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Vol: 54. No.9 - SophsT 0 Hold-Mum Sale Dean-Johnson Discusses,Role At ·Annual U·C-Miami Game OfStudent~~Govt,. At _As~embly' by Frank Melcher versity icompletely and still ful- which were directed to cover the fill their. basic obligation as stu- areas Of the .student council and Main 'feature of the Student student government that were felt govern,m:~pr">a,ssemblysponsored dents," added Dean Johnson, 'land thus, we have' a pattern of joint by the students to need revamp- by -Studentr'Council held Saturday ing. in the 'Uniontrwas.a talk by Dean . responsibility at ,UC." She' said of (Students, Lillian M. Johnson, that the keynote of student govern- Many ideas were returned by ment should be "involvement".' the discussions, major of which covering her opinioncof the pur- - pose of student government at UC. After the talk,' the meeting' was were -reflections the effective- Democratic Principles broken into group discussions, ness of contact between the SC and the college .tribunals, Also . '" Dean Johnson set down some brought up in thatcontext was the basic principles -that have to be fact that none of the government regarded when considering stu- groups on campus has clear-cut dent .government," including the guidelines by which their actions fact that student government is could be governed. based on democratic principles of political -and social equality; a The suggestion was also made concern 'for 'the common good; a that there be more co-ordination reliance. on individual responsi- between the groups on campus. ,bility; and the fact that the basic It was pointed out that many reason for the student being on thought some of the organizations campus is to learn. ..'were not using the funds aHoca- SOPHOMORE CLASS MUM SALE co-chairmen C,huck' Littleton and :: ted-to them' by the Student Coun- Dean Johnson pointed- out that - cil in the best possible way, and ot5 Ann Meier present Mrs. ~alter Langsam" with the first Mum. The everything else should be subordi- ,:that if the ,actions of any gr-oup ·tr~dition'al Mum Sale will be held Saturday at the UC-Miami game. natedito learning, and it is the . 'were not thought to be correct, administrator's job to see that the Mums c-an be' purchased for $1 at the student gate} the season ticket the "council should cut off the university follow three main di- funds for that organization for the gate, the Miami gate and from st-adium go'vendors .• Prepaid mums may rections: to desiminate knowl- year. I be purchased .from Greek r,epresentatives, and' maybe picked up in edge, to add to knowledge through Beer Issue _ the Fieldhouse Lobby by Miami Students, or the Union Game Room 'by research, and to educate men and Other points that were brought women. - ,- U,C students. to the attention of the council \ ~ -Photo by Mayhew Photographers "Students cannot run the uni- .; Dean Lillian Johnson were that action should be taken to keep the undergrad reading room of the library should be open YMCA, TIC» Hold later in the evening, more action OperationTelephone Contacts 16;000; on the referendum of last year, 'Pancake Supper and action on the beer issue. President Bob Engle commented The Student YMCA will again' Proi~ct' Breaks Last- Ye'ar's ~Records that he thought SC activity should hold. its annual pancake supper . ..!-z, . be limited to issues that affect all students, and not those' which af- _before and. after' the Miami f06t-· ...· by ·H~pe 'Victor cialcases like the law and engi- Room of the Netherland Hotel or fect only a 'small portion of the ball -game, Saturday, Nov. 26. ".' . neering alums, personal calls a box of Jergen's lotion products student body. He also said that he The supper will -begin at 11:00, Fr?m' No~. 14-~1;approximate- from their /small group of peers for .men .and women were among thought the structure of the stu- and associates usually means the a.m..axldcontinue until 1:00 p.m. ly 'fIfteen. to, sixteen thousand .the nightly gifts. dent council' was good, and repre- ~ . .' - " phone- calls were made from the calling alumni- can- ask for larger sents the. greatest number of peo- when"It will end-for the football UC· fieldhouse on 100 specially wedges. .,... The .winners .for the entire - ple possible. game. It will then begin again at installed private phones to Alumni Prizes Offered week won a first prize -TV set He also added that he believed 4:30'and ,wild.run until 7:30 p.m.. all';' over the, greater In order to encourage solicitors and a second prize clock-radio. If the self evaluation of studentgov- YM's World Service area .. Volunteer students and -to call,' the alumni association of- this year is an indica-tion of the , • ~ • h- the . Pharmacy students caned:' .Christmas ornaments. Refresh- Wednesday; the Enginnering and "rnents will be 'served in the Pads- Teachers' College volunteers ; on serie. E Thursday, the IFC and Panhel- Co-sponsors "are' the student -rJ) lenicrepresentatives; Friday, 'the members. of the yweA at DC, ,.-% residence hall callers came, and and the Advisory- Board, which _"'U- eonsists vof women chosen from ~ Monday, Nov. 21st, solicitations U. were carried out by the. faculty _ - the' faculty, faculty wives, YW t(1 q alumnae and community leaders. J( .and staff. .«( .. , ..••...... • Student chairmen are: -General Each night there was. approxi- I ~ Q Co-chairman, Kathy Goertemiller -0:: -r% mately half and half alumni. and .II uJ Z --.• and Betty Hendricks; Publicity. ;) t."" student solicitors. The percentage ::>'W of contributions has been good Sue- Long; S a Ie s Personnel. with the Pharmacy college grad- - , Jeanne -Nutter;" Refreshments. JUDY HOE~TKE., DECORATION Chairman" left, and Betty .Hendricks, uates Ieadingas usual. Mr. Small Salli Harrington; Decors tions. feels that the. greatest response General Chairman~ ' over some of ,the articles to be sold at the Linda Angel; Business Manager. (~ to the callers is given when the YWCA International Bazaar, Wednesday through Friday, Nov. 30, Beth O'Donnell; Entertainment. students phone. H' ~:ever, in spe- Dec. 1-2. \ . -Photo by JO!lDRabius Kathy, Ludele.

I bJ,I>J/~~,E.RSITY~'OF CI,NCINNAXI" NEWS-RECORD Wednesday, November ,23, ,1966 ~HqspitaIHonors:,TV's,Ruth; Jr. Class Entertains Orphans; rNew ·Playrob'm···Dedicated Project Termed 'Big~~,Success

~. In tribute to I Cincinnati tele- Ge.neral Hospital, which, has Last Saturday afternoon thirty ~, vision star and, alumnae Ruth been a member of the Ruth Lyons children from the General Protest- ~ Lyons - wh'ose annua' 1 ChrlS. tmas Fund' since 1946,.. estimatesh that ant Orphans .Home '.were enter- n' , • • • " • more than 3000patients eac year "tainedby members of the Junior fund-raising aCtlVltl~s h.ave c~e~r~ benefit from the fund. ' Class. The project, sponsored as ed thousands of pediatric patients _' The present playroom and class- a Philanthropic Project by the , at Cincinnati General Hospital, the room in the hospital's pavilion H juniors entertained the youngsters DC Board Of Directors will name were :completed ~n 1955, the out- with games, songs, a magic show, hI' .' th' -h' gh door playground in 1958, both un- and refreshments in the UC Stu- , , t. e hP~Y:to,olmb". ;lln .~~. nhe~'h 1, ~ d,er the supe,rvision of a full-time dent Union. ~ rise OSPIa Ul mgd III er· onor. " ' ., 'd db th h " "11be 11d "Th 'R', thLvot play-therapist provi eye os- The childr en were brought to It. WI" e ca, e. e, U, . yons ital .' , . . Pediatric Room". p . the Union by the home s adminis- t: N~merous Activities- trators and then the' Junior Class II A Great Hener" Activities supported by the Ruth took over. After the children and . D~. Walter" C. Lan~sam, U~ . Lyons Fund are- numerous. Upon -students got acquainted the pro- , president, announced MIS~!::YO~~ 'admission, to the hospital, each gram' began with a cartoon show. appr~)Valo~ the board deCIS~?n.. I .infant and-child receives a toy.' Then the Panhellenic Quartet sang consider ~hlSagreat honor, : 1\;11ss. Pre-schoolchildren participate in . and the 'children all took part. Bob Lyons wrote to Dr. -Langsam. morning 'nursery school while Weisman and Barb Solomon also Dr. Langsam said dedication school age children have an ex- sang some songs and the children ceremonies will. be' scheduled -at ) tensive artsand crafts program in joined in on a number of these." Ice cream," cookies, andipepsi the completion of the new in- the afternoon. THE JUNIOIR CLASS treated the children of the General Protestant patient building which 'Cincinnati . " were served and the children en- is constructing now for General". Chr~s~mas Party Scheduled joyed this very much. After the O;pha~ Home to a party this past Saturday. This was the junior's first Hospital. The hospital is the ma- play materials are distributed refreshments there followed a sort service project. The party for rhese under'privileged children was held [or teaching hospital in the UC to bed patients. Each child's birth- of. rest period from the activities in the Union from 1:30 to 3:30. Pletured abo,ve, are three of the chair- Medical Center.' . day becomes a day for special" in which everyone just sat down rne'n.Left to. right they are: Beth. O'Donnell~ Sudie Heitz, and Sandy celebration, along with seasonal and talked. Steele. ' and holiday parties. Each year a To end the program Glenn Weis- senberger performed some magic There were about twenty jun- which the juniors can all be proud I A "A ' •..1', ';~'I.'big Christmas party' is held. DRESS M ~~I"'lIIG an,u,. 'In addition," .the Ruth Lyons tricks which some of the children iors present to help Out with the of as being something very worth- ALTERATIONS DONE· Fund makes possible the purchase watched withwide eyes. Then the children on Saturday and the en- while. The children seemed to , of television sets, records, books, juniors gave out playdough, fire tire program lasted from 1:30 to think it was worth while also . .A1l Good Work Done Reasonably movies, cook i n g, equipment, hats, fire badges, and some games 3:30. In the 'estimation of every- of them left the Union with smiles \ Call 271-5127 ' games, toys, and play clothing to each of the children who were one present the program was a on ,their faces and Words of ap- for CGH's young patients. there. ' tremendous success, a project preciation for the good time which they had. WAL·NUTHILLS Bramson, McCann Named CI'u,bs -Sponsor LU'THERAN CHU·RCH To Deon Of' Men'sO'ffjce Brazilian .Film 801 Wm. Howard Taft Rd. "Pagador De Promessas", an George S. Steensen - Pastor Allan Bramson and H. F. 'Mc- versity, McCann will be assistant Cann have been. appointed to the outstanding Brazilian film of 1962, to the dean of men and resident will be presented Tuesday, No- STUDENTS AND FACULTY WELCOM'£ dean of men's staff at UC for counselor at DC. He has worked 1966-67. vember 29, 1966,in 127 McMicken 10:30 a.m. Worship Service for the Proctor and Gamble Com- Hall, at 4:00 p.m. Born in Detroit, Michigan, pany and was an officer in, the , Church School 9:15 The movie depicts many of the Full Communion 1st Sunday of every month Bramson is a 'graduate of Michi- United States Nav-y from 1958-61. . Need Transportation? ' gan State and Wayne State Uni- McCann has been a coach for .conflicts, contrasts and problems Phone 321-0826 or 961-6271 versities. He was ~a teacher from the Cincinnati Marlin team. While of the present-day Brazilian 1962-65in the Detroit school sys- he was in the Navy he was Far Northwest. It takes place in "the tem. At UC he will be acting as- East one-and-three meter diving old colonial city of Bahia, Brazil's sistant dean of men and foreign . He lives in 'UTC'sHer- first capital.' The movie gives student advisor. bert Greer French Residence Hall unique glimpses of the city's ar- Graduate of Florida State Uni- for Men. chitecture and culture. Mr. Mac- Nicoll, Instructor in' Portuguese, will present' further information on the film, immediately before T,AYLOR1S BARBER SHOP the showing. .> The movie is presented by UC's • (All Style Haircuts Including Spanish and Portuguese Club. Financial support for this event Men's Hairstyling was 'furnished by the Charles Phelps Taft Committee. • Razor Cuts • Problem Hair Corrected YM-YWTo Hold 2700 Vine, St. '(Ac,:oss from Student Assembly Firehouse) v Applications for the National Student YMCA'and YWCA Assem- bly to be held in Chicago, from Dec. 27 to Jan .. 2, are still being Time - I Supper Time .- Snack Time accepted. Scholarship money is available in limited amounts, hut A~ytime Is PIZZA TIME applications must be in by Novem- ber 30. ' ',,' l at The assembly will focus on Chi- cago as a laboratory for under- standing the phenomenon of Ur- .banization, seeing the problems BE,RT'S"Papa ,Di,no'I," and possibilities of the city, and -explorlng the' tremendous re- sources available for creating a 347., CALHOUN ST., truly .urban civilization. ' across from Hughes Personalities such as Malcolm

. \ ,~ BOyd:·Oscar Brown Jr., the Chi- l?ining Room and Ca.rryOut Service cago City Players, and Dr. Robert Theobald, noted British economist and author of "Triple Revolution", , Chicken In A Basket Ravioli will be present. Double -Deckers Meat Balls \ ....'" CHRISrMAS TEA L,asagna' FrenchF,ries Tue~daYI Nov. 29 the Uni- Spaghetti Salad ~ersityColiege Tribunal is / holding its' annual Christmas Tea. It will be held from 11 un- Mostocioli Spumoni Ice Cream til 2 p.m. in t~ lobby of the Rigatoni Chili - All Kinds .

Monday - Thursday Friday - Saturda'y Every.body,cheers for ice-cold Coca ...Co'la. Coke has .' . 11:00 a.m. until Midnigh,t 11:00 a.m. until 2:00 a.m, FOR RENT th~..t~~~~ yYQu\~~v.~i ge! tired of. •• '~Iways refresh- .: Sunday 11:00 a.m. until Midnight Furnisbed,.7-room house, ga- ing. rh.at'swhy, things go·better with C;o~ee '•• after,.' " z , For Free Fast Delive;y to Fraternity & Sorority Houses & Dorms rage, on~ bath .. ,Bishop St. Coke • ~.f;lfter: C~l(e.- 'Iolllec(under the,authority of Th~Coca.COIQ'~ompanY JJY , \, $150' . '~', . .: . 'yo "THE:C9C:A-eOLA BOTTLING WORKS C'OMPANY , Cincinnati, DI'AL DINO - 221-2424 Call: 861-6348 .. ("" '1, {" 1,..:.' _ ~ ,.., :' ~" ."; ,'-\' i . _,'\'"' ~/:~_t Wednesday, 'N()vember' 23, ,r1l%6 {JNIVERSrTY OF CINCINNATI NEWS RECORD Page Three ,. Cr,iminal Law Expert ,Analyzes' Journalism Honorary'Taps · ,.' . 0' f C/.~. ·'1 De b- d' e ,-' 18 Into, fall Pledge Class D-.ange,rs, " IVI Isoe ·Ie·nee-Pi . r5~lta Epsilon, journalism" From' 'the CINNATIAN,"they

I Does anyone have the right to age in-which we live;" Dean AI- honorary at, UC, held, its \annual' are: Linda -Yelton, .Randy Fraley, defy the law? . ' len remarked. fall pledgingcereIllony Monday and John Leonardi. Rejection of civility and ration- Just Application evening, Nov. 21. Pi Delt tapped . From the Co-op Engineer, Tim , ality in' the name' of liberal re- In The lecture· on "Challenge eighteen new 'pl~dges. All of the Park was. tappe~, .and from, the form may be the greatest danger and Response" Dr. Allen declar- pledges have. worked at least one Student Directory, Mary.Stuart.

of civil disobedience, Francis A. ed, I firm and just application of year on one of DC's publications. Pi Delt Officers

Allen, An~ ~rbor, Mich~gan, ex- the .law is essential to the main- t From the ·NEWS RECORD the ' The new Pi Delt pledges ~ill be -.,.. pert on criminal law, said Thurs- ..tenance of the public order. Real- new me m b e r s are: Karen initiated the second week of Janu- day in the second of his three daily ization of the promises of Ameri- Mc~abe, Paul Moran, Frank Kap- ary. The officers of Pi Delta Epsi- DC lectures on "Civil- ...Disobedi- . can 'society has never been so ur- lan, Pete Franklin, Sherrie Young; Ion are: president, Rich Dineen; ence and the Legal Order." gent a necessity as at the present Bob Plotkin, Mike Patton, Keith vice-president,' Dan a, Braun; Perils of Civil Disobedience time. ' Kleespies, Jim Ellis, Barb Behrns, secretary, Sudie Heitz; and treas- 'Mr; Allen is delivering the 1966 Dean Allen explained that he Nick Orphan, and Sue Hanni. urer, Judy McCarty. Robe!t S; Marx lectur~s of the UC was viewing civil disobedience as College of Law: He IS the dean a' criticism of American life and of the Uniyersity of Michigan Law, sought to discover what it tells School. HIS Thursday lecture de- us about ourselves and what sorts tailed perils which civil disob~di- of responses are required to 'meet ence may posefor the...comrrlUn~t~. the modern challenges. CLIFTON'TY,PEWRIT,E,R'SE;RVI,CiE Most modern defenders of cIvIl" . - .... disobedience, he said, have agreed !he persistance of civil diso- Rentals

Y WE·· DELIVER "There is, after all, danger in a situation. that appears to, identi- PICTURED ABOVE ARE some of the candidates for UC Band Sponsor fy the "cause of liberal reform with practicing. The winner will be revealed at the annual UC-Miami foot- means that reject civility and ra- ball game, Saturday, Nov; 26. Miss Pat Brady, 1965-66 Band Sponsor, tionality. It may be that there re- I will crOwn her successo~. /' Photo b{ John Rabius- ' sides here the greatest 'peril of all.': 'HOYI , "The purpose of .canvassing the perils of civil disobedience is not simply to chastise the reformers. Westendorf Jewelers Too often civil disobedience has resultedfrom the complacent dis- FR~TERNITY JEWELER FASTI , regard of fundamental social ills by the larger community. • Diamonds, Jewelry Accordingly, it is important that, the larger community be con- • Gifts and W.atches scious of these perils, if for no other reason than that is should fREEI • Watch and Jewelry Repair be aware of what is at stake in its failure to' make proper' re- 210 W. McMillan 621-1373 sponse to the challenges of the remarked, s-lypin htrah arahaah

• ..•.. .-FOR A 'REAL~ -; TUR'KEYWEEK '"BLAST!! Make your first' stop SOMEPLACE ELSE I /" The Newest-and 'Finest Spot On C'am,pus!

Live Entertain~ent - Fri. (r -S'at. Nites 8 :30 - 12:30 . ,ZIN'OI,S -,I.. .Serving i1i-pQwered 3-14" L·UpLO'W· Corner of Ohio, & College I.D's refreshments, begin- PLEASE 281-377.4- " McMillan "ing,Mon~ay, Nov. 21 9WfVERSIW:JOFI (::IN'CIN'NAtl.~NEWS'~ec'dRO W~dne~dy: '<"'{t\fbverhber'~2'3h.r,.t'96~, , , ,In 'Defenste 'OfOu:'t~<~:oo'..• :Satire 'vs~~::S~n~atidhalis~' "-lmm~diaterY""'aft~r'S last" week's issues .hit the Union Desk, .. Dove Altman we began :hearing about the, discrepancy between our- editorial, .' l' had brought, Behind us were the, tives, the Kennedy Eamily, 'and "L .', 'S '. '.' I" /f d "edi . I ' '1 <, "1' d I like to go back now andthen oqicvs. ensatlo~a ,Ism an . an ~'Itona page co umn entitle to a tree 'on a quiet hilloverlook- graves of, US fighting men who most of the leaders of the world. "Our' Zoo," Mahy of 'our readers feit that we defeated our own 'ing the District of. Columbia. had died defending their country. T\lll and, -irnpressive, standing a-' , /' ".". 'i,' /f' .' , -, , When~ver .Ldo my mind returns In front of us was the grave of a .part was proud Charles.Deflaulle, purposebY,Pllb,lIshl~g Qor Zoo.' to a Monday morning just before United States President. Few of ramrod straight, except for, his We agree.-that'Mr. Bowr1ng's column tilted toward sensa- Thanksgiving in 1963.. ' , ' us were sure why he had died. which was bowed a little. . . :'. ' .. ' '.' ., '. ~ \ Early that day, while the rest Caught Silently "Hail to the- Chief" played in a ticnelismiintits emotional content. The column, however, was of WaShington watched the casket Hours passed, everyone was way I had never heard it played j'ntended\lbbe sa,tfte, not sensationalism: ,We ,don'tdecry~atire. of the" Presid~n:t of the, Un~ted caught silently in their own before. Then there was the thun- ,', '(: ,r ,,' ., 'I;·,.~· ,,;, '. • Statesvcrowd-lined streetsv Arling- thoughts. When the commentator der of Air .Force Jets overhead. Anyone who has, studied /f,A Modest Proposal" by Jonathon ton cemetery was making' ready told of young John Kennedy on They flew in tight groups of four. Swift will attest to the value of g"ood satire. Two years ~go the fin~l resting place of the Chief the" steps of the church saluting In the last formation a'.plane was , , ..".\ ,', " ...., " . , Executive. thecasket of his father, I remem- missing.' Air Force One, the we' were 'blessed wi,th' ...-an excellentrsetirlst-eBob .Schumacher. Cold Precision ber a marine raising his hand to Chief Executive's private plane ,flew over .the cemetery and great- W,e recentl. ....rece.i'ied. -'a /f.pers.o.n.a'i/f I'etter to the Editor .'askfng "The Irish -guard and t...he Air cover the tears that .had, filled . Y . .: ~ ;' . r Force Bagpipe; band were there his eyes. '-...... ' ly dipped its wings. in a final sa- us tp,e'ither

,: "" • • :i' ' h "'k' '-" As I See It ' '~ 'I

~n.:Fir.:fG.'a~~Y.6'9.··:I.~9.t.h;n~~to~~h~n~U.'I,foris ,at~a..~~.f~1:1"': 'TheHer~ia and'th~ Vc)ters .: ,spirit."Sor:ne people would, grumbl~_ at the eccornrnodations In ,;,,",' .... , d'G ' 'Reav~ri'if they ever got there. They take 'their blessings_here , by Joel enovCl {C; much 'a~' a matter ~f course, 'that' even a day of general - "The Democrats had an illness i"itgthe first President to set foot Chi O's of 'bur, own campus went Thanksgiving, once ln, a ¥ear is more than rthey feel any need in the -family at' election time, ona U. S. battlefield since Frank- , .so far' as to sell their homecoming of i2 ,Airrotn~r 'ChiSf really desires, -to be ,-thankful, but- they: are however uncolorful it might have lin Rooselvelt in North> Africa in float to the, local Republican party -,,'<"' "II"d ", d t"" "Th ~.'tl1'h tb~e'world in'adepre- been. The illness referred to is 1~43, was not .underestimatedcby for f small-fee.dn 1,J:19J.>~~ubs1-:" _ (cating spirit, hoping thin'gs'Tlay' turn' .out well yet fearl'f1g the Tne-questionwhichhas 'been rals- ~ Ther'e is sUb'stantiaI 'opUiion to ',,' pres.;nce or"Absence . 1:worst. We always feel glad for this class when Thanksgiving. ed is whether .ornot. hi~ inability the effect that his absence from What is interesting in the con- -Day comes around. They then have an official warrant for grati- to. trave~ :dur~g t~s Import~nt., these local a~d regional areas w~s text ?f the Ame~ca~ political sys- . m]:~term _:c9Il~r~ss~on~1 election of some assistance! If the public tem IS that the intricacies of po- .tude. . . . period wa.s help~l "cr-harmful to opinion polls are legitimate cri- . litical interpretation, and the mul- How different with the thankful heart! What a gift it-is' Democratic candidates, teria for measuring the populari- tiplicity of important social and t b b ith an 0 tlook. .toward the bright side of things! .' The point is that President John- ty of thePresident'sViet~am poli- internatio~al issues, have ~ed us ~ ~ ~e om w :"4,;.,,, ~"" ~,"";., '". .'. ,:;,son,could not travel on the barn- cy, perhaps these allegations were to the P01l1t where a president's .And if not so b.y natur~,,,Wh~t~a ;tnvr,nph'.?f ,g-r.Q~e"t:~ea~t!. ;~; .:.:Happy are ·tQ~y-,wbo· ~<~is ~tiI~ely.trip to coIfferi~ .Man- Turned Out- . a~candi~ate may be constru.ed to ~ , hl ift! Blessin":s:ma fail,ca.f1d (fortonesv:ary.,but.tlilef'~llia an,d \1IS s~~sequent:VI~tnam '.' -- '. . ( '. be d~tr.m~en~al ~o that c~ndldate. ,.possess t IS g .<'f'>,,0:,~ .,'J;~Y ,'~~.'1', .. ;, "., .: .••.•••. ' f. : .: ",,>:- "Jun:ket,the,;pobtIcal motivation: of 'Heartbroken ~"Demo~rat~ who This IS Indicative of the fact th~t .rhenkful heart remams. The happy past, at least", IS secure- which cannot be competently and were turned out of offIce in num- the two party system is by no and Heaven is ahead. immediately adjudged, represens- bers over and kabdo,vehwhat w.a s means subject to simplistic analy- , _ ed positive campaign items for exp~cted remar e , per. aps quuet sis. A President may play "show -Golden Rule from Leaves of Gold cynically, that the hernia did not and tell" with the scars and . . . Great, Asset· tu~ out the sympathy v~~e, ~pon wounds- of surgery and use these HIS ,a~illty to report these ,e- WhICh.~ey were depending. effectively. Howcan you counter ven~s directly to the p~ople. of Obviously, some. people thought such public relations manuevers? VarI?USf a v 0 red constituencies and' feare~. that hIS campaigning ,Sentimental Appeal .•.. NEWS "REf;ORD ~ossIbly would have. been a great ,wo\lld be of some electoral, help . To the party of opposition the . ~sset, though there ~s.some que~- and sou~ht to counte~-b~lanc~ the only alternative is an equally Member: Associate Collegiate Press tIo~ as to ~he,._validity of. this effect this b~ campaignmg .vigor- sentimental appeal or an act of National Educational Advertising Service, Inc. claim. The significance of his be- ously for their favorite sons: The ridicule with regard to the inci- Rooms 411-12-15,Uaton-Butldtng, Cincinnati, Ohio 45221 dent. Senator Dirksen· handled 475-2748,2749 . this -effectively after his' release $3.50 per year, 10 cents per COpy: from the hospital and his subse- Second Class Postage Paid, Cincinnati. Ohio. ) 'T'he Opin'io'n Is Mjne quent sarcasmic and witty re- EDITORIAL STAFF by Dave Bowring marks on his own 'operation to 'Editor in. Chief », ,Judy McCarty newsman. All, was done in good . Associate Editor , , . , . ,~;., ' " .. , ", ".Dave Altman Reference my column tasteyet the effect was obvious. 'Manag,ing Editors...... ,~Y~\(\<;,d)ani;l,~ra~n,Paul, Moran That was published last.week: In Retrospect" ~ 'News' Editor ",.",. .:j_.~,.:}",,-,';} .,.,.'Laural~:Sawyer I'think it's high time .. ' In retrospect we can safely say Assistant ... , .... ",. ~;. ,'-'~:,:,. ,'; ;:, ):'", " ,. ,Kare"':McCabe ;'7 InE1:xplanation'! speak. ~. .that most probably l'4r. Johnson was m:ore of a help In Manila an~ Reporters , .. """" Jim Carr~ Rich Dineen, A'lter Peerless, Hope I was given this column, tha this im'posing figure on tlie Victol:, Linda Garber, Sally Howard,' Barb Behrns, Allen Kirsch- The'opinion,is mine; local campaign trail would prob'- / baum, Charlie Kallendorf, Sandy Steele, Jeff Isralsky, Saralou' If th~ content should 'chaf you, ably have been more of a liability Aher~, Peggy Gannon, Nick Orphan. - ' That's your problem, not mihe., than~ an asset. tSports Editor, , , , , , , , , . , , , , , , , , , , , , , , . , . , , , , , ~, , , , ' , . ,Frank Kaplan It is doubtful that the results '\ " Assistants""., " ":, .. , .. "",,, Bob Plotkin" Claud.e Rost I'know my opinion, of the election could l.!ave been Staff .. , .... ".",." .. , ,/... , ,Bob Brier, Jim Christy, Mike Kelly, , And the letters we received changed to any' significant de- F rank Melcher, Jerry Schultz. Show plainly that some gree by Mr. Johnson's' campaign- Are just a little bit peeved. ing. A number of factors were Social Ed~tor. , , .. , . .. Sudie Heitz working against the Democrats. . Feature Editor '':--;' Peter Franlll;'ri You're jrldign~~nf,andangr;Yi The off-year election with the Assistant ,-:'... , .. , .. ' , , ,SJ1!rrie\Y'(iung [,G.ivenover to wr~th; . usual waning, popularity-- of the Theater Editor . , .. , ,,;:-. , , ..·.~C;thY,"Hyde" But an 'old aqage sums 'it foiks:" incumbent president would have Typing Editor - , ' , , ,, , ,"",. .',,-',Suac Harlili This too

.' . . . .d '1

This week I came across a let- But the. thing that I remember The President of the Residence Last Friday a few UC students people have of something they ter that seemed to have a, special most was that far-off look in your , Halls happens to be a good friend carried 'a sign )nto the Rhine cannot comprehend, or. that' of- message during the Thanksgiving ·eyes when y,ou said, "Your old of mine and he told me that Room, and later posted it in .the fers a different opinion than ,season. It is printed below, just man never went to College, son. Seniors in the Halls were really hallway outside. of the old Grill, theirs. But -you who wrote the as it came, with oniy the tear You education is going to have no problem. He promised me that which read: Help Check Red' sign, if you' understand some- to do for both of us, .and .when , Summer school moving in could Action on UC.Campus Now. Post- thing completely,' then there is drops and blood stains removed; , ing the sign was illegal. The stu- Dear Dad, , you get that diploma osgradua- be taken care of if it were serious- dents did not belong to any or- nothing to be afraid of. I put off writing . you .because tion Day, you're going to be get- ly considered. The other supposed ganization-or at least they did Again, I can only ask the stu- ) , I hoped thatsomething might still ting it for me too." reasons for a Thursday Gradua- not inform Astrud at the Union dents with the sign to' clarify be done. Now that hope, or better I came back to school last year tion are nebulous and centered desk of this. 'Yet, she put a themselves, point out their is- stamp on the sign because it was sue's, and'there can -be an intelli- yet, that illusion is .gone. I sup- after' Thanksgiving determined more in ·someone's mind than in "interesting". Thanks to' Mrs. pose 1 could apologize for the to make you. proud of me at reality.; . gent discussion, not a foggy mis- Berns of the Union. Office the conception. ' , school, but I don't. think the school Graduation. But then, that's what Of course, we were told that placard was removed and, thrown No ISolation really cares. this letter is really all about. You student suggestions were wel- away. In today's fast-changing world At first I thought, that I felt see, you won't be able to come come, but as usual" it didn't do' But what is of greater signi- Iicance is the nature of the sign, no one is ever really isolated disappointment; then it was a .to Graduation. any ,good. I suppose that the from the actions of others. What kind. of sorrow; but now I think The roots of Red-baiting run They're having Graduation -on S~nior Class officers will go on deep in American Politics. Ever happens in New York City has that it's more Iike .a silent, futile a direct import on events in Los feeling. A friend said it best: . Thursday this year, and not-even trying-more questionnaires, more since Senator Joe McCarthy, this at night, but during the day. The . committees; more meetings-but In American .passtime has become Angeles. In the same, manner, "It's like having your dog run what happens in America affects Seniors thought at first that they the meantime, .Lfigured that I'd not only common, but highly re- over." I guess I feel a bit of spected in some parts of our Sweden in a direct manner, As it shame. too, because I 'know' that had just forgotten about all the better go ahead and tell you that society. And, as . it was in Mc- is now, the nation is not obse- you deserve better . trouble this causes parents from its on a Thurssday, and you won't Carthy's era, the source of it is lete, but it is in need of revision. Of course, they 'have all kinds out-of-town. .We thought that be able to come. pure emotionalism, in 'many With greater communication and they'd surely change it when we of excuses.. But that doesn't Unless ... perhaps ... that's cases with .vicious intent. What faster transportation no spot, no change the facts. Perhaps it's · pointed out the problems that nation, on the earth is really iso- it! The final hope is you. If they is .forever' startling to me is that _just a part of the never-ending,' many parents, have .because of whenever anyone screams, "Com- lated. always-beginning system, repeat- work during the day . But the sys- won't listen to the students. and if munist," the person usually does Beside these physical activi- ing like a tape recorder, "Maybe tem has no ears, . they won't .listen to, the Class Of- not know what he is talking ties, the morality of man has ex· next year . . . Maybe next year So the Class officers decided to .ficers, maybe they'll listen to about. tended beyond the national boun- ' ... " But next year never comes. try the .grass-roots approach; you. There's no place more sensi-: Red Hunt > dary. Men still care most for what The thought especially comes to They put a questionnaire in tlie The only reason that I am happens to their .own country, tive to public pressure (outside the mind .now because I remember School paper asking Seniors what - taking up an isolated case of but they are also concerned a- our conversation last year at · day they preferred Graduation. student body) than UC. If par- one sign is that I feel that the bout the future of other coun- Thanksgiving dinner. We were The response overwhelmingly in- ents began writing letters to "Red Hunt" is, unfortunately, tries. And quite a few men care talking about school and plans dicated the weekend as the best School officials and even the Cin- quite prevalent on this campus. not only for the, other nation, and the big things "that were com- time. So the Class Officers recom- -cinnati papers, then maybe we'd Since these students chose not but that other nation's people. ing up. And I remember .that ex- mended change. .get some action. If. the seniors to deal with specifics (what "Red This is perhaps the highest mor- cited· and proud gleam in your When the' issue was presented . would write to their parents and Action"? I can only ask them to ality of all, when feeling tran- eye as we talked about gradua- to the .Calendar Committee they ask them to "raise' hell" then clarify themselves. Instead of scends the specific national tion. turned it down. They' said that there might still be hope. pointing the proverbial red-white- boundar.y. This is why I feel that, ..Then you gave me one of your current scheduling would not al- I'll temporarily postpone my and-blue finger at something and Mike Patton's questioning should' great old lectures about the value low for change to a weekend and pessimism. But from past experi- labeling it subversive, isn't it not have culminated with the ofa college education. You told that it would cause problems in ence, I warn you. Don't get your wiser to' listen to what is being nation, but rather with the iIDe to be thankful, not proud or the Residence Halls, 'because, stu- hopes up. The, system has no said and attack it intelligently? WOrld: you and your world, who haughty. And you told .me to use dents could not move out in time hears. Only 'recently .have I begun to owes whom what? But he steps my e~~cation wisely. for Summer school to move in. Your son: .understand the deep fear that in the 'best direction-questionlng .

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-c, NOV'EMBER 26, 1966 Physics Annex, 475.28'44

'\ ".1' \ ,) C1'''\ ,; 1. (]5X.}':J:{;J (HAr~~1 i I ,\:.111"1 ':l~~ ~i··L . . ;,";~;l\n~1~; 'J(~) i , ,~.'~: •• C' dfH 9\: ') ;•.1 ..\lr,,~,.?o::;.r"l:'"\1 I Page Sjx~ UNIVERSITY OF CINCINNATI NEWS RECORD: Wednesday, November 23, 1966

-- ~ , I 1,'Lellers To The Edilor::TnlsD Goae, "Zoo" Decried~ I Tulsa and Leaders dent Bob Engle and IFC President' specifically'requested to be there, Pep-Rally and' at the 'Tulsa game Department), supporting p r e- ' Jack Boulton in particular. to help coordinate the funnel acti- T h Ed itself! ' game parties; sitting together in . 0 t e itor: I cannot defend the two hun- vity Messrs. _ Jack Boulton, John the student section which facili- With some chagrin I read in the dred and ten student leaders in- 'Unfortunately, it is true that Hagner, and Mike Patton (all tated cheering; forming -a tunnel

NE'\VSRECORD of Nov. 10, adicted by the letter in question . some chaos was created by the three of whom, in I the middle. of for the teams re-entry {at the re- letter from a student U+J&H'67) since the writer-who is "dennite-' students. who formed the funnel. mid-term week, individually and quest ofthe cheerleaders and with h 'tii h' ly for courtesy"-"courteously" The chaos, however, was precipi- together devoted approximately the O.K. of the Athletic Dept.) ~ 0, among 0 er t mgs., ques-. omitted their names. I do, how- tated .in great part by the tight 20 hours of their time for the sue- . and in being more spirited than boned the courtesy, maturity, and ever, defend the. presence of time schedule of the television cess of the Bonfire and Tulsa ever before. the ability of responsible leader- Messrs. Engle and Boulton on the network and the presence of a game spirit.) Several student campus leaders ship of various student leaders in football .field at half-time "during 'great number of uninvited stu- The UC, Football Team not only Greek affiliated but also .general; and Student Body Presi- the Tulsa' game, since they were dents on,the field. It was not ere- The UC Band independents as well as faculty ------~ . ated iby an overpowering desire The cheerleaders; (especially members have helped the cheer- 'of Messrs. Engle and Boulton to Ruth Carey , Donna Vockell, and leaders to support the .Bearcats She: How do you spell NEW DELHI? "appear on television as many Peter Woo) by taking chairmanships and car- .times as they 'could." . The Athletic Department; George rying out such events as the He: N-~-W D-I-L-L-Y Additionally, I would like to Smith and Coach Studley Tulsa game bond fire pep rally. point out, contrary to the implica- Buildings and Ground Depart- There' can be nothing but respect She: I'm sure there's an 'H' in t somewhere tion' made in the November ·.10 ment; Dick Neidhard and Hank for these people. How about you- letter, that the ability to express Rollins are you cheering too? We're' sure He. ,Oh,you mean the Indian one. sacrosanct opinions on important Hod Blaney' we'll hear all of you cheering the national issues is "not a pre-requi- Frank Nutter Bearcats boys on for the final She: Anybody would"think I was talking about site for' responsible leadership. .Bob Powell .football game-Miami. and then a gift shop. Sabbat House . let's show the Bearcat Responsible ,.leadership -is the Sawyer Hall . ability to create and build up, not team that we're behind them all He ; Have another beer, dear. French Hall the way to the ~1966-67 NCAA tear down and destroy-be ita Dabney Hall program, an institution, or an in- championship. She may be illiterate, but a! least HE KNOWS WHAT'S WHAT. Metro Please direct any and all spirit- . dividual (his name; but not neces- IFC sarily his ideas). ed suggestions to the cheerlead- Pan-hellenic ers. NEW, DI'LLY' IS' AT I~ that respect I would like to Men's Residence Hall Association Yours for better Bearcat Boost- . 949 ,Pavillion, acknowledge and. thank the' fol- Women's Residence Hall Associa- ers- lowing students and organizations .tion The UC Cheerleaders Open Daily 11·5:30; S~,.day, NO,onto 9; and every night that, freely, gave their. time and Phi ,Delta Theta Fraternity 'P.S., What's'the word? /1 e~cept Monday money which helped create the Lambda Chi .Alpha Fraternity (For the week) ,And We Are Very 'Friendly. tremendous amount of '.student all of the Fraternity, Sorority, and MUMBLE MIAMI!!!! spirit evident at both: the Bonfire Residence Hall Houses' that con- tributed -signs and manpower at Zoo ••• a£P7 cO' ..:£P7., cz;CP7cO"a£P7 £P7 a£P7 c£1I7 _-, £JBR a£P7 a£P7 _-. a£P7 •• the Stadium the day of the Tulsa ...... ~ .t. .,...... ••...... ~.....•...~ game. To the' Editor: ~~ . r,,~: •••••••\ •\ Respectfully, The only thing I can say about Hank 'McCann Dave Bowring's article entitled \...I \ .... Faculty Co-ordinator "Our Zoo" is that is uses tactics ...... •.1 for Tulsa Game Activity that- even the Cincinnati Enquirer would not stoop to use. On Cheers Terry Hall

To the Editor: AWS' Week We would like to express our,., , . sincere appreciation to the cheer- 10 the Editor: leaders during the 1966.football On behaif of the Associated, season from the very first game . Women Students, I would like to " the men,o{ French,' Dabney 'and thank all of the .NEWS RECORD, Sawyer came throughIn spirited staff, especially Judy McCarty and style cheering' .•...for example Pete Franktin,' for' all the; help "French is Best" among each you have' given us in supporting other and "Let's Go ·Bearcats" and publicizing our first women's together .. The fraternity men also week, "The Wonderful World of went all out in making spirit sings Women." (approved. through the. 'Athletic . Ann McNemar

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,'l""i .,,'., .. )" Page Eight tJ'NTV-ERSITYOF 'CINCINKIArl t\J&WS'RECO-RD- Wednesday, NovemberZd, -1'966 Micim'i' j'Redskin's 4CloseU'C Football ,Season .

b'y 'F.ran~ Melc,~er Miami's rampaging Redskins will come into Nippert' Stadium Saturday, well-rested from their one week lay-off, and hungry, for the championship of the South- western Ohio universities. " The 8-1 Redskins are looking, for their best record since 1955, when an -AraParseghian coached team went 9-0. In- their :last out-. ing again-st· Dayton; the, Skins completely dominated the game, ripping the Flyers for 440~yards

and a 38-6 victory. <, In' one of the oldest rivalries in the country, dating back to 1888, Miami has jthe edge with, 35 vic- tories. to .Cincinnati's 29,. includ- ing ~6 ties. ,.However, since the Joe Kozar Jim Shaw AI Moore Bruce Matte Bearcats-ipulled "out or the, 'Mid- American Conference in 1953~ ORe of their. two common op~ versity on successive weeks. the "Flyers defensive squad which mark of"-32catches, and six touch- rated secondin the nation, and a down grabs. He, has caught 89 Miami' has WOI} 9 of ,the' 1,3games, ponents with the Bearcats, Xa- Visions of an undefeated season played. " vier. The Muskies -were not able w e r e ended against- Bowling team who has their best record passes for 1,275 yards in his ca- to mount -any offense against Green, however, as the tough in last decade. reer. . Strong Offense the strong- -;Mia IIi i defensive Falcons upset the favored Skins MAC Co-Champs Against common opponents, The Redsidns strong' offense is, squad, arid the Redskins crushed 17-14. , Miami tied for "the MAC cham- DD and Xavier; Miami had litle , led' by 'senior signal-caller Bruce them, 27-3.. Miami .bounced back from, the pionship with' Western Michigan, trouble; while the Bearcats-were . Matte;and",velies,heavily, on the Miami's, defensive squad -is c. led BG loss to take Toledo 24-12, and, to repeat for the second year in beaten handly by both squads. '_ _running Of 'fullback Joe s Kozar by captain Ed 'Phippott, who, th.e~. s~other Dayton 38?c6.. M~tte a ,row as the conference co-cham- In, their. first nine.igames, Mi- and fleet halfback Al Moore. - against Dayton, received the' th.rew three touchdown' passes pions. ami .is averaging 22- points a' I Mi~ml g:avi ind'icatl'6hs of the lineman. of the week nomination against the Flyers, and ran an- Matte is the team's leading game, while holding, the opposi- big season to come, -whenvintheir for being in on twenty;)ackles, other score over,' amassing 207 scorer with 54· points on 9 touch- tion to 7 per contest. . first game, they continued their nine unassisted. '<",';, , yards for the afternoon. downs, . followed .bv AI' Moore "The game will be .tbe last of mastery over TQe~e~~"~1J!

teams 'with a stunning ....20:1Q vic- MAC, rand;' th'tn Redski-u.s·:;'rolled was the highest point total C run nior end John Erisman, who crowd of 18,000 is expected to tory over Indiana: ;,", .:; o'" over' Western'.Michigah\, Kent up by a Miami squad' since 1963, holds many of the Miami receiv- witness the traditional' closing In the second game, Miami met State, Marshall, .and Ohio' Uni- and the 440 yards came against ing records, including' the season game of -the season. Turner, '(:atsPlgy"' ·Well; 1.... I -

h l'.. "'-::.. .1.. But.Tigers: Win~ -26-14 by Jim Christy ton, raced ~92.yards on a simple Jackson. Lewis' extra point with dive play to knot the score at 7-7. 344 seconds to go in the third Flexing their muscles in prep a- 'I'he Bearcats took the ensuing period made the score' 14-14. ration for their game next week, kickoff and marched to the Tiger With 12 minutes to go in .the with high-scoring' Houston, 'Mem- 29 before the offense stalled. game, . Memphis' halfback Dale phis State withheld an aroused Turner's 47-yard field goal at- Bray went in motion and started tempt fell short. bunch of PC Bearcats to capture racing for the Bearcat goal. Tiger After another exchange of" quarterback Terry - Padgett hit a 26-14 decision, contest much a punts, Memphis State took the him with a perfect aerial and closer than the final score would ball .at -their own -43 and journ- Brady sprinted 61 yards as not' indicate. . I eyed, the final 57 yards' to score a Bearcat was within 20 yards With 13,357 in, the new Mem-. with" fuldback Covington getting of him. The extra point try failed' .phis Memorial Stadium looking his second touchdown on a three- and the "score stood 20-14-Mem- yard smash over right.guard with phis. <- .on, the Bearcats avoided the mis- 0:46 remaining in the first half. Any chance the 'Cats had of takes that have held the offense This made the score 14-7,'Mem-' pulling the game out of the fire at bay ll}ost of the season. DC phis, the margin the Tigers took ended .when Turner fumbled at fumbled' only once, and the 'Cats with them to the locker room at the UC 28, and Memphis recov- were assessed with just one pen- halftime. ered. After a Tiger first down, alty for a total of four yards. De- ICafs Come Back quarterback Padgett rolled out Midway through the third per- for 17 yards and the score with spite this, the Tigers from Mem- iod' a Memphis punt -rolled dead 5% minutes remaining. phis were ~ble to 'unleash a at the Bearcat two. From that UC later drove to the Memphis crunching ground attack that to- point the 'Cats set their offen- 39 with .Greg Cook at the controls taled 340 yards at the conclusion sive wheels in motion and march- but an interception killed any of the afternoon, compared with ed the 98 yards with Turner rac- further Bearcat hopes, and the ing the final 445 with the aid of score ended with Memphis in the FOUR OC DEFENDERS swarm Memphis State quarterback Terry UC's 193. ~ ' an exceptional block by Tony front, 26,::.14. ' Padgett-" Padgett directed the Tigers to'fa 26-14 win over ,he Bearcats. ./-__ ,,___ , .- I Tur-ner Has Fine Game- Clem Turner played the' best all-around game) of his career Memphis" Tenn. Described for the Bearcats, 'amassing '.176 . . of DC's 193 yards -rushing, re- turning four kickoffsfor 55 yards AsG~owing,ModernCity and, taking four pass- receptions . by Jim Christy play 9 games of their NBA sched- for an additional 15 yards. The ule in the Mid-South Coliseum this Bearcats continually went to Big The DC marching -band made year, as they did last year when Clem when the yardage was need- the long trip to Memphis and per- average attendance in Memphis ed, and Turner, showing some formed, outstandingly in a display exceeded the average attendance fine displays of second effort, in St. Louis. more often than not delivered. led by drum major Jim Dudley, Turner's 32" rushes during the" which won the admiration of those One can't help but get the' im- afternoon eclipsed a DC school pression that Memphis is in the who remained after the game to process 'of becoming a very "ma- record held by Turner' 'himself w~tch the Bearcat band. The band jor" city. Population inthe period and by Al Nelson, -now of the atso provided a great deal of'vo- 1950-1960 increased 25% in -the Philadelphia Eagles, cal support for the team. city itself and to about 800,000_in - DC~ took the. opening kickoff and proceeded to march 75 yards The Memphis Memorial Stadi- the Greater Memphis area, about the size of Metropolitan Columbus, in 13 plays to record the day's um, built for a "paltry" 3.6 mill- and about 60% the size' of Metro- 'first score. Tony Jackson com- ion (Cincinnati City Fathers take politan Cincinnati. pleted three i passes in the drive note) is a remarkably beautiful Memphis' downtown skyline is and Turner four times came. up structure, as is' the adjacent Mid- burdgeoning, the city is the pos- with the needed. yardage on key third-down situations. Turner" cli- South Coliseum, built for 5.5 mill- sessor of I ap.,outstanding .medical maxed tl1emarch' by 'negotiating . ion. The Coleseum is the' home of, complex and an expanding ex- pressway system. Residents of the final two yards for the Bear- the, 1\~eniphis State basketball this Mid-South metropolis point cat TD. team .and the Memphis 'entry "in <, with 'pride to their new athletic - After an' exchange of 0 punts, the Central Hockey League. The facilities and to the above achieve- Memphis found itself in a hole at CINCYIS DEFENSIVE LINE brings down a' Memphis State ballcarrier Coliseum 'seats '12,000 for- basket- ments when once all they could its own eight yard line, but on ballund i5,OOO~forboxing, wrest- boast of was Hernando's Hide- the first' play after the punt, on a dive play. The Bearcats played weill -but the Tigers prevailed in ling, ,etc. The S1, Louis Hawks away and Elvis Presley. Memphis fullback Herb Coving- the gamel which w~s closer than the 26-14 score indicates. Weonesday/ November'-23/ 1966 UNIVERSITY OF c:rNCINNATI 'NEWSI'~REtSORiD~. Page Nine :v Sa~'dy Retires tLA .Not· 'On BasltetbaliSked; by Gerry Schultz N.R~ Sports Writer Gentleman' 5 Agreement ,Gone ~~ by Frank, Melcner with his presence. Now, it seems, when basketball is .. drawing so that UCLA will not be able to re- much attention in the country, a one else, for instead 'of trading On going over the ,basketball He pitched three no-hitters, 'one turn .to ~e' humble Cincinnati each in 1962, 1963, and 1964: In ' him, they kept working with him. schedule for the Bearcats, there- school with a basketball team -,,' 1965, he pitched a perfect game 25,000. is one" name that is conspicuous campus, and .to ,a fieldhouse with so much talent as UCLA has .~ which only holds 8000. against the Chicago Cubs. The Of course, it was worth it. Two in 'its' absence, UCLA. must resort to (,money playing same year, he set a Major League short years after 1961, he was' a Gentleman's Agreement ' Home And Home rather than facing a school with , strikeout record of 382.' He was ~perst~r. Besides the records r Because of custom in the sports the basketball reputation that UC named Most Valuable Player in ~ aforementioned, he won the Cy When the Bearcats went to the world, coaches schedule games has built up. , 1963, and was second in the ballot- Young award for - Best Major West Coast' last year to play such as this' by a gentleman's ing this year. League pitcher three times, drew UCLA and Southern California, it agreement, and George Smith did Harold Morgens, Athletic Direc- When the Dodgers swept the crowds every time he pitched, and this with the Bruins. tor from UCLA, apparently felt Yankees in the 1963 Series, he almost by .himself won this year's was the belief of many people that it .was not necessary to in- pitched two of the four' games. He' pennant for his team, even after around campus, and indeed, in Because UCLA found, out that it led the National League in wins bis famous holdout with Don Drys- the Athletic Department, that the could draw giant crowds in such form George Smith of the fact places 'as c Chicago Stadium and three years, in strikeouts four daye. At 125,000 dollars the Dod- game was to be played on a home that they would not come to UC, gers got a bargain basement deal. get a 'cut of the gate, rather than because when Cincinnati was on times. He led his team to three and 'home basis, meaning that pennants, and narrowly missed a Even with only six good years, play for a guarantee, they are the coast last year, Morgens told fourth. he was one of the greatest pitchers UCLA would return the visit to violating commitments wh i c h Smith that they would be back. KoUfaxCalis it Off the majors have ever seen. His the Armory-fieldhouse. were honored by other coaches It is' unfortunate that money previ.ously. Thus,' Cincinnati .went Sounds like an obituary, doesn't fast ball was. equaled only by -his However, the .plans for the takes precedence over a previous curve, and when' he mastered his to California for a guarantee, but it? Did Robin Roberts or Warren game had been made before Lew agreement and also the chance to Spahn or some other control he was close to perfection. . UCLA will not be back, play a team that has a reputation great pass away? No, but. last Opposing teams hoped to hit him Alcindor decided to grace UCLA Money Play, for good basketball. Perhaps the Friday, Sandy Koufax announced in the first two innings, before he It is unfortunate that in a time emphasis should be examined. , his retirement, at the peak of his loosened up. career, at the age of 30. Although Sandy Was Here Kent Whips XU; perhaps the only death signalled It must be included that, 'as is is that of the Los Angeles Dod- dutifully .noted in every article about Koufax, he started here at .Cards -rop tulsa gers, it marks the end of one of ."Ask One of the most brilliant pitching ca-. UC, coming here on a basketball Bearcat opponents broke even scholarship. He attended classes Customers" reers ever. in. the won-lost column last week MY Sandy could have pitched next here for two years, 1953 and 1954, before signil\g'a, 20,000 dollar as they won four -games while ~-i year, or even several more seas- losing the ·same. ons, but I think he did the right bonus contract with the Dodgers thing by calling it quits. His left .In 1955. He played baseball and The'running of Don Fitzgerald Mr. Tuxedo: Inc. arm . was swollen after every in his freshman year struck out plus the passing of Ron Swartz game he pitched. .After each 16 in one game, 18 in another' led the Kent State Golden Flashes game, it took more and more" game, ana averaged nearly a to a lopsided 42-14 beating" over YOUR CONVENIENT FORMAL Cortisone to ready it for the next walk an inning. the Xavier Musketeers. Swartz, a game. Sandy has acute arthritis,' Jucker Comments junior quarterback, found his' re- RENTAL SHOP' and he could have crippled him- Mr., Ed Jucker, now Director ceivers open all afternoon as he Offers ',.,.. self permanently by pushing his of Intramurals at UC, - coached completed thirteen of nineteen !.-'~ career. Sandy when he' attended UC and passes. Carroll Williams, Xavier's Started in 1955 he had this to say about Sandy's talented aerialist, completed only As I calculate it, it was around retirement. "He was the greatest eight of twenty passes to termi- STUDENT DISCOUNT PRICES 1956 when I first heard of Sandy pitcher .ever and it is a big disap- nate his glorious caree·r. Koufax on a baseball trading card. pointment to everyone to see him _, W/here Quality Coun~s_0 , I remember him only for the facts retire. However, Sandy has tre-" Dayton scored a 20-16 come- that he was very wild, and won mendous pride and. he wants to from-behind victory over Toledo. 621-4244 212 W., McMillan very few games. The Dodgers had pitch at his best. He knows his . The Flyers of Dayton finished the another pitcher around the same physical condition and he is going season with. a record of 8-2, their time, with almost the same cre- out now, when his name" ~is on best since 1942. In/an inter-league dentials, by the name of Karl top. We are very proud of him at contest.cBenny Russell's pinpoint Spooner. I don't recall what hap- . UC." passing plus a' ball hawking de- pened to Karl, but Koufax disap- Politics Ahead. fense, carried the Louisville Card- peared for a few years, and then Everyone wishes Sandy the best inals past the Tulsa Hurricanes, reappeared in 1961. of luck for the .future, which 29-18. Pete Comprise contributed Checking through the records, I seems clear. He will probably con- nine points via two field goals 58th found that the Dodgers, even mov- tinue his acting career and' with and three PATs. ing from coast to coast, did not sports and acting behind him, he Quarterback John E c k man give up on Sandy. They must 'will be a sure bet for Governor or passed for 405 yards and three Ann.iversary ha ve had more faith than any- Senator of California.' TD's to 'pace \V,ichita State to a 37-23 upset victory at the hands of Colorado State. North Texas State's Eagles invaded the Chat- Auto Engineers Society tanooga camp and proceeded to whip the home team 47-7. Miss- SALE Conducts Economy.~Run ouri. just got by a stubborn Kan- sas defense, 7-0. Tulsa was de- Last Saturday Nov. 19, The area. At the finish line food and feated at the hands of Louisiana State University in a home con- • Suits. · ~ · ..·."$5· Society of Automotive Engineers beverages were served to com- 6'·95 in conjunction with the Ashland plete the day. , test 21-7. • Top~oats ..•... , . Oil and Refining Company and the Valvoline Oil Company con- Trcditionols In Fine Worsteds/ Herrinqbones ,,' .. " ducted their annual economy run. Those who attended will verify this was the biggest and most enjoyable of any previous run. • Spo.rt Coats-,'. • • • • • $3'6.95 All participants were rewarded with free. gasoline, compliments of Ashland and seven quarts of Orion Pile Lined .Jeekets ... $22.95

racing oitl,compliments of Valvo- .) " line Oil. The winners of the vari- reg. $30.00 ous classes were: Ken Williams, driving a 1954 Oldsmobile; Jim Knee Length Parkas . 29.95 Rudd, driving a 1956 Chevrolet; , .•. Charley Rizzo, driving a 1956 reg. $40.00 and $45.00 Tempest; Richard Haltervdriying a 1960 Rambler; Corbett Caudill,

driving a .1965 Volkswagen. Fine Rain Toppers .. 'f' •• 35,,00 The ro~te. started out in North- side area, went out through Mt. With Pile Liners, reg to $45.00 Healthy, Hamilton, Oxford, Chev- iot, and ended in the Northside Sweaters, Sportswear ,- REDUCED

- All Alterations Will Be Completed COLLEGE In Time For Th.e Christmas Holidays. STUDE'NT Needed for parttime, "work. 'Car.requiFed. , '~45" ,per~wee~, Call' 731~16PO ( For Interview v ,Page ,Ten Wednesday, November-23, 1966

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Cincy 'Men.tor < Baker Happy With~Progress . MU,Mble Miami! by Bob Brier, in determining the team's' future \ .-0- this season. Who will actually The University of Cincinnati start, however, has not yet been basketball season is just around determined. Dick Hauke, .DC6'6" the corner. The UC student body forward from last year's fresh- as well as the entire Queen City -men squad, is presently playing are anxiously awaiting what hopes even with seniors Mike Rolfe and .Paul Weidner. The three players to be another superior Bearcat are all extremely capable and campaign. their' fight for the second forward Will the Cats surpass last years , position will probably not be de- termined until the final pre-seas- e excellent 21-7 record? Nobody really knows for sure. The per- on practice. John Howard, ):':ho has been a standout in practice son best able to speculate on the so far, will start at the other hoop situation is Head Basketball forward spot. coach Tay Baker. But even Coach Baker cannot really make any Dean Foster, a sophomore stu- dent on last year's championship concrete statements as of the squad, will definitely occupy one . moment. < of .the starting guard positions. Sophs Make Improvement The remaining spot in the back- I spoke to him before practice court will either be taken by Rol- on Monday afternoon and he lie Wynn or Gordie Smith. Regard- seemed quite pleased with the less of who gets the starting role, both players will see a great deal iprogress the team has v., made since the initial- workout, approxi- of action throughout the season. mately three weeks, ago. The Competition Tough four new additions to, the, squad, Concerning the schedule, Baker sophomores Rollie Wynn, Gordie feels it is just as difficult as it Smith, Rick Roberson, and Dick was a year ago. In the valleyour Hauke were singled out by Baker four prime targets will probably I'" as having made substancial im- be Louisville, Wichita, St. Louis provement, especially over the and Drake. Anyone under the im- last two' weeks. - pression that the calibre of MVC '\ Rick Roberson will be the Cat's competition has gone down, Is starting center, according. to the quite mistaken. Almost all the coach. Rich' has fine potential and top performers from last year seems to be improving with each have returned and with a .year 'practice. His size and strength of experience under their belt, are his overwhelming assets, and players like Unseld and Allen experience should make him a should be tougher than they were prime defender against anyone in last season .. ~ the MVC, including All-American The Bearcats are young unprov- Westley Unseld. en squad. There is a great deal of ,3 Fight for Forward, Spot spirit and potential but with four The three remaining sopho- \sophomores playing a major role, mores will play an integral _role nobody' can accurately -speculate on just how well the team will do. -Varsity Drowns Bearca't Frosh '- Head Coach Roy Lagaly took the cover off, the Cincinnati aquarium Friday with the annual varsity-freshman meet. Last' year, thousands Led by the newly elected co-cap- tains, Jim Stacy and Tim Kute, the Bearcats drowned the flound- of lawyel's i'ba,nkel's, ering frosh 66-29. The varsitysquad bagged firsts in 10 of the 12 events, and there accountants, engineers, was a new school record' set r' by co-captain Kute. In the first time the distance has been tried in the doctors 'and business mea school pool, Kute swam an When You Must Keep Alert 11:41.9 for the WOO-yard free- went back to'coll~ge~ style'. . When you can't afford to be drowsy, Outstanding freshman of the . ~, - - . inattentive, or anything less than all meet was George Brick, who 'there ... here's' how to stay on top. turned in a fast 200-yard butter- VERV Continuous Action Alertness fly of 2:09.6. .-,And not justiol' the Capsules deliver the awakenass of Coach Lagaly pointed out that two cups of coffee, stretched out the team has been concentrating up to six hours. Safe ' on distance in practice, 'and not football games~ and non-hanlt-tormtnq, on sprints. He added. that 'as the practice - becomes more intense, We'd like to clear up what appears to be a Center ,in Princeton, N. J~ Selected times should dip considerably. 'misunderstanding. It is somewhat popular employees are sent there from all The swimming season opens on on campus to decry a business career on, • over the country for a year's concen- '" Dec. 10 at. 2:30 against Indiana the 'grounds that you stop Jearning once trated study leading to a master's lfERli University," a perennial swimming you start working for Cliche Nuts & Bolts. degree.' -, Continuous Action power in the country. That idea is groundless. '\ You get the idea., We're for more learn- We can't speak for Cliche" but we can ing in our business. After all, Western for ourselves-Western Electric, the man- Electric doesn't 'make buggy whips. We ufacturing and supply unit of the Bell Sys- make advanced communications equip- , . 6 out of 10 college graduates who have ment. And the Bell telephone network will joined us over the past 10 years, for exam- -need even more sophisticated devices by »»»».««««

t ple.have continued their higher education. the time your fifth reunion rolls arouI!d. How're these for openers: ' / The -state of the art, never static, is where W.E.'s Tuition Refund Plan lets ern- the action is. ployees pursue degrees .while work-' At Western Electric, what's happening ing for 'us. Over 6 thousand have at> ~ IS the excitement and satisfaction of con- Stu~~ removes the dull tended schools in 41 states, tinder 'tinued doing and learning, If this happens this plan. We refund more than $1 to appeal to 'you, no 'matter what degree million in tuition costs to employees you're aiming/for,"check us out.And grab a year." "r, a piece of the action. To name another program-advanced '@'_:'<"'""" »»)~)~.«««« engineering study, under the 'direc- , }~'t5teJfI1Electric tim! -of Lehigh University, is eon- • _ MANUFACTURlNG&SUPflYUNITOfIHEBEllSVSTEM ducted at our Engineering Research ~,e-" ' )' Wednesday, 'November 2"3, 1966 UNIVERSI,TY OF CI'NCINNATI NEWS ,RECORD Page, Eleven t;,r','j -

1M N'otes Frosh To Open With Alumni; 'by Bob Plotkin ~' Ass't Sports Editor Ard~ 5chvtallie· Lead Team' by,Alan Marks State players, also promises to Feb: 4 University of Louisville Two "Cinderella'! teams, have Phi Delt downed, a stubborn On December 1, the freshmen be an obstacle for the freshmen five.. ' - Feb. 11, Morehead State College worked their way into the finals Sig Ep team by a 14-6 score. basketball team display their of the University league playoffs, wm 1966-67 Feb. 15 "'" Xavier University Clark Eads _and Jim' Druffel court magic against an alumni' one behind a scrambling, explos- Dec: 1 UC All-Stars (Alumni) Feb. 22 Bradley University ive offense, and the other behind teamed up on a 50~yaTdpass play - team prior to the tipoff of the' and then Eads pitched to John- Dec. 3 '" 'University of Kentucky Feb. 25 Miami University a stiff' and hardened defense. The new campaign for the UC varsity. / ' Pikes and Sigma Chis will meet ny Myers for a touchdown and When asked' the major differ- Dec. io Miami University either Saturday, after the Miami the extra point. Denny Reigle led -ence in college ball as compared -Jan. 5 Xavier University Sig Ep's comeback, passing 30 PA Man Nef!c!ed game, or Tuesday night under the to high school basketball, Coach Jan. 7 Marshall University Nippert lights, for the champion- , yards to Fred Butler for a score. Lee Rose remarked, "the biggest Jan. 10 University of Dayton ,Head Swimming coach Ray ship. Phi Delt won the game when Jim adjustment from high school ball Legaly announced that a stu- The Pikes, who a week ago Ball intercepted a, Reigle pass to college play centers around de- Jan.~14- Franklin University dent is needed _as a public ad- didn't seem to have a chance in and later ailed to Russ Uklotter fense." He further emphasized Jan. 21 " University of Louisville dress announcer· for '-all DC the world of even making the play- for the score. that college ball is moraaggres-

J,. BETA DEFENDER breaks'up a Pike pass pattern-eadt in the contest. Pikes went on to down the Betas ,27-18 to advance into the final game with Sigma Chi. - ,,Try to understand son .... 'No~ that I've been elected go·vernor you si~ply .A 'Newman Center must learn to use better -table mannersii you ex- pect me to let you go to the R~OUND'rABLE on 2685 Stratford - ., • -Than.ksgivi~g n:ight to see the Chose~ L~t - NEWMAN' .CENTER PA'RENT~S,-NIGHT

I-HE ."R,OU,ND'TABlE ') W. CHARLTON it GLENDORA,

j '_\', 25•• ;'~ 8:00 Nov. J. ~ •• FRIDAY EVENING$ Skit -, Receptio~ SAL ,VATION & 'TH:E ARMY Page Twelve liJ~ilV'ER£ITY OF CINCIN"NATI NEWS RECORD Wednesday, November 23~ 1966 , 1 Freternifies Announce Plan -Jr. PonhelCollects M'oney Fashion Fa(ts For Winter Rush Seasont For" Muscular Dystrophy , '\ : Becauseot. the growing, inte- man may indicate on a supple- by iudy Sta'utzenback year's total of three hundred dol- rest in winter rush" the Interfra- mentary sheet any fraternities he Jr. Panhellenic Council' held its lars. Sigma Delta Tau was .first ternity. Council has announced might be interested in seeing. -annual philanthropic project on among the sororities for receiv- the initiation of a' new winter ' Such indication will not restrict Sunday, Nov. 13,from one to three ing the most money· they receiv- him from rushing other frater- 0' clock. The pledges collected for , t ( • rush program: Any man interest- the Muscular Distr6phy in the ed the Jr. Panhellenic Traveling ed in fraternity rush is encour- nities nor other fraternities, from iaged to, register in the Dean of contacting him. It is merely a Cincinnati suburb of Cheviot. 'I'he- Award, for the 1966-67school year. Men's OfficEr.now. . means through' which he may in- ' girls received over eleven hun- The other sororities which were , .. ,.:~.. ' J Early' registration wilt' be to dicate an interest is being con- dr~d dolla~s for. their hard work. ' recognized for totals were Alpha f; the rushman's advantage, \ notes tacted by certain fraternities. ThIS total IS.an Increase over, last Delta' Pi, Alpha Theta, Phi. IFC. Not only will .he be able Sigma Sigma, Theta Phi Alpha, to observe day to day fraternity- and KappaDelta. life on a first hand basis, but it will enable him to become ac- Jr. Panhellenic Council has been quainted with a greater number busy. Mrs. Reuscher, the house- .of houses as well. '. Cupid's Comer mother from Sigma Phi Epsilon, .1spoke to the 'council on proper Lasts'TiII Jan. 28 Pinned: Tobie Levin, SDT; conduct / in a fraternity house. This present rush period will Trish. Mann, Theta; Bruce Kahn, HUC Plans are being made for the -~ "last through Jan. 28. During the Scholarship Banquet. .For the }week of Jan. 9-18: an IFC Rush Dave Hinsch, SAE. Pat Rundo; Barry Borman, Acacia; coming meeting, representatives Registration Desk will be set up Sarah Ward; from Ivy Chain, Mortar Board, in the Student Union. It will be Greg White, Acacia. Pam Whoknos; Eric Johnson, Acacia and Alpha Lambda Delta. will be open from 11 a.m.'to 1 p.m. Any Donna Wiggs, ZTA; speaking to the girls:' Nancy man not already registered for John Leidner, Acacia. / Nunn, for Ivy Chain; Lauralee Married: winter rush may do so. at this Engaged: Sawyer, for. Mortar Board; and time. Nancy Fite; . Cindy Buchard, AD Pi; . Nancy Lloyd, for Alpha Lambda while registering, the rush Peter Stockmann, UC Grad Dave Haber, Acacia. Delta .

": . ltl~Alt Interesting earth colors of char- coal, f,)rown and putty 'used_on the straight and bias. The darted and shaped" neckline forms a I*"I~\I~'. II. ':*¥*, , stand up collar. The dress was designed and drapeel by Kathy Hamburg, iuniorin Fashion De- sign, DAA. Sal Point cotton con- Sports hercjoses girl to mild-mannered mat~ rncjor, tributed .by Cone Mills, 1412' ..,??::"::i;;;::::{ ::::::::::::::I::::::{:> Broadway, New York, New York. -, DEAR RE!: I'm a big football star, and I've found a girl who suits me to a T. But Alpha Lambda Delta I've been blocked out of the play by a math major. He knows math Alpha Lambda Delta, the Fresh- 'from A == Pi R2to E == MC2. Now she says he's found the formula man women's honorary, celebra- for success with her. All he has to do is mutter "Coronet R/T," and ted its 3J)thanniversary this year. Thursday, Nov. 17, a banquet was I g~t thrown for a loss. 'Believe me, this is no equilateral triangle -held for all ALD members honor- that I'm in. Outside of telling me to bench myself, have you any ing the anniversary. Miss Jean advice? Winston, the first chapter advisor ~.,.u' FALLEN STAR _for ALD at UC and now the- asso- DEAR FALLEN STAR: .ciate professor of mathematics at DC, was the guest speaker. Other Now's the time to plunge. Coronet R/T isn't 'his, ex- guests included representatives , clusive formula. Your nearby Dodge Dealer has it, from other women's honoraries. too. And it comes almost as easily as the cube root of 27. Then how can the girl of your dreams resist two superstars: .. you and your Coronet R/T? From there on out, vour math major will be the victim of dlrnlnishinq returns. Huddle with your Dodge Dealer now, and get your signals straight. . ~-j SIMcv'~'W

BEARCAT STUDENTS FREE COKE

'c • With this Coupon and Purchase of Any Red ~arn Sandwich or Chicken Dinner.

, . And why not? Look what you'll have going for 'you in your Dodge Coronet R/T, convertible or two-door hardtop. All standard, too. 440-cubic-inch Magnum VB engine. ,Dual. exhausts. RED ,Heavy-duty brakes end suspension: High-performance Red Streak tires. And exclusive RIT grille and hood scoop design, full length point stripes, ang nameplates, front, rear and sides. Soqet with your Dodge Dealer, and your 'problem will sorve Itself. At.. BARN DODGE DIVISION lit ~ CHRYSLER . " :READING at LINCOLN -, , ~ MOTORS CORPORATION 8259Colerain Ave. 7131Reading Rd. . .> 6715Hamilton Ave.• Itttltt;~,~ .11~11~I.4LlttN-ttl·~I=A'I~lttNI :f;Z 3604Harrison Ave. WeCJnesday, , November 23, 1960- UNIVERSITY'OFCINCINf ..fATI NEWS RECORD -.., /' Page' Th irteen

Cinema . ) Pianist: To-Appear 'With~',CSO "The Professienels.' A. IN~ewl..Western Pianist RaYIl10nd Dudley jwill ,GaesarOp: 28 J:>y'Kurka; We- i"; - ,'" _ appear with the Cincinnati Sym- bern's Symphony, Op.'21; and the phony Orchestra Friday after- "Hary Janos" Suite by Zoltan Kodaly, ' by Jonathan V~lin noon and Saturday evening, Nov. 25 and 26, as guest artist. O~ the Artist-In-Residence "The Professionals," Director demptive tradition, of law, order, the long-winded soul-searching podium, Erich Kunzel, CSO assis- Mr. Dudley is artist-in-residence Ric 11 a r d ("Elmer Gantry") and morality to the up disciplined common ~tomost adult westerns is tant iconductor, will conduct his at" the 'University of Cincinnati Brooks' first, sortee int-o the wild splendor of the, American past. not. , ' second subscription concert of the College-Conservatory of Music and West, pours more fast action, fine E9ce-Lifting Worth taking' a look at} for- 'season. Curtain time is. 2 p.m. concertizes- on both sides of the photography" excellent perform- But American tastes do change: pure excitement alone, "The Pro- Friday and 8:3:0 p.rn. Saturday Atlantic. Early this year he a- ances, and slightly cornball dia- Starting in 1950 with "High fessionals" is playing the Grand at Music Hall.' > ' chieved outstartding sue-cess. with- logue onto the screen since Mar- Noon" (the transition piece and 'and Twin Drive-Ins:', . Mr. Dudley will perform Rach- performances" of Haydn and re- tin Ritt came up with "The Mag- apex of the old order of west- 'liThe Swinger" Hardly SWings maninoff's Third Piano 'Concerto, turned to record 36 sonatas. These nificent Seven." erns) , the cowboy- movie began It gives me ,a tremendous -the .work he successfully present- recordings are currently featured There are" many parallels I its 'transformation into serious, in' Sunday" afternoon programs could point up between these two amount of pleasure (and a com- ed in London's famed Albert Hall' "adult" entertainmenf Through- ~ensurate sense of power) tore- with .the ,BBC Syrnphony'q.rch,es-, broadcast at "4 p.m.Ifrom WGUC movies, both in plot and cine- out the fifties, the western under- vIe'Y<~.really :otten mOyIe every tra, SicMaJ.col.tn Sargenf<:()nduct- radio. ,,' . • matic style, yet I think it more went a Complete face-lifting. The once III a whIle.' A.-nd I~ever I ihg.. ' ' .." ;" 7 A concertjtour iof Italy is next pertinent to, note how represen- steadfast marshal was replaced have seen a bad mOVIe, Ann- "'. ~ '. , on the' schedule, of the busy, young tative each is of -a long-develop- by the hardened gunman or cow- Margret's latest film, "The Swing- Other program pIeces are JUllU~ Canadian, artist. I ing trend in the American west- ardly reprobate, whose revised' er," must be close to" the nadir ern film. code read : kill or be killed. Real- of its genre. If this is Hollywood's . A long, time back, when good ism had come to the West, yet idea of a "camp" movie, some- ,~ guys wore white and badmen it was a realism tempered, by one really ought to inform them ; Jadt~"d1 black, the plots or' most westerns tradition ,and loathe to give up that the summer is over: In fact; were simple and predictable. The the decency and naivite the west- "The Swinger" is probably the I."C"~'~"::'" _,', . . W_IlL_ •..' III _.uJ_ - ~- audience "was never burdened ern had once embraced. Out of funniest thing I have seen, since r~"'~ ~ ,«U.eIL/'~" c with having to-choose sides. They this' hybrid arose the existential the pigs ate my brother. knew that the marshal stood for 'cowboy hero of today, the good- Non-Existant Plot law and goodness, just .>-as cer- t~zt~fkif~~ bad guy who might fight on the The plot of the 'movie is llon-_ tainly as, they knew the despera- wrong side of the law but still existant. Indeed, the only truth ~'rJ" !t ' 'and intl.oducing JUDI WEST dos. would eventually be sprawl- live, work, and' die according to ~entailed in the entire film is the ed over some scenic landscape, his own standard of' right and . mounting sense of disease.jthat., ...., -7imes and MARSHAlL H. FINE dust and gun smoke blowing over wrong: , seizes one's lower ""bpwel" and their unfortunate demise. ' Following r the model establish- twists it tighter -,andl"tlghter as '~"T~~' U IIPre-'Adult Weste,rns ' ed in George Stevens' "Shane," the action, '~prQgre~ses. "The- ,Down/own -Ut,DlDl There was a classic beauty the 'new westems.i Iike "The Pro-' Swinger" -is 'probably the closest ,~ about these "pre-adult" westerns, fessionals;" present their anti- thing to 'a cinematic stewed prune reflected in the all-abiding, naive heroic' saddle bums as men who that Hollywood has vever'' baked faith the American public placed perform their jobs with exciting (or cshould I say half-baked): in their prototypic heroes. Men efficiency and ironic humor. Most like Gary Cooper, .Clark Gable, significantly, "The Professionals" DI'NE'IN and James Stewart came to em- live' by a code of ethics just 'as Agenda Set 'For body i.the rugged grace of the " stringent, in context, as the one OR American frontier. These' 'proto- of twenty years ago, yet perhaps, MunimersTry:~t~ type-heroes. could always be re- not .so credible. / lied, on to uphold the' "code of Avoids Pitfall In order ,,'to g'et off to" 'a"thead CAR,RYOUT.' '..... -."':'.",.; \ the West," to treat women with Because the director often i start for Winter Quarter, tryouts courtesy, and never shoot a man works diligently, to establish the, for "A View from the Bridge" in the back. At a time 'when hardness of his hero, it is some- will me held in room 101 Wilson Americans desperately neededre- times ludicrous for this charac- on Wednesday, Nov. 30th at 7:30 assurance c of ,the truth and sta- ter suddenly to turn preachy and p.m: "A View from vthe ~ridie" bility in' 'their heritage, the early soft. ,This pitfall, however, IS by Arthur Miller will, be present- .. westerns. of the '30's and '40's neatly and humorously avoided ed style in the Losantiville brought a commendable and re- in "The Professionals," although Room' at the Union on February Mon. thru Thurs.

••It _,.I';~_~""_~'~ 24. . .10 'til 3 a.m • .. "Rehearsals' 'will "not begin until Fri. & Sat. after the Christmas recess. Mr. Film Series To Feature Dudley Sauve, director of the 10 'til 4a.m~ l play, says that he needs 12 -men Sund~y 10 'til 10 p.m, age 18-50 and three women ages 1Tor:n jones/ IP}llow Talk "'~.~ 18-40. ' The Popular Films Society will charming movie version or' the Scripts can be checked out for / offer an excellent selection of Broadway musical hit, starring 24 hours .from Mr. Sauve. His of- movies during the winter quart- Dick Va~ Dyke, ,J~net Leigh, and fice is located in 104 B Wilson .·ICINC'INNA"I~CHILI S:P~ECIALISt ~ my all-time favorite, Ann-Marg- Auditorium. "A View from the er. Among the films that will be ret. ' Bridge" will be the lirst major Located Cornerof.Clifto,n &Ludlo,~, shown at 7:30 every' Wednesday A must film for anyone who production of the Mummers Guild J",st a five minute. wal~froln,c,a~pus' evening will be: "Pillow Talk," likes to laugh is "What's New for Winter Quarter. ~, -,-'- ,_.. .. ," ~ ;', "'-'." '," '~>.. .. ~":" '';'' a Ross Hunter commentary on Pussycat?" a wacky, delightful, Miss Doris Day's eternal virgini- tongue-in-cheek, slapstick mish- ty; "Devil At Four O'Clock;" an mosh that makes about as much interesting Spencer Tracy movie; \ sense as a pie-in-the-face and is' "A 'Raisin in the SUIt;" Sidney twice as funny, starring Peter Poitier repeating his excellent Sellers, Peter O'Toole, Woody' Al- Broadway role in a story of preju- len, arid an assortment of the " dice and integration; ,"Tom most beautiful women in the Jones," one of the all-time great world. ~ motion picture comedies that The final film of the series' is copped 'about every Academy about Helen Keller, "The Mira- Award going in 1963. cle Worker," 'a poignant and

Also, among the varied assort- beautiful motion r picture, .illumi-

ment of films are "Help," a col> nated brightly by the magnificent ' ./ orful ~exposition Of Beatlemania; performances .of Anne' Bancroft "Bye Bye Birdie," a bright and and Patty Duke.

/

~~ DAViD A young-co-ed and her pinnuuehurryto the neui intimate atmosphere oi the,TUESDAY ROUND &LiSB T AB.LE.~aquietehat ,by calfdlelight, the, jazz ~ AN and iotk stylings,oi-Jack Mann & Fiiend,~nd a UNUSUAL' tall fC,Qstymug. The perfect place to relax lifter LOVE the meeting-and never a cooer charge on Tues- STORYI day 0- .

""RING KEIR DUCLEA / JANET MARGOLIN / HOWARD DA SILVA ,ol'OAVdkAj~"~:~:':~"~'f:::~~::~;

• ," , C ---~ "';<;;;:;<~;:::;;;:;:;;:;::~"pius~;~i:~:;:::::;::::51'""_ "'~ ~ ~- "REMARKABLEI'" THE:"ROUND· TABLE" 'IN GLENDC?RA ~LLEY LORDO!tiI/mES I FE.AtuR,NG " THE CHOSEN LOT ONE WEE.K ONLY) e8q~ire THURSDAY AND~ATURDAY ••••••. .0« ~j . 281-17. ~ W~dnesd9Y',~,Novem>~er 23, 1966,

"': "11Q Jr;I ..The S~:c:iq~'-rtate~,·"Sap~rb':" Lonqer Runs, FOf<:,UC'$\Mus'icals,'Urged \ A new rriuslcaY' version of the anothe~ puppeteer," merely jerk~ ", 'Ii; Be~ky Pitteng~r tion with professional' ease. steadfast Noah Curry. Although Brecht-weill-classic.i.'Three Pen- ing strings to make painted dolls, ",_ .• ,_ ,,;. ' Some Disappointm~nt his acting was stilted, the basic ny Opera" willjbe , seen" at _the move on" a miniature, stage. He ' D~ Ml}.mmersGU1~~production The rainmaker played by Far- ability for acting was present and - Taft Auditoriumon Saturday, De- deals in '"layers _of meaning as ,of, "110 In the Shade," presented ' rel Mathes' was? a .bit of a dis- can be smoothed out with more cernber 10,at"8:3'0 p.m., when well. Eventhe.most amusing com- l~,st Friday, Saturd~y arid Sunday appointmer:t. Although, Mathes experience; Martin has avery Sweden's 'celebrated Stockholm ie interlude, has a lot more in it nights, proved, to be on~ _.ofDC's was alive, exurberant and con- clear voice with good tonalquali- Marionette '"Theatre of Fantasy than meets the_eye. mostsu_c~es~ful u.nde~taklngs~; sistant in his role, the real char- ty and strength. Shari Baum's performs.' He uses black theatre tech- The ~echmcal direction, orches- acter of Bill ,',Starbuck, as in- performance as Snookie McGuire The troupe, having just com- niques, a black stage with techni- tration, music ,and _casting were tended by his creators, did not w,as vivacious, refreshing and pleteda very successful long-run clans garbed in black. Bound a- the components of this success. come through. Farrel has a nne charming. <, , in Stockholm -cornes to Cincin- ries cramped space and puppe- There were several instances of voice with good tonal quality The Mummer's Guild Orches- nati as part~f 'its first American teers disappear. / His huge pup- emotional transition that did not but he seems to lack the quali- \ tra; under the direction of Car- tour- under' the \ auspices of con- - pets," ranging from 4 to 10 feet, build properly,' but this' is .un- ties necessary to successfully por- -men DeLeone, added profession- cert producer- Roger E. Abram- three-dimensional mannikins, and derstandable when - a, script is tray a character' with the magni- al orchestration to a beautiful son and the .Swedishr.Institutesof papier mache figures, all which rewritten to fit another produc- tude of Starbuck, in a bouse the score of music. And the stage Stockholm. "One of the most po- seem to move of themselves are tion style. The revision of stag- size of Wilson Auditorium. construction and lighting were tent -theatres to burst on the 'pup- interspersed with live actors~ Ob- ing and script, by Paul Rut~edge, Well-Rounded Cast done effectively with few hind- ~ pe.t world", ,~ounded in ~958 by jects and cos~u~es,. -specia~ly wa~ done effectIve~~ a~9;wIth~ut Ken Stevens, -Martin Vidnovic ranees, - MIchael Meschke, -the MarI?nettes dyed, stand ~ut VIVIdlym~he void. 10SlI~gany of .the-tquality of .the and Shari Baum rounded out the Longer ~un? are a :treas~red possession to - Mail Orders are now being ac- musical or drama,tIc, ,mtent. casting performance. Ken, as Jim This reviewer, would like to European audIences.', cepted at the Community Ticket ~rtf~1 P~rf~rmance " Curry, successfully executed -the see such musicals, with the cali- ~ Meschke's "Three. penny" ,dis- Office, 29 W. 4th Street. 'I'icket Bo~n~e HInson, In ,the lea~ role comedy and exuberanceJiis role ber of "110' in the Shade," run pels the misconception that pup-, prices are $2.501 and' $3.50. A spe- ,of LIZZI~,was both dramatically _ required. He was refreshing and longer than one weekend; It is / /

l' Ats are only forchildren. Part oL cial" discount is' offered for group and musically .s,!~er~'.She had .the ~carried his high pitched charac-. felt that there would be enough hisv-secret • , " /. ~ - strong, -melodious 'voice and dra- matic ability, coupled with poise 'Rob£Rl~It~~~JQBNS- and' stage presence made Bonnie's" Vargas-:.Renowned Flamenco, It performancesa-jiolished work of " '- m,., ,_,I ® art. -== SJ zzz: Best Acting ~ To'PerforIn On December 3_- -=- ~!.I .=:: ~ Frank Reigleman's 'role-as "H.~_ 'h' KENWOO~D 'MALL C." Curry, was his 'first with -the by C~tfiy Hyde . Mummers, .but we hope it won't .M~nuela, 'V.fl~~as,.a~clalmed; ~y be' the .last. His portrayal, as Liz- European ,C,rIt~cs as, .the ,,:?r1,4.s . COUNTRY WEAR FOR LADIES, zie's father, was 'one of the best greatest ,Fla~enco dancer" will Telephone 793-4044 :;,: ' acting jobs in the cast. Consis- a~p~ar ,aIOJ:~g with her, company ta-ncy and quality; sum up :Frank's o~,f~t~en, dancer~ at tneIaft ~':l~ performance. Hisvoice and man- ditorium ,on Saturday., December nerisms .were-completelythose of ~/,at8;30 p.m.. , a' middle-aged father and he held __( A breatp'~akingly, e x cI tin g, COLONIAl,LAUNDRYI ',' - ~, this, '~characterization throughout volatile young artist,. Manuela 2917 Glendora the show. His transitions from Vargas is the most idolized 'Fla- (Behind the ,high rise) ; '. humor to seriousness were easy menco dancer in Spain today. The andibelievable.. Our, congratula- reasonsfor this pre- eminence are". ./ ~,::-;,);, Featuring , tions to Frank for 'a job, well at once apparent to anyone seeing done." ,,' ,'" . , ' , her .perform. What' Time Maga,; r;;~"·;·::~~;;;'~·t»,;E'COLO;,N!IA,I.- SH~RT joe diGenovq, gave f~rthan-' zine called "the raw unbridled

;,~~.~i~~,~~~:;~7;'~-'r:-~1J:1-{~:'·" ,"-'-:;-~'~:~,~.! / "~" ~ ,itlie~ .t~Ii~.per,f~r;~ari~e:,IIi( 'to~,e~ passien, of.he~>p,edorm'a~c~,;>was, ~:;;~T~;f'2~'~tA:\{NDRY.T:01ITS_ FI,NEST a,s }i'lle, th.e t,o,wnsherIff;, ~~s ?~-, far .and away" the .entertalnment ~'~'~~"':;;§~\ ti(-·p·.~~:.): ,.~~f!: . "\. ..--\.~,~•.~:~,~." _. - l~vered' I~It1i',masterful ,dramatIc, highlight of the New York World's a,nd .musical 'strengt~." ~e\, came :' Fair, drawing capacity crowds to , <:'c ("Also Dry CI.eCi'ning":Service on strong, played hIS CO?tr:asts_ tile'; Spanish Pavillion ,day after convincingly and -held- all atten- day, In fact, two hundred thou- <, sand spectators paid the admis- sion to see her perform at the Manuela Vargas, Fair and Manuela Vargas and separated by the footiights, -she Company, were the 'only attraction succeeds in creating the atmo- P:ure .and Authentic Perfor,mance$ sphere necessary to maintain the '" to show a profit at the Fair. purity of the ';'small, room" in ,Manuela Vargas was also the which the, initiates can be pres- first I dancer to present a per- ent at the-flamenco rites. ' formance of pure flamenco last- Parisian ~ritic Jean, Hermes ing for more than two hours in perhaps best summarizes the an ordinary theatre. In her com- Manuela Vargas Company when pany there "are no second rate _he says: "Manuela Vargas is flamenco dancers -and rio 'songs more than just,' the finest flamen-. which are not pure and authentic. co dancer: she embodies in her Although the audience may be performances the soul of Anda- lusia and qf the, gypsies; she has J .. revealed this soul to us In a great new experience." Tickets to the Manuela Vargas concert are priced' at $5.00, $4.00, $3.00 and $2.00 and are available ~I at the- Union Desk. , STUDY IN _SOUTHERN i='RANCE A University year-In Aix-en·Provence under 'COLLEGE the auspices of the' University of Aix-Mar- I seilJe(founded 1409). EUROPEAN AREA STU~I~S \ST,UDEN~S FRENCH LANGUAGE' AND LITERATURE • ;P-ART TIME JOB HONORS PROGRAM' .;.-:",~\ (courses in French University exclusively) , 2-~-4-5 or 6 day 'week', 3 p.",., , ART AND ART HISTORY to 11 shift, flexible schedule, SOCIAI:- 'SC1ENCES complete training pr 0 gram, -MEDITERRANEAN AREA ,STUDIES no experienc-e necess~ry. Classes in English and French satisfying curriculum and credit requirements of over 2-80 ;American Colleges and Universities. ,/SALA~R¥_ Students live in French homes. Total costs equivalent to those at private universities _ and collages in the United States. "SE~ESTER PROGRAM IN AVIGNON" $18 per day - "SUMMER PROGRAM I" AIX·EN·PROVENCE" 1"0 those who qualify. Write: For appointment 'call: INSTITUTE FOR Student Personnel Director AMERICAN UNIVERSITIES , (founded 1957) 2 bis, rue du Bon Pasteur AIX·EN·PROVENCE, FRANCE 4~11:;5,324, Telephone: France (Code 91) 27.82.39 or (Code 91),27.69.01 rv);:J I ~::- / :,,~ln"}<'ivr,:,,":,~"ib.), ••..,~ ,~\\. ; i'" ~ ~'!_'\':;(J "\/\ "o'~ l ", ~p~ ~ '\ !.A ~ .••.•. ~. '\. l"~ Wednesday, November 23, 1966 UNJVERSITY OF CINCINNATt N'EW5 Exotic .Imports Sold Housing .CouncilPresident Discusses

I "'.~ .,.,0, , _ •. I _ At Annual BazaQr Revision Of Women's Curfew Hours by Sherrie Young For hungry patrons or for stud- ents with time to eat but no time by Sally Howard , some cases being, granted, un- of course, subject to the approval Beginning Nov. 30,- the third to shop, there will again be a Being president .of--Women's limited hours. UC's Women's of the Dean of Women. annual International Bazaar will Housing" Council is a job' for an Residence Halls are looking into food bar at which one can' find Regulations on hours are more be ,held at the Calhoun Street American stand-bys like donuts energetic girl any year, but in a the matter; says Sharon Zweig, and Bar-B-Q in addition to such, decade when students are ques- this year's president of Women's lenient now than those allowed "Y." During the three days that many women commuters by their things as French.pastry and vari-: .tioning the moral standards ot Housing Council: the Bazaar runs, UCstudents and .parents. Freshmen must be in by ouskinds of German food. The "We took a survey' last spring 11:00 p.m. Monday th r o u g h Cincinnati residents will purchase campus International Club mem- to see what kind of regulations Thursday, while upperclassmen everything from earrings to hand- bers will entertain during lunch on hours the girls liked best. ,The must. be in by midnight. Every- and supper. question of unlimited hours was carved Mrican fire gods, items one may be. out until 2:00 a.m. which represent the end of many only one of many in the survey- Problems, Problemsl Problems Friday and Saturday nights, and months' of planning and work. We,tried to include every curfew 12:00 a.m.' is the Sunday dead- An aggregation such as this system possible." she said. The actual work begins well presents many problems in re- line. The -most recent change In Sharon, who is a junior in T. C. the rules came last year, when before the event, when the com- gard to-publleity, display and se- majoring in Special Education, upper class women won the privi- mitte~ for the Bazaar is chosen. curity . Publicity is arranged for was sorry to say that the results in every possible medium. On lege of staying out until midnight Since it is sponsored by the "Y" of the..survey were not yet tabu- Monday through Thursday. Be- campus, fliers announcing the lated. It's -a slow process when advisory board any the campus Bazaar are posted in any and fore this, they were required to you don't use a: computer, and the be in by 11:00. YMCAand YWCA,:the committee every available space, and spec- , student committee in charge has is composed of both adult and -~tatorss at football games hear to take care of responses from Sharon and the Women's Hous- _ student members. about the. Bazaar from announ- approximately-l500 women who ing Council, advised by Miss, -cers. participated in the survey. . Osinsky, are also _working with Chicago Import Show In addition to ads in the two men's .residence halls to help co- . - major local' papers, weeklies in . Follow Feelings Of People .ordinate living policies, judicial Ear~y In the year, one of the various parts of the city are also But ~hen .the resuIts are avail- guidelines, and dress standards. committee members attends an given stories about the Bazaar able, the Women's Housing Coun- However, the men will not _be import show in Chicago to see and what takes place there. The cil will act to enforce the hours asked to wear heels on Sundays, what is available, and then orders - preliminary shipment is dis- favored by most women. -This is, only-suits and ties. from the merchants represented played in the window of the 5/3 , at the show. Most of the merchan- Bank downtown and signs are Sharon Zwell- _diseis bought on consignment. A, hung in stores with no window 'sample shipment is received for space available for displays. . their parents, the job requires display purposes and the rest' ar- . even more endurance. . Plea,sedon'-t rives about a week before the 20% Off . Unlimited Hours Bazaar. Shortly. before the Bazaar, com- Men and women living in col- z Lupf'Spr-ft.e, In addition, money is kept on . mittee members turn to manual lege dormatories .all over the hand for individual buying pur- labor and build the eight booths , country are asking for" and in poses. For example, a committee for display of the merchandise. It makes member' happens to be in, New They also design, paint, and put York and sees one 'of the items up all decorations inside of the , WUS plenty of noise that could be .sold at the Bazaar. "Y." The workers in the booths .petitions are now avaUable He. buys it and is reimbursed are students (not necessarily for those wishing to work as a all' by its'elf. from this money. ' "Y"members), faculty wives, and committee" member' for ",the other interested people. For work- W 0 rid Univer~~ty Service. Sprite, you recall, is - Scandanavian Imports' ing, they receive a 20% discount WUS sponsors ",')lwe~1 on on everything they buy. the soft drink that's The things on sale come from campus where through differ- so 'tart .and tingling,' ent programsl. the members 22 different .countries and are Pinkerton And Sleepless Knights we just couldn't keep widely varied. Glassware, French collect mo.ney which goes to Finally, all the items have to it quiet. water •color ..drawings" ..,.Spanish, I:hel.p c~lI~e s!~dents in _oth!r:_ Flip its lid and it jewe!J:y;'land' African~woo(rcarv~ be-insured-and "PillkertoI1!guards' countries. Petitions are av•••• , have to be arranged for, to. guard really flips. ings a!e,parto( the; articles on able in the residence hallsl the premises for· the three days' BUbbling, fizzing, sale. New this' year are sweaters, Union desk and from any WUS gurgling, hissing and toys and Christmas decorations of the Bazaar. As part of this sew committee chairman. Petitions carrying on allover curity, men who live in the build- from Scandanavia. are due Jan. 5. the place. ~ ing sleep downstairs at -night; An almost exces- right in the middle of everything. sively' lively drink. .Seminor When the Bazaar is presented Hence, to zlupf is World Nov. 30, Dec. land 2, it will.rep- ·YE OlOE to, err. resent the work of several months. What is zlupfing? Held In Denmark' and a large number' of people in an effort to enhance the cultural Zlupfing is to drinking what . In the fall of 1967, the Inter- life of DC. . smacking one's lips is to national College in Copenhagen "SRIPS" eating. offers a program known as'~All It's the staccato buzz you World Seminar" to all interested .~ ....~ I.-..., ~ake when draining the Laat few students. Assisted by guest lec- Voters ..-. ~ deliciously tangy drops of turers, the students, the princi- (Continued from Page 4) Sprite from the bottle with a pal, and the director of ICG,.will appealing to the constituents as straw. ~ ~- be working together in a wen- an alternative to the Democratic , 'Zzzzziliupfl integrated, yet informal and incumbents who suffered from It's completely uncalled for. friendly group, exploring the con- having been in office during a hec- W_e Frowned upon iIi polite'society. temporary geographical, econom- tic and frustrating period. And not appreciated on campus ic, political, social, and cultural The Hernia thus seems to nave either. _ ' situations in' the various coun- had little effect one way or the Excellent Food But. If zlupfing Sprite tries of our world. ' - other. It appears that the results and Beverages is absolutely essential to your. would have been similar even with enjoyment; if a good healthy East-West presidential push and support in THERE IS, A' zlupf is your idea of heaven, Another feature for the season the form of "whistle-stopping." well. ..al1 right.- 1967-68 is an eight-week -study The 90th Congress will be a' shad- 'BIG 'DIFFERENCE, But have-a hear t., With a tour in East-West relationships->' ow of the former 89th but this drink as noisy as'Sprite, a through the capatalistic Scanda- cannot be blamed upon the lack little zlupf Ko-es'a 'long, long way. navian welfare states, thesocial- of presidential campaigning. The SHIPLEY~S: istic Soviet Union, Rumania, Hun- change was, you will pardon the 214W. McMillan St. expression, inevitable in view of gary, Czechoslovakia and Poland 721~9660 and the divided city of Berlin. the temperament of the American ICC offers again this year its people and the uncanny predita- 40 Years Young traditional five-week summer ses- bility of their voting.habits. sion in Denmark and,several win- ter programs under the name of "D~rlish Seminar." $~ Ways And Means , , ICC is attempting to make se- lected lectures, field trips and tours, excursions, frank idiscus- sions, and social gatherings with young Danish people, its means to accomplish its goals: Interna- tional knowledge, understanding, and friendship: ICC is efficient in its method and informal in its

approach. -ICC offers-no 'scholar- . ~, ships but its programs are priced 1.1 well within the range of .most students. Students Interested in any or all-of the. available programs are asked to write to: ,ICC, Dalstroget 140, Soborg, Copenhagen, Den- mark. Page Sixteen l:J~;t¥ERSITY OF CINCINNATI NEWS ,RECORD Wednesday, November 23,,1'966 C'rinie-De:lin'q'uency .lssues ·d .Bits. .,' e Signal .k I Studies At Recess Institute Brl ge -. Suit·. Preferenc by leU Israls Y UC students from -the New for term papers and reports. York area will be interested in Eacn student will be assigned a three day Institute on Crime, to, al1 experienced staff 'member As 'was stated last week, there Delinquency, and Correctioris, to EAST' WEST Lead Suit-Preference S i g n a I beheld in Brooklyn Dec. 27, 28, of the Probation Department, who are basically three types of suit 8-J9653 8-A72 against no trump is .after a. de- H--65 and 29. . will, act as .his .me~tor and ~on- preference signals, the' mo~t.co~- , H-98 fender has established a suit and Sponsored -by the' Supreme sultant durmg',msbtute sessions mon-of these, the' Follow-SUItSIg- : D-J D-AQ9863 .~ C-I09754 ~J2 has one outside entry with. which Court Probation Department, Sec- and be host to the student for nals have already been described. to get in to cash that suit. ond Judicial District, 'the Insti- lunch. everyday. " Today'scolumn deals with the sec- SOUTH tute is designed foeducate' the Students interested in apply- ond most frequent type, the Lead S-Q108 NORTH undergraduates interested in law , ing may do so by sending their Suit-Preference Signals. This type H-A 10742 S-A7 psychology" .sociology.ccriminclo- names, home address~s,teleph~ne of signal can be given' only by the D-K105 H-K105 gy, . and penology in current numbers, college name, major . defender whose turn it is to lead. C-AQ D-K1Q~ methods of. treating, criminals .. and year'of grad~ation to ~o: By leading a certain card, .he ca~ Against the contract of four C-J8542 They will. be..in the form: of role seph A: Shelly, ChiefProbation actually tell his partner which SUIt hearts, West fell upon the excel- EAST WEST 8-KQ1092 'play demonstrations, tapes; films,' Officer, 'Supreme Court of the to lead back. The two most com- lent lead of the ace of diamonds. S-J:8 lectures, "buzz group" meetings, State of New York, Probation mon situations here are when giv- . H-42 H-9763. When his partner's jack 'dropped interviews with criminals and Department, Second Judicial D.is- ing partner a ruff and when es- D-A962 D-J743 field trips. This is a valuable op- trict, Municipal Building, SUIte tablishing a long suit against a no he knew his partner had either C-93 C-K76 portunity to gather information 305, Brooklyn, N. Y. 11201. trump contract. In either case the jack alone or king-jack doubleton. SOUTH size of the card played indicates In either case he should lead an- S-6543 the side s,qit in which the leader ; other diamond. West led the 9 of j H-AQJ8 has the quickest entry. diamonds, an unnecessaruv high D-Q8 ••....."';;.. Esquire .Barber,·,Shop card, for East to trump. East C-AQ10 A very common defensive situa- recognized this as calling for the tion against suit contracts is one Against South's three no trump Phone 621-5060 lead back of,the higher of the two contract, West led the jack of partner's giving another a, ru~. non-trump suits, thereforespades. When this, occurs, the leader will A spade 'lead put West in to set spades, in response to his part-. Razor Cutting, Fan Wayi~g, -want to indicate, .by the size of the contract by giving his part- ner's overcall. East won the first Princeton, Ivy League, Flat Tops the "spot card" he leads, what ner a second diamond ruff. With- trick with the queen and led back suit he wouldlike returned on the out the help of Suit Preference the deuce of spades at trick two: Monday thru Fr'iday 8 a.m. to 6 p.m.' next trick. Signals, East would probably have This Preference Signal showed a Saturday 8 a.•m, to 5 p.m, NORTH had to guess which ace' his part- quick entry in a low-ranking (i.e.' 228 W. McMillan. St.: S-K4 ner had. diamonds or clubs) suit. Declarer /I H-KQJ3 finessed the queen of clubs to at Hughes Corner, ,next to 5thl3rd Bank D-742 Against No Trump The most common use 'of the West's king' at trick three, where- C-K863 upon West shot back a diamond to defeat the contract two tricks. If East had the ace of hearts he should lead back a high (i.e. the king) spade at trick two. Bridge N,ws -We'set out to ,I ruin The second annual Queen City 'Intercollegiate Bridge Tourna- some ball. bearings and ment will be held on Sat., Jan. 14, at ¢ Xavier University. Starting times of this two session team-of- four games are at 1:30 and 7 failed successfully pm. The Terrace Room of the Xavier Student Center will be the scene of the tournament. Over one hundred colleges have been invited to send teams to this event. The winners will receive master point awards; trophies do- nated by the US Playing Card Co., and free entries to the 4 session Open Pairs of the Midwest Region- .::..~ al to be held in' Cincinnati in April. Entry' fees for the Intercollegi- ate tournament are, $1.25per ses- .

c sion for each player; entries from each college must be made in groups of 4.

The Bell.System has .many small, automatic out to ruin-some ball bearings telephone otflcesardundthe bysmearlng them with an country. Theequipmentinthem icky guck called molybdenum couldoperateunattended for disuJfid~ (~QS2). ' • tenyearsor $0, but for a problem. , •• ',:' ',; , "'" ..:;' " - " , ,I Swotk!!his,Soli?lubric~nt, used a certain The manyelectric motors in those offices way; actually. increased the life expectancy You may save '25%/' on you r neede~ lubrication at least once a year. Heat of the ball bearings' by a factor car insurance (or Dad's) from the motors dried up the -bearing oils, with ou r Good Student Dis- " .' i ' count ... another State thus entailing costlyan.nual maintenance. ~i~h~~~ Farm first. You're qualified • :~~:::t~~~tt~e:~:~: if you're a full-time male To stamp out this problem, many tests studentbetween 16 and 25, werecond ucted at Bell Telephone We've Jearned from our at least a Junior or in the eleventh grade, Laboratories. Lu engi- "failures." Our aim: investigate' and h a v e a, STA:n 'UM brica nt average orBl ...••. neerGeorge H. Kitchen.decided everything. equiva.lent. Call ' •••• to do basic, experiment that , The only experiment that can, me today for all. IN5UUNC~ a the details! . would provide a motor' with the really be said to "fail" is the worst possible conditlons. He deliberately set one that is.never tried. IN THE GREATER_ CINCINNATI AlREA CALL HOWARD ''A. FOX 941-5614 @Be'lsystem ,I , & '. '. American ~elephone & T,elegraph STAUFAlMIIlUL AIT.I.BIl( INSURAJICECII'ANY AH. T ,and ASSOCiated90mpanles 1.ll OFfICE:BLel.IISTIN, IlliNOIS W~Hne~d~y:·KJoveriibe'r23';" f"966 ONTvERS IW"~OF'CING!NNA:rI'-'NEWS'~fR~crc!j~D Poqe iSeventeen --owu Student·.,'5enate .Votes YRClub Elects Choi rmen: Weeklv ~MeetinqsP lorined By Majority' Yo Dissolve Self uC's Young Republicans re- Dr. Robert Harnzak, Assoc. Prof. , I cently elected their chairman. of Music, is ,t~egro!1P's advisor. by Lauralee Sa.yer group 'attempts in' the future to The Senate bill reserved the They are: Claire B~inker. Pro- Young Republicans brought 18-3-3 to .pass the bill. " right of Senate to make all in-. . " Donald Clancy to UC and sup- "',..- The Student "Senate at Ohio Approval of Student Senates terpretation concerning the legis- gram; Lony Bray, Policy; Bob ported Robert Taft in his recent Wesleyan University in Delaware, The bill states that all proposals lation. It 'has, indicated that the Peterson, Publicity; K~n Wo~fe, campaign. The organization us- Ohio, has voted overwhelmingly relating to student affairs which Faculty Student Affairs committee Freshman Representative; RICh ually meets-Tuesdays at .1:00 in to dissolve itself if any student originate from, student groups wouldbe interpreted as "faculty..." Lemle, , Sophomore Representa- 145 McM. ' by-pass its authority. must be approved by Student Sen- , ,-:" Student Action Rectified tive; Brent Thomas, Junior ,For further information, con- In an extra edition of the "Ohio ate and that if the faculty con- Representative; Bob Bercan and "tact Bob: ..Peterson., ,Mrs. Diane "Dissolved" was defined l1S fol- Mrs. Diane' Grahame,'" Graduate"~ GrahameoI: Dr. ,lIornzak Wesleyan Transcript," Ohio Wes- siders any student proposal which lows: "If the faulty considers· any leyan's student newspaper, David has not been ratified by "Student proposals relating to student af- Queen, Student Government. Edi- Senate, the Senate shall thereby fairs without prior Senate approv- tor, reported that' Senate voted "consider itself dissolved:" al, Senate shall cease to meet un-

, . \ til such time as either the situa- tion causing the above student ' action has been rectified or a new Texaco Education, Progral!l Senate shall be elected by. the student body. Gives UC ,.Unrestricted Aid According" to the Senate bill / _Senate has the ultimate power to rule on all proposals eminating "M" IS FOR THE MANY THINGS from any student group because its constitution, approved by- the ,YOU'LiTEACHIlER' . Board of Trustees in March, 1963; Nobodywill dispute-surely not I-that raising children states. that Senate. has the power is a task which requires full time and awesome skills. to legislate on and regulate "all Nonetheless, a recent nationwide survey has revealed a- student activities." startling fact: mothers who go back to work aftet their Constitutiona IP recedence children are. safely through the early ye~rs,:are,~notably \ When senators' questioned whe- happier, better- adjusted, and-more fulfilled than'friothers ther Senate had legislative 'power who slmply remain housewives. Moreover77apd mark this over the Association of Women well-the children of such working mothers are themselves Students, which received a sepa- happier, better adjusted, and more fulfilled ! , rate charter from the Board of All very well, yousay, but what's, it got to,go with you? Trustees in' 1914, it was argued Isn't it obvious? Ifyou are underachieving at-college, get, the SG constitution took prece- 1 YQurmother a job. '. . . '., - dence. \ What kind of job? Well, sir, your motlieris 'prohiibli"

Following passage of the bill, I between 35 and 50 years of age, so certain occupations Senate then voted to form a com- must immediately be ruled out. Logging, for example. Or mittee to inform all affected par-:: , whaling. Or carhopping, \ ' ties>and organizations who have But don't despairv There are other kinqs.rof jobs-enot in the past by-passed Senate. many, to besure.ibut 'some. However; you?must not stick These groups included the Inter-' " Mom in just any old job. You must remember that after' fraternity Council," Panhellenic the-excitement of rais,ing~you~~hewouldbe.bored to"tears Council, and AWS. asa file clerk, for instanoe.ior as 'a dolrnan.rt A dolman,'as A IIWatchdogll we all know, is someone who brlngs handfuls of water to Thecominittee .will also serve track layer,s.Withthe recent inventionof the pail, dolmen/ as a "watchdog" and will report are gradually falling into technological' unemployment.) to Senate all actions which may But I digress. I was saying, find Morna job worthy of be in violation of its ultimatum. her talents, something challenging that uses her vast wis- If Senate decided as a body dom and experience but, at the same time, is not too hard that a violation has occurred, it on her obsolescing tissues. That's what Walter Sigafoos UCHAS BE E'N selected, ,as one of the colleges in' the United States to did, and the results were brilliantly successful, would vote on dissolving itself, . Walter, a sophomore at the Upper Maryland College of ;f,~€~i~~ ~r,r~s~i-i~t~cf ,d~catiOi;ar:assistance under the Aid-to-Education Rick Cunningham," author \of the Progr~m of Texaco lne., it was announced by Dr. Walter C. Langsam, bill, said. " ~ Wickerwork and. Belles Lettres, majoring in raffia, ap- President of UC. A grant of $7,500 will b'epaid in five equal annual , IIChe,p Hired Helpll proached the problem scientifically. First he asked himself what his mother did best. Well sir. what she did best was installments. Rog Morris, Senate Chairman, to keep hollering, "Dress warm, Walter!" ~ 'UC is one of more than 250 cofleges and universities inCluded in in his opening remarks before At fif~t glance this seemed a skill not widely in demand, Texaco's program of educational support. In addition to providing Senate said, "This Uni"ersity," but Walter was not discouraged. He sent out hundreds or' direct fini1ll1cial support to 150 schools, the program includes scholar- which purports to have the high- inquir ies and tQ.day,I am pleased to report, his mother is ships and fellowships to 90 educational institutions, both private and est educational ideals, has done 'happily employed as wardrobe mistress for the Montreal public.' _ ., its best in' the past to keep us off Canadiens. our tracks as students. We are Another fortunate venture was that of Frank C. Grans- Receiving a chec.!<,for $1,500.00 is pr.esidentLangsam. With him administrators - we administer is' R~ T. Howell, assistant manager of Texaco's Lawrenceville, Indiana, mire, a junior at the 'Oregon State Conservatory of Music policies' handed down to us - we 'and Optometry, majoring in sties. Frank, like -Walter, did refinery. -Photo by Sarge Marsh are, in essence, cheap hired help." a survey in depth o,f his h;}other~s,talents. Chief among them; he found, washer abifity to.make a' roast of beef feed the wholefamilyJor three:pay~:So, naturally, Frank 'Eng. 'Honorary . got her a job at the Museum of N~ttir"al History. " SKI & SURF SHOP What has one to do with the-ether, you ask? Isn't it Initiates" 16 Meh" ,obvious? Anyonewho cflIlstretcliribs like that belongs in 517 Monmouth St., Newport, Ky. paleontology. ' " '. 7h ~ ; Tau, Beta. Pi, national engineer- i ing scholastic honor society, has announces a initiated .16 College of Engineer- ing upperclassmen at 'the Univer- * *STUDENT DISCOUNT (10%') sity of Cincinnati. New members are; Gerald-Bar- and thel,:,Jim Bono, Dwight Cottier, Dick Davis, Joseph Douthett, 'SPECIAL'FOUR MONTHLY PAYMENT PLAN ,I. 'Richard 'Halter, John Hickman, "HART-NORTHLAND SKIS, PARKAS, SWEATERS, James Kallio. CATALINA SPORTSWEAR, AFTERSKI~BOOTS Oth~ts 'are: David Molfenter, Chris Passirello, Richard Pistler, OPEN: Weekdays 'Til 8:00p.m.' SAT~RDAY 'Til 5:00 p.m •. ) Theodore Polas, Randy Smith; Erich Tiepel, Darsey Thacker, PHONE: 581:2111 I.cannot.'. C.OllclU.d.ethis,..cotui__"..n..'~I.·.tho,..P..t,{SaYing a few andRobert Wolf. words about Personna Super ainless Steel Blades. The reason. I cannot is that this c l~~pis sponsored by the makers of Personna Super Stam'l~ss Steel: Blades, and they 'are 'inclined to get peckish if t bmit'tb,rtlention their product. - i ,.Not; 'mind you, ,that -it is. a chore .fo r me to plug Personna.r Or, for the.matter pftl\at,~9 shave with •• Personna: No sir: no .chore'. -Personna. t~k~s' the pain out ofshaving, scrapsthe scrape, lle8",~testhenick, repudiates "the rasp, peels the pull, boycotts the burn; blackballs the . --B,,1!IP bite, ousts the ouch, Furthermore, Personna endures and ~ -abides, gives you luxury shave after luxury shave, day after day after day, 'And further furthermore, Personna ~ l"E'. G"T 01= LASTING /' ENJOYMEN, is av~ila.qle bptp.,in double-edge .style ,an,d~?jector style. And as If all this were not bounty enoug'll'; Personna IS .now offer~ng you, a chance ,tQ,gra.l!.aJisV,l,11of $100 bills'! . Stop' at Your Personna dealer and"get an"entry blank for Good1ies Disc:ou·n,t .R'8(o,r,ds the new Personna Super Stainless Steel Sweepstakes. But. hurry! Time is limited. McMillan at Clifton * *'* © l%li. Max Shulman Phone. 621-8710 j Thc makers of 'Pertllpna ~ho br.ing you this co~umn a.ll. through the schoof- ~ear;'lso bring youthe~llltlmate m "At Goodies, Discount Is A Business, Not A Slogan" luxury shaving with Personna and Personna'e partner in

- ~age -Eighteen UN~lvlRsrT¥OFlei NCI"NNATL NEWS i kE'COR'D , Wednesday; November 23, 1966 Crockett Names Compo~er;' Voters:; To-,Decide School Levy Cage' Jo'iris Grad Faculty America's leading avantgarde Museum of Modern' Art and the At· Special' Election On Dec. 9 composer John Cage will becom- League of C.omposers',He began .' - . . . to devote himself to composmg by Karen McCabe qUlring local funds~< such as discontinued, making half-day .~oser-m-res.Idepce during the sec- works for' the "prepared piano", IIHead Sfart/' will be' discon- sessions necessary. ond and third aca~emic quarters which he is credited with invent-. Without the revenue from the ued in June. ( 15) Maintenance work will '-, (If 1966-67at DC. HIS appointment ing. recently-defeated School Bond 8) Summer" staff assign- have to be \deferred. As Mr. was- announced by Dean Camp- In 1949 Mr. Cage received both Tax. Levy, the Greater Cincin- ments Will necessarily be re- Boisen pointed out, IISchools bell Crockett of th~_DC Graduate - a Guggenheim fellowship for ere- nati School Board will be forced duced. ' probably won't be painted un- School. Mr. Cage IS expected to ative work in the fields of music to 'eliminate 16 facets of the -, 9) Dental services for in- til the plaster falls oH the arrive "at DC at the beginning of and an award from the National school system- now inioperation. digent ehildren will be elimi- walls." , the second quarter. , Academy .of Art~ and Letters" for Over $4 Million Deficit nated. Obtaining only 43% favorable 16)- Finally, administration Born. in Los Angeles, California, having thus extended the boun- ,10) Driver Trair;ling will be and supervisory' staHs; both il) Mr. Cage has studied with Rich- daries of musical art." He organ- (vote, the measure called for 4.8 discontinued. mil. tax, or $4.80 on every $1000, the central oHice and in the ard Buhlig, _Adolph Weiss, Henry ized a' group of musicians and en- 11) Working, agreements worth of property to run for schools will be reduced. Cowell; and Arnold Schoenberg. gineers in 1951 for making music r. with _ Cincinnati1s Symphony five years. According to Mr. After listing these items, Mr. From 1936-38 he was a member directly on magnetic tape. Orchestra, Natural History , Boisen "observed: IIlf this levy of the _.faculty of the Cornish Mr. Cage's works have included William Bolsen, Director of Museum ,and Recreation Com- School Community Relations, the doesn't get passed, I would say School, Seattle, Was' h i n g ton, "The Seasons", Atlas Ecliptical- mission will be withdrawn in that-the Cincinnati school system where .he organized percussion IS" "Fontana Mi~'?-for magnetic School Board would be opera- January. _ \ ting under $4,443.500 deficit in wQuld return to the level of edue- ensembles and presented concerts tape, and the score for the motion 12) Teachers will no longer cation that was offered in 1890. of~ music: for percussion instru- picture "Works of Calder". '67. Worse yet, the deficit would be provided at the Child Guid- rise to 6 million in '68: Cincinnati schools began kinder- ments alone. From 1956-60a' member of the ance Home and Catherine garten classes in 1905, and eve- In an effort to secure the After one year on the faculty faculty of the New School, New Booth Hospital. ning school was initiated in 1840." necessary . 55% favorable vote, of the Schoolof Design in Chicago, York City, he now teaches' com- _I' 13) ,WCET, the educational' Furthermore, the director per- he moved to New York City, ~ position privately. the School Board is holding .a TV station will no longer reo; ceived an acute disadvantage to where he directed a concert of separate election, Friday, Decem- . ceive C inc inn a t' i support. DC education students if the bill ber 9 at the usual, polling cen- percussion music sponsored by the Greater' Cincinnati Schools is not passed. "Some of the very .ters. If the measure is defeated, A&S Seniors supply over half of WC ET's fine young people we' get from the following items will be elimi- All students in the College of funds. DC would not have much to look LOST Arts" and Sciences expecting to nated: 14) Construction of tempor forward to: as more of our teach- 1) Kindergarten wi"1Ibe dis- Sans &Strieffe Sl,ide Rule, receive' a' degree jn June or ary buildings to avert over" ers retired, we wouldn't be able August, must file formal appli- continued, Sept., 1967. crowded classrooms will be brown case' with na.me: Wes to afford to replace as many." cation for degrees by Decem- 2), Summer seheel will be of- Garbee. Call 861-7524. Reward ber 9, in Room 137 McMicken fered only to those ,students offered. Halt" who must repeat courses. Ad- vanced courses and enrich- Autho~ity .Speaks On Sex; ment programs for elemen- ,- tary children ...will not be of- Criticizes Poor Educatio'n IISPORTS CAR· ,MINDED?II fered. ' r., 3) Adult evening classes will by Peter Franklin sexuality but also, concerning the Come out to our unique sP9rts car center and ..• ' be discontinu~d in Feb., '67. The teachings of morality have social implications of sexuality. 1. Sell your car - - 4) It~will be necessary to in •. always been presented negatively .Repreduetlve Biology 2. B~y one:of ours, new or used - - - or, crease the number of students as a list of "don'ts" explained The over 800 Social Health As- 3. Have.us service your imported beauty. in ,each classroom. sex education authority Dr. Mary sociation members and. college 5) In "September the present Our reputation is based on expert, dedicated service for S. Calderone at her talk at the students present at the lecture ALL makes an~ models of imported ca~. Try ~s ••. soon. 'school year, 195 days,' will be R'o y E. Dickerson Memorial were told that a course in repro- -. needed to obtain state funds. Luncheon, Nov., 18. Dr. Calderone ductive biology was a necessary AUTOSPORT, INC. 6) Coaches and band leaders asserted that morality must be addition to the curricula of every Cincinnati's exclusive Alfa Romeo Dealer will no longer receive ,xtra presented 'positively': "as con- .high school. The course would 9635 Montgomery Road ...::::.793-0090 -cornpensaflens for resuming structive and creative things that cover such vital areas as child Open Monday, Wednesday, Friday 'till 9 p.m. duties early. . you do." / development and nurture," since 7) All federal programs re- Dr. Calderone who is a gradu- the effects from this period of de- ate of Vassar College and the 'velopment have' proven highly University of Rochester Medical _significant in influencing the School is, a founder of the Sex child's future Iife. Education and lnformation Coun- Dr. Calderone .also enumerated cil of the United States (SIECDS). 'several other areas which she Ignorance of Sex - feels should' be included in a The well-known sex authority course of this type: "The drive to criticized the poor education most marriage . and the factors that i people receive on the role of sex- threaten marriage must be cov- This is one of uality in their' lives. "Sexuality, ered. Man must also be studied begins at infancy and is an on in relation to his environment Arrow's newest style going dynamic process." The with particular emphasis on the button-down sport shirts. doctor r.ecommended that sex ed- tensions under which we live to- ucation should be an on-going day. Also the population explosion' Be choosy. process as well, With the" child must be studied since it is becom- learning' about sex as he grows, ing a greater influence on our It's Arrow "Cum Laude" King up. ( lives as each day passes."; Cotton shirt of 100% cotton. Dr. Calderone explained that The M,gic Hour all factors of sexuality must be ' Dr. Calderone asserted that so- .Has a full button-down collar .... .jiresented and discussed in the ciety makes a "communal ass" of Shoulder to waist taperand "high school classroom not only in itself through ridiculous rules pleat. "Sanforized", of course. relation' to the physical aspects of supposedly designed to regulate , sex' activity in our society. "A \ $6:00. Plenty more where girl may not be in a boy's room this came from. Plenty. after 9:30 p.m. as if this is the ••••• ~ I magic hour - after which bad Bold New Breed by. things happen." In conclusion, Dr. Calderone I explained that society must pre- ~ARROW~ pare each of its citizens to de- cide "Who they are and what they will do with their sexuality. Will , ree to they manage it or will' they let it ,-Colleze manage them?" Stude~lts , ,2,5¢' to others A new booklet, published by a .!- non-profit educational founda- THANKSGIVING tion, rells which career fields lets Because of the Thanksgiving you make the best use of aJI Holiday, Hillel will not have lunch or Shabbat Services on Friday, your college training, including November 25. liberal-arts courses -=- which career field offers '100,000 new FRIDAY NOON LUNCH jobs every year,- which career We' will serve our last .Friday field produces more corporation .Noon Lunch of the quarter on De- cember 2. Come and relax with _presidents than any other-what your friends for the last time be- starring salary you can exp«ct. fore final exams. Just send this ad with your name and 'ad d r es s. This 24-page, SHABBAT SERVICES career-guide booklet; "Oppor- Friday Night Services will be- gin at 7:30 on December, 2. Be- tunities in Selling," will be cause of final exams, "there will mailed to you. No cost or obli- be a Kiddush, but no Oneg Shab- gation. Address: Council on Op- bat program has been planned. portuniries.S 50 'Fifth Ave.,New We'll just be singing and talking till -late, as' usual, so stop by. .York 36, N. Y., CINe 11-21t Wednesday, November ..23, 1966 UNI·V,ER5ITY-OF ·C1NCINNATINEWS REG:;0J3[), Page Nineteen SDS Members Discuss Issues; Sofety.On Cornpus Needed,'. Sawyer. Off:ersProtection .. Reveal <. Philosophy i Objectives by Barb Behrns Women are urged to call the What is "Students for a Demo- should be more, not less, democra- compensating for the climate in The need for greater protec- -desk and obtain. the name and cratic Society?" What does it stand cs , in America, the community the university." tion on campus was recently call- telephone number of one of the -for, and how will it affect UC?- and the campus. We feel the con- Do you think the University is ed for and" the Sawyer Hall se- men who will be 'their escort cept of democracy is a radical curityCouncilwas established for for the evening. It is up to the , These questions were raised' as notion today, in this country. We molding the minds of the stu- that purpose. The proposal for the -' dents,?' "We have to do a lot of SDS pamphlets attacking UC's want to build a truly democratic council was made by Bryan Rose, men and women to get together placement service began circula- society based on active individ- research on that. ROTC has been and Jim Lauer was elected chair- on the time of study; This es- ual participation.' a, factor which molds the mind of man of the group. cort service is set up On a day ting. the student in a definite direc- to day basis. . The Cincinnati Students' for a Students "Advisory Role~' tion. I advocate some kind of pro- Escort Service "Participation," stated Jim, Democratic Society is a group of What does this position mean gram' to give credit for working The purpose of the Council is "has not been overwhelming but approximately "25 students with in a univ,ersity? "We believe that with WEEP." an escort service set up for the the service has been used." It is headquarters at 2331 Clifton. SDS students of a university should be Doesn't ROTC build good mili- women of UC. Sawyer Hall men 'also a good way for the men to tary leaders? Yes, but do you get acquainted with the' women is not as yet 'university-affiliated given more of a hand in determin- studying at the library or other ing the policies. In the past stu- need more military leaders, or buildings on campus during the on campus. organization, nor does it have any dents have been given more of more social workers?" evening. have been asked to sign The .idea will be continued as officers as yet. an advisory role, which is unfair Who will defend the country if their names at the desk at the long as it is necessary and as • The Nlt vinterviewed Bill Burge in a so-called democratic com- we don't have good military lead- Hall.. long as it serves the_purpose. and Bob Turner, .aetive members munity." I ers? College might be the wrong of SDS; their answers have been "What we now have is a stu- time to serve in the armed forces dent body where. only 46% vote and should be a time to cultivate printed without editing. Before P.M,.'O.C. at Student Council elections. The yourself as an individual." -. examining their arguments, it is basic reason for apathy is that What's yo"r stand on Vietnam? important to bear in mind that students don't have any say in "Basically, while we're for the PLAYBOY ,REP. 25,000' members 'of this .national what really affects them. The role end, we don't agree with the ® _ SUBSCRIPTIONS FOR U.C. STUDENTS "Association of young people to of the Administration is not to be means currently used to wage it. '4 the left" marched on .Washington the moral guardian, of the stu- There is a difference between' for- ,RATES ONLY THROUGH REP. to end the War in Vietnam on dent; it should not run their per- cing people to be "free" and let- 1 YEAR - $6~50 (R~. $8.00) April 17" 1965. sonal Tives, " ting them choose their' own form ALSO PLAYBOY PARTY KITS \ "How did SDS originate in Cin- What is.an example of the Ad- of government, regardless of any PLAYBOY FAVORS cinnati? "It grew out of a peace ministration running the stud~t's form they may choose, even Com- ) movement on campus. We dis- lives? Beer is prohibited here, munism .. We believe that' part of Checks Payable To: covered that we were concerned even though Student Council vo- the US policy today discourages WINSTON ROGERS, Kettering Laboratory, University of Ci'lcinnati 'not only about peace, but civil ted for it. Students and faculty foreign democracy." or call 341-2036, after 6 p.m, .ights and democracy too. In should make more choices about I September we got together and, curricula. Administration should called a lot of people." keep buildings up." TH~T SOCKI,NG AD~ER ATTITUDE Sex, Black Power, L.S.D. What tactics' do you en;tploy to get your point .across? "One of So far, the organization .has the best means is talking to peo- published two editions of their ple. When an issue comes up, you newspaper "A Voice," a four- draw attention to it. The so-call- . page anti-War in Vietnam leaflet, ed tactics depend on the situa- and a pamphlet attacking Tru's tion.We picketed, as individuals, placement service for arranging for SC resolutions that were pass- interviews for engineering and ed. Leaflets .explain the -specific scien-ce majors with US ammuni- problems and communicate spe- tion depots. In addition, they have cific problems." publicized Student Religious Lib- eral meetings, featuring such top- Wouldn't yQusay some of your ics as "Sex, Black Power, and leaflets are rather sensational? L. S.D.:' .. "Leaflets, like pictures of two burned corpses',areYrea]istic~ not Individual Participation sensational." , What· -is the purpose .of SDS? Do you attempt to tell both sides "We hope to function on campus of the story in yourpamphlets? , as an educational group-to try "No. We are representing our to point out to students that there point of view. Perhaps, we are Law Frat Names Pledges Phi Delta Phi, the largest Legal From the Junior Class: Barton, Fraternity at the UC College of Ed; Burns, Dave; Duning, Bill; Law announced the pledging of Finkelmeir, Lou; Gillyan, Lou; 67 men fot this year. In the, Fresh- man Class are the following men: Goldberg, Sherm; Gowdy, Chuck; Allen, David; Anderson, Bill;' Howell, Jim; Kramer, Hank; Baker, Jack; Blase, Kevin; Bo- Mathews, .Stan; Meyers, Carl: genschutz, Dave; Bressler, Ken; Miller, Rob; Muir, Doug; Peltz, Buecker, Tom; Carpenter, Rick; Dick; Wildman, Walt. And from Cobey, John; Collins, Pete; Court, the Senior Class: Perks, Ben. Colley; Crabill; Charles; Donohue, .1K.1';'1:{.p..•• :li3·R"k-':1'@:1=t-1 •• Denny; Dressler,' Roy; Eagen, Tom; Also: Ertel, Tom; Eynon, Ern- ie; , Mike; Fisher, Bill; Hayhow, Steve; Heuck, Ken; Jos- selson, Frank; Kassen, Hank; Kil- 'mer, Jeff; Linnenberg, John; Lip- pert; Jim; Meyer, Ron; Mac- Laughlin, Lew; Millonig, Art; Nechemias, Steve; Oliver, Jim; Patterson, Larry; Peck, John. Peyton, John; Riley, Pat; Roberts, Robby; Schriber, Ken; Schuler, Dick; Seibel, Ken;Sher- man, Tom; Stubbs, Tom; Stutz, Bob; Susskind, Stu; 'I'eevan.rRon ; Thorton,' Jack; Tranter, ....Terry; Vernaglia, Josh; Wills, Roger; Wittenberg, Shelley. ' ~

WHAT DO YOU BUY WHEN YOU BUY GREGG'S PROFESSIONAL KICK UP YOUR _STATVS··~WITH DRY CLEANING?" ,-THE RICH CREW: the Adlercrew they call Life/long in white and 30 going colors. ~ YOU BUY A FINISHED PRODUCT Going on ih Orlon' acrylic to.look good and f~el great. With stretch nylon Soils and stains have been removed. to fit all feet. A buck fifty foots the billand you're socking right Trimmings and ornaments have been removed and'rePiaced. Repairs have been made. upto your attitude.Tust like the rich crew .. -~r:·.L '~;::IC~C:;C: The original "feel" has been restored by sizing. additives. Creases are sharp and fabric is properly'finished. . Your garmentis ready to wear. '. H:.& 5 Pogue Co.' I Gregg Cleaners 'McAlpira's 200 W. McMillan Street Sh·illito's· .l"":\11- Pqg~ Twenty UN.IVERSITY OF CINCINNATI NEW~_\RECORD Wednesdoy, 'N0ve,m.ber~2a,~~l-966 . Gary/ Ault Receives Award" Ass't Dean Campbell Enjoys New Job; Others- Norned As .Finclists WQrks<:With 'AWS, 'Fros~ Honorary' by Karen McCabe' counselling except her thesis. -"Women are becoming more As advisor for Alpha Lambda aware of their responsibilities, . Mrs. Mary Campbell, a friendly Delta, Mrs. Campbell said: "Hon- not only to themselves, but also young brunette, is a busy woman, 'orary societies have a definite im- to society," Mrs. Campbell said. who seems delighted with 'her portance, as long as their activ- Many will have to choose be- - new' job. ities foster scholastic ideals. I tween marriage or a career. Yet, Assistant Dean of Women since would like to see. them become Mrs. Campbell belives that both August, 1966, Mrs. Campbell more aCtive." She also hopes to _ can be combined "successfully. In works closely with Aws and Al- increase interest in AWS and advising aspiring career women, pha Lambda Delta, a freshman what it -stands for. "I .think it's, she said: "A woman's first re- honorary, and interviews the important to make women stu- sponsibility is to raise' her .chil- , freshmen women and transfer. dents conscious of their role on dren, but as her' children get students. ' campus, and in the community." older, she can manage a career "In' the many interviews I've' Is woman's role changing? too." had this fall, many of the fresh- men have said that there is a friendly spirit at UC.--,-They tell NEWEARR.INGS - :EARR'INGS- EARRINGS me it's easy to meet people on, campus, and give good reports 1000's Han'd, Picked 'Round the World! about the, orientation program." I Smiling broadly, the Assistant TrINY FILIGREE from Israel, Portugal - NATIVE WOODS, Dean continued: "The. student body at UC is 'so diverse. No two Africa, Austria, India - CUTE ENAMELS, Siam - DAINTY people that come into my office ANGEL WINGS - GLAMOROUS RAINBOWS, Tahiti, Hawaii, are alike." South Pacific! - Earrings, Rings made to. your order, too. Students aren't always happy, Gary Ault, right, a student in the College of Desigrl, Architecture, however, w hen. visiting 'Mrs. Chr istmas Lay-Away Plan has won an award from the Cincinnati Con.vention and Visitors Bureau Campbell's office at 101 Beecher. i~r his design for .~ lagatype, letterhead, and brochure for flhe Con- "I think students do have a cer- Ta-Wa-Na 274,Ludlow - Wholesale, 'Retail vention Bureau. - tain amount of stress 'and ten- sion. A. lot of times, they just In the photo, he receives a plaque from Philip A. Dem'psey,e,xecutive want a-chance to talk things out. vice-president, and Edward J. McHale, president of the Conventio'n If there were more opportunities /1 Bureau, in the presence of his associate professor of art, Louis G. for students to discuss their prob- She's all shook up Rockwood. , lems, both individually and in UC students who received honorable mention in the competition wer'e groups, with faculty members, .She's on cloud' 9 Barry Steinnecker, Stephen.Sunderhaus, W~ R. Pendley, and Douglas better understanding could be the result." , Her HE'RSCHED~E 'DIAMOND Penn. They and 'Ault were select~ as finalists by Profes·sorRockwood. . ( . Sitting in her comfortablejjf- / A committee of the Convention Bureau made the final selection of fice, Mrs.- Campbell reminisced Just suits her! fine! Ault's work, which will appear on the/ Bureau's m,ailing pieces a'n!c;I about her college years: She was other materials in the near future. a Phi Beta Kappa at the Univer- ",~"",,. sity of Wisconsin and earned .. botha bachelor's and master's de- Langsam-Consultant Fo'r Paperback gree in botany.' \ Surprisingly e n 0 ugh, Mrs. ., Dr. Watlter C. Langsam, not~d Affairs Multi-Text, the l60-page Campbell. had originally intended illustrated book is' an introduc- to pursue - research' work in as an historian as well as presi- science. However, _ a two-year dent of pC, is one of two con- tion to the history, geography, term as woman dorm residence sultants for Scholastic Book Serv- cultures, and political and eco- counselor during her graduate ices' new paperback volume on nomic problems, of the nations of study. changed her mind. Mrs. Western Europe. Campbell has completed all the "Western .Europe." ,.__ ..~. work on a Ph.D. in- guidance and The other consultant is Dr. Hans Kohn, professor of history emeritus of the City -University' of New York. The volume is' edi- BOSTON'IA:N SHOES ted by Dr. Louis L. Snyder, pro-: fessor of history at CUNY. •. A Multi-Text Identified as a Scholastic World

Poulo Chosen For ROTC Band Sponsor ({ Miss Paula. J. Heckman, junior majoring in Business Education in the .College~of Education is the new UC ROTC Band Sponsor. S}le was chosen recently by the men- of. the band and has been par- ticipating- with the Band since nllr RUittrrnity ~4i!V FOUR"FINE STORES then. Her duties include march- ing and- traveling with the band Located in the eldRlehards Store at Cliftor. and McMillan" , • 8 w. FOURTH and acting as hostess for the band. .0 TRI.COUNTY CENTER Other activities in which Paula STORES LOCATED AT: • KENW~OD PL~A is- involved include: Secretary of '< the Student Union Board, Treas- Ohio U Bowling Green . Ohio State • HYDE PARK SQUARE urer of Delta Delta Delta Sorority, Kentucky Eastern Kentucky Purdue a member of the UC Band Bear- kiten Squad, and a member of Miami Florida SNEAin the College of Education.

~i~ ~c ' ,}'.c!~\'~ HAPPY· 'HOLIDAY·:SEASON o\~ i.~. ~~..c. ...,~,~ 0"'t!• ~'"~.t ~- 0; e-: v ~( GIFT .- BOOK'S' .,..<. .>,- :f1.c ~o ,/ "10 ~ ;...

Complet~ Line of Greeting. Cards- ~.' ., and Gift Wrapping Pciper "TRY US FIRST'" - \ ' . -, DU'BOIS :BOO,KSTORE' Calho,un, at ,Clifton "Opposite The Cornpus"