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Draft Controversy those who disagreed with national policy ingly, students will receive a longer break would be punished by being put into uni- between semesters, thanks to the new plan, An OU student was a central figure in the form and sent to join them . and enrollment will be as leisurely and re- recent controversy over a directive from The presidents of Cornell, Brown, Yale, laxed as, say, shopping in a department Selective Service headquarters in Washing- and any other school you can think of crit- store two davs after Christmas . ton, recommending that young men with icized Gen . Hershey. Senators deplored student deferments who attempted to im- the action, and a group of Representa- pede the draft system through anti-war ac- tives called for Hershey's resignation . About Protecting Our Children reclassified I-A. John Ratliff, a tivities be the on:y p-ace that was silent was the White Under the visiting speaker limitations en- sophomore from Tulsa, was reclassified by House, and Hershey also kept his sup- board of regents, Thomas board in November, soon after a cted by the OSU his draft port with his draft board people . The Jefferson would be prohibited from speak- it received the directive from Gen . Lewis B . chairman of the Tulsa board said he would Stillwater campus . Adolph Hit- 74-year-old head of the Selec- ing on the Hershey, the use his influence to remove student defer- ler, on the other hand, would be allowed to tive Service who has become a svmbol of ments for anyone "who has a poor attitude speak under the regents' guidelines. military conscription in this country . Gen . toward the war ." Said a student who dis- Hershey told the nation's draft boards to agreed with the draft board chairman, "He strip students who militantly opposed the wants everyone to be a `good German' and Police Brutality war of their II-S deferments, and in doing go along quietly . Well, we still believe that so, drew a barrage of criticism from almost speak without being "Lick" Wilkerson, the Norman policeman we have the right to Corner, retired every corner of political thought, from Gov . taken away ." whose beat was Campus Ronald Reagan to members of the New last spring after many years of patrolling On Dec. 21, Ralliff checked his dossier Boyd, Asp, Bu- Left . at the draft board and discovered that his the parking meters along Ralliff apparently was reclassified be- chanan, White, and University Blvd. Lick, student deferment had been reinstated. At received from cause he had taken part in demonstrations first the chairman of the board denied this. who walked with a limp he against the national policy in the Vietnam a motorcycle accident injury, may not Another spokesman for the board said it many col- War and because of his affiliation with the had met that day and voted to drop the have been known by name to Students for a Democratic Society . He had lege students through the years, but it's a I-A Cassification . He said the board was was not burned nor turned in his draft card, given "new information ." Ratliff said the cinch a large number knew who he and his grades were satisfactory . and many of them ended up with his only new information he knew of was a park- Among those who disagreed with Her- legal brief from the Civil Liberties Union. autograph-on tickets for overtime shey's policy were Dr. George Cross and ing which they found under their cars' the dean of University College, Dr. J . R. windshield wipers . Lick became an institu- tion of sorts ; by the time he retired he was Morris . Dr. Cros s was quoted as saying Zap! You're Enrolled that the action by the Tulsa draft board ticketing the sons and daughters of his was futile and probably not constitutional . Enrollment, which has often resembled the first- generation of offenders . He was al- Dr. Morris also questioned the legality of day after Christmas in a department store, ways sporting about it, however-the tic such a move . The chairman of the legal hopefully is to be speeded up and simplified went to the driver-and it was not unusual advisory committee of the Civil under a new system which uses a "zap num- for him to show leniency, and sometimes Liberties Union, J . D. Dalton of Tulsa, in- ber." "The zap number," says Dr. William mercy. Probably some even thought fond- terceded on Ratliff's behalf . The Tulsa Price, dean of admissions and records, "is a ly of him, which is something when you newspapers supported Ratliff's right to unique number identifying a specific course think of what an unendearing job he had. dissent, as did the SDS and the OU Com- section. It's used to ensure that the student His successor is Patrolman Joe Dover, mittee to End the War in Vietnam, and gets the class section he enrolls in, and it a nice man and a competent policeman even it's been a while since all these groups serves as guide in pulling class cards as each if he is reported to be a zealot in the ad- agreed . enrollment is processed ." The zap numbers ministration of his duties . Says one veter- Supreme Court justice Abe Fortas range from 1 to 7,089, which is the number an Campus Corner observer : "Lick gave called Hershey "a law unto himself" and a of class sections at OU in the spring semes- enough tickets during his career to stretch man who "responds only to his own con- ter. The zap number for a course might be from here to Los Angeles . Well, it looks as versation." Time Magazine, not exactly a listed, "Zap No . 419, The History of Con- though Joe is out to make Santa Fe in his leftist publication, described Hershey as a crete, Sec . 1, MWF 8 Rm 333 BH Mr. first year ." "19th century man" and admitted that he Portland ." The new system eliminates the was "unread in Constitutional law." Col- orange permit-to-enroll cards also. Ad- Wrestling Report umnist Carl Rowan wrote that he won- vanced registration, which is what pre- dered how the troops in Vietnam would enrollment is now called, was completed As Granville Liggins lay injured on the respond to the apparent Hershey concept for the spring semester before school was turf of the Orange Bowl playing field in that they were a penal colony and that dismissed for Christmas . If all goes accord- the fourth quarter on New Year's Day night, Chuck Fairbanks wasn't the only injury . It was easy to concede the match side of a controversy . The speaker must coach who was upset. Coach Tommy Fvans and begin talking about revenge in Febru- be subject to questions . There must be no of the wrestling team must have been close ary, when the Cowboys would come to Nor- violation of the law ." Will there be a move to tears, for Liggins was to play a key man . Evans wanted this one though, and he to deemphasize sports and emphasize aca- role in his plans for 1968 . It is now unlikely decided to manipulate the line-up . demics? "You don't necessarily have to that the marvelous athlete will wrestle at Rice was moved up a weight to 130 and limit one to advance the other, Hollomon heavyweight this year . The knee he sprained McGuire moved to Povalac's division at feels. He thinks there should be a greater against Tennessee probably will prevent his 137 . Stan Keely, a soph, started at 123 and re'-ationship between the academic program competing. wrestled a good match before losing, 6-2 . and the athletic program, though, with ad- Liggins' injury is not a lethal blow to Rice beat his man, McGuire stormed from ditional emphasis on intramural sports ." OU hopes, but it complicates matters great- behind him and with near-fall points won ly . The Sooners are solid in the lower handily . Bud Grant at 145 remained un- Basketball Report through the middle weights ; it's in the defeated, also winning points for a near divisions from 167 on that OU is weaker. fall . Wells was as good as gold used to be The basketball team, at the semester break, I.iggins was a most important asset. in decisioning his man, and McGlory fought stood 6-7 for the season and 2-0 in the As the season got underway, things were to a 1-1 draw with Stone of OSU, a not conference for undisputed first place. What going pretty much as expected . Going into unexpected development . The score was is perhaps most significant has been the the opening dual against OSU in Stillwater now 14-5 for OU and, if OSU took the re- notable improvement the squad has made on Jan. 6, the Sooners were undefeated aft- maining bouts, as it was favored to do, and the development of a guard combi- er making their annual trip East, defeating the dual would end in a tie . A pin among nation which may prove to be good enough Penn State (20-9), Lehigh (23-6), and Rut- the wins would give the Cowboys a victory, to make the Sooners, if not contenders for gers (33-0) . The season opened with a and OSU has a man who knows how to the championship, at least a team which tournament at OSU in which the Cowboys get the fall in 177-pounder Fozzard . Thus will have something to say about who edged OU 66-64. if OU was to win, it needed an upset at eventually wins the league title. Not surprisingly, the Sooners were being 167 . With great presence and superb pre- As the season began, Coach John Mac- paced by senior Wayne Wells (152 lbs.), science, Evans called upon John Eagleston, Leod pointed to defense, rebounding, and 24-2 last year with a conference title and a junior, to make his first start of the sea- outside shooting as the three areas which a national runner-up trophy ; NCAA 130- son and replace the injured McDaniel . called for most improvement if his team 16. champ David McGuire, a junior, and Eagleston normally wrestles al 152 . On was to be a winner (Magazine, Nov . 1967) . NCAA runner-up Cleo McGlorv (160 lbs.), the night of Jan. 6 he wrestled al 167, com- In addition, the Sooners were called upon also a junior . All were undefeated in six ing from behind to defeat Robinson of to adjust to a radically different offen- matches, and Wells had three pins . Also un- OSU in the key bout of the dual to as- sive system . defeated in his half-dozen starts was sopho- sure the win for OU. Eagleston wore his MacLeod demonstrated astute scheduling more Mike Grant at 145 pounds. Steve man down with aggressiveness and con- in his first three games. The Sooners won Povalac, a senior who has wrestled behind ditioning and picked up enough points to all three, two of them easily . The Cen- AI-Karaghouli and Dick Haxel for two win in the last minute with a reverse and tenary Gentleman, and they were polite to years, was 5-1 at 137 . Senior Bryan Rice, predicament points . OU led, 17-5 . Anticli- a fault, fell in the opener at Norman, 91- the superb 123-pound two-year Big Eight mactically, Fozzard pinned Landrey at 177, 73 . TCU of that lousy basketball confer- champ, is beginning slowly with a 4-2 OU forfeited the heavyweight contest, and ence, the Southwest Loop, fell to OU at mark, and he was soundly beaten bv OSU's the Sooners drove home with another vic- Ft. Worth, 66-57. What was encouraging soph, which isn't too lilting a note . Bruce tory-. Liggins will be sorely missed, but about the win, other than the fact it came Landrey, who must now carry the heavy- the 1968 team is a good one, and a gutty on the road, was that OU had rallied for weight burden, was 4-2 and usually out- one, without him. the closing spread in the final three min- matched since he is a natural 191-pounder . utes after allowing an early lead to dwindle Senior Bud McDaniel, 3-3 at 167, is wres- Press Conference to a single point. In recent limes the Soon- tling in a most difficult division, and ers have pulled away at the end about as Charles Shivers, s sophomore from Tulsa Dr. J . Herbert Hollomon talked with the often as Raquel Welch's leading men . Next Washington, was 4-2 at 177 and im- Oklahoma Associated Press Editors Assn. came Butler's Bulldogs, who arrived in proving . when that group met one November Sat- Norman without their top scorer, who was It could be a very tough year . Iowa State urday in Norman . During the press con- ill, and who were beaten, 79-75. The Soon- has a lop team, it appears . OSU is bet- ference portion, OD's president-designate ers let a 19-point lead melt in the final ter than last year, and the Big Ten, with answered some questions from newsmen . minutes . Michigan and Michigan State, has arrived . Wayne Mackey, of the Daily Oklahoman, Failure followed . The Sooners left for the Despite their deficiencies in the heavier reported some of his replies in an article West, finding the same sort of success that divisions, the Sooners downed OSU in the thusly : Academic freedom? "Boiled down, Custer had. They were defeated by Texas first dual meeting of the two. The score his answer, which consumed several min- 'tech of that lousy basketball conference was 17-15, and the credit goes not only to utes, showed him .c strong advocate of in Lubbock, and by two California teams in OD's superbly conditioned wrestlers but to campus freedom, provided, however, the Los Angeles . Southern Cal did it one night Evans for his clever juggling of a line-up expression of divergent views is coupled -O. J . Simpson didn't gain a yard inci- hampered by injury and illness . Credit also with order." Campus picketing? "Peace- dentally-and Loyola dominated OU the the aggressive wrestling philosophy of the ful picketing hurts no one, Hollomon next evening . About the best thing to be Sooners, which believes that always going maintained, providing anyone can walk said is that OU didn't schedule UCLA . An- for the fall is the shortest distance to vic- through a picket line and go about his busi- other western team, Wyoming, smelled tory . By constantly attacking, OD's wrest- ness without a sign clouting him on the blood, followed MacLeod's lads back to lers dominated OSU. head ." The loyalty oath? "It's a question Norman, and beat them . There was time The match was televised by an Oklahoma of law, Hollomon said, and needs a court for another loss, to Drake, before the Big City station, KOCO-TV, making the fourth action to lest its constitutionality . It's Eight tournament in Kansas City over in a row of the duals between OU and OSl' liable to be unconstitutional, he thinks ." the Christmas holidays . There the Sooners to be shown on the tube . OU has won all Speakers who advocate the violent over- blew 6-point first-half leads to eventual four . throw of the government? "If they make champion Nebraska and conference favor- It seemed that the best way to gel the remarks that are violation of the law, he ite Kansas before losing to both by the team to Stillwater would be by ambulance. said, they should be arrested and tried. At respective, if not respectable, scores of Rice had jammed his thumb badly earlier the same time, how are sponsors to tell 75-65 and 73-57. In the fight for seventh in the week and had required eight stitches in advance what speakers will say?" Speak- place in the tourney the Sooners trailed to close the resulting wound . McGuire had er guidelines? "There must be a legitimate Iowa State 33-22 at halftime in what ap- been in bed with the Ilu for most of the sponsor . The meeting must be open. There peared to be an undeniable surge toward week . McDaniel wus sidelined with an must be a moderator not involved on either Continued on page 30 Braver, who has done extensive research in genetics, came to OU in September 1955 Campus Notes from the University of California at Berke- ley where he was a junior research zoologist CONTINUED in 1954-55, an acting instructor in 1955-56 and a research geneticist for the Atomic Energy Commission from 1956 to 1958 . their eighth straight defeat . MacLeod let A promising statistic is the Sooners' 48 He was graduated from James Madison his boys have it in the dressing room, and percent field goal shooting . Against OSU, High School, Brooklyn, N.Y., in 1941 and they came out like people who had sud- they battered the Cowboys with 13 of 20 served in the U.S . Marine Corps from 1943 denly tired of losing. In the second half, and 65 percent in the second half . The to 1946 . Following his discharge from the Sooners outscored Iowa State, 54-28, Sooners are not going to the NCAA this service, he entered Brooklyn College where playing offense and defense like the Green year, but they are becoming a solid club . he received a bachelor of science degree in Bay Packers . The Sooners were showing Hopefully, they'll get better as the season biology in 1949 . He earned a master of signs of becoming a cohesive team. In their goes on . It's too bad that the Field House arts degree in zoology in 1950 and a doctor conference opener at Missouri a week later can't be improved with coaching, too . of philosophy degree in 1955 at the Univer- they played erratically and at times with There has been an attempt to do some- sity of Missouri, Columbia . He served as little inspiration before pulling out a 71- thing about its dreadful appearance . Its a substitute instructor in biology at Brook- 70 win on Don Sidle's three free throws interior has been given a fresh coat of lyn College and as a research assistant at in the last 24 seconds . paint, which is like an aging hooker Missouri . He and his wife, the former In the last game before final exams dying her hair red and doubling her rouge Norma Blanksteen of Brooklyn, live at against OSU at Norman, the Sooners played load . What OU needs is a fresh Field House. 816 Oakbrook Drive, Norman . They have as fine a game as any Oklahoma team in three children, Susan Loura, Nancy and 15 years, beating the Cowboys, who had Robert . Mrs . Mraver is the daughter of defeated Kansas in the Big Eight tour- Sabbaticals Mr . and Mrs . William Blanksteen, 1801 nament, 61-58, outshooting, outdefending, Dorchester Road, Brooklyn, and Braver's and outrebounding Hank Iba's team, which Sabbatical leaves of absence for five pro- parents are Mr . and Mrs . Philip Braver, like all of Mr. Iba's is a smooth, superbly fessors were approved by the Board of 52 Broome Ave ., Atlantic Beach, N.Y. prepared outfit. Regents in December . The five are Dr . Prior to joining the OU faculty in 1964, The shortcomings which the opening 3-0 Richard G . Fowler, Research professor of Hengst served as director of higher educa- record covered are being conquered . The physics and chairman of the physics depart- tion for the Michigan Education Associa- defense was much, much more formidable ment, and Dr . John W. Morris, professor tion, Lansing, Mich ., a post he had held in the 13th game than it was in the first of geography and chairman of the gcogra- since 1961 . From 1951 to 1953, he was three. The execution of the controlled phy department, Sept . 1, 1968, to June 1, principal of Barnum Junior High School, offense, downright terrible in early games, 1969 ; C. M . Stookey, professor of music Birmingham, Mich ., from 1953 to 1958 . is showing marked progress . The rebound- and director of the School of Music, and He was a research associate at the Michi- ing is sounder, and the agressiveness, oddly William Harold Smith, professor of art, gan State University Center for the Study missing in opening games, has been quite Sept . 1, 1968, to Jan. 16, 1969, and Dr . of Higher Education from 1958 until 1960 apparent since the second half of the Iowa Gerhard Wiens, professor of modern lan- and in 1960-61 was an assistant professor State game in Kansas City . The outside guages, Jan . 16 to June 1, 1968 . of education at MSU. Hengst was grad- shooting is still lacking though the guard uated from South High School, Grand has improved. Rapids, Mich ., in 1942 and served in the situation People MacLeod has tried eight players at guard, Army Air Force from 1943 to 1945 . He without any tandem standing out until the Dr. Richard V. andree and Arthur F. received a bachelor of arts degree in t1SU game, when Joe Holladay, the Dun- Bernhart, professors of mathematics, have American history from Albion College, AI- can junior, and Steve Ayers, a sophomore been selected to be visiting lecturers dur- bion, Mich ., in 1948 and a master of sci- from Norman, played well together. Holla- ing the 1967-68 academic year by the Math- ence degree in education from Bowling day has displayed desire and defensive apti- ematical Association of America. The pro- Green State University, Bowling Green, tude, and Ayers is a ball player whom gram, originated by the association in Ohio, in 1949 . He earned his doctoral de- MacLeod describes as "a kid who won't 1954, enables small colleges to bring out- gree in administration and higher educa- quit ." Holladay has also been about the standing mathematicians to their campuses tion from Michigan State University in best outside shot among the guards, and for formal lectures, conferences with stu- 1960 . Avers is consistent from outside though dents and discussions of teaching problems Jack M. Cochran, a recent graduate of he doesn't shoot often . An early appendec- and curricular matters with mathematics OU, has been appointed assistant director tomy attack, which required surgery, side- faculty members . of high school relations at the University. lined Harry Brown, the soph on whom Robert G. Summers, a personnel officer Cochran also will serve as administrative MacLeod counted heavily as a catalyst in for the University of Illinois, was ap- assistant to James E . Swain, director of the the offensive attack, until the Missouri pointed director of Employment Services Office of University Relations . A graduate game . He will be playing more regularly at the , effective of Wagoner High School, Cochran received as the season continues, though the Holla- Oct . 1, when the OU Board of Regents met a bachelor's degree in business administra- day-Ayers combination will be hard to dis- in Norman in September. Since 1959 Sum- lion from OU in 1965 . He was a member of place, if the two play as well together as mers has worked in Springfield, Ill ., with the first President's Leadership Class. they did in January. the Division of Services for Crippled Chil- A collection of poems by Dr. Ivar Ivask All American Don Sidle is averaging 20 dren, which is administered by the uni- has been published by the Frederick Ungar points a game, hitting 60 percent of his versity's Medical Center in Chicago . From Publishing Co ., New York . Ivask is profes- field goal attempts, and leading the team 1953 to 1959 he was a personnel officer sor of modern languages and editor of rebounding . His leadership is indispensable for the university's Office of Nonacademic Books Abroad, the international literary to the team's success. His running mate, Personnel on the main campus in Urbana . quarterly which is published at OU. He Willie Rogers, back at forward and more Appointments of two members of the joined the faculty in July and formerly comfortable there, is averaging 14 points faculty as assistant deans were confirmed served as chairman of the German Depart- per game and playing well. Garfield Heard, when the OU Board of Regents met in ment at St . Olaf, Northfield, Minn . Ivask's the 6-7 soph, is impressive, pushing Sidle September . Dr. Gerald Braver, professor of 63-page book, "Gespiegelte Erde" (Mir- as top rebounder and scoring well. zoology, was named assistant dean of the rored Earth), contains 36 poems in German . Through 13 games the Sooners were al- College of Arts and Sciences, and Dr. Her- They were written between 1953 and 1963 . lowing opponents 74 points per game which, bert R. flengst, associate professor of Edu- Dr . Inci Incikava Terry, a woman who though better than the past, is not over- cation, was named assistant dean of the has strong personal feelings that elderly powering. It's better each game, however . College of Education . persons should retain an active and re-

sleeted position in their communities, has tion, offers short courses and workshops Istanbul, in 1951 and the license degree been appointed director of OD's South- to further research in aging processes . It from the Universitv of Istanbul in 1956 . west Center for Gerontological Studies . is funded by a contract with the geron- She earned a master of arts degree in Her appointment fills a vacancy left by the tology branch of the United States Public psychology from the State University of resignation of Ernest E. Sellars, who had Health Service . Born in Istanbul, Turkey, lowa in 1958 . During the June 4 cony directed the center since it was established Dr. 'ferry, 34, was educated in Turkey and mencement exercises at OU, she received in 1965 . Sellars p!ans to continue his studies the United States . She brings to her new the doctor of philosophy degree in psy- toward a doctoral degree in education . job a strong background in psychology chology . The gerontological center, located at the and education . She received the bachelor Dr . David P. French, associate professor Oklahoma Center for Continuing Educa- of arts degree from the American College, of English, is chapter president of the American Association of University Pro- fessors at OU . Other chapter officers are Dr . Ed F . Crim, professor of economics, first vice president ; Dr . Geoffrey Marshall, assistant professor of English, second vice Sooner Boosters and Dr . John M . Canfield, as- (10 0'(011111lendcol for president, .ldvcrtisers below and clseu'ltrre ill sooner Magrlziru' 1 of physics, secretary- soonrl. . sociate professor their efficient, frirndlY .service . You an, urged to prttronize u Booster treasurer . Awesome Absurdity Rep . Adam Clayton Powell was invited to TYLER G SIMPSON CO. speak at OSU by the Afro-American Socie- ty during that group's Black Heritage Week Hal Muldrow Agency Wholesale Grocers observance Feb . 12-17, but authorities at '28 Norman the school announced that Rep . Powell lir~~i~tntr c,f All kii- would not be allowed to speak under the Ardmore, Oklahoma provisions of OSU's visiting speaker guide- Hoiuii Gainesville, Texas lines adopted recently by its board of re- 117 E . Comanche Norman gents (Magazine, Nov. 1967) . The society, the OSU statement said, was not a recog- nized campus organization, and even if it were, Powell couldn't speak . The reason he can't, OSU said, is because he advocates Bill Eischeid Pontiac \ on'r KNOCK-ood,coll T civil disobedience . B . A. '50 The absurdity of OSU's regulations is awesome . Similar regulations at other in- 514 South Broadway L(~KWGrJD L stitutions have been struck down by the Edmond, Oklahoma *INSURANCE - BONDS* S courts for their disregard of the U .S. Con- convicting per- 4-1170 ATLAS LIFE BLDG . " PHONE L07-5103 A stitution . OSU is in effect 0. C. VI 3-5749 - Edmond PL sons of criminal acts (advocatin(-, disobedi- ence of laws is what is generally alleged) without a trial and without the acts be- forbids Norman's Two Leading Food Stores ing committed . When a university Union Beauty Salon an individual to speak because of what he Hair Styling McCALL'S SUPERMARKET might say then it is no university in the meaning of the term . Such control and GREENLEAF- purest Eye Makeup of who speaks whether practiced in Moscow Manicures FRIENDLY FOOD MARKET or Stillwater or Peking is still tyranny .

Basement Lobby-Union Building (J . 7'. McCall, ('lass of 1940 License Reports that the 1968 Oklahoma auto- mobile license tags featuring a garish "barn- yard orange" and despondent "roofing tar black" and known as "Aggies' Revenge" Will Rogers Cafeteria will be recalled by the state as a matter of Ming Room good taste are apparently unfounded . Excel/rill Food 1,xcrllrnt Food VarictY of Choice (:rocions servirr Equipment for produc- Reasonable 1'rice Relaxing'ltrnospherr tion, storage, refining, and OKLAHOMA MEMORIAL UNION JUST OFF UNION LOUNGE treating of oil, gas, and water from the well head to the consumer.

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Hair-raising Development I`or all those Nervous Nelfes, to borrow :c phrase from one of our more eloquent statesmen, who tend to associate student hearts with dissent and all that unplea "antness, these are the limes which NEW LOW PRICES try their discernment . The annual beard-growing contest sponsored by the College of Engineering for its annual observance March I1-16 began Jan. 29 . For a couple of months beards will be sprout- AT OKLAHOMA ing on more faces than usual . It could harry some people a bit, Irut we hope not . STATE LODGES Bombing Incident Soon nut threw a Ic :u gas grenade into Sudic Triplet's house about IXWEEK RATES 4 a.m. Jan . 14, starting a fire which was extinguished after caus- SPECIAL SUNDAY THROUGH WEDNESDAY ing slight damage. Miss Trippet is a member of Students for a Dem- Except Holidays ' ocratic. Society and former chairman of the Committee to End the War in Vietnam (Magazine, Nov. 1967), and it can be as- sumed that her opposition to Johnson administration policy in Sept 15 to April 16 April 16 to Sept 15 Vietnam and her involvement with minority political groups prompted the attack . The Norman Police Department, which has European Plan "Mod . American European Plan Mod . American members of the SDS of harassing them, Per Day I Day been accused by some Plan Per Day I Per Day I*Plan Per will conduct an investigation . What kind of job the department does will indicate its commitment to protecting equally all citi- zens, no rn;itter what their political beliefs. LODGE Double $8.00 $16.00 $10.00 $18.00 Recent Speaker Single 6.00 10.00 8.00 12.00 Charles Bolduc, traveling representative of the Young Socialist Alliance and a Marxist, spoke Jan . 9 at OU on "Che Guevara and the Latin American Revolution." Bolduc's talk was sponsored WESTERN HILLS LODGE for a Democratic Society and by the campus chapter of Students Double 9.00 19.00 10.00 22.00 was a public forum, held in the auditorium of the Botany-Micro- biology Building . Single 7.00 12.00 10.00 16.00 The YSA was formed in 1960 and is composed chiefly of students . Bolduc, 21, of New York City, had spoken in and LAKE MURRAY LODGE Houston before coming to Norman . Faculty members who participated in the discussion follow- Double 8.00 18.00 9.00 20.00 Dr . ing Bolduc's talk were Dr. Richard Baker, political science ; Single 7.00 12.00 8.00 14.00 Fred Silberstein, sociology, and Dr. Heydar Reghaby, philosophy. Students participating were John Ratliff, vice chairman of SDS at OU, and George Vallamlares, a senior from Cuba . QUARTZ MT. LODGE Double 7.00 16.00 8.00 16.00 Violate a Regulation and Help a Student The University has reduced traffic fines and has reassigned the Single 6.00 10.00 7.00 12.00 proceeds from them to the Office of Financial Aids where they will be used for work scholarships and fellowships . Formerly the ARROWHEAD LODGE money from violations went into the general operating budget . The recommendations were among those made by the public Double 10.00 20.00 12.00 24.00 Relations Advisory Council, composed of students, concerning Single 8.00 14.00 12.00 18.00 modifications of student regulations. The council also proposed that the fine for illegal parking be $5 and that the fine for driving on campus (which is prohibited for students from 7 :30 FOUNTAINHEAD LODGE a.m until 5 p.m.) be set at $10. An additional $1 will be assessed Double 10.00 20.00 12.00 24.00 if the fine isn't paid within a week. At present the fine for illegal parking is $10 ($5 if paid within 48 hours) and $20 ($r0 is paid Single 8.00 14.00 12.00 18.00 within 48 hours) for driving on campus. "Though the reductions aren't significant-they only liberalize ROMAN NOSE LODGE the time required to pay actually-the use of the money for financial aid is a good idea. Single or Double Occupancy for 4 Nights The recommendations were approved by the president's office Sun. thru Wed. $24.00 European Plan Only Jan . 10. $4.00 Per Child for Modified American Plan- Information on Threshold (see page 1 ) No Room Charge for Children Under 12 Any high-school senior may apply to Project Threshold (see Occupying Same Room As Parents. page 1) . Priority will be given, however, to the students whose standard scores on the American College Test are under 19 (par- ' Modified American Plan includes breakfast and evening ticularly in Eiglish and math) and who meet the minimum legal dinner ordered from menu. Above prices include gratuities . requirements for admission to a regular semester at OU. These are as follows : A composite ACT score of 16 or above or a 2.5 grade average in high school (on a 4-point system) or ranking in the top 50 percent of your graduating class. (.About 20-25 percent of the freshman class will have ACT scores of from 16 to 19 . This group accounts for 75 percent of dropouts .) The cost will be $348, which includes $108 for fees, $25 for books, and $215 for room and board. Cost of non-residents is INDUSTRIALOKLAHOMADEVELOPMENT AND " PARK DEPARTMENT-, same except for a $216 in fees. A number of scholarships at-(- avail able . For further information on Project Threshold parents TOURIST DIVISION 500 WILL ROGERS MEMORIAL should write Dr. J . R . Morris, dean of University College, Uni- versity of Oklahoma, Norman, Okla ., 73069 . BUILDING, , OKLAHOMA