THE NORTHERNER Vol. 16, No. 29 ·Northern Univeraitr, Wednesday, May 4, 1968 ( could lose Wynn Battalion, colonel seat on Board to he honored ~ of Regents over at commissioning felony conviction ceremony for cadets

NORTHERNER STAFF REPORT OnApril9, 1942, /JauwnfelL ~,..,... B vivon, including tM brave mt'n we honor Student Government's president-elect wniglu, ,..,.. beginniTIIf a tluu and a half may be denied a seat on the Board of year journey at tM portal. of MIL Regents because he was once convicted of a felony. Excerpt from ceremony program Brian V. Wynn described his convic­ tion for stealing equipment from an BY KRJS KINKADE automobile in Dayton as a mistake he THE NORTHERNER made when ~~e was 18. Friday's (May 6) commissioning Wynn told a Kentucky Prut reporter ceremony for ROTC cadets will be a little that he and his family made full restitu­ different from past ceremonies. When the tion to the victim of the theft and added cadets go up to be sworn in this year, it that he served two years of probation. will be administered by a man described - Wynn, junior political science major, as one of the greatest marine heroes of this was elected to office after a controversial century. election campaign that involved last Colonel William minute write-in candidate Rich Nielson. E. Barber, a medal THE GOOD, THE BAD AND THE BEAUTIFUL: Debbie Schwierjohann, Jim of honor recipient Simon and Nick Cres8le from The Northe rner are ready to bust out of here. Wynn and Vice President-elect Scott for his actions in Kappas, were criticized for successfully Korea, will bestow drafting a resolution of endorsement for officer s tatus on A. B. " Happy" Chandler after the fonner NKU cadets at a go"ernor had made racial remarks. • cere mon y that Northern administrators are reviewing • 1 IJ ...... serves a dual pur· Dukakis: Now you see him, now you don't 1 state law to determine whether Wynn can 1 poee in honoring the legally be seated as a regent. I men of the 192nd sot to Findley Market too late. \J. [ BY HANNAH SIMON tank battalion for Dukakia bad been sone a half hour when "No official action has been taken as '-M ~ GUEST CONTRIBUTOR Col. Barber the ir actions in we arrived and waa then on his way to of yet," Elizabeth Blincoe, assistant legal World War II . Cleveland, Oloo, said an unidentified televi· counsel for NKU said Monday ...1 know Besides Barber and some members of Michael Dukakia waa at Findley Market sian cameraman. there will be, but I don't know when." the battalion, various upper echelon of­ April 30 to pve a friendly " heUo." He wao lrv Katzman, a weekly shopper at F"mdley Under normal conditions the SG ficers in the army, induding ge nerab, will on a campaign tour. Market, commented that he was so close to president is given a voting seat on the be in attendance and media coverage will We would have taken a picture of him, Dukakia he could see the lillings in hio teeth. Board of Regents. include a special on KET public television, but my dad, Jim (the editor), Nick (the art lrv had brought hio camera alao, but it waa various magazines articles and local news director) and Debbie (the editor), jammed. ""'"""inB coverage, according to NKU professor Jim Claypool, one of the organizer> of the ceremony. Within the ceremony a special plaque Howe donates $100,000 to NKU will be dedicated in the name of the I 92nd tank battalion, whose heroic efforts in NORTHERNER STAFF REPORT Howe, who died in October at age 90, students in the nursing and medical World War II contributed to slowing down practiced medicine in Alexandria for over technology fields. It will help train students the Japanese onslaught in the early days orthern Kentucky University recently 50 years and is reported to have de~vued in proCeedures such as cell-culturing and of the war. received a S I 00,000 donation to set up a nearly 5,000 babies. He also provided toxicology analysis, according to university To better understand the significance clinical sciences laboratory from the widow medical services to numerous members of officials. of these men's actions and why they war­ of a local physician. Northern's faculty and staff according to Boothe regarded the donation as an .. ex­ rant such high regard, it's helpful to ex­ Orpha Howe, the widow of Dr. A. E. N KU President Leon Boothe. ceptionally generous gift" and said that it amine their actions during the months that Howe of Alexandria, presented the money Mrs. Howe donated the money to help would go far in helping pick up the slack that foUowed the bombing of Pearl Harbor. to NKU offi cials Friday, April 28, at a lun· medical professionals. The money will go to a lack of state funds has created. While on manuevers in the Philippines, chcon ceremony in her honor. equip a clinical sciences laboratory for the 192nd tank division of the national guard inadvertantly got caught up in the whirlwind of IVW II when the Japanese at· HISTORY: This tacked the iolands on Dec. 8, 1941. Viewpoint...... p. 4 week we wrap up When the U.S .• Filipino troops were Featu res ...... p. 6 NKU'a history with fo~rd to withdraw their forces in Bataan, Sports ...... p. 12 Boothe'• administra­ it wal; the 192nd and !94th that covered Bloom County ...... p. 14 tion and the school'• their retreat and, when captured after a Classified a ...... •••.... p. I 5 futuR. See page 2. three month standoff against m08t of the aee HERO, 1"'8e 16

0438.tif 2 News, The Northerner, May 4, 1988

Trivia Q. What t·olor was ud

0439.tif May 4, 1988, The Northerner, Newa S

in March, atudent Becky Lockwood otarted choir until the summer of J 982. Ever si nce a petition condemning the contest as then he's had to call new male students to "dehumanizing" and ..sexis t." ask if they'd like an audition with the choir. Lockwood had gathered only 34 " lt's like having a top-grade basketbaU team signatures when a story about he r anger in and hanging around the halls asking tall guyo the local newspape r prompted poUce Chief if they want to play basketball." Donald Maio to withdraw as a judge of the event. Michael llaffcny of the Jimmy Fund Profanity halts play Wire denied the fund was associated with it and Campus censorship problems continued uskcd Delta Upsilon not to use the fund 's to escalate last week. Bikinis dropped namt'. At San Jacinto CoUcgc in houslon, Texas, FinaUy. on 'April 1 the local Miller Lite Chancellor Tom Sewell stopped the campus distributor issued a statement that the com­ literary magazine from publishing an award­ for cancer research pany would not COSJ}O nsor the contest. winning play about a student's suicide, citing COLLEGE PRESS SERVICE Consequently, " the re arc no prizes and th e characters' use of profanity. the event is canccUcd," added Joe Giarusso .. It 's an excelle nt play," St-wf'll conced­ Protests forced Miller Lite beer to drop of the Pink CadiJJac Bar, where the co ntest ed to local reporters. " but I had a real pro­ its sponsorship of a "bikini contest" at the was to have been held . blem with the harsh language." University of Massachusetts April 1. and The play. calle(l " Just A Phose." was then co nvinced the bar at which the co ntest Singers needed performed on campus in 1987, won good was to take place to c ancel the event. reviews and. in December, an Excellence in The nation faces a serious s hortage of "It's ridiculous." replied Delta Upsilon Play Writing Award for author Robert Earl tenors and basses, claims Leonard Van President Paul Kearney about the canccUa­ Milstid, 24. from the Ame rican College Camp, a music professor at Southern Illinois tion of the contest, which ultimately was to Theater Festival. University at Carbondale. raise money for a cancer research fund. Sewell added he would have barred the ..It is a problem nationally," said Van The house had planned to usc the pro­ play from being produced had he known of Camp. who, puzzled by a shortage of mule ceeds from the contest to pay for its annual its profanity in advance. si ngers in his choir, took a sabbatical from beer keg rolling contest, which. in turn, pro­ In late March, administrators at Chap­ the university to tour the country to find out duced S3.000 for The Jimmy Fund, the man College in Orange, Cal., did stop a per­ why young men won't sing. cancer group. last spring. formance of "The Coloring Box," a student­ Van Camp says fewer young men are ''If (women in bik.inis) go to the beach, authored play that included frontal nudity participating in choral groups from the are they goi ng to call that sexist too?'' in its climactic scene. seventh grade through coUcge. and his na­ Kearney asked. In a written statement, Chapman officials tional study was piqued by his own When ads for the contest - in which said the nude scene - which author Joel experience. women were to d ress in bikjnis and be judg­ Moffett said was necessary to demonstrate Van Camp. who has taught music at SIU ed on how good they looked in them - ap­ the characters' growth into strong people­ for more than 20 years, says he had no shor­ peared on the Amherst camJ>US the last week confficted with the teachings of the Christian tage of males auditioning for the college's Church which run the college. Stripper sparks debate over gree Gettysburg College, citing racism, sexism, may abolish greek system

COLLEGE PRESS SERVICE freeshmen in the veterinary medicine school by helping - at the woman's invitation - hired a woman to take off her clothes in the the performer undress, but Baker vehement­ 'f i 'fAh! Gettsyburg College in Pennsylvania may March 1 1 class of retiring Prof. Norman ly denied Fingerette's version .of the incident. kick its fraternities and sororities off campus Baker. "There was no physical contact between ]~HIJ. c • ~ in May. In the aftermath, Elaine Fingerette, a stu­ that woman and me at all," Baker told the NORTHERNER ·~ Gettysburg's Faculty Senate approved a dent in the ~ and coordinator of the cam­ Aggie. ~:{ motion in mid-April to ask the Board of pus's Rape Prevention and Education Pro­ ..Those of us who were involved thought Trustees to abolish greek houses, saying they gram, released a statement calling the it was a .simple, fun thing to do." said stu- encouraged sexism, elitism and .. demean­ ed intellectual pursuits." striptease a form of sexual harassment that dent Nancy Martin, who arranged the per­ formance, adding Fingerette ''appears in­ The trustees, college President Charles violated university policies. capable of understanding the laughter and COLLEGE STUDENTS Glassick said, will consider the motion at Baker, Fingerette told the Aggie, the frivolous nature of the whole thing." $5 · 7/HR. their May meeting, and will give campus campus paper, participated in the striptease greeks - who make up 63 t>ercent of the student body- a chance to plead their case. Enhance your RESUME In March, Stanford University officials GREAT JOBS AVAILABLE and build valuable skllls gave greek organizations warnings they Word Processors Secretaries/Typists by working for Fortune would have to come up with " non­ 500 Companies. We discriminatory'' ways of choosing members by 1989, or face being banned. PC Operators CRT/Data Entry have positions available Meanwhile, members of Yale Universi­ for accounting clerks, ty's chapter of the Zeta Beta Tau fraternity Receptionists Light Industrial data entry/work pro­ say no one came to its April 3 .. general in­ Outstanding opportunities for students looking for part time cessing, receptionists terest meeting" in New Haven. or full time work, Summer or thru the school year. and custormer service, An unnamed ZBT member blamed the Various shift schedules, weekdays/weekends, days/evenings, throughout the Clncln· meeting's failure on publicity about ZBT's shon and long term temporary positions. March 3 suspension at the University of nati area. Pennsylvania, the Yale Daily News reported. EARN GREAT PAY, BONUSES & MORE!!! Penn banned its ABT chapter for violating campus rules by hiring two strip­ Calltoday.'.AOIA pers to perform at a rush function in Oc­ Florence 283-0098 fJ V•4i{ftlra~~ tober, 1987. Downtown 241-2342 Strippers also have sparked debate at the Tri County 771·3006 The Employment People 772·0555 University of California at Davis, where

0440.tif May 4, 1988

Vol. 16, No. 29

orthern Kentucky University

James wrilten byU.. Edilor, Man

Presidential candidates could create some interesting times at Northern

·Looking back on Northern's history, it has been noted NKU might be about as exciting as watching a PBS show by some that the school often reflected the times. Various on the mating habits of the deep-sea sponge. But really, people have brought up parallels between the administra­ with a Dukakis-type in the White House, NKU is likely tion of the school and the national administration, the to see some times similar to the Albright administration amount of growth between the school and the nation-at· (namely boring and average). large in the early years and the recent conservatism that has spread over both. If George Bush were elected, expect Boothe to hold office at least four more years and a lot of what we have Kris Kinkade now - messed-up budgets, a conservative attitude and a legislature that can't accept what the president says Note the parallels in administration. Frank Steely and without changing it somehow. Richard Nixon - both elected to two terms but forced If Jesse Jackson makes it to the White House - to resign in the second amid controversy, Ralph well, let's just say The Northemerwill have plenty to write Tesseneer and Gerald Ford- both in office only a short about. time but stil1 accomplishing much before losing out to A.D. Albright and Jimmy Carter- who have been call­ Then, of course, there are the longshot candidates ed mediocre presidents by some. Then there's Leon Like Albert Gore, Mario Cuomo and Pat Robertson. Boothe and - both plagued by tighten· Gore's counterpart at NKU would have a wife that would ing budgets and legislatures that give the two a hard time, try to get aU the textbooks in the bookstore labeled for so to speak. offensive material and rated for content while he personal­ ly would attempt some recruiting of the middle-of-the­ Now , this is not to say that the parallels are so close road, blue collar Democrats he appeals to in the area as to suspect N KU presidents of doing some of the more -resulting in a 50 percent drop in enrollment. Cuomo's questionable things U.S. presidents have been known to counterpart would be indecisive and wait until the last do, but you've got to admit their are some similarities. minute to do anything, causing confusion among those around him and - in a roundabout way- get more done This led me to think (boy, I hate when that happens!) than any other president who ever held the office. Oh, about what the next president of the United States might and the tablecloth dry cleaning bill at the school would mean for NKU. If precedents mean anything, Reagan's go up noticably. Robertson's counterpart would .. . let's successor could present some interesting predicaments not even think about it! for the school (as well as the nation). Let's (as if you really a choice) look at some of the candidates and see what Kri.J Ki11kade is a jUIIWr journalism major with a minor happen to NKU if they were elected. in political science and hopeJ nobody will take hiJ col­ If Michael Dukakia were elected, the president of umn seriowly enough to wamznt a lawsuit.

0441.tif May 4, 1988, The Northerner, Opinion Cl Readers' views What was Kent State about?

More views on Chandler issue WASHINGTON - Periodit·all y. I am askt·d to letiUre to high school students who travf'l here under the ausp1ce8 of the Clo8t" l p Foundation, a non-profit or~ani7.allon that offers studentA a first· Student denounces SG for representing NKU in this manner hand look at how government operates. While the visiting students arc generally oltentive. their background in public affain and To the Editor: the tuition of a Kentucky resident. I om not complaining history is fnghtful. -I chose NKU above any other university because I am ashamed of the decision NKU's Student Govern­ I love Kentucky. llookt·d forward to an atmosphcr<' con­ Cody Shearer ment n·cently made to send a letter to the governor t'll· ducive to learning- ont· of intellectual freedom. growth. dorsing and thereby his recent racist and tolerance. Student Government. however, has caus­ Last week, for instance. I asked an a.ssembly of 800 junior remark. Evidently the former governor had a good civil ed me to question the existence of that environment. and senior high school students if they knew what had happened rights record previous to this; nonetheless, I have a dif­ I do understand Student Government's reasoning in at Kent State Univenity in 1970 and why the incident was impor­ ficult time believing someone who keeps racist ter­ making their decision. If the letter endorsing Chandler's tant. Only a handful in the group had a clu . minology in his head docs not also keep racist philosophy racism docs go to the governor, however, I will be forc­ I know I shouldn't be surprised by this non-plus response. Alter in his mind. ed to send my ow n letter in opposition to Student Govern· all, this generation is the one in which two-thlrds of all high school What Student Government is doing. in effect, is not ment's stance . I urge other students to do th e same. We seniors didn't know when the civil war took place. supporting racism via Chandler but also saying that. cannot permit the governor or anyone else to think we Alas, there must be some reason why these seemingly weD· us an NKU student, I am a racist. I vehemently denounce support Student Government's decision. intentioned students know so little. Beyond the inherent duUneS8 Student Government for representi ng me and Northern that accompanies today's school bureaucracy, students must deal as a who le in this manner. Sincerely. with boring and frequently incomplete textbooks. I am an Ohio resident, which means I pay three times Debbie Ma•chal Too often the problem with our schools is that they have a tendency to present our country as an ideal construct. Ours is of­ fered as a nation without serious conflicts, without ill-will or stupidi­ SG accused of alienating minorities ty. In short, all is weD . The husband comes home to the adoring wife in the suburbs and the children are weU·behaved. The extent to which students swallow such bland fiction. they're Dear Editor: Furthermore. why should the Student Government of bound to suffer. Of course. many high school teachers and ad­ NKU get involved with an issue so far removed from our ministrators believe that propagating innocent fasehoods creates As a concerned minority student whose interest campus? The letter formulated by the newly elected S.C. good citizens. In reallity, the opposity may occur. throughout my college career has been to uplift current president Bryan Wynn will undoubtedly be interpreted Clearly. any misrepresentation of history, gives young people conditions here at NKU. I am deeply hurt at the current by minority students as racist. I asked myself, does the little familiarity with the dangers that lie before them. At some debate over the remarks of former Gov. " Happy" 8. Student Government have minority student interests in later date, they may feel that their own encounters with conflict Chandle•. mind? Well, that question should seriously and tension are unique and thereby downright unAmerican. Let me make it clear that 1 along with others fully investigated. Naturally. any student worth his or her weight should have lit­ understand that a Lifetime of seemingly sincere public Bryan Wynn and Scott Kappas have set us (the tle trouble contrasting the fiction that is offered at school with the service cannot be frowned upon by a mere state­ tire student body) back by alienating minorities on reality of the world around them. ment. What I cannot understand is why should a man with pus with the fonnulation of thls letter. How many minority What happened at Kent State University on May 4, 1970. is such statements be allowed to remain on the Board of students were polled? None. Oh well! Here we go again. still critical for every student in America to know. When Presi­ Trustees at the largest institution of higher education in dent Richard Nixon announced the American " incursion" into the state of Kentucky. Stepphone E. Cambodia on April30, 1970, America's students went into ac­ tion. By May 4, hundreds of student strikes were in progress in every section of the country. At Kent State University in Ohio, record is not excuse for actions students had already burned down the ROTC building. To The Editor, the state "So what!'' to the public. President Nixon wasted no time in denouncing all campuus Admittedly, " Happy" Chandler has done quite a bit protestors as "bums." When the National Guard responded to I was dismayed after finding out Student Govern­ to benefit civil rights in the state of Kentucky (along with taunts on the Kent State University campus on May 4, four students ment's endorsement of a letter in support of " Happy" admitting Jackie Robinson into major league baseball). lay dead and nine others were wounded. Chandler. I couldn't believe that out student government S till By evening on that day. 30 percent of all campuses in the coun­ would show support for anyone who made the most in­ this does not excuse his statement. We can't live off what try were on strike. The dam had broken. The largest number of sulting. derogatory. and dehumanizing statement one can we did 30 years ago. students to ever demonstrate against any single act had been make against a race of people. Surely, the letter would The actions of our student government perpetuate the unleashed. Hundreds of colleges never reopened for the rest of have never even been considered understanding the same attitudes of UK. Unfortunately. SG's view will be the term. Thousands of students returned home to their com­ severity of his statement. seen by the public as indicative of the NKU student body. munities to get involved in politics. Henry Kissinger described Mr. Chandler's remarks are reprehensible and offen­ As I'm sure that the majority of our students are con­ witnessing these events in his memoirs as the beginning in which sive to all races. Unfortunately, his remarks are also in­ siderably more enlightened than our student government, the "very fabric of our government feU apart ... After all. thelr dicative of race relations in our country today. We've I would encourage those of us who oppose the endorse­ children (administration officials) and their friends' children took become apathetic towards racism and believe that if we ment to make their opinions known. Let the public know part in the demonstrations." just ignore it. it will go away. The best way to solve racism that we as a student body disagree with the endorsement In the ensuing days of the crisis, President Nixon felt pressured is to acknowledge that it does exist. and refuse to be apathetic or seen as co-existent with to announce that American troops would leave Cambodia by mid­ The term " nigger" is more that a racist epitath; it's racism in any form! The only way to guard against the June. But students everywhere had gotten a different message. the indictment of an entire race of people. Chandler may spread of racism is to take action against it. While many demonstrators were accustomed to police and FBI not have said what he wanted to say. but he certainly surveillance. nothing intimidated more like official violence. said what he felt! The following actions of Chandler and David E. Coleman Students had learned that demonstrations could create the pretext for shootings and that stopped many of them in thelr tracks. One the one hand, students did not want to resort to violence because that would have been self-defeating and tactically stupid. Accordingly, helpless fury turned into withdrawal. Modern historians say the deaths at Kent State University was I a turning point in the student movement. But is it fair to say the f-- student movement for social change died or was it 888888inated? In retrospect students today can learn much from this period if they realize that imperial states rarely lie down and let popular movements dislodge their foreign policy. Three years ago Kent State Univenity agreed to erect a memorial to the victims and raise the $500,000 nece8&8.1')' for ita construction. So far, a slim $32,000 has come ln. Individuals like

oee STUDENTS, -· 16

0442.tif May 4,1988

Graduation munchies for the big party Campus Cook graduates to creamy desserts

BY SUE WRIGHT The Taft Museum, 316 Pike THE NO RTfiEilNEil t., downtown Cincinnati, is featuring .. Framework of the This week's Campw Cook is dedicated Heat oven to 350°F. Grease the bottom, Frontier: Early Cincinnati Ar­ to aU the graduates who have worked so hlU'd sides and rim of two 9 inch pie pans or round Chitecture8nd the Baum Taft House,'' con­ to make it through their years at Northern. cake pans. In a large bowl blend all shell tinuing through July 31. Hours are I 0 a. m. No one knows what is in s tore for th e m next, ingredients at a low speed until we ll mixed - 5 p. m., Monday through Saturday and 2 but U they have tried their luck at cooking (About 2 minutes on high speed). Spread - 5 p.m. Sundays. Call 241-0343 for more this year, they are probably planning that big half of batter in bottom of each pan. Bake information about the exhibit. cele bration dinner for their friends and at 3500 for 25-30 minutes. Do not overbake. Beat remaining cream untillhick enough Theater family . Cool for 2-3 hours. to spread across the top of the pie. Who knows. one of our graduates is pro­ Refrigerate until ready to serve. Wild Women Don 't Get bably at home entertaining right now, cook­ For filling: In a large bowl blend ice the Blues, an official bicenten­ ing up the latest recipes they have saved cream until smooth . Spread evenly in the Hot Chocolate Pudding Cake nial play presented by the from this semester. ct•ntcrofthe shells leaving lh inch rim. Drop I 1A cups sugar divided Womcns Theatre of Cincinnati, Evcryonr realizes how hard you have spoonfuls of icing on top of the ice cream I cup all-purpose flour. has show times scheduled for this weekend, worketl to r('ccivt• your degree. So here arc and with knife. swirl. Freeze at least 2 hours. 7 tablespoons cocoa mix, divided. at Gabriel's Corner, Liberty and Sycamore some words of advice: live it up. One day 2 lcaspoons baking powder Streets, downtown Cincinnati. Call of t·uting rich. swl'Ct dt•serts will not hurt you! 1.4 teuspoon salt 961-4431 for times, ticket prices and more Th(• finul CCJmpf.l.\ Cook has some tempting Chocolate Peanut Hutter Pie 1h cup miJk information. rt•cipt•s that you just cannot pass up. 4 eggs 113 cup butter or margarine, melted Music Frosty Mint Ice Cream Pies. Chocolate I cup (2 stidOOn chocolate mixture into pie shell. Spooning sauce from bottom over the top. Sundays. Call 621-3889 for more cn.·am (other flav ors may be substituted.) Swi rl peanut butter into chocolate mixture. Garnish with whipped cream. information. A tribute to the outstanding professor of the year to pursue the dards and won honorable mentions fro m the the whole concept of afftrmative action was national as an outstanding chapter in 1986 BY ~!lCHAEL ADAMS loves of coming under fire, heading the Budget Com­ and 1987. James' scholarship has reached NORT HER ER CO~TiliBUTOR teaching and mittee of the Faculty Senate. and serving on scholarship. His fruition with the recent publication of his se­ the institutional steering committee for the Jamt•s A. Ramage has made creative performance in cond book, a study of the contributions made 1988 visitation by the Southern Association <'ontributions to every area of orthern 's life both area has to modem warfare by the Confederate raider of Colleges and Schools. since lw came to the institution at its incep­ been ex­ John Hunt Morgan. James has been my colleague and friend tion as a four-year undergraduate institution emplary. He is This volume won both the Governor's for a good many years. In that time I have in 1972. a very popular Award for the Best Book in Kentucky History found him to be a thoughtful, civil and His first position was as executive assis­ teache r, even from 1982-1986 and the Douglas Southall modest human being. Perhaps that is why tant to the founding president of the univer­ though he of­ Freeman Award for the outstanding work in I find the choice to give Jim the Outstanding sity, Frank Steely. In that period, Jim ably fers some of the Southern History in 1986. The book's Professor award for this year a particularly ht'lped to deal with a mass of complexities less glamorous popularity has brought many invitations to felicitous one. For he typifies the large speak to professional and community groups. spawnf'd by Northern's amazing growth in subjects such as economic history. He has number of faculty members who quietly Jim has been highly active in the com­ its fonnativr years. And he did something been tht' lirst and only faCulty advisor to our build a distinquished record without ever ex­ munity, rounding out his professional com· that i~ difficult for any admimstrator to chaptrr of thr Phi Alpha Theta, the interna­ pecting to receive much recognition for the mitment this way. Also. he has remained in· achif'H': hf' carrit"d out an institutional policy tional student honorary society. work done. In this sense, Jim aptly valved institutionally. repreSf'nts all of us. without alienating himst>lf from tht> faculty It is a tributt' to the students and to Jim lwart of th.- uni\r"§ity . that within onr yt'ar of inception the society Among his important senices are chair· Micluul Adanu iJ a Professor at NortMm in th~ hiJtory and geography d~partm~nt. In 1976 Jamt'S rf.'\t>rted to faculty status, was publishing a journal to professional stan· ing the Affirmative Action Committee when

0443.tif May 4, 1988, The Northerner Featuree 7 The AIDS test: some questions may be better left unanswered

BY PENEWPE WHITNEY multiple sexual partners of their sex. And the real heart­ screeching halt, focus. A 6·foot·5 skinhead from Paris, teU COLLEGE PRESS SERV ICE stopper for me: sexual partners of any of the above ing me afterwards " I never get tired of sex. There are A< individuals. many things you can do with 2 bodies .... " Other blur·stop­ When J 0 people live in a house they talk about lot of It goes on to explain whottest results mean ... Positive" click memori

0444.tif 8 National News, The Northerner, May 4, 1988 National News Newsweek on Campus to shut down after fall issue BY J .M. RUBIN troduccd there were five pubUcutions," Pear­ The company also will continue produc· and also publishes Plw Magazine, another CO LLEGE PRESS SEIIVI CE son explained. " Now there arc more than ing "Good Stuff," boxes of product samples of the inserts. 14. fl 's a very crowded market." - paid for by the firms whose products arc But Rose i!. optimistic. Newsweek on Campus. one of the biggest Newsweek on CamfJlL! never broke even included in the boxes - distributed to .. If you deliver a product of interest to college nt'WS)Japcr " inserts'' in the country. in the six years on its existence. snid Pear­ students in their dorms. students at a cost that allows you to make last week announced that it would soon stop son, and the hi gher costs didn't bod e well It was an advertising world Newsweek saw a profit, th e free enterprise system will take publishing while Canipi.Lt Voice. probably the for J)ushing it over the top in the near future. as the coming thing, but one the company care of you. We're very bullish on the cam­ sJjckt·st magazine aimed at coiJcge students. So, in order " to protect the quality of didn't want to ent er. pus market with reference to media and said April I 3 it will transform itst·lf into u New!nveek itself. the company's directors Newsweek " recognized that many other advertising." wall poster. voted April II to close Newsweek on Cam­ pu bJjcations offer concert sponsorship and For CASS. this has been the best year Tht'se changt's, sonll' observers said , pu..s and a spccializenpcrs, Adams cautioned, callccutors She cited increased postal and paper 1988-89 academic year. Committee, were angered that the policy had told him there were no laws with which to costs as well as increased competition as the The poster, inserted into plexiglass been drawn up wit hout student input, and prosecute the person - whose identity still reasons. frames in campus buildings. will carry news that students were being shut out of the is now known - who sent "hate mail" to '"When Newsweek on Campu.s was in- items and national ads. discussions about whether to adopt it. see TROUBLE, page 16

PRIORITY EARLY REGISTRATION March 21 · April 8 EXTENDED EARLY REGISTRATION (in person only) INTERSESSION - April 20 · May 13 SUMMER - April 20 · May 20 FALL - April 18 · July 22

Visit the Registration Center, AC 301 , or phone 572·5556 for details.

0445.tif May 4, 1988, The Northerner, National New• 9 Students lose less than they gain from new minimum wage

MIKE O' KEEFFE debaling rai11ing the federal minimum wage 1-l urvey, will"put cash in the pocket.A of peo­ fewer workers because of demop-aphic COLLt:GE PR t:SS St:RVICE above the current 13.35-an-hour noor. The ple who will spend it, ,. .A tirnulating economic trend . The pool of IB·to-24-year-oldo io legislation, cosponsored by Kennedy and growth. shrinking, he said. and busineues will have A bill now in congress thai would raise Rep. Augustu! Hawkins (0-Cal.) would. if But critics of the plan - including the U. . to pay higher wages anyway if they are to the minimum wage from 13.35 an hour to Rl>proved, increue the minimum wage dur­ Dcplll1ment of Labor and the U.S. Chamber recruit and retain employees. 14.65 in the next few years might make it ing a thret•-year period to 14.65. of Commerce. WJ weU aa many busine ses harder for students to find summer and part­ - say increased labor costs will force ''This labor shortage." said Pratt. "will Kennedy's version of the bliJ also would time jobs. campu placement officers say, employers to reduce the number of job.A and go weU into the next decade." but probably would help them more than it revise the minimum wage in the 4th year to hours they can offer workers. Harvey agreed. pointing out that in many would hurt them. a rat{' one· half of the "average private, non­ states with low unemployment rate.!! - he A Senate subcommittee approved its ver­ supervisory. non-agricultura1 hourly wag{' as " Whenever there's an increase in the cited Massachusetts as one- even fast -food determined by the Bureau of Labor sion of the bill two weeks ago, setting tlw minimum wage. there's an incrrn.sc in rrstaurant.s which normaUy pay minimum Statistics." Harvey reported. stage for a final congressional vote before tlw <'osts," said Junius Kaufman of the Tulane wage have had to increase their hourly end of 1988. University student employment office. salaries to IS or S6 an hour to keep workers. Studt•nts, the bill's advocates say, need Harvey argued that raising the minimum But Christopher Prall, tlu.• director of wag<• wou ld motivate people on welfare to th<· <·xtru money a higher minimum wage career services at Seton Hall University. said That labor shortage. said Marylin De cntt• r the job market. wou ld case the finan­ would bring. the minimum wage debate may be a moot Tomasi of the Southern Illinois University at "The minimum wage has stayed tiU' cial burden of the working poor nne thing." to pay them more. students who in past years " inee it hasn't been raised in seven years. thing'' that required a lot of cnginCf'ring skill. niversity police said they have a suspect would have been hired for me nia1 jobs are the cost of liv ing has outpaced earnings. Rice Uni versity students managed to turn a in the case, which involved disconnecting now finding themselves in managerial posts. Shavers also agreed that businesses, fore- one-ton bronze statue of school founder spotlights normally trained on the statue and " If an employer found a student worth their ed to pay more, may not be able to afford William Marsh Rice around in the middle usi ng a blackened A-frame lever built wi th while, they may not mind paying ex tra." to have as many jobs to offer students. of the night. 4'x'6' beams to lift and turn the structure. "But," Shavers maintained, "students On the morning of April 14, the statue Professional movers used a crane and .. Is have a tudent working for me who will always be able to find part-time jobs. The was di.s<.:overed facing south instead of north, took 3 and a half hours to retu rn the statue I pay more than minimum wage," said Stan jobs will still be there. They may just have as it has for the last 58 years. to its original position April 14. Noblitt Nicolazes, the owner ofNic's Grotto Cafe in to look harder for them.'' " It was a student prank." said Rice added. ant a Barbara, Cal. " It's pretty hard to live for more than a year, Congress has been s lokesman Bill Noblitt. " It was a rite-of- on S3.35 an hour."

Student Government, (SG) is the elected representative · body responsible for presenting the collective viewpoint NORTHERN KENTUCKY of the students on University policy. We represent you, UNIVERSITY STUDENT the students, on various University Committees that include Parking Appeals, Grade Appeals, Financial Aid SUGGESTIONS/GRIEVANCES Appeals as well as a host of others. SG also helps students cope with college life by providing services such as the Student Book Exchange (SBX), Handicapped and Alcohol Drop in Suggestion Boxes Awareness weeks, Musicfest and Book Grants, just located on the main floor of to name a few. all Campus Buildings. The Grievances and Affirmative Action Committee is a part of SG. Whether you have a problem, a comment to make, or just want to get involved, we're here to listen. But, we cannot do our job without your participation. So, were asking you to take a moment to reflect on your time spent here at Northern and jot down a few suggestions or comments you feel would better our school.

Sincerely, '

Brian Wynn Chairman, Grievances and Affirmative Name & Phone optional Action Committee

0446.tif 10 History, The Northerner, May 4, 1988 cent for 87). But on the other side, the rrom page 2 lcgislaturt' munagf'd to miS<'alculute revenue HISTORY intake and a lnrge shortfaU the foUowing year forced tht' school to cut some of the raises. began to que lion what was Kentucky 's com· mitmcnt to trying to maintain a quaHty stan· dar Kt" ntucky Advocates for Bighcr limite

,..-- We need business students, graphic design students and any other students interested in becoming part of THE NORTHERNER staff. Interested? Apply in Dean of Students Office, UC 346 by May 10.

0447.tif May 4, 1988, The Northerner, National Newa 11 Penn State, Berkeley get tough as students protest racism

COLLEGE PRESS SERVICE ryl King, a student protest leader. "ThiA is confrontation. 8tuden,.' request, met with them and quickly symbolic of the way they treat us here at On A1)ril 5. notes from a campus in· 8f!reed to demand Chandler apologize. In a switch in tactics. administrators at Penn State." vestments meeting revea1ed the UK Trust ~ Chandler, heeding the advice ofRooeUe Penn tate and the University of California­ A.B. " Happy" Chandler, former commiA­ and current Gov . Wallace Wilkinson. djd Berkeley sent in police to break up bla k stu­ Brad Hemstreet. a Penn State sioncr of major league baseball and a 2-time apologi1e. though he added he was doing oo dent protests of escalating racial confronta­ spokesman, said officials tried to negoliatc governor of the tote. had argued against under preasurc. tions on their campuses. a settlement and have someone besides Jor· divestment in part by noting that "Zim­ Racia1 tensions aurfaced at other cam­ RaciaJ tensions also erupted, though less dan speak to the proteste~ before police babwe's aU-nigger now. There aren't any puses last week. too, most notably at Georgia violently, at the University of Kentucky and were caiJcd in, but the students refused. whites.'' Southwestern College, where a black &tudent Georgia Southwestern CoUcge. But at the University of Kentucky, of­ When the notes became public, about 40 hu charged a white profe880r with making On April 9, police broke up a IS-hour­ ficials managed to defuse building campus UK students marched to the offire of Presi· a racist remark when she tried to drop hit long sit-in at Pennsylvania tate University's anger about a racia1 slight without arrests or dent David RoseUe, who, responding to the class. Telecommunications Building by about 150 blnck students hoping to dramatize, among other things, their request for more attention to their needs by administrators. Ninety-one students were arrested, and ''Dad was right. charged wit h trespassing. On the other side of the country, police on April 7 arrested 18 of the black students You get wliat who had occupied the Berkeley's housing of· fice to demand that three white students who you pay for.~~ had been harassing a black freshman woman be expeUed . Students who complained of inauenlion and racism at ot her campuses got gentler treatment.

In February and early March, for exam· pie, administrators and protesting black students entered week·long, peaceful negotiations to end sit-ins and treat racial complaints at Hampshire College and the Universit y of Massachusetts at Amherst. Minority students at Tompkins-Cortland Community College in New York. the univer· sities of New York at Buffalo, Michigan, Pennsylvania, Iowa, California-Santa Bar­ More people choose bara, and Illinois, as well as Dartmouth Col­ AT&Toveranyother long lege and Fairleigh Dickinson University, distance service. Because, among others, also have protested alleged with AT&T, it costs less campus racism this school year, but the pro­ than you think to get the testers themselves were not arrested. service you expect,like Administrators at Berkeley and Penn clearer connections, State, however, seemed to run out of pa­ tience with their protesters. 24 -hour AT&T operator After quickly arranging to discipline and' assistance, instant credit move three white students who verbally on wrong numbers. And harassed and wrecked the bicycle of the assurance that we can freshman Traci Morris, Berkeley ad­ put virtually every one ministrators sent police to break up the sit-in. of your calls through the first time. That's the genius ''This protest is the culmination of a lot of the AT&T Worldwide of different things that have gone unresolv­ Intelligent Network. ed at the university,'' African Students So when it's time to Association President Michael StoU said in make a choice, remember, explaining why the protesters wouldn't move it pays to choose AT&T. even after hearing that Morris's tormentors had been punished. If you'd like to know Berkeley spokesman Ray Colvig said the more about our produru 18 students were not detained, but issued or services, like the summonses for trespassing and released. He AT&T Card, call us at characterized the protest - and the police 1800 222-0300. response - as .. well-organized and non· violent."

''There was no resistance," Colvig said. At Penn State, the 150 student& who oc­ cupied a building for 15 hours saw Presi­ dent Bryce Jordan's "quick" use afforce as proof Penn State didn't care about them. " I think it's a terrible message to send Al'laT to student.s when the president of the univer· The right choice. sity would rather send state troopers to meet • with them than come himself," said student government President Seth Williams, one of those arrested. "People were manhandled," said Dar-

0448.tif May 4, 1988

• Lady Norse lose In finals of GLVC UK denies Lewis pitching holds sending box of team in check, l-0, 6-l cash to prep

BY JAMES J , LIDINGTON hoops star THE NOHTHERNER COLLEGE PRESS S ERVICE

The Lady Norse were defeated in their bid to dethrone University of Kentucky President David ddcnding Great Lakes VaUcy Co nference champ Lewis Rose lle professed April 14 to know nothing Uni ve rsit y at last weekend's GLVC tourname nt he re at about an anonymous $1 ,000 cash gift to a Northern. star high school basketball playe r who will NK U was turned back by the Lady Flyers twice in the enroll at UK next fall. championship round of the two-and-out tourney, 1-0, 6- I. A " mistake" in an athlete recruiting in their fi rst two home losses of the year. brochure, moreove r, led a University of The two win s over No rthern gave Lewis their thi rd Southern California faculty member to ac­ GLVC title in four years and a possible at -large bid to cuse campus recruiters of be ing sexist last the NCAA tourna ment. week. In the fi rst game of the championship round, NK U and The problems at Kentucky began Murch Lewis were scoreless until the bottom of the seventh in ­ 3 1. when Eme ry Worldwide Air Freight ning when a Rosie Grimm single scored Sally Vierk . employees in Los Angeles noticed a package NK U pitc he r Amy Brown a iJ owed only four hits but they were processing had broke n open. was still give n the loss as she got no offense from her On further inspection, th ey found the teammates. The Lady Norse managed six hits on Lewis's package contained Sl,OOO in cash. The Diane McDowell. package was addressed to Claud Mills, father The loss to Lewis forced a seventh and deciding tour­ of mu ch-recruited Chris Mills, California's nament game between the two teams. Northern knotted high school playe r of the year for the the score at 1- 1 in the third inning when Lisa Brewer 1987 ·88 basketball season. scored on a throwing error aft er Katrek.ia Puckett's bunt single . The package was sent by Dwane Casey, That would turn out to be Northern's only run of the Jay Udington/The Northerner a UK assistant basketball coach. game, as Lewis's pitching held NKU in check through HIGH FIVE: NKU's Lyn Gamble runs in to congratulate teammates "We don't recruit that way." Casey said the final four innings. Amy Brown (no. 1 7) and Beth Nealeigh af'ter Northern's 6-2 win in when asked about the package. ••J have After Lewis picked up another run in the fourth inn­ the r1rst round of the GL.VC tournament. never, ever put any money in a package." ing , the flood gates opened and the Lady Norse were NKU finished the season with a 6-2 win . Claud Mills, wh ose son signed an agree­ was hed away by a four-run Lewis seventh. NK U could 26-15 record on the year and ] l -5 in Second baseman Beth Nealeigh led ment to go to Kentucky last Nove mber, said not respond in the bott om of the inning and were the GLVC. the NKU attack with a single, a triple, he knew nothing of the package, either. eliminated from the tournament. The Lady Norse had loo ked like and three RBI. Nea1eigh picked up one Northern pitcher Amy Scrraino took the loss in an world beaters in their ftrst game against of those in big NKU fUth inning, driv· Roselle, meanwh ile. himself called the error-plagued game. The Norscwomen committ ed six Lewis, roughing up LU pitcher Anna ing home Lisa Brewer who had reach- National Collegiate Athletic Association bloopers which, in effect. sealed the victory for Le wis. Speck for seven hits and six runs in a see SOFTBALL, page 16 (N CAA} to investigate the matter. The NCAA , which sets recruiting mles for member schools. had reprimanded UK in February for " minor" violations of the mles.

Nebraska governor vetoes bill that would pay student athletes At USC. Prof. Hele n Horowitz offi cially complained last week a bout athletic depart ­ COLLEGE PRESS SERVICE good point , and urged campus regents in the never sign that bill," asserted James Frey. ment broc hures advertising for women state " to address th is issue to" the National a sports sociologist at th e University of students to become a " USC recruiting LI NCO LN. NE B.- NclmiSka Gov. Kay Orr Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA). Nevada-Las Vegas. hostess' to show prospective USC athletes vetoed what would have been a landmark In vetoing the bill, she said she thought Two days before Orr's veto, Frey noted around the Los Angeles campus. coUege sports reform bill April 13, but then the legislature was usurping the power to run that paying the football team members would urged that campus offi cials in the state press campuses from regents. be an admission that the team is Such hostess programs were criticized as the issue on a national level. ..S he's trying to placate me by referring professior1al . little more than dating services for high The bill aimed to pay college athletes in this to the regents," Chambers said ...Th e school recn1its at the University of Georgia Payment would violate "a romantic the state, hoping to e nd wh at bill sponso r regents haven't done anything in all these and Southern Methodist University in 1985 culture about colleges and college athletes," Sen. Ernie Chambers called d iscrim ination years. They won't do anything now." and 1987, respectively, but the charges were robbing the game of its " nostalgic appeal as against the athletes. Chambers has proposed the bill every never proven. " The universtiy (of Ne braska) spends year for the past 8 years. This is the first time a ·saturday celebration,' " Frey said. about $1 50.000 a year on scholarships for the bill has go ne as far as the governor's Still, Frey saw the bill as telling colleges " !think (the brochu re's) a mistake," said the players, but it took in S I 1 milHon," desk. to ''quit being hypocritical. The employee's the USC Executive Vice Provost Robert Chambers explained. " It 's historical," crowed an undaunted job is to raise money and bring attention to Biller. "I thought we agreed last year that At the same time, other rules prevent Chambers of the bill's progress. the school. To adopt (the bill) admits that the program would be billed as a host and players from holding jobs, leaving school to He thought the bill got farther this time colleges are corporate entities more in­ hostess program." take a higher-payi ng job with professional because it now excused Nebraska schools terested in display and entertainment than Nevertheless, " the ve ry best interpreta­ teams or even transferring to d ifferent cam­ from paying players until at least four other in preparing students interested in ideas." tion one could put o n it is that it involves the puses as readily us othe r students can. states in which Big Eight colleges compete objectification of women,•• Horowitz replied. "' If the players are generating th is passed similar laws, and because it exemp­ Chambers hoped his efforts eventually <~ Th is ia n ' t a dating service," insisted amount and fac ing injury, they should be ted paid players from eventually getting pen­ will pressure the NCAA to reconsider the recruiting director Jack Himebauch. " It's able to share what they raise," Chambers sion payments reserved for faculty and rules for all college athletes. strictly a group of girls who are interested maintained. administrators. " They'll see this again and again, .. tong and can lend a different touch to the depart­ Orr, in fact, thou ht Chambers had a Nevertheless, " the overnor (would) as I'm he re •• Chambers vowe d . ment ...

0449.tif May 4, 1988, The Northerner, porte 13 Norse end season on winning note

BY ANDY NEMANN Fl'it·wht>l'(' on tht• Kl. Sf)()l1..~ M't'llt', C'Olll'h and JUlES J . LIDINGTON Dw1ght Levi's mens tt•nrus l<'am <"nded thr1r THE NO RTHERNER 1988 srason by posting a third place finish in the Great Lakc8 VaUcy Co nfere nce tour­ The NKU men's baseball team closed out nament at India napolis on April 2 1-23. th e 1988 season by sweeping archriva] The Norse had won three individua1 cham­ Thomas More College in a doubleheader pionships in the conference. Je rry Beerman Wednesday (Apr. 27) . and Je ff Euwema won the number one a nd Came one saw the Norseme n come back nu mber two singles champio nshif)S while from a 3-l deficit after three innib ngs to low both of them captured the numbe r one out the Rebels I 1·3. doubles championship. Sophomore pitcher Paul De Moss e ntered The Norse's fi nish ended their two-year SNAPPY PIZZA ~ the game in the third in ning to no-hit the streak as GLVC champions. The Norse will Rebels over the last four innings. return a num ber of players next season. Plain M:.'~:m ~~-: ~~J Northern exploded fo r four runs in the fifth Men's basketball coach Mike Beitzel litem 7.%0 9.75 ~ and fi ve runs in the sixth to KO Thomas recently announced the signing of Ft. Z Items 8.%0 11.00 More. Senior Craig Hines had three RBI and Thomas Highland's star Deron Blasingame 3 Items 9.%0 1%.%5 teammate Ken Johnson had two to lead the to play at NKU. 4 Items 10.%0 13.50 ~ ':;/ Norsemen. Blasingame , a 6-foot-2 guard, averaged &Items 11.%0 14.75 ,. Northern and TMC were tied 1-1 after 20.9 points and 4.3 assists during his senior We abo have •andwiclae•, · J"' three innings in game two until junior fi rst­ year at Highlands. He chose Northern over •aladl and a ..orted beve"'Be.I · baseman Todd Streite nberg hit a two-run GLVC foe Indianapolis and Winthrop (N.C.). Phone 781-8833. homer in the fourth inning to move NKU out a Division I school. to a 3·1 lead. Blasingame said,"Ilike (Northern's) style --FREEPIZzA ___ l 4144 u.s. 27 Cold r---FREE-Pizz:.--- Senior second baseman Gary F1owerdew of play, the up-tempo pace. I also wanted Buy any &i:e I Spring, 781•6633 I Buy any 1i:e added another homer in the fifth inning for to stay fairly close to home so my family and . • 1 Sunday Noon·llpm 1 • Mon-Thur llam·llpm his last time at bat and Northe rn added friends could could see me play." p&zsa, get second 1 1 pnsa, get 1econe another run in the sixth inning to take a 5-2 Brian Shea of Erlanger has also indicated one of equal value I Fri & Sat llam·lam 1 one ofequal value win at TM C. that he will play for NKU next fall . Shea , a FREE! I FREE DEUVERY I FREE! F1owerdew went 3-4 on the day giving him 6-5 forward from St. Henry High School, Free Delivery to : Coupon• not vaUd with : Free Delivery to I a .401 batting average for the '88 season. averaged 18 points and 15 rebounds a game NKU Campru or I other offers. I NKU C mpw or 1 Flowerdew upped his four-year batting for the Crusaders. He led his team to a 28-5 I 781-6633 I a I I I ___ average to .405 while striking out only 23 record in his senior season, winning the 33rd ___ !!~r:!!!!_l!!'~Y..!. P!!.T!!_~ffL_J times in 193 games. He started every one District championship and fin ishing as of theg I 9 3 ames he played for NKU . runners-up in the Ninth Region. F1owerdew hopes to win a try-out with the ' Shea was a three-year starter for St. Cincinnati Reds and will be missed by head Henry, wi~ning AU-Region honors his last coach Bill Aker and the Norsemen next year. two ye81'5 and honorable mention statewide Northern finished the season with a 23-21 dring his senior year. record. SUMMER JOSS, ENVIRONMENTAL ISSUES

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0450.tif 14 Entertainment, The Northerner, May 4, 1988

Stretching the limits of reality to bring you what you want to read. Northern Kentucky University Congratulates James A. Ramage 1988 Outstanding Professor of the Year

Previous Outstanding Professors Include:

1986 Jeffrey C. Williams History & Geography 1985 Compton Allyn Management & Marketing 1984 Stephen D. Boyd Communications 1983 Larry A. Giesman Biological Sciences 1982 Janet M. Johnson Education 1981 Robert Wallace Literature and Language 1973 George E. Manning Psychology 1972 Terrence Robbins Literature and Language

0451.tif N ORf1fllb}l}lNER May 4, 1988

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0452.tif 16 The Northerner, May 4, 1988 Dcllocco ultimately complied, giving the Racial turmoil appeared on yet another HER 0 from page l TR 0 UBLE from pages stude nts 24 hours to get off campu.!l and campus April 15, when about 300 Duke suspending them for the faU, 1988 term. Univel'l!ity students demonstrated in favor of DeRocco, subsequently ohnounced Japanese army, were forced to participate two Macalester students. 58, hiring more minorily faculty members, an on April 16 that he W8.!1 resigning from his in the .. Bataan death march(s)." It WM " It may not be illegal," Gavin added, aim the school's Faculty Council had endons· position, but that the boycott didn't have during this time (they spent about three .. but the pen~o n has violated our rc· ed March 17 without selling a timetable for anything to do with his (lcci.sion. years in capth•ity) that much of the group quirements . ., doing so lost their lives, with just over 100 of the In Ohio, Denison University students 325 that left for the philippines returned. halted a twt>-day ci.,. boycott April 13 when Such advice may seem naively simple. from pages One of those who survived, Dr. Alvin President Andrew DeRocco said he would STUDENTS But it begs the importance of reasoning and Poweleit, returned to Kentucky and set up lengthen the suspension of two white nnalyticaJ judgment on the part of students, Martin Scheuer, the father of Sandra Lee, a practice in the Covington area, treating students accused of harassing Aaron lf they don't have a baseline of factual who was killed in the May demonstration, anyone and everyone in the area (some of Laramore, a black senior dorm resident. 4 knowledge. As the Carnegie Foundation for whom couldn't pay for their treatment), in­ Members of Denison's Black student thinks the current administration at Kent the Advancement of Teaching acknowledg­ State wants to bury the past. He told the cluding other survivors who returned to the Union had argued the school's initial punish­ ed last week; our schools are becoming "lit· last week that area. Powcleit will also be in attendance ment - placing the two students on proba­ Chronicle of Higlu!r Education tie more than human storehouses to keep at the ceremony. tion - was too tight, and called for a boycott "people should know what happened so it young people off the streets.'' until it was stiffened. won't hap1)en again." Col. Barber. who earned the Medal of when Ju)je Joseforsky drove in Rathjen and Melissa Slone, who scored on an Agric.ola Honor during th e bitter Chosin Reservoir SOFTBALL from page 12 Linda Ku nkler. Joseforsky also scored later single. campaign in Korea in November and in the inning. After Terri Bennett got on board, Gam- December, J 950, retired from active du­ ------ed on a walk previously. Teammate Katrelcia For Bellarmine, Senior infielder Laura ble singled and reached second on an error ty April 30, 1970. A captain at the time Allgeier picked up a triple and a single in by Indy's center-fielder that nJiowed Agricola he won the medal, he led his company in Puckett also drove in a run, .. scoring Lyn four trips to the plate. and Bennett to score. Gamble scored later a desperate five-day defense of a frozen Gamble with a single. Puckett was lt~ t er delivered by Wendi Lukes, who also singled. The win moved Indianapolis into a meeting on a Lisa Brewer single. mountain pass vital to the 1st Marine Divi­ with the Lady Norse in the second game of NKU's Serraino picked up the win and In- sion's breakout to the sea. Pitcher Amy Brown allowed Lewis only four hits over seven innings. The Lady Flyers the winner's bracket. It was one Indy would dy's Cherie Bernnrth shouldered the loss. probably like to forget as they were mugged Serraino gave up five hits to Bernarth's 10. Fighting in sub-zero temperatures picked up their two runs in the bottom of by Northern 10-1. Both teams committed an error. against overwhelming odds, he was wound­ the fifth when Carrie Murrow singled to right After U of I came up with a run in their Indianapolis moved on to face Lewis in the ed on the first night of the action, but refus­ field. first time at bat, NKU responded by scoring second game of the loser's portion of the ed evacuation and remained in action in Northern's opponent in their second game. four in the bottom of lhe inning. Nealeigh draw, losing a tight 2-1 game to the Lady command of his company. Indianapolis. walloped Bellarmine 7-3 in the had an RBI single and Lakes drove in two Flyers in J 0 innings. Barber also fought at lwo Jima during tournament's opening game. Indy got its of­ with a double. Mary Agricola sacrificed The game was scoreless until the top of WWII, where he earned his first purple fense going early, scoring three runs in the Lakes home with one out. the tenth inning when Lewis moved into the heart, and served for a time in Vietnam. third inning. After notching two more runs in the fourth , championship round, benefitting from an His medals number close to twenty , in· Candy Rathjen had a triple and teammate Northern bruised Indy for four runs in the extra-inning, tiebreaking rule that places an eluding two purple hearts, and is current­ Heidi Lawre nce doubled as The Lady fifth. Lakes began the inning with a triple automatic runner at second base, starting ly living in California. Greyhounds rambled out to a 3-0 lead. U of I picked up three more in the fifth andr------was lifted in favor of pinch-nmner at the top of the tenth. , (CURRENT CIRCU,ITS J i GRADUATES . . 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