<<

, V\CEN""'~ fU-C'''''~ University.~of Cincinnati CI'J ' ~. ·'.R.E·CO.. NEWSPublished Tuesdays and Fridays during the Academic Year except a" scheduled. RD ~ \150 ~: ~"b, , ,.•OJ ~19, _ "'\9V ' Vol.58 Cincinnati,' Ohio. Tuesday, February 18, 1969. No. 29 fFreedom"Es.sential'ForBlack Achievement' by Kathy Walsh united stand. for freedom. "Black "dedicated to-the fight for black people have come' to" think of Thi'summer of 1964, stated "The Black Cultural 'revolution was beautiful and being black was freedom," . beauty as processed hair, thin lips, Brother Imari, was the turning of the past several years has given our first sign of loving each "We are the ,\.chosenpoople" and sharp noses. But, we have point for the revolutiop.' In way to a new kind of revolution, other." ' Obaboa Olowd, Treasurer, of the begun to 'open our eyes ." -The Harlem and Birmingham "bfack one of power, violence, and the As part of UBA's Black History' Republic, told the audience, "And cultural revolution has brought a men .stopped. a one hundred use of force," stated Brother week, Friday night's lecture we must work to re-erystalize the new identity to' the :American year-old fear of usingsviolence Imari,Minister of Information to brought the ·Republicof New black people." Black', men, he Negro,l\1r. Olowd stated, and now against .their white oppressors." the Republic of New" Africa; Africaleaders to UC's Fieldhouse stated, are a race conditioned to -with that identity there must Organized violence has since Friday night, He stated the to encourage, incite, and enlist living in a white man's world. "We l come freedom. \ ~ become the foundation of the cultural revolution was the lust mem bers into the newly formed are conditioned to give up our Freedom is essential to the revolution and must increase if step towards black u~ity and, a black army; an organization women to the white' winners, Our Black man if he is to achieve the "we are going to win". _ things he wants, declared Mr. When asking for enlistment into Olowd, 'The first goal is to the Republic of New Africa seperate the, races for "we have to Brother .Imari proclaimed, "You clear, ourselves of oppression. If are not a citizen .... the we are to, revolt we must know document that freed your the differences. " The American forefathers from slavery was' the -Negro should learn from the Nazi thirteenth amendment." Jews, he said. ·The Negro must not According to Imari, Ute black feel he is safe, "the Jews thought population was, not given the theyhad carved a place and would choice of going 9ack to the home be protected by their' Germa,n land, "you were not given the _friends ... Don't let the honkies '-choice of citizenship" so "why convince ybu." should you be bound?" "From the ashes of, the "Violence 'and killing are American Negro we must build a necessary if we are to win," Imari black nation." This then is the ,·stated. The, Republic of New goal of the Republic of New Africa is an existing' organization Africa and of the revolution, "to drawn together under a public seperate ourselves from the white cause to create, "a better world man and claim what is ours." The for better people everywhere." To rightful property of the Negro, achieve, our goal -we must first Mr. Olowd contended, is the land attain our freedom. "through on which they slaved for several violence if must be,"- challenged generations. , Imari. Immediately following Obaboa In an effort-to gain enlistments, Olowd, ' Brother Imari took .the Brother, Imari urged Black people platform to, a standing ovation to come and join the fight for a prompted by -«tDfmbers of the 'year or two. "At$40'a month and p~tform.. Brother",' Imaricame -room and board-you'll be fighting with' a three-fold purpose: to tell for' your, own cause;" The fight of the background of the revolution, "the Republic,-,"Brother .Imari said,' to discuss the"'"was~itSelf,.,and,to , '.'is ~ little' scrap, of land where we encourage "active,participation. A can fly our own' flag andrun our staunch "Malcolm X apostle, he own government 'for (and with) began by 'announcing that the our own people:" OBABOA OLOWD, Treasurer of the Republic of New Africa, addresses the-audience at Friday .night's Black revolution' was indeed started, and Following the address, a number - History Week presentation. . those in the audience should of Blacks signed' up with "Brother , (NR photo by. John Sedgwick) anticipate active involvement. Imari's Black Army)" Division About'langsam, Laws, Wording·· Tr

Forum f "t'irocls Two S'ides Diacovers fRights";Commiftee For the first time two CRC's recent proposal to remove ' by David FeBland .: . There' was somedissent amongst were run jnth~ same manner as noticeable factions divided the .one of ~he. present student The- draftrng of a final wording me~bers,most . notably Jack private : anartments .. the school, fourth CRC- forumlast Thursday. representatIves on', t~e Board of for the firsL4points of CR9's, Rembac:h,.and RICh Newhauser, deeisions . of committees that The .forum followed in the Dnectors.. ' ,,' recentlytproposed-Bill of Rights co~c~~!1I?g"the attachment of any would, have the right to charge Fieldhouse President ~Walter Addressmg .. the forum, grad ..proved to be a major problem, last provisions at~ll, ,b_u~both agreed competative prices. La n gsa m ts "State of the student Patrick D~ffley ter,Te~' Saturday; at the, University to ~~cel?t the Idea fot the sake of , .~ " . University" .message, ~ost. of ,,,Langsam s address,. as Cominittee meeting.' ' A 'conflict con~muIt~. i -:- .\ ".~ather than s~ekmg a, SItuation One faction, consisting mainly ,bull ----.' .A ro~nd, of aif),plausealso arose concerning those points . . DISCUSSIon.,aro~ as -to wh~t WhICh ,would lI~cur .upon the of athletes and other students not and c~eers followed. . " ,'. ' • '~hlchmight supercede state and ' rights the university would retam student grea~er ,fmancuu burden, evident at earlier forums, seemed , Others though, I!Ieludmg""an local laws." '. should ~the student~ " ... be most ,commIttee members .felt satisfied with Langsam's address. athlete and a senior .student, Con cer ning , the "right (of af~fordedall the ng~ts. ~nd that the s~ud~nts.,s~ould be given This group was at odds with the countered the' charges, and . students) to determine where 'he privaleges of those students living freedom" w it.h'i n a set of other, larger group, many wearing debated many of the. dissident shallTive ... ",' several committee in,private housing." _ boundaries to be determined later .red and black armbands, who student. Ag~in some supp'0rt was members', felt that by forci~g The rig~tsaff?rded the l~ndlord ,bY th~'dorm st~dei1ts themselvt;s . generally seemed 'disenchanted heard ~or this group~ . ., .students to 'sign a "residence hall by. law' mcludmg the right to In t~IS. way, It was felt, the with Langsam's speech. All m all the group met !or;, contract as a prerequisite to protect property were, gene~ally dormltorI~ ~ould" ~~come more Meeting in / the Fieldhouse, about, an .hour 'and came up, w~th, re-admission, 'the university was agreed upon. "I'he.. c~mmIt,tee of a~ educational living process. many in the group argued that the . prop()saL~p:er.qve4· ,Thaassembly unfairly trapping them into living realize~ however, that ,If d~rms c~onhmMI9 onJ)(We 3) ~President said only two things decided to yote"at the next for-lim on campus. It was determined - , relevant to the forum. Those were on whet9c~r.tp~y ,isl,:tguld.place an that the university should instead Langsam'sstatements on' the need at-large ,stuJentcandidate for the establish no policy concerning on for "only one student Board of Directors on the campus or off campus housing. - government" and his remarks on ballot. The next forum' is this Where the "right to' regulate Thursday in ~room:' 22 of ,theA' their own living 'conditions", was A & S FACULTY VOTE Chemistry buildipg., concerned, it was determined that ,The faculty of Arts' and Previous to the vote, one further 'and 'more specific' Science will meet today at student,' Jack Reinbach (A&~~69) clarification was needed in the 1.:00 p.m. to vote on proposals proposed that both_ student final draft. The' co,ncern here) of the A & S Curriculum iepresenatives to the Board according to Dean Claude Sowle Committee concerning the (Student President Weissenberger of the UC Law School, was that Elimination of' the Physical and' Vice-President Collins) be the student. be allowed to reguiate E d u cat ion - ROT C ousted and replaced. Reinbach his' life without ,confficting- with requirement. Passage of the offered that neither represented the laws of society and state -. recommendations will result in "their" interests. ~ ,. Sowle 'felt that for the Board of their immediate application for Also, Senator Joe Herring asked Directors to accept such a all students presently in A & S. the gathering to sit in on the next demand, there would have-to be NR TAI

{ Page ~wo THE UNIVERSITY OF CINCINNATI rebru~ 18, 1969:

WHY SHARP'S? HERE'S WHY, , , I. g~~~nt~~s~sDj'rectIY From The-2:',I\IIII/ 2, Prices Lower Than The ~ So· Called "Whole· saler's \l "Coded" Prices! Israel Campus Radio Faces Competition; 3.,Diamond Scope To Choose Intelligently, . 4. BUr With Confidence From An 5, ~~c~~~it~ersonal Effort To Be Must Live Helpful. . SHARP's JEWEL ERS Broadcasting From, Calhoun 3049 Madison Rd. 871·3377 W~DI, , WFIB' has some competition on equipment except the transmitter things go well, we'd like to put campus this year in the form of is transistorized. This equipment transmitters in 'all the dorms but radio station WGDI broadcasting uses less electricity than a couple I'm sure the University won't let from Calhoun Hall. At 100 of ordinary light bulbs. The us." Millowatts, WODI broadcasts to station is financed as Steve As it stands, the University can four floors in Calhoun. Michaelson p,uts it,' ?'out of our only approve one station as tbe Started in the middle of the first own pockets '. official campus radio station. No quarter by Joel, Frendsdorf and Although WGDr broadcasts to a' other University has two stations Steve Michaelson, the station now very small area, Joel Frendsdorf -running the same format. has 'five disc jockeys: Joel cites a definite conflict between Summing up the WGDI disc broadcasting under the alias or his station and. campus· radio jockeys' united efforts to run a "The Streak"; Steve (Mountain station WFIB: "WFIB claims that good station, Steve Michaelson Man); Neil Golenberg (Road we are taking away their listening said, "We came from nothing into Runner); Frank Nicodemus (Fred audience in Calhoun Hall." something really out of sight." Summer happens Marks); and the comedian of the Asked about future plans,' Joel WG DI can be reached at station, John Weeks.wbQ does a said, ."We're not sure what we'll Calhoun Hall on AM radio, at 990 . -wiae range of impersonations and do at the end of the quarter. If Kilocycles. . at Southampton! runs the Maudi Smith Show for five minutes every evening. Tom What a way to learnl Located in one of the country's Marks is WGDl's general manager. best-known slimmer fun areas, Southampton College is WGDI, broadcasting every night surrounded by magnificent beaches, yachting and sail- from 6:00' p.m. to 1 :00 a.m., ing centers, golf courses, art colonies, theatre activities started out with all the equipment and more and more! resting atop a footlocker in room Accredited undergraduate courses in Humanities, Sci. 1028 Calhoun Hall. The ence, Social Science, Business Administration, Marine equipment now includes a small Science, and Education, plus limited graduate offerings, transmitter, four tape recorders, a during two 5-week sessions: June 23-July 2q; July 28· record .player and sundry other August 29. Courses are open to visiting students who items necessary for a successful are in good standing at their own college. radio station: The station, with a library of well over 2000 records, Three, four and five-week workshops in sculpture, music, plays and the top

o painting, drama and films. Concerts and lectures will be.. twenty. Advertising is not part of given by resident rnusiclans and yisiting experts. the format. . - Dormitory 'accommodations are available for students in WGDI runs a record countdown academjc courses and workshops. . every Tuesday evening at 6:00 For further information, mail coupon today.' , p.m.l,.and puts out a survey called the Roaring Bu's Survey. Because r------~------~----l, Director of th,e Summer Program,' . . I ,of university regulations, the survey can be. distributed only in the Calhoun lobby. . ,. SOVTHAMPTON I For the purpose. of promotion, WODI is running a series 01 COLLEGE I contest. Last week 15 .singles .and LONG I~LAND, UNIVERSITY I 2 albums were given away to the Southampton, N~Y.11968· (516) AT 3~4000 ' Calhoun Hall man who phoned 'the most girls and persuaded them Please send me Summer Program bulletin. r to vote for him. This week' the I am Interested in 0 1st session 0 2nd session contest is in honor of George Washington's Birthday. These I attend -- .contests seem to be good station College Year Major .' promoters, as one evening, brings Name _ 0' In more than 500 phone calls. PAUSI~G between broadcasts are three of WGDI's "Fantastic Five". The costs of, running WGDI are Address _ minimal because all the \ (NR Photo by Jerry Taylor)

L City' ~ State \ Zip ~___ ~ Petitions for the University , /':,Jusl·.:Dribblipg A.round. C e n t er Board and the Un iv~rsity Center PrOgram fWilH~ No ~Goal In lilel Council are now." available at the Information Desk, , • Residence Halls : and Greek h 0 uses. Petitions ','must be HAVE" A 'HEART! returned to the Desk by March Support Sigma Alpha Mu's NOT·I,CE!" :lrd Annua.1 /' WILLIAM BENDER IS LOOKING FOR',A DATE fOR Bounce for. Beals THE JUNIOR PROM, THE GREEK WEEK DANCE, THE SIGMA SIGMA CARNIVAL beginning Wed.,' F'~b19, 10:00 am AND OTHER NOTABLE CAMPUS EVENTS}, lor 80 Hours al APPLICANTS MAY APPLY IN Man"agement opportunity? Sure. Right now! We be- THE STUDENT SENATE lieve the way to train managers is to let them manage, SWIFTON SHOPPING -CENTER OFFICE. Riqht from the start. And it works! Our experience shows that orr the average, our successful college' trainee reaches middle management within (6 months' " Set 'your own pace when you join us! We're one of the world's largest merchandlsinq. food and .retailing organizations ....:.·8. civilian operation, serving Armed Forces toersonnel through "PX" and- "BX" retail out- lets. And-we let you go and grow just as fast as you - want to! That's the; way we've grown! ' We're looking for ,bright people ,in the fallowing fields: • B.uying • A~chitecture . • Retailing • Mechanical Engineering • Accounting • Personnel, • Auditing , • Food Management • EOP Systems • Vending Management • Transportation • Management Engineering Our starting salaries and fringe benefits rank with 'the best-sand we offer the opportunity for worldwide.

travel, too! " . <' If YOU want to succeed in business at your own rate, without the ho-hum long wait routine,' contact your placement office! .

OUR REPRESENTATIVE WilL BE ON CAMPUS' ,Feb. 2-4.,19'69

Can't make' the interview? 'Don't sweat it. Write our College Relations Manager and tell him what you'd like to do! . 1 [ ARMY' &. AIR' FORCE ARMY & AIR FORCE -'Who' ceres I who's got the <;oke?'Coca-Cold has the ' .' refreshing testeyou never get tired of. That's why things gO, i 'I. 'I.' EXCHANGE SERVICE better with Coke, after Coke, after Coke. . . . . Dallas, Texas 75222 Bottled under authority of The Coca-Cola Company by: Equal Opportunity Employer V The' Coca-Cola Bottling Works Company, Cincinnati 4 Februm:y 18, 1969 THE UNIVERSITY OF CINCINNATI Page T?ret Comm ittee Seeks To Define Rights Sit.in.gThis 'O'ne Out (Continued from page 1) Point 4, involving the right to THIS WEEK AT 'HillEL "open access to any and all financi-al records of the university", was limited to those I:~;.-:l! ;;;;;., ~; ~~~~ records which are not personal -" ~.1 ,(Le. faculty saleries) or do not conflict with the rights, of privacy Traditional Service of (he donor. Also determined was that students should participate in, rather than review, fund allocation. The extent of Tue.- Feb. 25 participation' was still undecided. Final wording of these points Bo_ard Meeting was not reached, and Glen Weissen berger, Student Body Presi dent and Committee .,-Election' o;f Officers chairman, set up a drafting subcommittee including Joe Kornick and Jim Finger to do this 7:00 P.M. work before the next meeting. In addition to those previously 'mentioned, All-University committee members in attendance included Dr. D. H. Lipsich, Vice Provost of Undergraduate Affairs; Professor IWarren, A&S Tribunal Advisor; Dr:'-W. Nester; Dean of. Students; Joe Herring, Senate and AMIDST THE HUBBUB of Thursday's Open Forum, this couple found CRC; Steve Aronoff; and Bob their own little corner of tranquility. These two were part of an Ullman, past president lFC and estimated crowd of five hundred to attend the' Forum following Dr.. Student Senate. ' Langsam's address Thursday in the Fieldhouse. .; At the committee's first meeting , (NR photo by John Sedgwick) on Feb. 11, the committee decided upon its purpose - to define the rights of' UC Students, to put this document before the student body as a referendum on April 15th and 16th, and to divide

the aspects of student rights into " cat ego r i e s for stu d y b YI FIGHT sub-committees. The committee will meet next on Wednesday, W h il e The y La s I! February 19 at 8 :30 p.m. in Union 307 A or B. FRIDAY and SATURDAY ~ FOR 'fE OLDE .Limited Quanities, But All Good Quality, .This is Our Annual Opportunity To "Fess Up" to some Buying CLEAN Mistakes and pass 'the Savings On 'To You! TH~EME:S!· SPO-RT COA-IS Refuse anything but Eaton's Corrasable Bond Typewriter Paper!

Mistakes vanish. Even fingerprints disappear from the special surface. SUITS Excellent' "Food An ordinary pencil eraser lets you , ' erase without a trace. Are you going to end ~ev.erages ,stand in the way of cleanliness? Get Eaton's 'Corrasable today, 1r:1 light, ll2c". ,'". '., Prl~e,..~.) .•.. _~,-, ~~o:r~'les~~'~'" .•...•. ,,, ">, THERE IS A , medium, heavy weights and BIG D'I FFERENCE Onion Skin.IOO-sheet packets and 500-sheet ream boxes. 'At Stationery :SH'IPLEY1S Stores and Departments. ~ 214 W. McMillan St. Only Eaton makes Co'rrasable.® 721-9660 EATON'S CORRASABL~ BOND TYPEWRITER PAPER JEANS 41 Years Young Eaton Paper Company, Pittsfield, Massachusetts 0)201 Up' ' t 0 $ 6 . 0 0\ TIES Va lue INDULGE IN AN EPICUREAN OR'GY" 88 c EVERY TUESDAY NIGHT $2 , '/ 88

., RAIN COATS Just A Few 'Save UT~ 1/2

ALL THE PIZZA YOU CAN EAT ~ FOR - AT ,$1.00 "~<.- :'" 5-12 p.m. ...• Page Four February 18, 1969 The "W"eek,T ha t 'Was %r~1 l A~-Clear Definition Of Rights I Sir: determined people declared government. Ask the peasant A group of "Moderates," "these truths to be self-evident." abo u t La tin Arne ric a n loquacioysly led by .Graduate And by the stand of this minority, government. Ask the Black about ~ Assistant David Altman, has truth was recognized / and UC government, But what more is suddenly stepped forward affirmed. a declaration of rights than 'a questioning the right of CRC to And now, in 1969, here in taking of a moral stand-against the-' .speak for the Student Body and Cincinnati, we _face a situation of slavery of silence, against the to voice doubt about the validity dynamic and- potentially government of the many, by the of the Student Bill of Rights. This dan g_er 0 us precedence. A few, for the privileged. And what, is a response to Mr. Altman's' determined minority of involved historically, had been the response patently political gesture. students has affirmed rights for all to those who would not recognize In 1776, a minority of men students, , rights that affect every men's ability to, apprehend, drew up the Declaration of facet of life in the academic affirm, and defend their rights? Independence. They did not speak community; rights that help define Just as the is a for all the colonists, the majority the actions of student, professor, political social entity, containing a of whom vacillated' between and administrator. And by 'their government, a populace, and an Toryism and apathy, A, handful of stand, and by their actions, these established structure; so too the men saw that token men are known. They are part of University of Cincinnati representation was no the Campus Reformation Council. constitutes a socio-political entity. representation at all; saw that (::RC was created by students. Our Administration and Faculty benevolent monarchy was no Students are working together govern; the students, being the self-government at all; saw that through CRC to attain a clear governed, form the populace; and some must standif changes were to definition of their rights 'as the established structure had the be wrought.- And so they stood.' students, a clear delineation of purpose of imparting knowledge. In 1789, it was not the majority Administrative and Faculty And just as, in the American ~ of delegates who seceded' to the controls and limits, and an open government, the voice of the -"Tennis Court Parliament" and understanding of the roles and governed; the will of the people, is initiated the "Declaration of the functions of the individual within the guiding force; so too, here at Rights of> Man." This .minority the University community. "Who UC, the wishes and the will of the , was not recognized by Louis XVI could be against this?" some ask; students is the repository 'of'the as spokesmen of the people. The not realizing that the price of/ power and the right to University peasants knew' most of the deed universal rights is personal 'government. Just as the U.S. beforehand. But these delegates, privilege, nor seeing that the citizen has rights, so do the- by their actions, affirmed establishment of legitimate students of UC have rights. Just as themselves as spokesmen for all student rule is the curtailment of the National government has men and for the spirit of Adm i n i s t rat i vel F a cui t y responsibilities and limits upon its Self-Rule. And by their stand they prerogative. " , ,"'" , " powers, just so should the were' known. And comes again the voice of University Administrators have .So too, in 1963, not a majority privilege, the voice of those clearly defined responsibilities and of Congress, nor a majority of contented with the power that sharply drawn limits upon its Negroes, nor even a majority of they alone now wield, begging the prerogatives. ,This is the goal and American citizens stood and question, crying; "Whence came pur po s e 0 f the Campus defended the equality of civil these 'rights'?" And what can the Reformation Council. Black History Week was, we feel, an unqualified success. It rights for the southern Black power.1essindividual respond? Ask L. R. Wiega~d American. Again, a small band of ' the dirt farmer about Mississippi A&S '69 was a successful execution, on the parts of those groups and individuals involved, of an eight-day long program of events Jim Finger of varying appeal and unvarying interest. This fact alone would single out the Week, and its planners, for praise. But the Week achieved a, success far more important' than its mere execution. Itswas designed to give the Black Man a In Search Of Radicals look at his history, his culture, and his achievements-and it "I would iike to characterize the to vote for the proposed Senate I may not be the correct person did this well. And it gave the White Man a chance to get a gesture of forty students walking Constitution?' Are the students in to yell that the boat is going down over to my office and presenting A&S going to get to vote on the but I'm going to yell that this close look at the Black Mood-and at the foundations of the proposed cirriculum changes? school isn't going fast enough and me with a proposal as entirely Ii Black Pridewhich is the keystone of this Mood. ' appropriate and proper. They An article in last week's News that possibly all the students can Itgoes without saying that the Black Mood is something were very politej' Record praised the early CRC get together and agree on the which our society will have to accept and understand before ideas and vision merely because proper speed. Not because there is Walter Langsam, address to they originated with -0."800-1000 a' need for consensual validation, , any real strides in the name of Humanity-not Black _ Student Senate, names from all types. of but because changes come about humanity and White humanity, but just plain Humani1y-can Feb. 12, 1969 students-dormies commuters, most easily when all recognize the grads', A&S, Bus. Adm, need for change. bs made. It will have to be understood-as a natural pride a Dick Gregory was one of the conservative" radical, apathetic, At the first All-College People has in its. past, and a natural hope for its future, and first to point out that when some arid-drunks~" To praise an idea Convocation in eight years those accepted wholeheartedly as a healthy evolutionary milestone people say "law and order" they because of its diversified support in attendance were told that this are saying "Nigger, Nigger." When' in our society's growth. is 'inherently anti-intellectual. school does not support the status some people at the University of Since when does consensus have quo. That means absolutely 'Just as International Week, Man and Communications Cincinnati say" student radicals," Week, and other special Weeks before it, Black History WeEfk ixr espo ns ib le anarchists," or anything to do with the quality of nothing except that the school is ~ "student activists" they are Saying an idea? A broad and varied base not. in truth reactionary. was an attempt to focus out attentions, for ashort time on a is -nice for' psychological research Nowadays with the .great amount special problem of our existence, and' our coexistence with "no change today," "we're afraid," "we don't understand.'? but has little to do With the - of change going on one would others. On the one hand, these Weeks are successful if they What kind of an intellectual place principles of a Student Bill of have to be reactionary to keep the open the eyes of a single unseeing person; on the other hand, is this when ideas are rejected just , Rights. status quo. To be moving ahead a ,by being labeled radical' or The students who drew up the little may merely mean that the unless they get ~s all to Qpen our ,;ey~s,ct~ese We~ks.are Bill of Rights are saying that there entire organism has not been unsuccessful. - ,;"" ,:' " . conservative and accepted because they are labeled moderate. Iii are "higher laws" than the killed. Hopefully ,there isn't a Black History Week is over; it is, itself, now history. But it 1965 when Sonny and Cher were Student HandbC;>Of,or" popular ,college<,jn,,4rn.~rica that isn't will not have accomplished anything if its lessons are to be doing "I Got You Babe," ideas consensus that they respond to., .moving". ahead :some. It was a soon forgotten. Unless Black. History Week remains alive in . could be, rejected because they That "this·is,:the minimum, the:' speech of, parKing lots, new came from "long hairs," but now minimum Bights we' as~tudents " buildings;' arid .money spent, not our minds fifty-two weeks a year, this Week will only have can with conscienee'tcontinue to';' of people. ' '. '. that even Wallace people wear been a brief, respite in our continued cultivation of ignorance. achieve an education with". ,When all the words are said and beards and nobody buys Sonny What would all those.vpeople done the reality is that there is np and Cher records, 'it's "student who speak so fondly of consensus : direct, student power over any radicals" who get their ideas do if the vast majoritY"of.,Bla~~s,/areas(" of consequence. The rejected. To quote Thoreau, NI~\VSRECORD· , (Nixon got 10% of the Bl~ck:vot~J:;'-Speaker of the Senate is on record "there is no help for .it; for he University of Cincinnati :;decided to reject Presidential' as saying, "Student government considers, not 'what is truly ~dictates? They just might say on this campus exists with the National Educational Advertising Service, Inc. "r e s p ee tab le , but what is there .are higher ·,principl.es than ilt\plicit, stipulation that we can Rooms 4IJ·12·15" Union Building, Cincinnati, Ohio 45221 respected. " consensus. I thought the example only, use, th~ powers we have in . 475-2748, 2749 ~ $3.50 per year, 10 cents per copy. And enough of this t~k that the of the Johnson'sadrninistratjon the"way~tha~ the Admlnistration Second Class Postage Paid, Cjneinnaft.r Ohfo entire. Student Body was .not killed the notion, of consensus' approves.yThe much praised and Member: Associated Collegiate Press consulted in drawing up the Bill forever. Hopefully the Bill of supposedly progressive Code of .of Rights. Name one document at Rights will receive support from a Student Conduct. calls. for only EDITORIAL STATEMENT this university that was dr-awn up broad consensus, D,utthe rightness one directly' elected student, the by 20,000 day school students of it does not depend on achieving Vice-President of the Student 'Ihe leftets and columns appearing in the News Record represent and 10,000 night students. How consensus. A majority vote Body. All other students are solely the views of their writers .. All editorials reflect only, the absurd can one' be? Student doesn't determine the rightness of appointed and the President of Senate never drew up a Bill of ; it either, but it will determine if it the 'University has final veto views of the editerial staff of the paper and do not represent Rights, the A&S -Trlbunal never ,is accepted or not. ~ "power over~all"actions, So far all University policy. did, so I guess a few students had " I sometimes get the impression students on important committees to get around to doing it at this campus that there would (with one or two possible sometime. The final drafting of .•.. EDITORIAL STAFF be a "correct" person to yell that exceptions) are appointed and - the Bill of Rights will be carried the boat is sinking. The cabin boy none of these committees has 'a Editor-in-Chief out by the highest administrators, is a bit low and the Captain a bit ' .final say. '.,I 'challenge anyone to Lenny Green faculty, students from Senate, the high, but the 'average passenger ,dispute the fact that students have Student Body President, the would be perfect. In answer to little or no direct say in the ~.Execut'ive;Editor ipa.st7Pr~sitle~t~of. 1IFC,'; and other :Mr. Reichmann's charge in last running of this university. Direct

r' Diarla Risse " '1l1tereste& ,> students: The final 'week's News Record that the say means self determination. draft will be voted 'on by all people at the Forum' put' And maybe most importantly of Associate Editor students of the university. themselves on, a pedestal I would all something must be said about Bernard Rubin This is the most democratic say the only person placed on a, violence. Asa leader of the Managing Editor I •••••••••••••••• ' ••••••••••••••• Sue.Stenger thing that ever happened at' this pedestal .around . here is the so-called militant students, I must Sports Editor Richie Katz university. What other document "average, man." This school say in all honesty that I have Theater.EditQr. ~ ' ,~Bi1l.gpear effecting all students was ever suffers from an - "elitism of the heard more talk of violence from Photo Editors - John Sedgwick, 'Todd Bardes before put to a vote:' Who is going average." , "(Continued on Page 5) - --" Page Five ,February 18, 1969 THE UNIVERSITY OF CINCINNATI Finger: Allain RighlsHoljeslly 'For We Will Nol Be: Denied: Look to'Your {Continued from page 4) There- will be no need to label the that vision. Then one of the Deans _ college administrators and administration as "pigs" or "white of this University goes on TV and supposedly non-militant students overseers." There will be no need says that he has been forced ihto than from those labeled as radicals to call anyone names or make negotiating with students by the Information Desk with the exception of -possibly political deals. We will achieve threat of violence. Well Dean you three people. I have yet to talk student determination for student can go to hell if. the only reason Tangeman University Center with one of the high level affairs openly and honestly; This you are negotiating with students administrators at this college is going to be one case in' which is the threat of violence. I thought for when I was not warned half way the means and ends are not going we were talking because students Lost and Found Articles through our initial meeting that to be in conflict. We are going to' should have rights. And if you taking over buildings would not achieve our rights .as all men' were coerced by the idle talk of a Ticket Salesand Information advance the cause of students. I should be able' to achieve their few or the mass media's picture of Concession Sales a~on record as having said, "We rights-by coming forward and "student radicals" you don't have will succeed to the extent we are saying 'Yes I' am a free any guts. General Information able to show to the campus the man' ... Not meekly but boldly How many times. have I been ~ and a smile sincerity of our vision and the for we will not be denied." Neve;'" asked. "What's going to happen if strength of our committment to a has there been a private the Administration rejects the Bill 8 a.m. - 11 p.m. humane educational svstem. conversation of mine to betrav of Rights?" Or, how many -'··f -- discussions have there been, not - Neios nrte s 'Ion the Bill of Rights, but on the • . _ ~.,.- -. . legitimacy of violence on the ·n T r a n c e college campus. All of these S Ir ha. n / f..'I . .' discussions on this campus are a bunch of. crud. The so-called Your,faculty· .. • Rosemary Haddad militant leaders are committed to . . I exhausting every possible legal Los Angeles: The defense attorney for Sirhan B. Sirhan claimed that means for change are on record as Sirhan was in a "trance in which he had no voluntary control" whenhe saying so. . advisorasks.you fatally shot Senator Robert Kennedy last June. Emile Zola Berman, On the other hand, college

actina in Sirhan's defense, blamed the trance on terrible scenes I of administrators, Presidents of violence experienced by Sirhan before leaving Palestine. According to countries, or sheriffs in the South Berman, these left such an effect on Sirhan's personality that he was cannot deny people. their rights subject to fantasies and out of touch with reality, UPI reports. and then dictate behavior to men for advice? who have been denied their rights. TUNA BOATS ATTACKED Let's face it, men in factories go Washington: An American tuna fishing boat was seized by Peru~an on strikes for fringe benefits and naval vessels after it, and four sister boats, were fjred on by Peruvian ~ people were applauded for sitting vessels. Several .American countries claim jurisdiction. up to two in (not taking over) in Little hundred miles out to' sea, while the U.S. recognizes only the traditional Rock. And we're talking about three-mile limit plus an additional nine. miles of fishing waters, four of the most important ye~s MAFIA LEADER DIES in a person's life, not three week Washington: Vito Genovese, major underworld figure in the United paid vacations. States, died in a Federal prison Friday at the ageof 71. UPI reports that Elderidge Cleaver said of Ronald Genovese suffered a congested heart failure. He was the alleged leader Reagan movies, "Man.T just knew of the Mafia (Cosa Nostra) in this country. He was serving a fifteen year nothing was ever going to happen sentence for smuggling narcotics. in those movies. I could look at CIGARETTE AD BAN ATTACKED that guy and know there wasn't a Think it over;over coffe~. Washington: Following a decision. by the Federal Communications hint of' any, bit of life." Well, for, Commission to ban cigaret advertising on radio and television bills have the first time in ages there's a hint been presented in Congress to. prevent the FCC from carrying out its on .this campus and its. getting a TheThink Drink. demand. The bills call for an extension of the present warning carried bit more obvious. Let's not blow on allcigaret packages, while barring the FCC from further action. it, searching for radicals, or LOnGE PESSIMISTIC ABOUT PEACE TALKS scapegoats. If..;as ~Erhest Becker Paris: U.8.delegate Henry Cabot Lodge reportedly is pessimistic about says ~ in Beyond Alienation that the full-scale sessions of the Paris Conference. This came after the higher .education has been faced - ~ fourth weekly meeting produced no significant results. Lodge and other . with the challenge of reality and Foryour own Tbmk Drink·Mug. send 75C and your name and address to: U.s. officials apparently see the road to peace as one of secret found wanting-then let us admit ' Think Drink Mug. Dept. N. P.O, Box 559. New York. N, Y, 10046. The Internaliona.1 Coffee Organ.zatic«. bargaining sessions with the North Vietnamese. that it is found wanting; and USSR DENOUNCES RED CHINA change it. : Denouncing Peking for a "silent agreement" with Washington not to interfere in the Vietnam War, Russia declared Communist China its worst enemy. Two Soviet magazines accused, China of quiet accomodation with the U.S. and "treason" to the Asian community, B-52's BLAST REDS Saigon: In an effort to cripple the Communist offensive power in Vietnam, U.S. B-52's dropped 2.5 million Pounds of bombs on about 40,000 Red troops threatening Saigon. UPI reports that eleven U.S. battle ships shelled guerilla bastions along the northern coast of South Did JO,U lilie "ietnam !.~aid the U.S.camp~ign. -c- SIGMA. ALPII'A MU~ beer the first' time , PRESENTS . • 3-rdA i1 n u a I I you tasted it? ,B'OUN-CE A lot of people say no. They say 'beer is Beechwood Aged; it's beer is one of those good things a costly way' to brew beer, and you cultivate a 'taste for . . .'like it takes more time. But it \ olives, or scotch, or works.) FOR kumquats. So whether you're Maybe. ~~utwe one of the few who think it makes a dif- has never tried beer, BEATS ference which brand of or a beer drinker who .from: 10:'00 A.M. Wednesday,Fe~. 19th beer we're talking suddenly feels the about. urge to- find 'out why to We think Budweiser' ~. so many people enjoy 6:00 P.~. Saturday, Feb.22 is an exception to this "you've Budweiser, we .think you'll gotta get used to it" rule. It's like it." - "at Swifton Shopping Center·' ~ so smooth. (You see, no other From the very first taste. I ,AI 80 HOUR MARATHOI in. con j u nclio n' wit h Budweise& is the King of Beers® THE HEARl AS;SOCIA TION (But you know that.) of SOUTHWESTERN OHIO ~ Page Six THE UNIVERSITY OF CINCINNATI February 18, 1969

-\ BE UNIQUEI Barb Wins Hearl ,Of "Sig Eps ; Annual· Dance' Honors Queen B,E SELEC"T"! Barbara Schecter, junior in Teacher's College, was selected IF NOTHING ELSE, BE Queen of Hearts of Sigma Phi :: ON HOMECOMING COMMITTEE! Epsilon Fraternity, .Friday night at Music Hall. Barb, a member of Sigma Delta Tau sorority, vied for, YOU RlAST CHANCE-. SCAMPER TO_,TH E UNION DESK. the Sweetheart honors along with DUJ: TOMORROW 5:32 P.M. candidates from each social sorority and women's residence hall. ' ~, Barb's coronation marked.the 20th year Sig Ep has honored the women at the University of ENGINEERS Cincinnati-for their generosity and consideration at the time when A representative from the Jervis B. Webb Company will be ·on the local chapter," Iota Chi Campus Epsilon, was about to incorporate nationally with Sigma Phi Epsilon. Last year's queen, Diane Saul of Chi Omega, presented Barb with February 26, 1969' the fraternity pin and a heart shaped Sweetheart ring. The men Graduating Students - Opportunities are excellent for those who of SigEp honored Barb with roses desire a career in the Material Ha,ndlinglndustry and are and atrophy. Barb will preside interested in diversification of-training in all product 'areas - from over the .Girls of the Golden . desig!,ing 'to wherever your abil ities carry you in this exciting Heart, a' Sig Ep women's industry. ',.-" - honorary, and will be hostess and Sweetheart J at all fraternity STOP AND TALK,WITH HIM ,functions forthe next year. Greek Week- An equal opportunity Employer _7 MORE WEEKS "A Higher Vision')

PINNED Kandy Lee Womer Linda .Lehmann, Chi 0 Robert Albee II,' Phi Tau, . Kent Brown, Kappa Sig, U of Muhlenburg TIL /' Jamie Bogen Anne Grever, Theta Phi , Mark Jacobson, Ron Clinsy, Phi Delt ' PROCTER 8 GAMBLE , Paula Rost .•AO ENGAGED ~ Tom WhItelaw 1. Delt Karen Gerth Kathy Souders, AO' " John Terry, Beta , WILL· INTERVIEW John- Longobardo, Theta Chi Pat Bertsche Linda Hunter Larry Dies Randy Kerks, Theta Chi Carol Estep .-.f~bxu.tJrr v27, Only Barbara. Dansforth, .Kappa, Ohio, Jim Alexander -Nancy.Hubbard For Technical E~gineering openings in our central Engineering Divi- Wesleyan ' 'Chuck Osburn, Theta Chi Jerry Francis ) sions: 8S-MS' level candidates in/all Engineering fields. Robie Cohen Joan Endres Don Barga, Phi Kap Ken Bicknell February 27'-28 Mary Martz.· . Lois McGinnis Bob Agricola, SAE Al Perry For Technical Management openings in Manufacturing/Plant Manage- Judy Feldman Jan Armstrong, Alpha Gam ment: B'S-MS level candidates in Engineering or Science; Graduate • -Marty Brafman, SAM Paul Godwin, Arnold Air Kanda Carter, Theta Mary Creahan, Zeta students in Business, Economics, or Industrial Management with tech- Bill Hawkins, Beta John Shorten, Phi Kap nical undergraduate degree. ,February' 28 Only For Research. & Development: BS, MS, and PhD level ChE's and IT'S aRIGGSI Chemists and PhD level in Math. & Statistics.

PROCTER & GAMBLE OFFERS YOU: ~ In Technical Engineering W The responsibility for the development, design and construction of new 8 -pl.mts and equipment for the entire Company. A wide range of oppor- tunities are available in the areas of high speed packaging equipment. F process equipment. electrical distribution and control equipment. instru- mentation, building design, field construction and project management.

'..•. I In Technical Management o Ch,1l1enging carel'rs in your field of interest in Plant 1\1.magcment. Our I highly diversified business includes f()Q.ds. toilet goods, .and paper products a~ well as SO,lP5 and detergents. a.nd the engineering ~prob- lerns involved in producing bi.ghquality. low cost; high volume B" products are formidable,SubstanJial early responsibility; promotion HEAR BRIGGS GAMBLEA, WFIB'S ANSWER TO - THE from within based on demonstrated performance, Our expanding FRIDAY NIGHT BLAH'S - WHAT A WAY TO KICK OFF THE business is constantly generating a need for technical managers ! I "higher up". Week of February 17, ·'969 In Research and Development "FIB'S BIG,arHITLINE Activities ranging from "upstream" investigation of complex LW TW 2 molecular structures to the development of process technology 1 TIME OF THE SEASON· The Zombies 1 2 SWEET CREAM LADIES· for new or improved products. Problems of active interest em- ' 9 3 BUT YOU KNOW I LOVE YOU· The First Edition -)7 4 DIZZY· Tommie Roe ' brace all' fields of Chemical Engineering as well as several areas 5_ 5 YOU SHOWED ME • The Turtles 6 6 THIS MAGIC MOMENlf· Jay & The Am'ericans of chemical physics and microbiology. You will work in the 11 7 PROUQ MARY· The CreedenceClearwater Revival 13 -8 LIVIN' IN SHAME· Diana Ross,& The Supremes area of your' main interest. Latest and most sophistiCated 3 9 BUILD ME'UP BUTTERCUT· The Foundations ~ 14 10 NOVEMBER SNOW· Rejoice! facilities-or invent your own! 8 11 EVERYDAY PEOPLE· Sly & The Family Stone 15 12 CROSSROADS· Cream All openings except Manufacturing- 16 13 THIS GIRL'S IN LOVE WITH YOU· Dionne Warwick 18 14 I GOT A LINE ON YOU· Spirit Plant Management are at our head- 19 15 TRACES· The ClassicsIV quarters in Cincinnati, Ohio. In Plant 16 LOVIN' THINGS· The Grassroots 17 HOT SMOKE & SASSAFRAS· The Bubble Puppy Management, we can offer a wide 18 LAIA LADAIA • Sergio Mendes & Brasil '66 choice of locations in addition to 19 MENDOCINA· Sir Douglas Quintet Cincinnati. .( 20 ROCK ME/JUPITER'S CHILD· Steppenwolf

An EqlJal Opportunity Employer CONGRATULATIONS TO ALL THE GIRLS W.HOWON PLAYING THE BIG 8'5 VALENTINE CONTEST. COMING SOON: A CHANCE TO WIN ALBUMS & T'ICKETS TO THE SERGIO MENDES ALBUM

f:'" February_ 18,--~1969 THE UNIVERSITY OF CINCINNATI- Page Seven -- --,--=::;::;;_ ••.•------~--- Direct Line ·_..;-72 .GR~~S:::: -ClEANERS.- -=- -- =- Complaint, question, because one of the colleges on suggestion? Write Brian Zakem's s up por ts student personnel NOW LOCATED AT THE campus got sick of it and threw it services and student activities such DIRECT LINE' 1040 Towanda out. Since this time, I have tried SIGN OF THE GREEN CANOPY Terrace, Cincinnati, Ohio, 45216. to watch two programs on it. The as Student Senate, Students. \, Include name and university Publications, Budget Board, Nixon acceptance- speech sounded Allocations, .etc, . 2510 CLIFTON AVE. position. This information will be like the Ohio River was being withheld if desired. Sponsor . drained, and the second show, the Mr. Richard J. Towner Nr. Calhoun Across from DB'U OlS B 00k S Student Senate. Supremes and the .Temptation Associate Director, TUC Q. "What is being.doneabout a special of "T.C.B." had a picture graduate student governmg that looked like the flight pattern N EW PHO~NE: 751-4200 council? Is one propsoed to be of a ruptured duck in fog. Why, Classified Ads established? If not, what channels can't the students have a Call News Record office television with some quality? . DRY CLEANING FOR PARTICULAR PEOPLE' must be used to initiate such a or place in N.R. council? If so, when and how is it William Bender, UnIversity I to be administered?" Biology . College, '69. ' mail box 4 days prior 2S YEARS IN CLIFTON HEIGHTS Grad. StUdent, W2 A. There is now a new television to insertion In the Main Lounge of the At Corner of Cli fton and McMillan A: The Divison of Graduate 10 cents a word Studies is indeed interested in the University Center. . the development - of graduate In r e s n o n s e to the HELP WANTED: 2 boys-(18) to work student organizations. If sufficient misunderstanding of the $25.00 Fri •. & Sat. nite"s. Girl (18). Student Service Fee that Mr. 11 :30-1 :30 (noon), M-F' and some interest should exist among the Bender's letter portrayed, I would nites Call 321-4213. graduate student body, a point out the following: governing council would be quite 1. The $25.00 Student Service FOR -SALE-·Remmin.gton 513T desirable. To date, however, the Matchmaster· Target grade bolt action Fee is now new this year. Our repeating rifle. 221-5072. type of continuing interest state affiliation has required a necessary for the successful change in _accounting procedures FOR SALE-12string eleCtriC g,:,itar. institution of such a council on whereby a' previously -hidden fee our campus has not existed. If any of $19.00 which was included in RECORDS!' Oldies! 20,000 in stock~ graduate students are interested in Send $.3S for2JOOO listing catalogue. working' in this direction my the amount charged for tuition, is Mail orders fillea. RECORD_CENTER, office, and the Office of the Vice now' billed separate from tuition. 1895 W. 25th St.-Cleve., Ohio. This $19.00 added to the old Record Tapes Provost for Students Affairs, will -----_ ...._--_ ....__ ....•_. ------SOUL provide every encouragement and 'Union Fee of $6.00 (voted in - effect by student referendum in TAKE 'EM OFF ••.. Take 'em all off assistance. I will _be glad to talk to our hands. I mean, what can. we do any graduate students interested 1965) now constitutes the $25.00 Student Service Fee. .- with 600 Homecoming Petitions. ON in this matter. Union Desk. 2. The $6.00 portion which goes Dr. Robert H. Wessel to the University .Center is used Vice Provost for Graduate Studies exclusively to retire' the ICE approximately $4,000,000 - Q. The students pay a $25 indebtedness of the new addition. A~F. R.O., .C. service fee - for every academic 3. Th~remai~ing $19.00 PAPERBACK- •• ,,· STOCK. quarter they are enrolled at the for sa Ie University of Cill~n~t.k I believe AFRiCAN LECTURE this money ($2.2 million) goes-to pay the boys who wash dishes in JosephOkpaku, editor of th~ 200 Blue Uniforms ~ the kitchen at General Hospital; it Journal of New African 3OO.Blue Shirts goes to pay the men' (UC Literature and the Arts, will maintenance, employees) who cut 90 Blue Rain Coats speak at 12: 30 p.m, Tuesday, the lawn and rake the leaves at Dr. 100 Blue Flight Caps Langsam's home; and it goes to Feb. 25, at the University of build a new faculty lou-nge (that Cincinnati as part of UC's 200 Complete Blue All Wool very well might, be eqUipped with African Studies Lecture Series. unifqrm~, variqus sizes. a bar); not to mention all the Okpaku's lecture will be on other student services this' fee is "The Role of. the African intended for. My question is why Mon - Fri 10 a.m. - 2 p.m. Writer, " and will be held in 2622 VINE STREET can't the students have a decent Room 127 ~McMicken Hall. Room 131 B Pharmacy television in the student center? The TV that is now in tile old Play'wright, author, iuid, WITHI~N S·IGHT Of:'.iJC Call ~ '..'f. ~ .. ~ _' ; ._ ''"''' union lounge has seen much publisher, Okpaku waS'~bom in' better days. I carried the one that Nigeria and is ·currently. a 475-4343 'ACROPOLIS 1-4055 is in there now from a storage doctoral candidate in dramatic closet on the day Nixon's election literature at Stanford was announced. Mr. Dick Towner, University. At 25, he is one of who asked me to c8rry it'for him, the y~ungest members of PE~. _ told me the student center got it

"

Wlll.YOU <., • HAVE A· TAN MARCH 25th BE, "BAHAMA BOUNDII

As a member of the special group of U.C. students headed for. the Freeport Holiday Inn on' Grand Bahama Island, March 18th WHERE IN THE WORLD DO YOU GO-FROMHERE? - through 25th, via Delta Jet.

',Compare with Comparable Trip! Career opportunities now available for you with ... firt$lotl,t Trip includes at no extra cost: a diversified. worldwide multi-billion dollar company -Round trip air fare by Delta Jet including all transfers and air tax March 18 returns to Cincinnati March 25 -7 days and 6 nights at the Holiday Inn located' on the beach' Can you meet the challenge where the action is in these fields? -Fre~e live music every night -Eleven other universities staying at Holiday Inn -Golf and Tennis facilities available . .-MARKETING MANAGEMENT -Also available are sailing, fishing, sauna bath, arid scuba diving Read our brochures Cost of entire trip •ENGINEERING MANAGEMENT et your .: -MANUFACTURING MANAGEMENT placement office,

ON LY$·199.50 - .~ -ACCOUNTING- MANAGEMENT F l~;tone s Sue ;:.. . ~:--:.. All original reservations have been filled but new Mean" Opportun'I,c" for YOU openings are available. Call 281-8006 for reserva- Firestone WILL HOLD CAMPUS tions as soon as possible, tQUAl OPP\jU1'V ••••'I" t",VjU ••ff.f INTERVIEWS ON:Feb. 26, 1969 \!J An Equal Opportunity Employer Rates Not Affected By StUdent Rate Change! Sign up no-w for your interview! Page Eight THE UNIVERSITY OF CINCINNATI February 18, 1969 'Cats Eye Cats ,'Avert ,Destructive Hurr.icane focusing on Meet High' Flying .Cards Salu~day The Rampant Refs.

by Richard Katz MVC race spiraling, into a, tie The UC soph drawing the ",by Richara Katz . Sports Editor between the Hurricanes and the starting assignment for the first Cats who won Saturday afternoon time .in a' few weeks played Sports Editor The on -again off again Bearcats at Wichita 65~~2.. I consistently both on offense and came out of cold storage Saturday The usually high scoring outfit defense. ' The Bearcats played a very poor game last Thursday in losing to ' night to' down the Golden from Tulsa,averaging 85.7- ,points He scored 8 points and pulled Wichita and I don't think anyone should try to make excuses for them, , Hurricane of Tulsa 76-63 before a a game going into the UC down 8 rebounds to go a'ong with but there is one thing about the officiating that I would like to say. It cheering throng of 6159 fans in encounter garnered only 63 points his fine gluing job on Smith. was the worst that I have ever/seen in my entire life and believe me I the armory fieldhouse. well below their average. It was The big gun for the Cats was have seen some bad ones. Those inadequate refs even had Coach Baker A combination of an unusually due. to a swarming tIC defense again Jim Ard who gunned talking to himself., J aggressive defense and a steady that is only seen once in a while, through 23 points while hauling There were times during the game when I thought they were having a offense that came up with the when the occasion calls for it. down a game .high 14 rebounds. free throw contest rather than playing basketball or should I say trying points when needed gave the Cats One particular .bright spot for Through the entire contest, Ard to play basketball, because nowadays one can't play basketball won number 15 against 6 losses. the Cats was the fine job along with Rick Roberson limited - anymore, there is a foul called on every play." . The conference win upped Coach sophomore Steve Wenderfer did the Tulsans to only one shot at Indeed the officiating has been sub-par in the MoVal all year but it Baker's crew to 7-5 in the league on the .leading scorer in the MVC, the basket, Roberson himself came to a head last Thursday. Those two striped shirted fanatics who , while the loss was the second in a Bobby Smith. Smith averaging pulled down 6 rebounds while called themselves refs were none other than Ray Ripplemeyer and Dick row for the Tulsans who lost to 25.5' going into the contest ""was chalking up 19 points, second Jorgenson. Ever heard of them? ' Louisville Thursday night. chased all night by the smaller but only' to Ard. No one has ever .heard of them and I don't believe anyone wants to The win 'for'- the Cats sent the aggressive Wenderfer. After theCats had taken a slim hear about them in the hear future. If they persist in making the kinds 35-32 lead into the locker room at of calls they did here' they are going to get hung one of these days and halftime, Roberson led a charged it won't be in effigy. up squad onto the court for the Besides being very wrong in numerous calls throughout the night, •final half that outscored the MVC they were inconsistent, used no discretion whatsoever, and on top of it leaders 41-31. In the initial half all displayed no rationale in tooting their play toys whenever and on Roberson was 'unable to score-whomever they felt like. from the field but in the last I'm ,not attempting to cry about the UC loss because they- were twenty minutes he hit 8 field almost. eliminated from the Valley anyway. It is just a shame that goalsto go with three free throws basketball players must be humiliated in such a way by men who giving him his final total of 19 obviously don't know too much about the game. points. There were two goal tending calls on Jim Ard in the second half and Don Ogletree played another another block by the UC center. On the basis of consistency the last fine game even though he hit only one should have been called like the first two but it wasn't. Likewise three shots from the field.' He any half-hearted basketball 'fan could see that the first two calls combined those with a perfect 5-5 displayed va complete unawareness of the entire situation" and no from the charity stripe to total 11 comprehension of the rules. x ' Another gem of consistency also came points. in the second half. ,Gordie Smith stole the' ball from Wichita's Greg Tree along with captain Gordie Carney and started down' court. After two dribbles Gordie almost Smith 'gave the Cats a .balanced bounced the ball off the ceiling and when he regained control he attack. Smith also scored 11 palmed the 'ball, but alas no toot from the ref. Gordie proceeded in points while quarterbacking the utter bewilderment to take a shot which was rebounded and scored by offense. another Bearcat. After a tightly played first half' ' Smith himself knew he had turned the ball .over and was waiting the the Bearcats came out in the call but none came. Later a similar situation occured but this time it second half and proceeded to looked like Gordie was the center of attraction in "Kill the Man' With outscore the Hurricanes 16-4 in the Ball." He finally got away from the demolition squad only to be the first five minutes. The called for "palming the ball". Ah yes, consistency at its best. -. t' bust-out g~ve Baker's dozen a The unmistakedly miserable calls by these two inadequates c,arne to commanding lead 51-35, one such a point that two UC students were thrown out of the game which the Tulsanswere not able to midway through the final half. This has never happened at a UC contest overcome. before and ,it just shows how totally incompetent these two men were. However, they did manage to As one student Sparky Sleppin, aptly put it, "it was the most pitifully cut the lead to eleven points twice refed game I've ever seen," late in the half and once they However, these two refs are not the only incompetents because their chopped it to nine points but .the contemporaries in the MVC are just as bad and on a given occasion Cats were Up"to the task. there is no telling, where the next bad 'call is coming from. They quickly settled down and Earlier in the year with the Cats beating NorthernMichigan by some, built their lead back up until the 20 points with three minutes left in the game when it made a whale of a final gun sounded the end with difference to the final outcome the ref assesed a technical foul on the the Bearcats on top 76-63. ' , NM coach for standing up. I ask you what king of judgement is this. The next league encounter, for Granted refing is a tough sport but if they can not handle it they should the Cats will be Saturday. night get out before they harm anyone else. , when they travel to Louisville to _" Something has to be done with this ruination of the college basketball 'do battle with the Cards who are game as we know it today because if it isn't we may have to call off the currently tied with the Hurricanes NCAA tournament at the end of the season and sponser a free throw for the lead. The Bearcats can shooting contest. What do you say Mr. Neve (commissioner of the STEVE WENDERFER goes high to score two points in Saturdays win once again be the spoilers and MVC). Try to do something about the inadequacies that are cropping over the Hurricanes. Wenderfer did a fine job in the' Cat victory wreck the Louisville chances for up in your league, because if your blowing bums .do not quit their stopping league scoring leader Bobby Smith, with 17 points well under their third straight crown witba antics soon you may find them hanging by their whistle in some never, his season's average. Wenderfers two tallies here were part of his eight, win Saturday night. never land. ' points for the night. (NR photo by Rod Pennington) Wichita Shocks'·Wary Cincin~ati; Coach's~Combo Teases Loyola' by Lew Moores 200 yard butterfly, Asst. Sports Editor The 200 yard backstroke' event LaslSecond ShotW.ins For Stale Restipg in Gary Indiana before saw Denny Scheidt come up with six wins, five losses count in playing time remaining .. The shot his second first place win with by David Litt moving on to Chicago t6 face , Ass't Sports, Editor Valley play. Was off its mark, and players dove . L'oyola may have proved freshman Greg Christian following Although the final score was for' the loose ball. Smith and i nstrtimental in downing -the with a second. Freshman Rick A 30 foot back-yard basketball close, for the most part, Wichita Skinner both emerged with the Loyola team Saturday afternoon Go-ff, 'swimming exhlbitjon, jump "shot by Wichita State's Ron lead throughout the contest. After ball to set up the ensuing jump by a devastating 79-34 score. It actually finished behind Scheidt Mendell at the' buzzer carried' the the early going 'when the lead ball which in turn set up Mendell'. was .the Bearcat's first road in the event although his finish Shockers to a 75-73 upset victory changed hands many times, the winning toss. victory of 'the season and arriving wasn't recorded. over the 'University of Cincinnati Shockers moved ahead mid-way ,Big man for Cincinnati was Don at Loyola completely. rested ma3{ Ji m , Sheehy" mirroring his Bearcats in the Cincinnati through the half, and left for the Ogletree. "Tree" tallyed 17 in a have made the difference. victory of a week ago, took a ru:st Armory-Fieldhouse Thursday intermission with a 39-27 losing cause. Four other Bearcats , night. in the 500 yard 'freestyle. I advantage. to hit double figures were Gordie The Bearcats mounted their A surprlsfng start was co-captain Wendell's game, winning basket lethal .at t ac k from novel The hosting Bearcats looked Smith with 15, Rick Roberson 12~ Denny, Matyko in the 200. yard came as a great surprise -to the extremely flat in the iust half center Jim' Ard 11, all in the combinations in the' event. With .; breaststroke. Augmenting the 4,257 partisan UC fans, who htting only 27% from, the floor second half, and Dick Haucke team morale up and feeling secure surprise was Mat'yko'spacing expected. to witness the Cats first of a win, Coach' Lagaly jug'gled and 50% from the foul line. The with the same number. Steve himself to a first place finish overtime game of the season. Shockers did surprisingly .better Wenderfer and Haucke provided around with the swimming which only' goes to show you that With f our seconds left in combinations and still came up connecting for 52% from the field the bench strength the Cats the products of a coach's regulation play, '. the Shocker's , and an amazing" 91%. from the needed to stage their valiant, but victorious in 'nine meets; many of imagination' can be most Dave Skinner easily out lumped them no-contests. charity stripe. " fruitless, comeback. rewarding. Gordie Smith, nine inches his The second half was a different Big m en for the winners Although not successful, in the In the 400 yard freestyle relay, ,junior. Picking, up the loose ball, matter as both teams hit for included super-guards Greg 400 yard medley relay" the, Cincinnati was' unsuccessful again Mendell raced down court as far accuracy, and tight zone and Carney .and Ron Mendell. Carney Bearcats managed to capture an and .Loyola gathered the, seven' , as' he, could without having the man-to-man defense caused many hit on 10 of 20 field goal attempts impressive' 1-2 finish in the, 100 points finishing the meet at 79-34. clock run out on, him, and arched turnovers that made the and two foul shots to toal 22 for yard swim. Denny Scheidt, Contributing to the UCromp his game winning, toss directly difference in Ciney,'s comeback. the night to lead all scorers. proving that first place would not also' was the diving team of Greg through the home team's hoop to , An attempted stall by the Mendall, besides his game winning ~ elude his grasp should he change Bravchand Vince Napoli who the gasping dismay of the Staters went awry as ~he Cats shot, hit on 'seven others in his specialty, swam to an easy first in managed a first and second place Bearcats'rooters. managed to steal the ball .and accumulation of 18 markers. the event and was 'followed by respectively. This victory completed the move within three points with five Cincinnati out rebounded the Martin Kute. Distance man Al Coach Lagaly found the -meet, Shocker's sweep of Tay Baker's minutes yet top lay . Shockers 62-36, but it proved McPhee also took a long-deserved " ... most rewarding" t and looks crew t~is season. They also beat With the score tied, the visitors secondary, as the final score rest and swam the 200 yard forward to next week when Notre the Bearcats 67-66 earlier this had the ball with 45 seconds left indicated. Jim Ard once again lead freestyle where he. sprinted for a Dame invades the Natatorium. year at home. \ to play, but a bad pass gave UC in this department, with 20 for his 1 :54 time; also finishing first. The team relaxed for the seven The win upped Gary the Sphere with 20 seconds left to evenings work. After dropping the--fjo yard free, and· one half hour trip home Thompson's Shockers' record to play, The game's officiating was individual medleyist Bryan James satisfied at having left Chicago in 9-12 overall, and to 6-7 in the questionable in .spots, and the finished .a domineering first and 'a worse state of affairs than the tough Missouri Valley Conference. Playing for one" shot senior partisan home fans let the referees was encored by Butch Brick who Democratic Party did a half year The loss dropped the pre-season guard Gordie Smith was forced to know their feelings throughout set a Loyola pool record in the earlier. favorites to a 14-6 record, and a take a bad corner shot with, 0:07 , the con test, . " . """ February 18, 1969 T'HEUNIVERSITY OF CIN~INNATI ~ Page Nine

Bakerl Dying Dozell- Dares 'Day'ort:"',I < " 1 Tay'sTroops I'angle Tommorrow T,oday All-American 'Don May, is 'OP,EN PANELDISC~SSIQN by Richie Katz year. '~. Sports Editor Dan Obravoc, the huge 6'10" averaging 10.4 a game. center is averaging 12.9 a game. May is a 6-5 forward, whose CAMPUS' POLITICS Tomorrow night the Bearcats However the big middle man has all-around playha~ .helped the take on the Dayton Flyers in not 'been rebounding with any Flyers to the successful ""-season. another one of those typical exceptional skills that usually are ,_~ey have had so far. rivalries that have characterized seen in centers his size. . George Janky, Dayton's back up earlier DC-XU, and -UC-Miami The other' Flyer in double center for' Obrovac has been 12:30. P.M. encounters. figures for the season is averaging over eight points per The Flyers will bring to town a sophomore Ken May. May, the contest. 17-4 record that includes wins younger brother of present New In addition to their victory over OLD tECH ROOM 6 over many top teams in the York Knick and former Dayton country. The Flyers have split two the Cardinals, Dayton shows that contests with the mighty it can beat other Mo. Val squads, Louisville Cardinals, winning at in their decisive victory over the SPONSORED BY UNIVERSITY home 69-67 after losing the initial Bilikens of St. Louis University by COLLEGE TRIBUNAL meeting in Louisville 84-69. , a 67-56 count. The Flyers came They also downed the "Miami elo se ,to downing nationally Redskins with ease) winning 83-55 ranked Davidson but wound up while the Cats had a difficult time on the losing end of a 64-6"3count winning at Oxford. when Davidson scored in the final The Flyers come to town led by seconds. 6-6 forward Dan Sadlier who has Last y~at the Bearcats had little Perfect symbol been scoring at an' 18.4 clip difficulty with the Flyers winning through his team's first twenty by a substantial 82-68 margin. of the_love you shar,e games. This year, however, is a different Sadlier also leads the Flyers in story, and Don Donoher's Dayton rebounding grabbing 9.8 a game, a Flyers will be out to gun down far cry from the leading Bearcat the apathetic Bearcats. rebounders. Other double figure scorers for the Dayton squad are Jim Gottschall who 'is scoring 11.6 Bearcats Beat Anderson; points per contest.' Gottschall. is one half of the Dayton brother act that includes his brother Jerry Grapplers Now'At 6-7-1 Gottschall. who is not starting this By Dave Rosner and Steve Fisher have 27, closely Executive Sports Editor followed by Tom Barrett with 25 -Kittens Split Two; and Jeff Berkoff with 24. Points On Saturday the Bearcat are recorded on the' basis of five grapplers traveled' to Anderson, points for' a pin, three points for a Meet Flyer Five Indiana where they faced a decision, two points for a draw b Mart' W If mediocre Anderson College squad. and no points for a loss. , y m 0 The Cats won by a 22 - 9 tally and This .weekend the Cats take to The UC Bearkittens's odyssey upped their dual meet record to 6 the, road as they face Case has become a quandary tro its wins, 7 losses and 1 tie. The six Institute on Friday and Dayton, followers. Their erratic behavior victories are the most byUC John Carrol and. Buffalo on was-perpetuated this past week as wrestlers since the 1962-63 Saturday in a quadragular dual the Bearkittens easily handled season. meet. Beauty and perfection in the diamond Xavier's freshman, but were, Gary Miller, a freshman from overwhelmed by Thomas More, Cincinnati Princeton, got the Cats you will cherish forever. Superbly whom' logically should not_hav.e rolling as he easily decisioned-his styledtfings 'of'Fine qu'ality and crafts- \ .beerr able to stay on the same Anderson foe. Gary had been out Study in , I manship ... court with DC. -, with injuries, but with his Against Xavier the Bearkittens convincing victory, seems well on .Guadalajara, Mexico- play was superb, as they the road to recovery. Student Charge Account. Invited ••• overwhelmed their opponents Mr. Reliable, Tom.Barrett had The Guadalajara' Summer 100-81 on Thursday night. Four very little trouble as he defeated School, a fuUy accredited players scored over 20 points, Frank Daniels, his opponent at Un i versity of Arizona made 6 or more rebounds and 130. The win at Anderson was program, conducted in were credited with 4 or more Tom's sixth in a row and raised cooperation with professors assists. his overall record to 11 victories from Stanford University, John Fraley led the teanf" with as against only 2 defeats. University of California and 29 points. He was, credited with Jeff Berkoff at 137 was upset Guadalajara, will offer June 12 rebounds and 8 assists. Rupert by. Kevin Thomas. It was only . 30 to August 9, art, folklore, WASSERMAN Breedlove, who led the team with Jeff's second loss in his last nine geography, history, language 13 rebounds, added 20 points to matches. At this point, the Cats and literature courses. JEWELERS the attack. commanded only a meager 6 - 3 Tuition, board and room is Rick Barrett added. 22 points lead. "").', $290. Write Prof. Juan B. and an equal amount of hustle to Kevin Keller, a n o.t h er Rael, P.O .. Box 72,27, the team effort. Charley Snow outstanding frosh' from Cincinnati (I Stanford, California, '94305. scored 21 points and grabbed 6 Mt. Healthy, easily bested Howard rebounds, unusual for. someone -Arnold, his, Anderson challanger. Street Cincinnati playing mostly -in,the back court. After a. roc"k;y,start, 'h Kevin lias. This team 'unity. and aggressive, posted 4 corisecutlvevwinsvand play was absent \ Saturday night, stands at 8 and 4 for the season. when ' they were mauled by Vince -.Rinaldi then lengthened unheralded Thomas More 84-67. the Cats lead, to 12 - 3 as he' The Bearkittens who trailed downed his 1521bs. opponent. NEWS RECORD throughout the game, sunk only DC then accepted 10, free points 36.5 percent of their shots from a sAn' d e r son had rr 0 the field. representatives at either the 160 CLASSIFIED' "ADVERTISING Terry Cadle was one of the few or 167 pound' classes. Fran Davis bright spots -in the game,' scoring got credit for the 160, pound Now you can use this handy form to place your classified ad'sin the News Record. Just 21 points and making 8 rebounds.. victory, while Captain Steve Following Cadle, was John Fraley Fisher recorded his easiest victory fill out the form below, following. these three simple steps. with 15 poin:ts"despite a poor to date at 167 .. . night from the field. The- biggest The Cats had won 6 of the first (1) , disappointment was Rupert seven matche~ and had taken an Lost & Found Check whetherad is for Lost & Found" Wanted, ForSale, or other. . . . Breedlove, who made only 5 insurmountable 22 -' 3 lead. Wanted , rebounds. ' . Anderson then won decisions at (2) Write messagein space below. / 'The .Bearkittens wer~ outshot 177 and heavyweight which raised and outrebounded.playing ope of their count to 9. . For Sale' (3) Fill in name & address, and return or' mail this their worst game~ of the season. At'season's end 'the" Cats will. ~he 5-7 Bearkl~tens' n~xt see award a trophy to the man who form to the News Record Office, Rm. 411, action tomorrow night .aga1.~stthe has been able to gain. the most -Tangeman Center. freshman' ,of t~e lJ.mver§lty of points for the grapplers. With six Dayton. Game time IS 6:15 p.m, matches remaining Kevin Keller

-.,.;.."' • £~ ~4-';":~, Message '~~----~~--~,....---- , COLONIAL L~UNDRY I ~- • NOW AT TWO LOCATIONS , , Name ~:~ ;;•... ;...... •...... •... :..' ,....•.. : .'., . . TO BETTER SERVE YOU

249 W. McMillan Address ~;...... •...... (Across "from Hughes High) and Phone...... •.... ' .--...... •...... - '...... •..:' ~~..•..'. 2917 Glendora Classified rates: IOc/word - ,SOc minimum (behind the high rise dorms) peadlines: for Tuesday - preceeding Friday, Friday - Preceeding Wed. ;•...-, Page Ten THE UNIVERSITY OF CINCINNATI February'/18, 1969 CCM Winner Drama- Ticks , SUMMER EMPLOYMENT OPPORTUNITY Robert G. Delcamp,'. senior student of Wayne Fisher and Robert Gray at the University of "My, Useless Attempt?, Day Camp counselors,(Male& Female) needed for children 5-10 Cincinnati-College Conservatory, years old. Camp operates in Cincinnati. won the Yecent Young Organist '" . B l·11 S ~ Contest sponsored by the pear _ ..J The first fact that might shock wanted his plays to act '~ls'-bullels For application, write or phone: Cincinnati Chapter. of the American Guild of Organists. He you is that there were nine against the society. Indeed, both John Spitzer, Director now qualifies for the regional mistakes in my last article. aesthetically and morally, drama competition to beheld in conclusion: proofreading pays off. can say so much making a lasting, Kamp Karefree (Sorry about that, chief.) effect on the theatergoer. But 2040 Snowhill Dr. No.3 Wheeling, West Virginia on June 8. Secondly, and I guess most here at UC, apparently because

\ will conduct the CCM Bras; Choir and divulge my misconceptions on money-making m e d io cr ities. in a special free concert. Works the subject! There has recently Meanwhile, in the craft oriented 'will come from the 17th and 20th been a musical theater major schools of New England, student '1118 centuries and will highlight the added as a CCM area which is audiences witness Broadway American premiere of Dr. Felix strictly professionally' minded. bound originals such as "Fire" Labumski's "Salut a Nadia," The area of drama is in the school and Joseph Heller's "We Bombed composed for the 80th' birthday of A&S and, therefore, as a in New Haven." S8pdio "subheading" under the Speech I must warn you of my unfair of Mne. Nadia Boulanger, celebrated teacher of composition and Theater Arts Department, is concern for DC's drama program. with whom he studied in Paris. an educationally minded program Firstly, I am not even a part of it. M8Rcl8S geared not to produce I simply wish that we could do a professional theater people but million more plays and effect a rather to instruct scientifically in million more people, 1expect it to the fields of theater. With this be more than it will ever be and .Sbow knowledge, though, I do feel that. hope for a quick and radical the "department" could improve; change. I realize, however, with hence, my article. much regret, that here a change is Leroi Jones once said that he not only unwanted but also uncalled for. What, then,' is the feeling of' the musical theater director? Does he feel that he is When love is. providing musical theater majors . with better-than-average training SerIOUS, for their field? Paul Rutledge has been at DC don't be,casual for over' eighteen years. He has produced and directed a score of about the ring. musicals, many of thern , truly successful for Cincinnati as well as ~ for U.C. Yet in the hush-hush estimation of the musical theater major, he has not presented adequate training in the field. I couldn't figure this out, really, N"""EVERTun LATe because my talk with Mr. OlEnDES BRASIL '88 -UNDERSTANDING COMES Rutledge led me to believe that liiulO 1a things were. going well. "In our FASTER WLTH CLIFF'S NOrES! musical theater workshop, for instance, we do what the students Tangeman U~iversity . want to do. We ask them what OVER 175 TITLES EACH $1 EVENTIDE, from $150. to $1400. they need - they say tap-dancing, Center Concert:Committ~ee AT YOUR BOOKSELLER ( so we add tap-dancing. Th~ they .A!!Carved say they want an improvisation Sa t .. ·'Feb. \~"2~2\; DIAMOND RI N G S class, so we give them thiltP'What then, kind professionally. minded Normally, you just don't run 8:30 p.m. UC Fieldhouse down to the corner to buy a students of CCM or A&S, is the diamond ring. But even.if you're problem? Is it that .here we' have All seats reserved. Tickets $4.50, $3.50, $2.50. Tickets on in that much of a hurry, it only three in faculty, while a sale at University 'Center Desk. would be a good idea to visit place like Yale (which has 2,000 our store. For as ArtCarved undergrads) has - 48; or that we jewelers; we.offer you complete do six or eight productions yearly assurance that your diamond while Yale. does 60 - 80?' Do you engagement ring selection will want a better curriculum or a be right in quality and value faculty change? Please, somebody, as well as styling .. answer me ll! CONVENIENT BUDGET TERMS Next week,. if you're intersted, I will react to your reactions 'and JE""ELERS present my final views on the CRACE NEAR FIFTH 721·5555 musical theatre and drama --TRI·COUNTY M~~L 0 COVINGTQ~ "areas." At that time, I will WESTERN WOODS MALL 0 NORWOOD attempt to outline a, number of WALNUT HILLS o KENWOOD MALL changes which I would like to see. MILFORD SHOPPING CENTER MT. WASHINGTON 0 MIDDLETOWN If you feel that. you have' changes of interest, .please let me know immediately. '

>'( INNER~· CIRC.LE February ~'5; 1969 2621 Vine St. Cincinnati 281-3956 Become a 'part of the better idea, company in the following fields: The largest & most beautiful nite Design Engineering Manufacturinq Engineering club in Cinbinnati is proud to present Design implernentatiorl-packaging-cost manu- Process engineering-plant layo'ut-tool design- TROY SEALS and his seven piece facturing feasibility-vendor consulting. material handling-industrial engineering. , '., band Wed. Thru Sat. Development Engineering Plant Engineering Vehicle systems and component development- Maintenance control and scheduling-equipment engineering evaluation. FREE ADMISSION installation-i-structura! changes-utility services. Test Engineering Program. facilities'. and methods development- Quality Control with student 1.0. cards Wed. vehicle systems and comp~nent testing. In-process inspection and material testing-sup- plier quality control-machine capability-product -~Thurs. and Sun. Technical Computer testing. ' fraternities and Systems Engineering ATTENTION ~ . Hardware/software development-systems appli- Production Control sororities - FREE private cations and programming-internal consulting. Production and procurement scheduling-parts and raw material procurement and control-operating party accommodations Wed., Thujs., Research Engineering supplies and production materials. and Sundays upto (250) persons Applied engineering-human factors-vehicle, sys- tems, and component concepts. Production Supervision

Positions fo~rthe following disciplines: MAKEI .THE I.NNER CIRCLE I M.E .. E.E.. I.E.. Ch.E .. Met.E, Cer.E., Camp. Sci .. M,ath, I.M. either B.S. or M.S. / Register with your placement office ford personal interview. . 'PLEASURE NITE STOP IN We are an equal opportunity employer. CINCINNATI February 1~, 1969 I THE UNIVERSITY OF CINCINNATI Page EI~ven Classi'c Guitar:ist ,At CCM CLIFTON TYPEWRITER SERVICE Konrad Ragossnig, one of the the Salzburg Festival, the in . world's foremost artists of the International Music Festival in \ Ragossnig has received many Rentals -:-Sales - Repairs classic guitar and the lute, will Zadar (Yugoslavia), and the distinguished honors, among them present a major performance at Strassbourg Festival in France. first prize at the Cheltham Music PORTABLES - STANDARDS - ELECTRICS UC College-Conservatory's He has performed as soloist with Festival (England) and the first Olympia • Smith Corona • Royal • Hermes • Underwood Cor bet tAu d ito r i u m 0 n leading European orchestras-s-in prize at the international Guitar Wednesday, Feb. 19, at 8:30 p.m. Paris, Laussanne, Salzburg, Competition held in Paris by the, I There is no admission charge. Prague. This visit marks his third French National Radio. XEROX COPYING SERVICE His program will feature lute return to the United States and A well-known recording artist Copies Made While You Wait 'music of the Renaissance; ,Bach:,s , following a highly and radio-TV performer, "Prelude and Fugue for Lute; successful concert tour last year. Ragossnig headed the Chamber plus Spanish guitar music of four Recently, he concertized in Japan. Music Department of the Austrian Low' Students Rates centuries (17th to the present). While, still in his twenties, National Radio in 1957. That ·216 W. McMillan St. The 34-year-old Austrian-born Ragossnig achieved the full same year, he received his diploma (At Hughes Comer) 381-4866 - virtuoso, a former student of professorship which he holds as State Concert Artist, Magna Near UC Campus Since 1950 r: FREE PARKING Segovia, has appeared extensively, today at the National State cum laude,' from the Vienna State in concerts throughout Europe A cad e m y for Music and Academy where' he had been a and 'at such internationally Performing Arts in Vienna. During /prize pupil of Karl Scheit, r - famous events as the' Semaines the summer, he is also professor at r~ Musicals Internationales of Paris, 'the State Music Academyof Basel, ,ARLO GUTHRIE, Concerned Theater Majors now have in 'Concert Sat. Eve., i" 'Music Echo \ a chance to t. ~. gripe. Will you? March 1 'Procol' at Black Dome MUS1C HALL at 8:30 .p.rn. Jeff Mitchel Blow. Yourself- Tickets $4.50, $3.50,' $2.50 available by mail from Community Ticket Office, 29 West Fifth Street The Black Dome will present England and has had two albums n TO POSTER SliCe 45202 (send self-addressed stamped envelope] , in concert on Feb. in the States, "Procol Harum" and 2 ft. x 3 ft..I U r A SQUACK PRODUCTION 20, at 8:00 and 11:00 p.m. There "." Their two Send any Blac'k and White ar Color will be only 50q tickets sold for most well known songs (in Pho fo, also anY,newspoper or maga· each.show, Cincinnati, at least) are" A Whiter zine photo. We will send you a 2 ft. x "The Dome'~ is. a completely Shade of Pale" and "Repent 3 ft. BLO-UP ... perfect P.?P ART poster. Walpurgis," which is the Jelly' A $25 "DAZZLING! Once you see it, you'll never again picture new m u si cal experience for $350 Cincinnati. It combines the Pudding theme song. More value fo'r 'Romeo & Juliet' quite the way you did before!'" - -LlFE drinking, dancing noise of the esoterically, Procol Harum is 3 ft. x 4 ft. Blo:Up ••.•••• $7.50 campus bars with the solemn famed for the musical interplay concert' atmosphere of Music Hall, between themselves and The Band Photo Iigsaw Puzzle $350 TECHNICOLOR " and presents a no-drinklng rbut (Big Pink.) 1 ft; x 1 V2 ft. Procol Harum is one of the Send any B & W or cal!" photo. Mailed ROMEO .':~'ft' informal .regular program of in 40 ea,y to a"emble piece,. serious music. Simply, one goes to Ieading British' bands - around <8"JUUET ..,ij~ji;i! the Black Dome to listen. today. Their music is varied but Your original photo returned undam- always clean, exciting, and aged. Add SOc postage and handling The atmosphere .at the Dome for EACH item ordered. Send check e x c e p t i 0 n-aIIyin t ell ig en t . or M.O. (No C.O.D.) to: will be an outstanding Cincinnati is very -lucky to be uBEAUT~;L~~~::n:~:f;l:v::::~:~71Ui~ embellishment to the performance getting them. 'It does seem as PHOTO POSTER,~INC Dept. C-100 youth, love and violence!" , -PLAYBOY "-,.T~~ of Procol Harum. There will be an though performers are -beginning- 210 E. 23rd si. New .York, N.Y. 10010 Downtown-621-0202 intimacy with the performers to think that our fair city" is on never before offered in Cincinnati. the map. Following Procol Imagine-if you were sitting in the Harum, the Black Dome will have t! second balcony and got turned on John Mayhall,' Rhinocerous, and by Janis Joplin, think what it Paul Butterfield. 'And Squack World Campus Afloat ~ would be like to have been close ~ Productions will be bringing Arlo 11 enough to her to get splashed by Guthrie "to Music Hall' on March .her sweat. " . ~ 1st. Judy Collins will be at Miami is a that does more r college ,~ With this club's' intimacy University on March 28. And, are providing a great backdrop, Pro col you ready? On March 30th, ~ Harum should provide a fine rock Squack will present,' for two than broaden horizons, , show. The group hails from concerts in Music Hall, the Doors. , Itsailsto them and beyond. l

GALA OPENING WEDNESDAY Once again, beginning in October of 1969, the II;' I=ebruary 19th. at 8:30 pMI World Campus Afloat program of Chapman J College and Associated Colleges and Universities will take qualified students, faculty and staff into the world laboratory. (WINNER)"Best Picture of the Year -NftD Yort ,.. Critict ~ _ In-port programs relevant tofully-accreditad. coursework taught aboard ship add thedlmenslon I ''''The, Lion in,Winter' triumphs ... of personal experience to formal learning. brilliant! •••• you owe itto yourself -Classes are. held six days a week at sea aboard the S.S. Ryndam which has been equipped . to see it!" -Judith Cr~t with classrooms, laboratories, tlorary.stuoent union, dining room and dormitories. Chapman Oolleqe now isacceptinqapplica-, tions for the Fall and Spring semesters of the 1969-70 academic year. Fall semesters depart New York for ports in Western Europe and the Mediterr~nean,.Africa and SouthAmerica,ending iniLos Angeles. Spring semesters circle the Art student Leana Leach of LQng'Beach world from Los Ange·les through the Orient, India sketches ruins of once-b1!rled city during JOSEPH €. L€VlN€ p'••• n" World Campus Afloat visit to Pompeii. and South.Africa to New York. AN AVeO EMBASSY FILM ,I ll!~~[a For acataloq and other information, complete and PETER .~KATHARINE mail the couponbetow, O'TOOLE II H,nry II, KIng 01England ~ tl§!.@,gR~ SAFETY INFORMATION: The s.s. Ryndam,

~~ A MARTIN POLL egistered in The Netherlands, meets International 1HE LION IN WINTER \~_1~ , Safety Standardsfornewshipsgeveloped in 1948 and meets 1966 fi re safety req uirernerits. jAN~ MERROW1:"~inn. thru Sat. at 8~30 PM / • Pl.... s.nd lilt, tlcklts for I · Pleasesend your catalog and any other facts I need to know. SUlloNlte. at 7:~ / Matinee. at 2 PM ' .• ; ,. .t s lIell •• ·. <. Matinee.: Wed. & Sa~. :::------__$2.00 • Mltln•• n EVlflln. n 1st AltoDell • Sun. & Holidays ------__$2.50 •...... ••. 2nd Alt. Date ••••••••• · SCHOOL INFORMATIO_N HOME INFORMATION Evenings: Sun. thru Thurs. ------$2.50 • IAIIIQ • Mr. Fri." Sat., Holidays" • Miss Holiday Eve. ------$3.00 : ADDIESI, ,.: Mrs. LasCName First Initial For TheatreParly I SpeCial. Group Rate • Pleas.CITY----11II11 stamp.d ••ITA1I-.It-addrtSlld • Home Address Street Information Phone: LaVonne Bon,d Breyer: • enveloPe .ItII JOUr cII.ck 01 mon., •. at 231·5519 or Valley Theatre 761·1222 • ord.r mad., PQU'. to the rlleatr ••• Name of School ~ ~~ ~ City . State Zip ·" Cat1tp'l!sAddress Street Home Phone ( ) · Area Code · City State Zip · Until info should besent to campus 0 home 0 Campus Phone ( ) approx. date '- · Area Code I am interested in 0 Fall SpringO 19 _ · Year in School Approx. GPA on 4.0 Scale o I would like to talk to a representative of WORLD • _. .. C~MPUS AFLOAT ' : · . •·• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • 1 • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • '.' ,_ •.•••••••• Page Twelve THE UNIVERSITY OF CINCINNATI ,February 18, 1969

REG. REG._, ~ _ , '. • ••... $1 09 ~ --;z:::s --{,,~ t_ ... ,- $1.89. sf. . - 7? ", ' "llU SlI.PoJIC~ STallS .~,,,.,,,,,,~ 8u~:'4U9( 27~:'R::;:~:E ------'GJJat~ates " '-, R 1'(i'HT" ,!!!fl COSMET~CSALE (iUARD ~ 'select any

4 01, • Fresh Slarl'

Famous VICI'S Formula 44 by (i IllETTE I~\Vi~~ REG. $1.29 VALUE RMU «' 'I~,",f044: ® COUGH, MIXTURE- - IIIII~1IIIIIlI'II',I .

. . "" REG $1 19 VALUE \1 /',1111,,1, ! jllllll~- 111 • 1 1 • c~GU'.~~U~E .59t , '1 ,11 1 -~:6--'9'· (~tCR~M7J- . - 1,(,,, MENIIoW . ~'.:'

I Techmatic Razor Childrens' ASPIRIN i by' (ill~ETTE . REGULAR

NAIL POLISH $1.29 VALUE ~

"""". .' 88 ~ -. f!t4~*I~;: 1·9( BRUSH-ON MASCARA 1

-~."':'":.~:~'.::