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University ~of .' NEWS ORD Published Tuesdays and Fridays during the Academic Year excep,t ;as sch~edUled.

Vol. 55 , Ohio, Tuesday, January 30, 1968 No. 25 Allen1s D'ial_ogue Newman_ SponsQrs Vif;!tDebate; - -~ - . ; - .,.~ PaneIView~"Morality of War" by Margie Babst last spring. Father has "spoken It will prove Red China's content- "The Morality of War" issue and debated on the subject of ion that America, cannot win a~ will be wrestled and weighed to- Vietnam as :much as almost any- gainst the combination of guerilla, war and cold-war propaganda. morrow night at 7:30 p.m. in the one.jn the United States." ~ No Victory In Negotiations Great Hall. Two active, believers In 'Vietnam C,,:isis, which Communists want a long ground . in their positions, Father Philip, Father Lyons co-authored with war because they know America's Berrigan, S.S.J. on the left and Stephen an, Ph. D., who knew Ho strength is on the sea and in the Father Daniel Lyons, S.J. on the Chi Minh, Mae Tse-tung, Chiang air. They know the United States rlght,willform- the' Newman- Kai-shek , land Diem, Vietnam is policy: is aimed 'at: negotiations, sponsored panel with moderate seen as a. test case for Communist "wars of liberation." . not victory. Father Edward Brueggeman, S.J. Loss of US Prestige "America can never win at the Anti·War 'Demonstration conference table what she. does " America loses in Vietnam, Father P h iI i p ,Berrigan, a itwill. be the greatest defeat. in not win" in I the battlefield." As Josephite, ,bas been stationed at the history of the United States." long as the stalemate continues, ' St. Peter Cia vel' Church in West It will serve notice to the rest of . the war will be prolonged until the free countries of the world the South glves up. "W'e must a- - Baltimore's Negro slum. ghetto dopt a policy of winning and fully since 1965. He has, been active in that the United States is no long- convince the enemy that we in- both civil rights and peace move- tend to win." We must destroy ments. He protests America's ex- the Vietcong's sources of supply ternal diversion in an unjust war , (NR Photo by Walt Burton) and work toward moving the \'..: in Vietnam when attention should" "fighting northward. CLAUDE ALLEN returns to the scene of many of his animated be focused on the internal dis- discussions covering issues of the day, the Union 'Bridge. order in our own cities. His pas- Viet._War 1$ "Our Own" sionate involvement has set' him "This is not primarily South at . odds with both ecclesiastical Vietnam's war but our own:" 1\~ Allen Returns T-o-CalTlpus; and civil authorities. merica's tot a'} commitment to \.: He is currently u'ncter indict- freedom saved Western Europe Receives Better Reception - ment as one. of four, anti-war and, much of Asia 25 years ago. demonstrators who poured blood Leaders' of .s 0 me of these by Alter Peerless Diem, however; was too coercive. on their-own draft records in the countries . now- 'criticize Ameri- ca's involvement in Vietnam when He had secret police which strict- Selective Service offices in Balti- human freedom means as much lIIc.-".... Cl~ude A!~en returned to ~he UC ly ruled the country. As lVIr. Allen' more on Oct. 27' last year. They cam~us Friday an~ received a said,' "He couldn't keep the sham waited to be arrested, and Father to the inhabitants there as it did much' better reception than ,he of fighting Communism' alive." remained in jail for a week fast- to Europe' in the 1940's. The Viet- usually got before he left. Spon- , " . " ing. The maximum sentence they -namese were restive for centuries taneously addressing a group of According ','to Allen, the best face is up to 23' years in prison under Ohinese domination, and. students on the University Bridge, way to .makea c?un~ry go Com- and $32,000 in fines, - . they were resti ve under the Mr. Allen greeted old friends and mun~st IS t? send l~,flve thousand ,American Blood "Wasted" French. Today they do not want to spoke' with students on the issues Marmes WIth guns. negotiate - with the North, they Blood was' used to mutilate the of the day. Another objection Claude Allen want the North to leave them a- records "to illustrate that with Allen was an English -instruc- h~s to the. government's policy in lone. them and these offices begins the tor at UC last year. His contract Vletn~m IS the ~ost. ~~ are pitiful waste of American ' and South Vietnam must be kept was not renewed. He was' known ~eventy-elg~t billion a spending . Vietnamese blood." .He sees the free. Hanoi, Peking and Moscow at UC for being controversial and yearm Yle~n~m while we only prison sentence as a . "question must. learn that their attempts to advocating leftist policy, spend two billion a year on the a of identifying with the poor. They. take over free countries will be When asked about, Vietnam poverty program. He suggested Father Daniel Lyons, S.J. are the only people in jail-the stopped . wherever' the y . start Claude advocated' complete with~ that - the money spent on guns victims of society. And for the - er the great nation they can count them. If this is not proved, the drawal of American troops. He could. be spent on consumer most pari' they are black." on, and they will have to come to war in Vietnam will have been' stated that the best way to com- '. goods. terms with atheistic Communism. "a criminal waste." pete with' Communism was eco- Claude also feels that the He considers himself a peace- maker rather than a pacifist. A- nomically. "When they promise-to Korean capture of the Pueblo was build one hospital we - should a manufactured incident by the bove all, Father Berrigan says; build two. When th~y promise to U.S., engineered - by the White he wants "to serve truth.' I real- New Y orkers ForlTl Clique~ build two schools ,we should build House and the Pentagon to ration- ize that by taking this stand' (on four.'" , -, alize our: effortsin Southeast Asia. the protest) .that I am being being violent. The question is Mr. Allen went onto discuss As solution to our current Zoo Story Investigated a what is allowable violence. Truth our, present involvement in Viet- national ills, Mr. Allen suggested.' '. is violent, as is love." . How many students at UC a small place where you .can get nam .. He stated that when Ho Chi "Gear the 'economy for peace, . Vietnam Is "Test Case", - know -that the New York boys to know "everybody." Some of Minh took over Vietnam, he in- ' break the military industrial com- their majors are DAA, A&~;', and Father Daniel Lyons, a Jesuit, have, formed a clique 'called _the stituted "land reforms by distri- plex, disrupt the garrison state, Business. ' buting land in the south. The U.S., and establish a priority system debated' Claude Allen, an anti-- Zoo? according to Allen" did not want for social progress. Vietnam English instructor, at UC Although you. may not know Why do some say it's .a -hole? general' elections at that time be- them by name, a member of the They prefer big cities, where cause they knew thatHo Chi Minh Zoo is not hard to detect. Often there are lights, Broadway and. would win by 80%. The U.S. then seen relaxing in the Siddall people. However, some think Cin- dug 'up Dierriand sent him to .lounge, they- might, wear such cinnati is cute and quaint-they Vietnam to be our man in Saigon. things as turtle neck sweaters, know all of -the names of the Hinshaw Top ,Cand,i-da,te , black coals, boots, army jackets, streets and, bars already. sport clothes, and they may sport Some may think ~the city is Now that the formation to the new U~iversity Party has goatees, sideburns, and beards. "cute." They're not so impressed been announced, the election plans of the Coalition can be re- Once "in Siddal cafeteria, they with Cincinnati girls, They prefer vealed. -, - may take up three or fourtables. the New York girls because' of the way they dress, wear their Resulting from a secret meeting held several weeks ago in the Made up of about 45 members, hair .and apply their make-up. SAE;house libraryvDave. Hinshaw, former Student Senate Vice- the Zoo has rented an apartment somewhere in Cincinnati-i-it has They say New Yorkers have more President and currentley vice-president of American Strident class, savoir [eire, Cincinnati is Governments, has been nominated to head the list of coalition five -rooms, no furniture, writing on the walls and "it's 'really tuff." too conservative for them. -candidates' for the upcoming student elections. What-do they, do on weekends? Following a policy of choosing the: most capable candidates Several of .them have taken off from the student body regardless of affiliation, the coalition; a in "Les's" car to go to New York Mead Visits UC .collection of several fraternety groups, picked Hinshaw for pre-" and they also fly' up. They' have , sident because o~ the "ample experience and knowledge he could" Zoo parties in their apartment on Margaret Mead, internation- bring to the job" Saturday -nights. . . . ally' known _ anthropologist, will Of the three presidential candidates available to the coali- Invariably, some will frequent give a lecture today at the YMCA the Pickel Barrel, Round i'I'able, on 270 Calhoun. 'I'he vtime of the tion, Hinshaw superceded Glen Weissinberger and Mark Painter the Mug Club or the Candlelight, lecture will be 12: 00, and there because of the experience and knowledge of the' innerworkings and they are always in the Game will bea charge of $1.25 per per- of Senate gamed by his: apprenticeship as vice-president this year ROOIn, in ;iJc's Student Center,' son. Miss Mead's topic will be under Larry Horwitz, according to a coalition spokesman. playing pool. "College Students' Disillusion- The coaltion is made, up of -six fratenities: SAE, Phi Delta ':!'- A good' motto for the Zoo merit: Vietnam War ana' National Theta, Beta.. Lambda Chi, Sigma Alpha )\Iu, and Triangle.' In : would be "live -for :today." '. Service." I backing Hinshaw for the major office the coalition has thrown What do they think' of UC? '.Miss l\,f~ad was graduated from , approximately 500 votes t<> a non-Greek candidate. Contrary topublicbelie( they,' Barnard' College, 'and received like it. "Cincinnati IS such a . her Ph.D. 'degree from Columbia cnange from New York. It's such University. - , • ~ !O\ '<0; .",,", 11 ~'\I ':.,' f \ - , • I • ! , ...s: UNIVERSITY OF CIN,CINNATI NEWS RECORD Tuesday, JonuoryBt), 1968 Heart-Transplant ,In, Cincy Not Likely , News Summary \".' I There is no chance that heart formed in Cincinnati in the near The .two .Cincinnati doctors who Korea, .Viet Top News' transplant surgery will be per- future. - ',,' do all cardiac .operations in this .- , '"' area agree on this point, They by George B. Hatkoff are Dr. J., A. Helmsworth of Holmes Hospital 'and Dr. Floyd Main from the DC Medical School lahrmalln. ;Pharmacy , , ' Deartment of Surgery. 169 W. McMil'lan St. .' The heart, transplant surgery 'itself is not too difficult, Dr. Phone ·861-2121 Helrnsworth said in an interview 'Friday: But he added.v'We don't think that as a form of clinical work there has been enough, re- -search. In othe~ words," he said, "We don't think it's safe;" Rejection by ,the body of the transplanted heart and post-oper- ative,treatment of the patient are the problems. Doctors Main and 7S I Helmsworth are worried by. Case,.4· '''l1here's no one around here who has worked on the' problem to any extent," Dr. Main stated. SOc off with "It (theheart transplant surgery) has been done successfully on this coupon dogs, but not by anyone in this area." limit /1 per person \ YE OLDE

11 South., t ~'SHIPS", Chl.:"n.A. flt ' SeQ. 011\c\a\ ~~ <, tietc\se: " .~' ,':::~;:-,-,\' ' 80.01\ . ~ .. ,. r""'w !!ftw...... , ,' ~\t" ... ,-'--~= e '''0 ~oo iKi.. I.NQ& \4ot1'\A.""-ee.eo,,,ad vp.f"or P()$sib£e !1BW t:dtok./.:. z.:I~s(;!.J. ~n.f';'Ltr-o-tl..·on...000Lo,:,"<] th,e.Ho Ch.i..M.i.nh "/i-a;~t.. Excellent'Food ~,iJ)i.strJd 'Co..pi.:c,a.(s aueccul'l; bjVietcor:g sQft 'and Beverages COSMETIC PUFFS , THERE IS A Saturday, the Security Council been, followed by further rein-. BIG DIFFERENCE of the United Nations accepted a forcements. c Candian proposal to hold private ONLY, 49 diplomatic consultations during It was 'also reported' earlier by , -Navy sources that the nuclear- SHIP.LEY1S the r weekend in an attempt to re- solve the issue of the North Ko- powered carrie~ Enterprise knd 214 W. McMillan St. - rean .seiaure of the American in- two .escort ships were speeding 721~9660 telligence ship, the Pueblo. 40 Years Young for the .Korean area. But, later The Council was summoned to reports indicate that the Enter- an emergency session Friday by prise force is being augmented, by .a United States request. It ad-, a flotilla consisting of, an aircraft journed Saturday afternoon until 'carrier escorted by destroyers Monday at 3 P.M. The Canadian and six submarine ·chasers. proposal calls for the appoint- Also, the Navy, Saturday, froze ment of, an intermediary to ne- disch1rgerequests by members gotiate the release of the Pueblo .of the Naval Reserv:e drill units. and her crew of, 83 men. - Last Thursday, President .Johnson --...,1, , - , North Korea denounced the ordered to indefinite active duty ,. United States appeal to the Se- 9,340 men from the Air National curity Council announcing that it Guard, 4,847 from the Air Force INTERVIEWSOr\j -CAMPUS' would reject any resolution "con- Reserve and 600 from the Navel cocted to cover up the United Reserve - a total of 14,787 -fol- States imperialist aggression" as lowing the seizure by North Korea "null and void.", of the Pueblo. ' The Hobart Manufacturing Company Meanwhile, American. policy- The> United States Army in makers remain hopeful that' the South Vietnam has shifted 15,000 welcomes the opportunity to interview Soviets will reconsider an earlier airborne troops and' other men .to prospective 1968 graduates for. " . declaration, and offer assistance the northernmost area of South in recovering the American ship. Vietnam to aid the Marines In State 'Department sources de- that area. The Marines are up scribed the Soviet attitude as "ne- against what General Westmore- gative, but not hopeless." land described as a "sizeable in- OUTSTANDING OPPORTUNITIES IN President Johnson has been vasion" by the North Vietnamese. meeting several times daily with An official spokesman of the ACCOUNTING his top advisers on foreign policy. United States command com- They have been reviewing the lat- mented that "The massive in- I • ELECTR'ICAL ENGINEERING est diplomatic findings about the vasion up there is more than the ') Pueblo incident and are continu- Marines can handle . . . . They ing contingency planning for pos- need help." General Westmore- • 'INDUSTRIAL ENGINEERING sible military moves if diplomatic land said: "The North Viet- efforts prove fruitless". [ namese Army has mounted a • MtCHANICAL EN~INEERING American military sources said sizeable invasion from thede~' Saturday that new American air militarized zone and from Laos. strength has continued to' pour I am confident in the ability of into the Korean area. First, there' the Republic of Vietnam's air FRIDAY, FEBRUARY. 2, 1968 were reports of the transfer of force, ,United States and Free 36 jet fighters from Okinawa to World military forces "to handle South' Korean bases, but this has the situation." Please' contact the university placement office to arrange a pp o i n t rne nt -fo r personal interview .. COLONIAL U\'U'N'DRY N9W 'AT TWO LOCATtONS The HobartManufacturing Company TO· BETTER SERVE YOU WORLD HEADQU-ARTERS • TROY: OHIO 249 W. McMillan (Across from, Hughes HJgh) "Equiprnentand services for the vast food industry .. "in more than 100 and countries around the world ... wherever food is prepared, served or sold.' \ . ~ - 2917 Glendora (behind the high rise dorms) J•.",."" '_ 'i!>",,,- T~esday, January 3D, 1968 UNIVERSITY OF CINCINNATI NEWS RECORD Page Three More· UC Student Volunteers ·Pic,kU p, Your NR Dorms,- University Center Needed For Summer Projects , . by Pat Fox' - 1. Togo into communities and the S.V;S. arranges for under- PERSONAL ,POSTERS provide needed services . privileged igroups to use UC re- 18" x 24" 'I'he 'Student Volunteer Service', 2. To enhance the students ed- Send any B it w 'or Colo.r. IT'S THE RAGE creational facilities and also the ,;~EGULAR (S.V.S.) recruitment week ended' ucational ' horizons Photo,graph" 'Negativej ';,Col~' S.V.S. obtains free tickets to foot- •...,MODEL this past Friday, but meed for 3. To wake-up the city and its T' ,. , lage,Drawing, or S~apshot· ball games forthese same groups. ANYS'e'" < stu den t volunteers continues. ' leaders that there are many un- ONLY $3~75 tapped .playground and recrea- Community Relatio~s . 3 LINE TEXT Mrs. Dorothy Hardy, Assistant The finest INDESTRUCTIBLE MEfAL tional areas-that could be put to 'Altogether, the S.V.S., In its plus 25c handling POC.KEf RUBBER STAMP.1jz" 1 2". Director of Community Relations, good use.' " All posters B &W, 2 week,s Send ,check or money. order. Be efforts to promote .good comrnuni-. sure 'to "include your Zip Code. No emphasized that there will 1>~, a Student Orientated ty relations, works mainly '-in delivery. 'Your originalre- postage or handling charges: Add great needfor student volunteers The S.v..S.' is completely stu: areas around the campus, tutor- ,turned. 'Include school, name. sales tax. Prompt shipment. Satisfaction GuarantMd to continue its worthwhile pro- dent oriented as the entire organi- ingat Hughes High School, organ-' ,.' PSYCHEDELIC PHOTO CO. THE MOPP CO. jects' throughout the summer, be- (lation, including its numerous izing Saturday night dances in P.O. Box 3071 P. O. 80118623 Lenol Squire Station cause the majority of the seventy- committees, are comprised com- Fairview-Cllfton- Heights, while St. Louis, Mo.' 63130 ATLANTA, GA.• 30326 five participating volunteers. are pletely. of students. The recruit- sendng a CCM student to.' the' out-of-town students. Requests ment is carried out by students , 1st ',Reformed Church on Free- are pouring in for tutors, groups while the Orientation 'and Follow- manAvenue to teach, music'. All workers, musicians (mainly gui- up Committee calls on community these activities plus many, many tarists), woodworkers, and re- leaders to instruct the volunteers more are carried on by s,y.S. creation workers, but the S.V.S. on sociological factors of the' without funds, and under the di- does not have the people to, fill areas to be worked. Vervotten, rection of students. Here come the new these positions.: Conceived At UC The S.V.S. was conceived last Penguins summer by two UC students, Virginia Lambert and Brenda Blair, and in August, 1967, pre- sented the idea to the .Campus Direct Line Community Relations Board" for acceptance. The Community Re- by Brian Zakem lations Board backed S.V.S. and tion are also required to buy ex- · t L" kl f t pensive, yet unattr,acti.vegym hired Mrs. Hardy as its co-ordina- Drree me IS a .wee y ea ure I he " ", tor. Mrs. Hardy named the three f th UC"N' R'" d" If '11 b euses and sorts .. It seems an o e. ,~ws ec~~. ,~I. unnecessary ..expensevwhen we purposes of theS.V.S. as: attempt to bndge the generation could wear blouses and shorts gap between the st~dent body and we already ewnl _ N U'f dmini t' "A . ew m orms, th e. a ministra I~n. ',ny c~m- Our Own A & S Female. Make tracks for yourcampus 'bookstore tot/ay! Senate Urges plaints or questions, concern~ng A. To answer this question any or all areas of campus life, DIRECTLIN-E was directed to POLITICS AND SOCIAL SCIENCE. W. J. M. Mackenzie. A re- are :welcomed. 'Call 475-2748, be- the A. & S Tribunal. Their re- view of politics as an academic 'study from ancient times' to tween 8 a.~. and 5 p.m, ~onday search is as follows: the present; and a survey of modern political science- its Town Power through Friday. Letters~ay b~ .. .The faculty of the Women's scope, its methods" and the body of thought it has produced. The Student 'Senate Committee addr.essed to DIRE.CT,~INE, U~I- - "Diviston of Health, Physical Ed- A907. $1.95 on 'Commuters, 'under the chair- v~rslt~ Center, University of eln- ucation and Recreation purposely elnnati.. Name ~nd colle~e are .r~- sought out. a color and style of menship of Peggy Prachar and PROBLEMS OF THE WORLD ECONOMY. Richard Bailey. This John Harmon, has begun the win- que~ted but ,will be Withheld If shorts and blouses' which would' ter quarter with the' express pur- desired, look well on most females, allow volume deals with the economic relations between the West poses of.gaining a measure of in- Q."Where does my $6 /unlen for class unity and provide for and the underdeveloped countries, of the world - the present fluence in University policy- fee' go to?" - I.nterested A & S safety and freedom of movement: status of those relations and how they are likely to alter in m a kin Ig, increasing commuter Student:,. The idea for change was present- the years ahead. A901. 95¢ ~ A. Mr.' John Goering, Universi- ed to all women's classes in.phys- participation in campus 'activities, .;:." and, alerting 'commuters to th~ ty Registrar, says, '.'It is used to ical education last spring, 1967. THE' 'IN~OVATORS: The Economics of Technology. Michael power :whiChthey' as, an organized payoff tlie debt on the, uc stu- Samples wereshown, and-modeled Shanks. An analysis of the current race to put scientific dis- group might exercise. dent Center addition and 'is .a and the. date 'to .affeCt 'thechange coveries to use through technology- both at the company and At a reorganizational steering part of the $25 'Student Service' was announced. national level. A941. $1.45 committee meeting last" Thursday, fee." (DIRECT LINE notes this We were aware that women $6 was 'initiated by the action of with one or _two quarters of the .Harmon stated that the avenues THE ELECTRONIC REVOLUTION. S. Handel, This new book to' ,ch~nge and, innovation in all the students several years ago, requirement left to be completed in order that the Student Center could be most affected by the describes for the general reader the scientific basis and the areas University life are open of could be expanded). This $6 fee change. However, we also knew technical achievements of the electronics revolution, as well as to any !group with desire and is a 'pay as, you go' plan which that with the variety of selections its impact on our daily lives, ! A905. $1.45 strong popular support ,"Com- the students felt was best suited of courses a woman could com- muters," he said, "comprise ap- to' their needs. The~other $19 of plete the requirement, if it were THE COMMUNIST MANIFESTO. Karl Marx and Friedrich proximately two-thirds of 0 u r the 'Student Service' fee goes for only one or two quarters, with- Engels. With an Introduction by A. J. Pv Tevtor. The complete .,caffiiPus pOipuilation.They have "athletic - facilities, sporting e- out having to purchase the new numerous common pro b 1 e ms text of one of the- most influential writings .of the past century. .vents, the NR, the Cincinnatian, costume, as there are several . A915. 75¢ which have never been forthright- the Student Health Center, and activities for which the women , ly dealt with by university' offi- such student functions as- 'Mum- may wear a 'skirt and blouse. cials .or student leaders. It is now mers Guild,' .college tribunals, Knowing human nature and time that they select spokesmen Student Senate, etc," said Mr. costumes, and how books and PENGUIN BOOKS INC and, as 'a unified group,;press for Goering. so forth get passed from one stu- 3300 Clipper ~ill Road Baltimore, Md. 21211 # action or forget their gripes and The Registrar also' said, "fees dent to the next, we anticipated give up the whole thing." should not be broken down in the that it could take some' time to The co-chairmen of the food and present manner. Some students complete the change if we al- parking committees have been don't get $75 worth of student lowed exceptions to the recom- f delegated seats on the- University services a year, but this fee is mended costume change. Our Food and Parking committees re- not optional. A total, all encom- faculty discussed several plans spectively, so that they maydi- passing fee would be easier to but chose to, set the change-over rectly: voice the' organization's handle." . to be effective Fall Quarter, 1967. feelings in these areas and help Q. "Why is it that gi rls, who are' Mary E. Wolverton, Ed. D PAPA DI-N01S to formulate policy. . required to take 'physical educa- Co-ordinator

Specializing in Pizza TEENY BOPPERS'! Spagh'etti Ivan' and Hoagies Double Deckers the Sebers -The Oldest and Closest Place On Campus . .•.. appear at: Serving U.'C. for Years. The Round Table ,Dine-In ~,Q r.ry-O:u;~ every Wednesday and Sunday Delivery Service . AND ,Open 1Days A Week

The Mug Club For fast pick-up call "Papa" 221-2424 ~ 347 Calhoun every Tuesday and Thursday "Lunch time, Supper time, Snack time-Any time'is -Fizza time': ,;'1~·: .".'#'~ .r'.~ J-:fSf~: !.:!_;t:F'~' ~'~1 ~~' ~'~'~'J Page "Four UN IVERSITY,OFc CINCI-NNA""[-I ,NEWS RECORD' _ ~: ft'· _- ,-._.;~ .. ~,.... , ;;, -; .",,": _, ',,::,,. ~ _ Tuesday, January 30, 1968

I - - "'Jof,n Gardner" ~BEARCAT FORUM • • •

".,0: -----' by Dave Altman Challenge To Act, Instead Of M'erely Protesting To an the protestors, members of space in our News Record, and It seems to me that this is' the Most' Arrtericans probably did not take, much notice' of the of the former SDS and I' members even more time of our admini- perfect place to start working on announcement' last, week. "After all it was, obscured by events in of the UBA: stration and different or?aniza- that ideal world about which you Vietnam and Korea - and more important Cabinet members, have F' 'f 11' I ld lik t tions because of your claims of scream and we all dream. We resiqned recently - but an explanation of the resignation of Sec- irst 0 a, woum leo discrimination, etc. Now that you welcome you-e-we even dare you retary of .Healrh, Education, 'and Welfare, John Gardner, may 5e address myself to the marchers have achieved that great Ameri- -to come to the orientation pro- a more teHing commentary on Amerjcansociety than any of the and protestors. For four years I can status symbol of a college gram, not only if you're willing other more "pressing" affairs. , have seen you "discuss great mat- .education, have you forgotten to substitute or add some direct ters" in the Rhine Room, sit those of "your people" who have action and bits, of work for your - . Several weeks ago I wrote .in- this paper that Gardner down in the Union Iobby; and not been quite so lucky? Have constant (and for the most part, on "Meetthe Pre-ss" had feared that "history will not deal kindly march on the Center-bridge, over you become "Uncle Tom's" to useless) protests and barrage of 'Tr-- with a rich nation that wiLl'not tax itself to cure its miseries." rhe at Siddall, and in front of the Li- your own people-too good to de- words. The orientation meeting . column went on to .stete furtherth~t "Pri\lately Gardner has in- brary. But never-not even onc~ vote a few hours of your time and , will be Thursday, February 1,~at dicated that he does not feel that Congress is wHling to deal with. .in those four years-have I seen energy to help the uneducated, to 7:00 -p.m, in 'the University Cen- the -ghettos if the solution means spending more money." you do a single constructive mea- help those who remain behind in ,ter. How many of .you believe , It looks .as if Gardner felt that things would get worse, rather sure to help make America the the slums? enough of what you're saying to thenbetter in Congress. land of peace, love, equality, and This week the Student Volun- come? . I first noted' the growing depression under which Gardner opportunity for which. you yell. teer Center is beginning its' ori- Brenda Blair Do you realize that there isa war entation and placement program. A&S '68 was working when I met him at Friendship Airport in late-June, .brewing right here in our very 1967, right .after the Cincinnati riots. The Detroit and the Newark own city-a war' in which homes affairs were fo soon take place. ' will be destroyed and people kill- Plaudits Offered'For Daniels John' Gardner stood alone in a. corner' of' the, airport; he ed-a war which his, likely to lookedvsolernn and tired. 'Nith him' he carried a modest sized blow up not more than one, block To the Editor: great lengths to find a carpet which so well emulates a blanket. suitcase and p worn leather attache case. It's odd but I also re- from your beloved picket lines? I would like to congratulate For once; try getting off your the architects, designers or what- Another exquisite aspect of that .member .thet there was a button missing off of' his left;,sl~eve. carpet(?) is the ability it has to picket lines and help wor~to :'- Gardrier i:san 'unaffected soft-spoken brilliant man with,s,ome of ' ever for the wonderful exhibit of make the world for which you their fine taste in the interior absorb dirt. Dirt is constantly be-, the same characteristics as Attorney General Ramsey Clark .• ,"., yell. Maybe then, you'll get some decoration of -the lobbies of the ing tracked' into this lobby and He, talked ,of the riots in Cincinnati and spoke of the.;oe~,G!.for , yet the carpet shows no' signs of Ii effective results. , Daniels Street dorm. First, dis- this filth. fair ,bo':J;si.~g,,~nd always, his first love - education. When he And you-the members of UBA cussing the informal lobby, I feel talked of these things there was a slight. gleam in his eyes. -and ---;,youhave: taken up a great deal that the designers have gone to (Cont'd on Page 5) quiet determination in his voice. But he ended on a note 'thatlwas the antithesis of what he had said before. , ' "I was talking to my good friend John Galbraith the -other day and I asked him what he thought of the riots. John answered that they were the best thing that could happen to this country In Search Of Peace ,-- that America would now wake up." ' Gardner said that he turned to his friend and asked if he by ,Clinton, H·ewan knew what it was, like to heveftisjob and have to.try ,and 'get money out of Congress after the violence,,' h. f th tti ics, yet we pray and then kill. Frustrations and fears are being taken out on welfare funds , In the s adows 0 e s~ mg easy for us to grasp the enormity of the dilemma man has placed Our enemies' ideology is wrong, he told Galbraith and without that money 1I0ur most rneeninqful sun, John F: Ke~nedY,. m. a his world in. We are each day yet ours, 'which' employs their and necessary work must be scrapped." Gardner looked beaten. speech accepting hIS nomination faced even more forcefully with He seemed as if he alone stood, sanely, between liberals and con- at the Los Angeles C~lise.um said; the biggest of all questions" can tactics, is right. Can we, in truth, servatlves y--vknowinq-what had to be done but having his "hands "The American people exp~ct there be peace? cling so, tenaciously onto our i- Iashed fo'gether With a "knot 'ofever-increeslnq- complexity. . ~ore .from us than Cries of in- "The Danger of Ideology" deals?' It isfime, I believe, that .. Th"" id f hid D' f . h h d ..dignation and attack ... For the Peace. in our-world today may weexamine carefully that' which ~;i'/~ I~, ore ~I e-o, t ee.~e.r .... espite lu~tratlpn,.e" a, world is, changing.c'I'he oldera is 'we ·'call our-Jdeology. ,-:,. . accomr:>"shed mucb. Pass~ge of .the Eleme.ntary, and Sec;:oQd.ary ending ..~t~eold ways 'will 'not do. be impossible 1£ we as a people Education Act heads the list of hlsaccomp,lls~ments.,Reorganlza:" - "Abroad the balance' of power continue to base our aims and "Southeast Asia" tion of HEW, not yet completed but started under Gardner willis shifting~ There' are new and actions on ideology. Because' of In our search for peace, it is , streamline .federal handling in the public health and food "and more terrible weapons, new and our need' to portray our ideals my .belief that the great powers as those of the highest calibre, drug area. uncertain nations, new pressures, must face the fact that their we fail to realize that others may gamble for spheres of influence It is-evident that Gardner did not revel' in his victories too 'of- population and deprivation ... embody similar ideals. ' must .be discontinued. lonqrhe never got one of the main things he really wanted - a More energy is released by' .the We fool ourselves into believing more imaginative .and realistic approach to welfare, a~akemng of.th~se new nations In accomplishing this; Russia, that a .Ho' Chi Minh is different China, .and the U.S. 'must be will- 'His hope for an income-maintenance, prograniwill not be !hanby the fISSIon of the atom from a Premier Ky,we condemn ing to pull out of Southeast Asia . d .. d b hi U d' h 500 000 I Itself ... The world has been close a Castro Whose actions. are no a .mlnlster~ y "": 1'1:1' t e new pro~ram .' .p~op e to war before _ but, now man; using any means to save face, if different from a Batista whom we will be traln~d byprivate Industry: They \IV III receive 'a minimum. who has survived all previous this in reality is necessary. increase with,' a',;goyerhn'lent subsidy - m<:>neyir;l addition. t~,r:iot' threats to his existence, has tak- strongly support. In our efforls to 'uphold our ideology. we kil!' All three should ,decide to joint- instead of, what they earn: " " < ....,'. . .'. 'en into his mortal' hands the ly rebuild' on an extensive scale and maim in the name of free- the countries of this '.area which' There IS eYid~nc~.'to~'indicate:-'that the '-o'!d,:i9~entiv~killing' power to extermipate the entire,' dom, fully,' forgetting that our they are in fact responsible for idea of wertare, for 'each "dollar earned, a -dollar" is taken 'away; species 'some seven times over.". enemies employ' the same tactics. destroying. They must realize was opposed by Gardner. He, like the conservatives who helped In 'fully' evaluating his, quote, We condemn others for closing to defeat him, felt as though a morereesoneble :formula' for wel- no.doubt can be enter~ai~ea in our. that the leadership of the coun- their churches while we segregate tries, ;of Southeast Asia are, not fare had to be worked out. In seeking a solation, Gartlnervvo~ld ' minds as.to the .plctureJohn ours. Our enemies, as we see them, practice no Christian eth- enlightened enough to undertake turn to the human values -' keeping a person' on the dole "would Kennedy tried to paint. It became such a venture, therefore it is not do him any good, only keep him alive. the duty of these great powers The poor and the power structure in "this country needed his to act now. This I believe would touch, a touch which rnenifested Jtself.fn ~15' underst~nding of be in the best long run interest of human values and which was embellished 'by his i'maginati6d -. the world. His loss should be' bemoaned by liberal$and conservativeaelike., "Africa and South America" It was their shortsightedness that deprived America of some' of its L REALLY DON', ~tNK· ••• AA\JL A In the interest of humanity most valuable ammunition with which to .fight its greatest war. these areas must be made arms- Pt:.."'<:'IL wm'\ M'( ~AM.e. ow ,T••• THE..R,.E. free zones. The stigma of a Cold War must not be allowed to in- 'SHOULD BE .~. \o\£.Re., LeT M:e. AU,o- vade these-sanctuaries. A treaty NE\vSRE(;ORD making Mrica 'and South Ameri- Un iv-e'rsity' of Cincinnati: - ' , ca nuclear fre-e zones would be in .the interest . of all· people Member: Associated ColI~giate Press L\M\T"S ON !HE. wherever in the world they may National Educational Adverti$ing, Service, Ine..: be. . Rooms 41H2-is.,'Union Building, Cincinnati, Ohio 45221 AMOUNT of .•. "Realize Man's Worth" 47s.:2748, 2749 - $3.50per year, 10 cents per copy. LE.TM!i. TA~ '(OJ To finally accomplish our Second Class Postage Paid, Cincinnati. Ohio search for peace, each man .must EDITORIALST;ATEME.NT au, foR "0\NW~~ ••• be willing to reevaluate and re- . 'the letters and columns appearing in tf1e News Record represent vamp his way.of thinking. We ' MONEY A-'S.1\JO~T must all realize the worth of our solely the views of their writers. All editorials. refled only the fellow 'men.' No longer mtisr we views of the editorial staff o,tthe ,P!per.an~.do not represel1,t· CAtJD\DA'TE- ••• CAU 1 build vast kingdoms on the "blood University policy. ' , . '~ , of others. EDITORIAL STAFF ~u'C 'to\) A ~"'''? .. Our economics must now thrive Editor-in-Chief - without wars, our selfish greed Dave Altm'an eAtJ 'SftND CJN must be replaced with a genuine Associate Editor ~ E:.LE.L-r\o~ _._ desire to help the less fortunate. Frank Melcher What ever our political _views, Managing Eait:ors , ' .. , , ,Sudie'Heitz, Diana Risse the uplifting of humanity .must be Sports Editor tiow .A.eovt A. 1>~'" W\TK our primary goal. "Never have Claude Rost M'l ~\'S..,.~~ News Editors .Jlm Carr, Karen McCabe .''~e nations .of the world had so Theater Editor , Michael Weiner:" ' much to lose or so. much to gain" .,,{. BOSINESSSTAFF said John Kennedy. "Together we Business Manager. , .. , . , . '. Mike Myers shall .savecur .planetor togetlier Local Advertising we shall perish .in its flames.", , ,.,.,.', Lenny Green, We "have within our graspithat " Trudy"Kolb, Lois Shale-' National Advertising which brings peace to all men, the ,Eric Havenstein gift of reason. Let us use it. 'Tuesday, .Jcnuory. 30,1968 UNIVERSITY OF CINCI,NNATI NEWS RECORD Page Five Lette.rs,' • • • I PoLicy ((:ont'd from Page 4) naepenaenl'Mexican '~. .Another first in interior deco- by Tfm 51hay ration is the formal lobby. !tis Diet;vimmte not often that a designer finds a uFit~Willy" carpet which when laid looks ISO by Tim Shay is frowned upon. Arne ric a n An independent Mexico means COLOR ~tIltMu PANAYISION much 'like a carpet lining. This companies are free to produce in a stronger friend for the U.S. We Mexican - American relations' Mexico, but, they are thus requir- effectvcoupled with the wonder- now have an \ally who is tied to, have generally been smooth and . ed to develop Mexican natural re- ful choice of color, is unsurpassed us not because we .have bought placid ever since the 1920s. With sources. In the automobile in- .its friendship 'but because it truly, 71I11BS in elegance. the vanishing of Pancho Villa, dustry 'at least, the percentage of , wants to be tied to us. This is the t" CHcd;","'Gio'T~~: ~1 But in my congratulations I hard feelings have been mini- Mexican raw materials that must best kind of international' rela- ~ . 'O~wntown-621.o202 ~ mized, and potential 'areas of would not like to leave out the be used in making the finished tion. clash have been slowly obliter- product has been raised steadily craftsmen for the fine job they ated by- negotiation long before from time to time. ' 'c have done in laying the carpet in real animosity could build up. On Lastly, Mexico' has .asserted its the T.V. lobby. If I didn't know the surface, then, Mexican-Amer- independence by not asking for better, I would have thought there ican relations have, flowed along American Peace. Corps Volun- much like a steady stream, and .were no seams in the carpet at teers. Twenty other Latin Ameri- with 'about as little .'visible can' nations, 'by contrast, have re- all, but I was able to discover change. . quested and received Volunteers. them after close surveillance. Yet the appearance is deceiv- The Mexicans, thoughvapparently Yes, I would like to congratu- ing. In the last 10 years Mexico feel there are. just too many late all those involved in decorat- has gradually modified its atti- Americans already running loose ing the -Daniels Street dorm. .tude towards the U.S'. Mexico has in Mexico. Even though their funds were assumed a position of friendly This persistent trend toward limited and their> time rushed, neutrality or friendly independ- independence from the U.S. IS a they still. managed to overcome ence. The country is living in the healthy development. An inde- all .obstacles and give to our' cam- shadow of a giant, yet in the last pendent-minded Mexico is bound pus the very best. decade 'or so' it' has evolved ~ to be more stable and progressive Marty Werthhaiser foreign policy that assures that than one which is dominated by A&S 1970 it is not overshadowed by its po- foreigners. A country that makes tent Northern neighbor. its. own decisions has a continu- Policy A. Failu·re? This is no easy feat in foreign ous proving ground for its .poten- relations. Mexico has· been able to' tial leaders. . , . To the Editor: pursue a course that is independ- , The benefits to Mexico in this ent of U.S. Influence yet does not Mr.. Small's" rather scathing let- anger the Americans when their situation are thus obvious: better ter to the editor (Jan. 23, 1968) advice is ignored. The Mexican at- leadership, stronger feeling of na- commenting on the NR's "failure titude is one of .friendship .be- tional pride and greater prestige as a, student ,paper" was not all tween equals. Pressing this atti- among the Latin American . na- tions. wrong nor was it completely cor- o tude 'firmly but politely, they rect. At. times the NR does in- have been able to appear pro- .volve itself in affairs somewhat American withhout the penalty of on the periphery of general stu- having their foreign policies be- dent interest, ".but then .again it ing shaped in large measure by 1968, GRADS isn't' that easy to publish twice' a American planners. week. for thirty weeks or so, with The first signs of this 'new at- articles that are of direct concern titude emerged during the Eisen- \ Jobs with Social to all interests. hower years. Ike went to Mexico tnMr. Small's letter. there was City several 'times. On each trip 'Security

a suggestion that the NR inform he was cordially welc-omed by ) the student body of campus Mexican officials, and by. the Now and June thought. I would like to see a Mexican people. On each {rip, too; :> series of. articles dealing with re- his offers of forging new joint TRAINING POSITION ,$5565 search .going on In the University, pacts or projects were turned Pam Myers p,lays the saucy role of 'H,elenin Leading To by. a dv a n c ed .undergraduates, 'do~n.. . • ~. ·f· ••• graduate students .and the" facul- Cuba offers another example 'of JOURNEYMAN POSITION Mu'mmers Guild's' hi'larious musical "The Gold- .... ty. Interesting dissertation and Mexican independence. When the masters projects must be in U.S. tried to get all O.A.S. mem- $.8054 en Apple" ~hich opens this Friday night at 8:30 abundance. By reading/about bers to sever diplomatic ties with these projects, undergraduates Castro; most Latin American .na- Interviews Now in Wilson A.uditorium. Fo'r ti~kets can 475-4553 may find new areas of interest or tions bowed to the pressure and " \ . be stimulated to vary their pro- withdrew their diplomats from Phone_~. T. Maidlow 684-3457 or visit the' lovely ladies at the Union desk. , grams to gain some insight into Havana. Mexico, again politely, 'ideas not previously entertained. refused to break relations. The Graduate students and faculty, Mexicans also granted Cuba an although hea vily immersed in extension on its commercial air their own fields, can only gain '"routes from Havana to Mexico from. keeping- abreast of current City. thought in other disciplines. Mexico has .accepted, American From my point of view an in- firms ..on its soil, and, 'unlike formed student body is one. that other nations, has been reluctant is aware not only of the war, not I (jR,OUPFLIG,HT to nationalize any of. the com- ·U.C.' r only of the visits of the Linklet- panies. Yet even here Mexicans # ters, not only. the ups and downs .show their mounting desire .for of the teams, but also of what 'is more independence from the going on in their own academic . Yankees, American firms, such as TO'EU·ROPE backyard. Ford, are required to use / a cer- George Cohen tain percentage of Mexican raw Grad-Geography materials. Importing raw matter muff~!1 Pri('e:' $·265 \.' regulor·t.ourist fare -$510 OF CINCINNATIr~ ,J Departs N~w York' toPari~(-!J'un~ 20 ~ • t: •

Returns London to ~ew' Yo,rk ~Sep,ten"ber 4 BILL t, .•. OF (Car rentals at discount rates' ,:also~aYailable)

FARE '" ! O'pen onlyto,U.C~ students, fa~ulty,sta'ffland Burger Beer •...... 12~oz.Mug 12.02. Steak Dinner .... " .1.49 Burger Pitcher %-Gal. %-Lb. Hamburger Plate .• 99c their/direct famili'es. Local Bottle Beer Reuben Yla Walker .•.•.• 9ge Bure,r, Hud,pohl,Wlld,.ann Corned Beef .. -•... ~.. ..• 89c Out of Town Beer " German Mett Plate .••••• 7ge Bud.,lltr, Stroh's, MIII,r's , Schlitz, Bilek LIII'I, Pa~st Huge Roast Beef Sandwich 6ge Sign-ups now in,'/,RQ9-:n,3181 University Center, Soft Drinks 12-02.. 2~C Plnas •.•.....•.. 64c and up DUFF·S STEAK HOUSE ,"Where U. C. Meets" Calf 475~2832; 8:30 0•m, •..5.:0(\p.m, 335 Calhoun 861-8~45 . Cincinnati. \Ohio 45219

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UNIVERSITY';,OF1,OINCI:N:NJ\:V1 N~EWS:RECIDRO!' Tu-esday, ~Jantlary {30,vsl;968 ' Bearc(lts;~DefeatedBy.Billiken. H~ei.ght"~70-66 Bills .maintained small forced to look a.t. his. bench. for by George B. Hatkoff The . freshmen. He tried-several como, Asst. Sports Editor le~~sthro,ughout ~he second half, binations in .looking for the one , . until the Cats .ga~ned m?ment~m that would-provide victory. Usual- The UC Bea~cats MVC .hopes and came to 'WIthin.2 points w~th 1 Coach Baker finds the right were temporarily stalled Satur- a little over four minutes remain- y, ent to meet the enemies . , . . di d , . t ar~angem - day evemn~~hen they .roppe in1g, Ttl!e ~earcats momen ~m, offenses and defenses.rbut Satur- a 70-66 decision to_the !Ired.-up coupled iWIt~ seven-foot Rioh da night was not such a night. . - and well-rested, 8t. LoUIS Billi- . 'Niemann's fifth foul, gave the' ~aleigh Wynn did, come off the kens. This was the second of four appearance that UCwould once b h t provide much of the consecutive games on~e road. a.gain pUll.the game out of the s:~~ng °punch, ending utp with 'The Bearcats won the first ga~e. fire. But NIemann seems to have 19. . ts. but other Baker moves away from home at Memphis been holding the Bills back. 'usrOl~id~'t work out as they State. After he fouled out, Gene Moore J 11 d

\ In order' to remain aliveIn the moved to ~he center spot. and uS~':n:ng o'thestarters, center, tight Missouri Valley race the completely Jammed up .the middle Rick Roberson played a, strong Bearcats must win at least two forcing U~ to ~he o~tside. game. He scored 19 tallies' while of these four road games. Three Coach Baker's game plan ca~led ~ holding big ,Niemann to only 8 victories of four wo~l? put them for the Bearcats to run against points. Rick also pulled \down 17. in commanding position ~n the the Bills, who are taller th~n. UC rebounds, but Gene Moore was Valley, but t~ey m~st wm t~'e but not as fast.' But, Billiken the big man in, the rebound de- next two games this week m· guards, Barry Ormsand Tom partment with 19. order to do so. Tomorrow they . Thomas were fast enoughr.to- Guard Barry Orms proved the are at Bradley and Saturday they stay with the Bearcat fast break. deciding factor as he hit 15 foot travel to Louisville. These two' The Bills also managed to con- jump shoots !from .all over the games .should clear-up the MVC tain the 'Cats around the basket, floor and ended ,with 21 points. race considerably. where the Bearcats like to take Another decisive factor was, The Bearcats started off strong most of their shots. Centers Nie- again, UC's poor loul shooting. against the Billikens, but then mann and Moore fell of their men They hit only two of seven at- .began- making expensive errors and blocked several of. UC's in- tempts in the first half and 10 of'- .: that 'wound up costing them the \ side shots. 22 in the whole game. victory. These errors included: The fast !pace of the game Coach Baker had the Bearcats JOHN Howard, senior forward for the Bearcats, is finally 'realizing blown Iayups, bad passes and .St. seemed' to have wearied UC's~ .sboottag fouls as soon as they re- Louis steals, which gave the~Ills shooters and Coaeh :Baker was turned to Cincinnati. his ·posential. Coach ~aker recently pr~ised Howard saying that he the Iead for most of the first _ /I is playing the best basketbail of his UC career. half. As the half neared its end DC roared back to within two !points only to mak~ two m?re RompOver Ky: B'ig' J~ohn Spearheads, ICa·ts costly mistakes and give the BIlls Bearkittens a sixipoint lead going into the In>Drive 'To ·M"o-Val Title dressing room. Hess Sparks Win With 34 by George B. Hatkoff Asst. Sports Editor by Richie Katz . UC's tallest ·man .. Despite their John Howard can't remember when he began playing basketball, "Anytime you beat Kentucky height disadvantage the. 'Kittens but- it was sometime before junior high school. He played three years contained him well in the first twice in one year, you' have, to .half by·, "putting . one man in of high school varsity and was named to the' All-Ohio team the last be pleased." This 'Was the feel- two. John was a 3rd team HighSchool All-American' his senior year, front of. him and. double teaming \ . ing of Freshmen Coach' Lee Rose him with the o£fside "forward." . as he shifted between forward and guard. His high game for University after his squad polished off the As Coach 'Rose mentioned after . High School in Columbus, Ohio, was a 54'point performance his senior Kentucky freshmen for the sec- I ' , the game, "this special' defense year. ond time this season, 84-74 at the 'Worked good. in the first' half, but . Naturally, John was sought after by some 70 universities including UC. Armory Fieldhouse Saturday not in the second. We had little Ohio State, Oklahoma U., Penn State and Cornell but he decided upon' afternoon. This .game highlighted foul trouble in' the second half, . UC· because "rny; mother. wanted me to go here." It seems she had the University of Cincinnati's and if any of our starters get 'in met and been impressed by Oscar Robertson. ' Sports Spectacular, and no doubt foul trouble, we are hurting,", John spent a fairlyuneventful year his freshman season' at Cincin- it was the most pleasing UC 'vic- Rose was referring to Steve tory of the' afternoon. nati. His high game as a freshman was 31 points against Dayton. 'John Wenderfer, who got into a little llhe .'Kittens had turned back foul trouble late in the first half. " then graduated to the UCvarsity, where he has started for the past I . three seasons at the foward position. Kentucky at Lexington earlier in' After Schmitt- fouled out late .UC Bowlers Host the' .year by out-totaling them , His sophomore year, John averaged. over 11 points per game plus in the 'game, with a team high of 84-8~. ..In this second game the 17 points, forward Larry Steele more than 8 rebounds per contest, in helping the Bearcats win the 'Ohio 'IBC"Match Bearkittens scored the same 84 Missouri Valley Conference title and a berth in the NCAA playoffs. ' committed his fifth personal and points but their .defense was the retired to the bench with 14 Last year, John picked up his average to an even 13 points, while On Saturday February 3, the difference. They held the Wild- Ohio Intercollegiate Bowling Con- points. He was matched in the his rebound average fell to 6.2 per game. He got off to a strong start _kittens to eight less points. , scoring column by teammate Bob last season, including a superb30-point performance against Wisconsin. gress holds a match in the game- room of UC-Toledo, Bowling Coach Rose 'attribute UC's' big 'McCowan who notched 14 points Then he fell into a mid-season slump before coming 'back~ to finish first half lead to the fact that "we despite playing the entire second strong and average 16.5 points over the last seven contests. As a result Green, . Baldwin-Wallace, '0 h i 0 State, Dayton, and Cincinnati played well together, andoiUr half with four fouls. of his strong finish, John was picked as the team's "Most Improved defense was real good.': Behind The Bearkittens 'were led by' Player." - , comprises this league, The match will-start 11:00 a.m. and will end Don Hess' 19 points and M~ke Don Hess with.34 points. Hess Coach Tay ..Baker has commented: "Howard could have his best approximately at 5 p.m. .Gal!houn's'18 points the 'Kittens scored most of his pointsunder- managed a 54-36 lead. year it he really dedicates himself to the task." Last Monday at Mem- Cincinnati is in third place with neath where he was on the re- phis John pored in his college career high' of 33 points. .' , a good chance to close in on first 'Quick, 'sharp passes by the UC ceiving end of many fine passes About the future, John commented that he is "undecided. I want place. The team consists of Ted five marked the first ten minutes from Calhoun-and Schneider. Fol- . to finish school, that's alL"" . . Brim, John Cassis, Tom Atkins, of the contest. With guards Cal- lowing Hess in the scoring column Year GP FGM FGA Pet. FTM FTA Pet. RBDAvg A .PTS Avg. Jim Dotzauer, Bill Oliver, Norm houn and Jerry Schneider hand- were Calhoun with 20, all but two '65-'66 28 127 265 .479 61 101 .604 234 8.4 30 315 lL3 ing out beautiful passes the 'Kit- coming in the> first half, and '66-'67 25 133 300 .443 60 95 .632 156 6.2 18 32£ 13.0 Leet, Bruce Freerer, Rick DeFe- UlP '67·'68 16 80 183 .437 56 79 .709 J 99 6.2 21 216 13.5 tens built a quick lead which Wenderfer with 1 points. Ed licel Bill Hunter, Barry Miller, and Carl Truese. Leading t 'h e ' they never lost. ,With .only six Swegrnan, the 'Kitten starting squad with, an average of 193 is minutes :gone in the game UC center, also played a fine game, John Cassis. - . had already jumped on top by coming up many times with errant - ARD-Less Bearcais Invade Pit; ten. The closest Kentucky came Wildkitten passes. . The squad is under the direction after this 'was 75-64 with 5: 12 re- TheUG freshmen have three of James F. Bond, the University maining in the game. Missouri ValLey Lead At Stake of Cincinnati Game Room ,Man- days .to prepare for their next , - . ager. Each match consists of five Kentucky .lost it's chance to encounter which is with the by Mark NaeQel .The 'Cats need a win at Peoria bowlers from each squad, and come back further, when their big Xavier f res h me n Wednesda.y to maintain their lead in the con- Bond determines who will bowl 6' fo" center Steve Schmidt foul- TIlglht. Following that game the Tay Baker's UC Bearcats take ed out of the game with 1:00 re- freshhmen head. to Louisville .to . on Coach Joe Stowell's Bradley ference. The Braves are a very for Cincy by conducting a 12 tough team to beat at home, hav- game roll-off before each match. maining. His 6' 10" height gave. meet the Cardinal freshmen; Braves on their home court in him a six, inch advantage over Saturday night. - Peoria, -Illinois, in a rematch, to- ingwon their last nine games. The Bearcats are then represent- morrow night. The Braves have . Bradley's road trips aren't - as' ed by the five bowlers who .had successful., The Braves won only the highest averages in the roll- an MVC record of 5-2 and are 2 games while losing 5. They just off. currently tied for fourth place with Louisville. defeated Memphis State by a Cincinnati has 'registered some score of 92-69.Cincy will be hand- .fine performances so far, includ- T~~(sMVC Bradley's 6'6" center Joe Allen. icapped by the loss of Jim Ard ing a 660 series by' Cassis. As, a is their highest scoring player who scored l7points against the . team, the Bearcats totaled 1,003.- Standings averaging 23.4' points per game. Braves in Cincirinati. - ~ in one game, good for the second Forward L. C. Bo.en averages' Game's The· Bearcats are known', to best single game i!l the t league. Upcoming Games - 16.2 and Jr. guard Al Smith Won Lost Behind averages 17.4 points per game. have the best depth in the Con; UC also 'holds the -second best ference. They willneedthis depth three game performance. Jan. 31-Cincinnati at Bradley -,: The Braves other starters are Drake 4 1 on the road trip, for this will de- On February 16;17, thirty-four Willie- Betts at forward and Bob Drake at Wichita Swigris at guard. cide whether or not they will win schools will compete in the annual Cincinnati 5 2 V2 the Conference. Bradley has three regional Association Tournament. Louisville .... 5 2 V2 St. Louis at Louisville When the two teams' last met men who consistently, score.in There will be competition in bowl- at the Fieldhouse, UC beat Brad- the, double figures. However, their ing, billiards, table tennis, chest, Wichita 4 2 Feb. 1- Tulsa at NTS ley, '77-66: The big Brave center other starters and the bench and bridge. Spectators are wel- Bradley 5 3 l,l1J2 Joe Allen could, only score' 7 average .well below ten points. come, with beautiful co-eds par- Feb. 3-Cincinti at Louisville points. against Rick Roberson's Cincinnati has the ability to beat ticipation in all phases of com- Tulsa 3 2 2 game high 23 point effort. L. C. the Braves, but they will be petition except table tennis. Bond St. Louis 2 4 2V2 Drake at NTS Bowen, was high man for .the handicapped again by the loss of plans to set up spectator stands - North Texas 0 Memphis at Tulsa Braves with' 22. The two Bradley Jim Ard and Gordie Smith. The between the bowling lanes and 5 4 guards, Smith and Swigris, each Braves will have the home 'court billiard tables so that both events Memphis State 0 ' 7 5 I Wichita at St. Louis had 12 points. advantage. can be viewed with ease. ~- TuesClay;tf}a~uary:30, il968· UNI'¥ERSITY, "OF·' CJNCtM'N1\ TI·· NEWS~:'R'EC'OR:D Page Seven_' Campus Calendar ~om"TiiiToIE~

- TUESDAY, JANUARY 30 Faculty Loung--Univ, Center *Classical Film Series if Commuter Steering Committee "Th~' Cabinet of Dr. Caligari" A UNIQUE MUSICAl French Table 12:00 p.m. 1:00 p.m. 7:30 & 9:30 p.m., Alms 100 221-Univ. Center Exec. Conf. Rm.c-Univ, Center Russion Film Series YMCAFaculty Luncheon Lecture Home Economics Tribunal 8:00 p.m, Experience "College Students" Disillusion- 1:00.p.m., 205 Beecher. "Inspector General" ment: Vietnam War & Nation- Taft Lecture-Prof. Arthur Lall, , , Great Hall .al Service" - Dr. Margaret Speaker-"Interriational Crisis Management: The Middle East- CCM Renaissance Consort Mead, Speaker . 8:30 p.m., ~CM Recital Hall 12:00,p.m., YMCA ern Case'of 1967" University' Center Recruitment 4:00 p.m., McM 127 *Mummers Guild 8:30 p.m. Univ. Center Board 5:00 p.m. "The Golden Apple" , ' 12:45 p.m.: Wilson Aud. Faculty Lounge-s-Univ. Center Queen City Rm.-Univ. Center Baptist Sthdent Union 1:00 p.m. Student Volunteer Center 2~3-Univ. Center Orientation 7:00· p.m. Metro Show Sailing Club 1:00 p.m. Exec. Conf. Rm.-Univ. Center Senior Class - 7:30. p.m. Sat. Feb. 10, 8:00 p.m._ ,. . McM 206 Delta Sigma Theta 6:00 p.m. 227-Univ. Center Tickets Available at , 227-Uni-v. Center Viola Recital-David' Morse Frat. Alpha Epsilon Pi 7:00 p.m. 8:30 p.m., GCM Recital Hall 401B-Univ. Center FRID~ Y, FEBRUARY 2 Folk Dancing Club 7:30 p.m. IN , .Schmidlapp Gym UC Chess Club 12:00 p.m. *Kappa Delta Shoe Shine 221-Univ~ Center tHE /" - 7:30 p.m., Frat. Houses Chess Club Tournaments FEBRUARY Organ Reeital-s-Peter Hurford 12:00 p.m., 223~Univ. Center 8:30 .p.m., Corbett Aud. *Student BB Ticket Distributionl' 12:30,p.m., Fieldhouse ATLANTIC' WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 31 Inter-Varsity Christian 'Fellow- MONTHLY ship 7:00 p.m. I TH{ Basketball at Bradley 9:00 p.m. 225-':'Univ. Center "Where Graduate Schools Fail": ? German Table' 12:00 p.m. Phi Kappa Epsilon '7: 00 p.m. hey are stuck in' a complacent 221-Univ.Center 228-Univ. 'Center rut of pure academia and ante- Kindergarten Primary Club Scioto Hall OpenHouse diluvian requirements" write two ~~L~(N A~~L( 12:00 p.m., TC 101 '7:00 p.m., Scioto Han Harvard educators. .II International Coffee Hour , ' , 3:00 p.m. "Advice to a Draftee": , Faculty "Lounge-s-Univ.jCenter , Published for the first time, this Penguin Club 6:00 p.m. "letter written by Leo Tolstoy in lyAN,& 1899 to a desperate young poten- Schmidlapp Pool Alpha Chi Sigma 7:00 p.m. ial conscript bears a relevance to America in 1968. 225-Unlv. Center SABERS / Engineering Tribunal 7:30 p.m. "On Civil Dlsobedlence": Faculty Rm.-Baldwin by Charles E.Wyzanski,Jr., a care-t Panel Discussion-"The Morality FEB. 2, 1968 :fully reasoned examination of the of War", Rev. Edw. Bruegge- Displaying 9:00 -1:00' problem by a federal judge directly man S.J., Rev. Daniel Lyons onfronted withthe issue. Ulysses r-: :.-- Mr.· KLi kurugy a . S.J., & Rev. Phil Berrigan S,J" Speakers 8:00 p.m, "The Perversity'of ~:7:~a,~__~~:~~~::~~~~~~~~:~~~~~~~~~~::~:~:~.:~~~~~~~.~~s~'~~~~ Great Hall Daniels Hall ubrey Beardsley": Mother Here .c.: ~__--~------Miss. McGill Lavey Mar~ .; - ~______Miss. Burnet Student Senate 8: 15 p.m, A tascinating examination of the ;:;..r-: 11th Floor Minerva . .--~~------c-----_------.--- Miss. Pulos J£xec..Conf..Rm.-Univ. Center rococo artist whose work has, Miss. Juniper _------c--_----,,,c------c-- Miss. Moore.- become a cult for the sixties. . THURSDAY, FEBRU,ARY 1 WHey Major Hector ~----c------:--- Mr. \(on Hoene 50c Stag AT YOUR Speech Faculty 12:30 p.m. 75c Couple NEWSSTAND I 307B-Univ. Center ! . Classical Music Recital 1:00 p.m. NOW tI~ ••• '••••••••• \I \I \I \I" \I U \I ~\I \I •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••.••.•i A Conceptionof Mit 'RUTLEDGE Bieovenida Amigos ...... •...... •....•...... •••• --,.,...... •...... •.. In The Pit ••.•. - " Mit DeLEONE

•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• " ••••• " ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• 1••••••••••••••••••••• \ ••• "CLASS HAS~,HITTHE COLLEGE" A Double Hornpipe May Occur ... I•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••" •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••, ••••••••••••••••••" •••••••••• II Illumination & Spectacle, " BY MR. PACini The Dorm A B.11oon Scheduled To Accend 1W::;:::===:::::'=:;:mJI«:::;:c:::=::::::=:::=:?}J! fJg;:=:::::D1 rK::~~~. ;:$1 SIXTY PEOPLE ADORNED ~y Mr. Summers ...... ~ . 'featuring' Pedro's Mexica~ Cuisine' MR. IRELAND. t!'\R. ZIEGLER, -MlsS. HORN, ARE INVOLVED . , l ) ••.•.•.•.•.•.•.•.•.•.•.•.•.•.••.•.••.•.•.••.•.••.•.•.••.•.•.•.•.•.•.•.•.••.•.•.•.•.•.••.•.••.•.•.•.•.•.•.¥•. Located at 2-17 Calhoun Street ENTIRE' PROC,-DINCJS WILL OCCUR· IN WlLSON- AUD. FU. 2 & 38:30 P.M"ALSO FEB. 4 3:00P. M. Has finally opened their dees. Not only do we have tablecloths and candle- ******************************************~*************i light, but also Pedre, the Mexican chef, -hops from table to table sppeaking his TO RESERVE ADMI;rTANCE USE MR. BELL'S INVENTION J I broken- English serving his Taco (only 40 c~nts)' and other Mexican speci!,lties . 475~4553 . \ OR VISIT THE LOVELY LADIES AT UNiON DESK. s which blend perfedly with an Explosive Mexican Cooler served. in a whole s pineapple or a Marguirita. t; s$ - Call for Reservations ~s for JSatur~ay ,Nite ~,-.. ,\\~ 'Ask' About Our, Special Entertainment ~\ :~i. .., ••. ~J •. ~. ~t apen To Coneg'~' Organizations. ~~>~\~ ~ ~c:L-'P' ~f' $ ~~,~~.,,~~~,~~~~~~ . ~~ Page ,Eight 'I,UN'IVERSITY Or CINCINNATI NEWS RECORD Tuesdoy, January 30, 1968

I, Seniors _who are'inferested · j in being" considered" for the 1968 Se ni or C I a ss ,Orator Dormies. \ Pull Pranks For Gsrms sheuld contact, the Dean of by Cliff Radel all the windows in a room after other door trick is to tape it shut, LADIES Men or Dean of Women. Try- its inhabitants have left for the but since' there are many tech-' Our fine~ladies on campus are, outs will be anri~unced / As a public service to all in~ d~y. This tends to frost a person's niques this prank will remain not without their own subtle nocent victims of .Iatent pranks- belongingsIn the room, and else: ,.unexplained. 'So me, would-be grins: ters and natural trouble-makers, where. 'authors take the liberty of writ-. 1. When Someone is in the this 'reporter has complied' a 'list 2. On. the other end. ofth e ing words of wisdom in other stu- shower, a good way to lose a of frequently committed pranks, thermometer is a prank used dents' books while they are 'either friend in Memorial is to .throw BI:ow y,Gu,rself which can be adapted for any- when a poor .soul is taking a being r-oasted in the shower or a solid detergent on them (it 'TO dorm on campus. shower. The procedure is to flush cleaning 'shaving cream from doesn't matter whether it is a U POSTER SIZE GEN;rLEMEN all the toilets 'at once with the their shoes. / low sudser or one that makes the P 1. One of the most' frequently effect of warming the dying stu- 4. There once' was a football automatic grow 10 feet tall, they 2 ft. x 3 ft. used -methods of torture during dent in the shower; This heat-may player who did chin-ups in bed I all obtain the' desired result). / Get your own BLO-UP Photo winter months is the opening oj stimluate the blood' to his brian with a bar that hung from the 2. During j the winter, snow is Poster. Send any' Black and though, and wake him up enough bunk above. The bar was re- brought in and packed against White or Color Photo from to get on the dean's list. However, moved an d- placed in another the door of a sleeping victim. wallet size to 8 x 10, or any it may stimulate him to pull a room above a sleeping angel who A small space is left for knocking negative from' 2% x 2% to 4 , prank on you with his new-found was the floor joker. The group on the door, so when it is opened' x 5 inches. We will send you a the sleeper is greeted by a Cincin- 2 ft. x 3 ft. BLOT-UP ... per- FOR SALE mind. waited' until the alarm went off. 3. Many pranks are just, the This joker' who always jumped nati avalanche. fect POP ART poster. $4.95 3. Many' female pranks are Ppd. simple locking of a door while out; of, bed .very quickly didn't the inhabitant is the shower. An- compensate for, the bar. He re- very quiet" such as the turning Send any Black and, White or .'Binocular microscope, Bausch up of the heat in the night, re- Color Photo from 4" x 5". to 8" , gained consciousness' about two x 10'" or any' negative '2% .x & Lomb. Magnifications 40X, hours after -making contact. ' ceiving a miscellaneous phone' call at 2 a.m. having someone 3% to 4" x 5", .we will send I,OOX!430X, 97bx. Equipped MEN'S 5. Alarm clocks have been the 'you a 3 ft. x 4 ft.BLO-UP source of many practical jokers. walk into a room, scream, then $7.95' Ppd. with'Dynaioom that doubles ADVISORY They are either set up or set back walk' out, or swiping a final . Add N.Y. or N.J. Sales Tax draft of a theme. . ' any magnification. Bought a few hoursto bug people who are No C/O. D. E:XECUTIVE ' always on time. One case' of a 4. The radio-alarm clocks are \Send Check or Money Order to: new 1~66. Dennis Molony, person being early for breakfast somehow always turned up, to top, happened during the, winter when volume -every morning and When Ivy Enterprises, lne, U:C. A&SI966. Phone c/o BOARD they were set the night .before 431 - 70th St. it is still dark, in, the morning. PETITIONS This individual's clock was 'they were just the opposite: Dept. 189 Guttenberg, N.J. Strange! 431-2828 day; 'moved ahead three hours. He ar- Origmal Photo or Negative' Available at 5. Sugar and corn flakes have UNiON DESK. rived at the Union for breakfast returned. ' 921-2121 evening at 4 a-m. instead of the expected strange locations in' the girls dorms. Most of the time' these Ii Contact us to be Blo-Up Rep. DEAN OF MEN'S OFFICE hour. He must really have liked two items can. be' found 'under on your Campus DU~ -,JANUARY 31st the food to want to have' break- fast at 4 a.m. the sheets of the beds in many rooms. 6. The female "arties" have fun painting sleeping victims, either with magic markers' or »> from their many assortments of paintsvAll are found to be very hard to wash off. will a job with 7. Another' cold weather grin is to hang' certain undergarments LTV Aerospace outside and then smuggle them into a r00I1!-to be put on rapidly. make you more exciting, 8. A prank that' was' played on '\ all of Memorial was the 12: 30 sought after,. ~" a.m. fire drill. It is hoped that this list will healthy, wealthy enlighten some" and if any favor- ite' items have been omitted, ;,: an.dwise? please call it to the 'attention of , t!Ie ,NR, staff.' Why shouldn't you enjoy the good things of 'life when you're out to conquer the universer. HirtNeighbor Sound far fetched? It's not. '0 Your first job with LTV Aerospace sets, you on a path that Recalls \ can lead you almost anywhere you want to go. o LTV AerospaceCorporation.makes products, of ,b1l~at Fox I' course. 0 The A-7 -'F-8 - Gama Goat - MACV- Al Hirt will" return 'to the UC Lance-« Sea Lance - Scout - prime subcontract struc- campus, Sunday, February 4, to turals for the 747 and the SST. That's a few. Design, give 'a concert. in the Armory Fieldhouse. When Al returns he development and production require systems engi- is sure to look up Ed Shellhouse, / neering with enormously diversified capabilities. 0 Admissions officer in CeM, and At LTV Aerospace those, capabilities are .being ex- a voice major, who in 1940 room- ed next to him. The News Re- amined in terms of the total environmental picture cord though, got ito- Mr. Shell-, -sea, land, air, space and outer space;' in ocean house first and quizzed him about sciences''-:' high mobility ground vehicles - mis- his now farnousneighbnr, sile systems - military and' commercial aircraft, Ed remembers that AI' spent ;, most of his time practieing" his VjSTOL -launch vehicles - extra vehicular trumpet ashe was a scholarship activity research and development; These are student at the' College Conserva- today's spheres of action at LTV Aerospace: tory of Music, then located on the corner of Highland and Oak They are the frontiers of tomorrow. 0 A'rep- Street. The rest of :AI's time was resentative .ofL TV Aerospace Corporation divided between practicing for -' .will visit, your campus soon. Talk to him. the Concert Band or the Conserv- I atory Symphony Orchestra and Talk specifics about programs, assignments, f drinking at the' Highland Bar or duties, salaries. Then, talk futures. ,Ask the Hom -Inn - 'both on Highland questions aboutwhere your first .job can Avenue. It must be noted that AI , did not .wear his beard in"his "take you. 0 He'll have answers for you, , college days,' as / is practice 'of :\and they won't be vague generalittes. many today's students. AI, even He'll show you where LTV Aerospace though he stood about 6'1", did manager to fit himself into class- Corporation is .heading in the total en-. mate Jack Fisher's "Model A" vironmental adventure, and how you fitin. ' Ford for a trip to his hometown, o You could find yourself getting pretty , , .: during -spring break in 1940. " excited about it. And that's a darned good Ed, states though Al was just way to feelabout your first job. "eighteen, he played a "hell of a , College. Relations .Office, LTV Aerospace, jazz trumpet." ' Corporation, P. O. Box 5907, Dallas, Texas 75222,. An equal .opportunity employer. Classified Ads

CAMPUS IN;r~RVIEWS Librarian, Chemical Engineering, Il-: brary, partime flexible schedule, some chemistry helpful, light ty,ping, could, THURSDAY, FEBRUAl;tY 1, '1968 lead to fuU time technical position,· reply 542-7000,Ext. 236.,

Yoga-793-3737-,-Bill Lipskey LTV AEROSPACE' CORPORAT/,ON A, ';"USSIC"ARY OF •.•.'NOJ - ..,..arAACO - VOUc:;aH-r. INC. OAI-L.A_ Duplex-Modern 2 fam1ly, 5 rooms MISSILES AND SPA,CE DIVISION' VOUGHT AERONAUTICS DIVISION' KENTAON HAWAII, LTD • RANGE SYSTEMS DIVISION each, 2 bedroom, modern bath, '2 car garage, '397 ~robasco, 961-1451.

'7 ~¥t",~~~.~~.h;:"':"1-'&Si·'" \,\;:~~~' \ r ~ .."" ....• . Tuesdoy, January 30, 1968 U.NIVERSITY OF CINCINNATI NEWS RECORD Page Nine After graduation,what? Will you begin"your career as an engineer or scientist or return to school "foran advanced degree? , .

If you are an engineer in the. top third of your class or a scientist in the top quarter of your class, NOL offers you the opportunity to begin your career in one of the world's .great laboratories .and, at the same time, go ahead with your- plans for graduate study.

From the very beginning, new staff members have an oppor- sile systems, instrumentation, for weapons evaluation and tunity to contribute directly to significant projects ... to aeroballistics research, and performance of new concept be part of an organization where. groups are small and feasibility experiments. .~ emphasis is on the individual Chemical Engineers and Chemists-for research and devel- opment pertaining to high-energy propellants "and explo- NOL offers you a graduate'studY program that is one '0(" sives; high polymers; molecular and crystal struCtures;' the largest and most productive programs in the, country. electrochemistry; high-temperature, high-pressure chemical Each year members of our professional staff receive M.S.'s equilibrium studies; and the thermodynamics of high- or Ph.D.'s through this program. NOL has a Significant ad- energy reactions. vantage in its proximity to the University of Maryland. Many NOt staff members hold .permanent part-time positions on Engineering Physicists and Physicists-theoretical and ex- the Maryland faculty, and graduate level courses are taught perimental research in a wide range of areas including at NOL every semester. Maryland also offers many courses signal processing,infrared radiation, acoustics, magnetic on its own campus-qnly minutes away-at times which and' .serni-conductive- materials, and detonation physics; are convenient to and keyed to the, special requirements plus weapon systems development and studies. of NOL. N'Ol ACADEMIC STUDY~ PROGRAMS

PROGRAM COMPETITION ADMITTANCE SUPPORT Part-time . Open to all Refund of tuition and fees if Graduate Study qualified course grade is "B'" or " employees. better ... approx, lh time plus . ~ravel time for attendance.

nUL I~ it litUUlitlUIJ III lIIC lIUC IIICGIII1I5 VI LIIC "VIU, allY Recent college graduates Selected by Personnel , Full.satary, tuition, books & one of the largest and best-equipped laboratories in the Graduate Work~Stu.dy , in certain engineering & .Officer ... admission to fees ... 2 days.each week world. It is the nation's leading R&D establishment for scientific fields. local graduate school devoted to study and classes Anti-Submarine Warfare (ASW), the Navy's principal high for M.S. for 2 years maximum. speedaeroballistics activity, and a leader in the develop- ~ ment of new air and' surface 'weapons; The spectrum of Intermediate Recent college graduates Selected by Personnel Full tuition, books, fees, Officer , .. admission to travel per diem &lh GS-7 research at NOL ranges from nuclear effects to acoustics Graduate in certainengineering & Study scientific fields. graduate school ... an salary.' .. (over '$3800) ... to explosives and materials. At NOL, weapons development honors program. ' ,2 semesters full-time. is carried. through from mception to design to' prototype . test and development. Since 1950, NOL has completed 209 Advanced Scientists & Selected by NOL Full tuition, books; new weapons and devices such as SUBROC, nuclear depth Graduate Engineers, grade Training . fees, travel, per' bombs, mines, projectile fuzes, underwater detection sys- Study /' GS-ll and above. Committee. diem,'& full salary for 2 semesters. tems, and components and design data for POLARIS, TARTAR, TALOS, TERRIER, ATLAS and TITAN missiles. A civilian staff of over 3,000 people includes more than 1,000 NOL NEEDS: An NOL representative will be on campus ... professional engineers and sclentlsts--experts with .ria- FEBRUARY 6, 196.8' < • tional and international reputations. Extensive and unique Aerospace Engineers or Hydrodynami~ists-~esign' stud ies of high-speed, high-performance re-entry 'systems, basic Contact your PlacementOftice 'for interview. facilities embrace wind tunnels operating to Mach 17, hypervelocity belfistic ranges, the world's most exceptional problems in theoretical and experimental aerothermody- hydroballistic facility, shock tunnels, 300g. centrifuge ... namics, aeroballisticsand hydroballistics; and aerodynamic .; Summer Professional· Employment .. ' ,lof outstanding multi-million-dollar experimental facilities .. design and development of hypervelocity wind tunnels and, graduate students and graduating seniors. ballistic ranges. Here ls your opportunity. Each year, NOL interviews out- Mechanical Engineers-conceptual design and development standing engineering and 'science graduating students. ,Ujil'S., ~'~YAL of warhead safing, arming and target-detecting devices for Selects the' handful that seems to be really creative. Takes tactical and strategic missiles, underwater weapons, vehicle 'DRDNAN'CE them to its beautiful 875-acre "campus" (the front yard structures, and mechanical or electromechanical time and LABORATORY is a golf course) in the rolling hills of Maryland near the motion-sensing mechanisms. Nation's Capital. Puts them through an optional one-year WHITE OAK, MARYLAND professional, development course with rotational assign- Electronic Engineers-:-design, development and evaluation ments-to various areas.within the Laboratory to prepare of underwater communlcations and detection systems, .'them for -permanent assignments. weapons guidance systems, influence fuzing, air-borne rnis- . NOL Page Ten UNIVERSITY OF CINCINNATI NEWS RECORD Tuesday, January 30, 1968 ~. Murnrne,rs· Gui Id .Cost Set I. fNT~~!e!.!Y.t!'ENT " 'All The Way Home' Coming -~~~~~~~------, Joanne Horne, Graduate stu- ren Trickey. Their son, Rufus, dent in Theater Arts has been will be played by Rick, Triplet, one of Kay King's Mini-Mum- cast in the leading role of Mary > HOT CCM Plans Musical Concerts mers. Others in the cast are Follet in the winter Mummers Michael Weiner as Ralph, Judy Tonight at 8:30'iq Corbett Audi- Cincinnati's College-Conservato- Scott as Sally, Mike- Blackman as torium,distinguished British 'or- ry, Mr. Morse will play, Flack- John Henry and June Baldwin as ganist, Peter Hurford, gives the ton's "Sonata inGMajor, Opus 2, Jessie. Leslie Lazarou will play :,..-No. 6"; Schubert's "Sonata. in A last of three concerts covering Aunt Sadie,' Dorothy Wade 'is Minor ('ArpeggioIie')";' and .Pis- Great Great Granmaw. Aunt Bach's complete "Orgelbuchlein" ton's "Concerto for Viola an d Hannah will be played ,by Cathy chorale preludes. l.Ie will, be as- Orchestra." ' , McCarthy, Joel by: Joe Tilford: sisted by CCM Chamber Singers, Andrew by nay Schneider, and Dr. Lewis E. Whikehart, director. * * * The Renaissance,' Consort, eight Father Jackson by James Dudley: The public is' invited. ThereIs no Other Mini-Mummers in the cast admission .charge. of the most talented singers.' at the University of .Cincinnati Col- are John Ruhlman, Rod Quinn; Mr. Hurford' performs on 'Cor- lege-Conservatory of Music, will Mark Warshauer, Jeff Paul, and -b e t t Auditorium's magnificent give a .special concert under the, , David Karp. Joe Pacitti, Rocke- . three-manual Harrison and Harri- direction of Elmer Thomas on feller Fellow from the Playhouse , son organ of 60 ranks, first 'such Friday, February 2, at 8:30 p,m., in the Park, has designed an in- organ in North America. in CCM's Recital Hall, The public triguing two story set for 'the :}: * * is invited. There is no admission Wilson Stage. David' Paul Morse, candidate charge. ~,'All the Way Home", is based· At the for the degree of Master of Music Members of this elite ensemble, on the Pultizer Prize winning at the University .of .Cincinnati which 'specializes in the' intricate . Dovel "A Death in the Family" College-Conservatory, will give a form of madrigals (one voice to W.rren Trickey .s Jay In "AII by James Agee. 'I'he play itselt graduate viola recital on' Thurs- each part), are: Barbara Ide the Way Home won both the Pultizer prize and day, February 1, at 8:30 p.m. in Amaral, Donna Dehner, Eliza- the New York Critics award, in the music school's Recital Hall.. beth, Wright, John Wagner, Stuart Guild 'dramatic production" "All 1961. "All the Way Home", under U.C.YMCA· A student of Peter Kamnitzer, Brown, Fred Kennedy, Kenneth the Way Home." Cast opposite the direction of Dudley Suave member of the world-famed La O. Harshbarger, and Thomas Join the role of Jay Follet is opens February 29th and repeats Salle· Quartert in v'residence at Fox. Mummers Guild president, War- March 1 and 2 in Wilson-;,

Ii On Co'ihoun 'Golden Apple! 'A City Premiere Exciting Films The UC Mummers Guild·, has cinnati include 'also ,T. Williamg; . duction of "Prince Igor." Also in an enviable record of presenting "Camino Real," Odets' '''The this original cast were Kaye Bal- This Weekend Cincinnati premier performances Flowering Peach,"and "Dear lard, and David Hooks, who has This Friday, Feb. 2, from The .11,,·2, of great productions. ' Liar." In the musical field the been a popular regular during Classic Film Series, comes "The P.rodti.ction First Guild presented Cincinnati pre- 'many seasons' at the Playhouse Cabinet of Dr. Caligari". One of in, the Park. The very popular production miers of "Riverwind,". "Little the experimental films-a story Sound Plot "The Fantasticks" received its Mar y Sunshine," "The Boy within a story-Robert Wiene's first Cincinnati showing by the Friend," and "On the Town." The production itself was con- production has been praised for MONDAY Guild years ago when it '.w a's Now the upcoming hilarious spoof ceived by John Latouche and- its surrealistic settings which staged at the Hamilton County "The Golden Apple" joins' the Jerome Moross. Mr. I'ltouche parallel-the mental states of the Memorial Hall. Four of thatorig- illustrious list. had worked with Leonard Bern- narrator of the 'story, It has also inal cast are' now in professional Original Cast stein on other musicals,. The pro- been called an example of post ject for a spoof on the musicals war decadence and, classified as theater and work continuously. "The Golden Apple" was first .;: Last year the Guild received the presented in New York in 1954. of' the time so interested' t.h e doubtful decorative art.· THROUGH first rights to "Funny Girl" and- The original cast featured Mr. Gugenheim Foundation that a' And then on' Sunday with as won a claim for its presentation. Julian Patrick who .only this special grant was made available much exciting action the "knock Other firsts for the Guild in Cin- month was a, hit in the CCM pro- to the co-authors to complete the . me down" and "lay me out" work. When first ,presented in parody of the American Western, New York it won immediate ac- "Yojimbo", the rnternational FRIDAY claim and that year took the Film Series presents its sequel, Hirt Gives Special Format Drama Critics Award for the best "Sanjuro" . and most original musical of the year. " "Sanjuro" (1962) is directed by Akira Kurosawa 'and features Tickets, Available Toshiro Mifune in the same role Tickets for the UC Theater pro- as Samurai hero. duction of the "Golden Apple" Revelling, .in black and white can be purchased at the UC Uni- violence, -the movie',builds to' one • , versity Center Information Desk: of the .most spectacular sword phone 475-4553. ' fights in film history. All Sandwiches ~ Music -Review - _ Sold At Cost Hurford Concert A successl

------by Lauralynn Kuhn . by Lauralynn ~uhn instead he presented detailed in- formation. Mr. Hurford has a Famed British organist Peter natural flair for speaking .before Hurford with the College-Conserv- groups, probably strengthened by atory of Music Chamber Singers his studying Law at Cambridge • gave a concert on Jan. 23 at 8:30 University. , p.m. in the Corbett Center Audi- torium. . He commented that Bach does- n't take a chorale, and vary it; -Cold Drinks Included in the concert were Bach expresses the underlying the following works: emotion of the hymn, and this is Bach's Orgelbuchlein; chorale the brillance of the man. In one preludes for the Purification, and page .of music, "Bach pours his Also· Available Before the Sermon, plus various essence of what today we call. miscellaneous selections. Al S 0 genius." presented -were Prelude and Fu- Very surprising was the fact gue in C (BWV). Before each pre- that the audience never clapped lude was played" the CCM Cham- until the conclusion of the con- ber Singers sang the earliest cert. The richtone of the Harrison known setting" of' the' chorale con- and 'Harrison Organ along with cerned. the evenness of Mr. Hurford's AL HI RT bring his unusual format~to the Armol1Y Fieldhouse, Febru~ry Mr. Hurford greeted his audi- touch provided for an evening of • 4. Mail erders are now being accepted at the University Cenh~r Infor~ ence with a bow. By his appear- outstanding entertainment. Each mation Desk. " ance alone he, cornmanded vre- tone was delivered with clarity. 'spect. Mr. Hurford, who, is tall Mr. Hurford moved from the or- Large Quiet Al Hirt's music is described full treatment 'in UC's Fieldhouse and ',has red hair" cut quite a gan bench to conduct the chamber as "definitely not pure' , on Sunday; February ,4th. Tickets handsome image in his tuxedo. singers with ease, grace,' and but better' .in many ways- defi- are$($3and~,$4;.·ma.il orders are The artist's humor was evinced energy. now beingvaccepted at the, Uni- by his opening comment which re- nitely not classical, though the Those of you who can attend Study' Areas varsity of Cincinnati Center. Tick- ceived warm laughter from his- his next concert with the chamber training in 'this-field shows-s-dett-' ~'etOffrce;;Cincinh'ati,'Ohio' 45221: .. audience. "No kidding," he re- singers, 'I'uesday, Jan. 30 at 8:30 nitely '. not jazz-pot precisely T:i~ket~"are'also available at the sponded, "I don't h a v e my p.m. in Corbett Center, should at- ~- swing because swing is a thing of Numark -Melody Shops located at .music." tend. Presented at that time will . the past and. Al Hirt is not." He S~iftoh; Tri-County and the Ken-, He began to explain the pro- be Orgelbuchlein and choral pre, says,'!J'm a 'pop commercial wood MaU,and also at the Song' gram notes, "Let IOe .give you ludes for Passiontide, Easter and' musician and I've got a success- Shop at 6th Street, downtown. For some food for thought." It seemed Whitsuntide. Prelude and Fugue ful format." tic k e t information, p h 0 n e: 'he was going to give some gen- in E-flat (BWV 552) will also be

This format glven the "475-4553. j eralities about the .program, but in the" program. ":1'~:i,.~" \~: ~,:v '::~-i· ~ !~esday, January 30, 1968 U,NIVERSITY OF CIN'CINNATI NEWS RECORD Page Eleven Claude Allen RecallsUC" Days, Views TurlDoil""In US I Claude Allen came to UC" in ridiculous. Perhaps I failed. A. Yes, it is a leftist radicalism drugs which he seems to be using Q. 'What was' the most dis-' the Fall of 1964 as an English in- Listen, I live a very handcrafted and it encompasses the Black more and more frequently? I heartening thing that happened structor after, leaving Texas existence. nationalist movement, the leftist A. Oh, indeed. There will be to you while you were here? . where his "radical involvement" Q. Don't you think' you were changes in this regard, 1'00. Mari- A, Well, I can't remember any- started when a policeman clubbed Dr. Langsman's biggest problem political movement, and the peace' him over the head during a dem- movement juana will be legalized very short- thing particurarty disheartening. " during your three years herej . ly in this country and we will I have a very thick skin. I be- onstration. Immediately Allen be· A. Dr. Who? Q. What of the "need for came the focal pOint of campus quickly clear up that problem. But came accustomed to being a Q. Dr. Walter Langsam. change "in solving social pro- the dispossessed or alienated pariah of sorts. I became used to controversy with his anti-estab- A. Oh! No, no, no, he's always lishment stands. An aura of blerns? Doesn't social' change bourgeoise student, the hIPPY, seeing, my name written on 'rest had much larger problems than usually take evolutionary, form? . they make a real contribution to . room walls .and to having people legend grew up around the color- Claude Allen. I'm just a surface ful Texan and many were' un· A. Change occurs slowly. But it the American society. They have" spit on my shadow as. I walked pustule on the epidermis of con- returned to some of the funda- across the campus: In fact I ha,ppy with the "image he pro- servatism; If he thought about is dangerous to regard this as a [ecteti" oJ the University. mentals of Emerson and the tran- came, to live With it and almost me at all, I'm' sure it was as a natural law. One of the great scendentalist, to the teachings of accept it. It helped. to define me Before leaving Cincinnati Allen boil on the backside. myths keeping the status quo ah ... ah ... ah ... Jesus, and and keep my concept of self-hood initiated tioo, events that left an Q. I see. In terms of the social .alive is that· Rome wasn't built to the concept of love and I think alive add' there's some value in impact on the school. In a nation- "climate" here, do ~ou think that .in a day and that you can't change this is very worthwhile. Commun- that. When you're living 'in a' pig ally covered' story he gave' all his there is a prevailing conservative you that if General Motors, al villages have been set up pen you take any opportunity to students "A's" and he' conducted bias. things overnight. I'm here to tell throughout the country, people get a bath. And so, as I say I'm a "Gentile Thursday" -- a day G.E., IBM, AT&T, Standard Oil, A; It's not a matter of conser- have gotten out of the rat-race, proud of my enemies. But on the whe-n,"everyone went around lov- and DuPont want Rome built in they've opted out. Unfortunately positive side of this I was very ing everyone else.'! He g~ve out vatism in Cincinnati, the Mid- a- day, it will by God get built West or this country, It's a lit- when they opt out for escapism, well received by so many of the lollypops with the inscription, "if and we'll all pitch in and' help it can be disastrous and I don't students here and so much of the it moves ~fondle it." ( tle too late to .seek solace in that them; Now the problem is to kind, of easy label. Mter all, Viet- think it helps too much. But there community. And I can't for the Q. A lot of, students have won- . make the power structure and the is still hope; dropping out is the life of me remember one dis- dered where you have been and nam is a liberal's war. I don't power .elite see. the -necessity think that it is conservatism that first step, if they grow beyond heartening experience while. I why you left UC. for making radical change. There that and become engaged once was here. A. Well, I have been at Point we are fighting' in this country. is no way to gainsay the move- ~or~ .in trying to make radical - Q. 1i'ou left then with no bitter- " Park College in Pittsburgh and I Both the liberal and conservative ment; the dispossessed Blacks in vision are grievously ,flawed. I ~hange, .we~lthen I see real value, 'ness whatsoever? left because-my contract was not this country are going to see to it m the hippie movement. " 't't th t renewed here at the University of think indeed that the liberals and that the "stop gap, piece meal Q. Tim Leary says that he's not .A. No, I. can q~I e say a . Cincinnati. the conservatives will eventually measures" of the war on poverty, for everybody dropping out or Bltterne~s IS.somet~m.es valuable. make common cause against the that the sops that the status quo freaking out yet it seems like a I a~ ~tIll bitter against the. ex- Q. Would you compare your en- dispossessed people in the coun-: vironment in Pittsburgh with the power structure have been throw- larger number without guidance ploitative forces in o'!r soclet~. try. Yes, even the intelligensia. ing them will no longer suffice. of any kind are taking this route But I have always tried to err- environment here in Cincinnati. How many Phid's were there in So I expect that there will be out. You seem to advocate this to ti.cize those forces a~d turn -s, my How do people treat you there Nazi Germany? Against the ·as opposed to the way they treat- radical change in this country and a certain extent. f bitterness to cons~ructI~e u~e. The Black, the poor, against the alie- I think that most of the progress power structure In this country: edyou here? nated and disaffected, so that A. Yes. As it happened, I- am will be made after the reactionary the White House, the Pentagon, eventually a whole new Limen- the corporate state and it's flunk- inside the establishment at Point forces have taken over the coun- sion will be added to the political try and after many thousands of ies and lackies on the local level, Park and that is a relief and a spectrum. in Cincinnati, they function to the blessing I'm sure to both parties. people have been put into prisons. Q. Did you leave Cincinnati with Five years from now we are all intellectual as Joe Pyne to the f am no longer the walking con- a heavy heart or was the change average American. ·They: can sit ; science for the "knee-jerk" li- going to wake up and find 15 welcome? there and glare at the "boob'" ,berals on the campus nor a whip- thousand or so; professors, college tube, get mad and angry and vent ping boy for the carnivorous con- A. Well,· it's nice to take. a rest, leaders, pacifists in prison, and their spleen. But there has to be .servattves. It has freed me to I will say that. I have been lick- i they say it can't happen here, but more. When I vent my, spleen, I do a lot of productive' work in ingmy wounds, but I left with a I'm not so sure. We did it once writing, in poetry, and in teaching. heavy heart because I came to b e for e with the J a pan e s e- open it in the direction of con';" love the students at the Univer- Americans. structive criticism with the ever. Q'. Do' you think that the cli- present hope of action. I direct mate here had you trapped; did sity of Cincinnati. You are mak- Q. In terms of this growing un-' inga silent assumption here rest in Black America, I take it it toward those enemies of demo- you feel' oppressed by anything cracy in America.' . while' you were here' at Cinein- which I can't agree with and that then that you think the riots na,ti? ). ", <,' has to' do' with me as a person, serve a very real purpose? Q. What phrase would you leave' me as Claude Allen. You see, the A. Yes, I do. This country was the citizens of Cincinnati' as you movement for social" change is born and conceived in violence. .go back to Point Park College, and so .much larger than anyone It has perpetrated violence upon take up the fight? personality, needless. to' say. The a racial minority; it has - used A. A phrase? job that I can do, or that anyone their muscle, their brainpower, Q... '. That we can print. person can do is rather limited. their blood, their sweat and has The movement will grow and it, A. I would say, "Keep" the done it quite cruelly, never hesi- Final Thought • "if it moves' faith, baby, and if it moves - . will continue to grow because tating to do what was necessary there' are economic and social fondle itll fondle it." to perpetuate itself. Consequently, ------,-~-- forces at work in the American I feel "that the Afro-American has A. Well, it's better than mak- society that will' insure this in learned a valuable lesson, namely ing napalm. Jesus Christ man, spite of all that Claude Allen or' Every Thursday night that there is after all such a thing ,. what this country needs is moral the Rotary Club downtown can as creative destruction. Violence imagination. do to help or hinder. It cannot be at the stopped; it will grow. will break out, there will be thou- Q. What was your most grati- sands of people killed, it will be' fyingexperience while you were Q. ,This sounds a little like a on the boob-tube, in color, and the here in Cincinnatiz Communist organization that hit blood lust will be in the street. A. My. most gratifying eperi-, Germany before the Second By this time, Ameicra will have ence during my three years here 9 p.m .• 1 a.rn. World War, when Germany had become policemen for the world. at Cincinnati? At the moment I all of it's problems. Do you think Wars for the liberation of the can't take one particular incident Sandy ','Friend" Na~san that .this' would be an ideal time colored people around the world or experience unless it was the and for a Communistic or leftist alter- will spread, and we will have sent receptiveness of the students (to native to take over in this Marines to Venezuela, to Guate- "Gentle Thursday." Most of all,' Saturnite country". - mala, once more to the Dominican the dialogue that was established A. Well, I will say that we Republic, other Vietnams in Asia, between students while I was 9 p.m. - 2 a.m. need alternatives in this country. Africa and Latin America, and here. I witnessed it and it was re- Now don't think that the label I'm afraid, that we are going to .warding to me to be able to par- .:Larry Kinley Communism is relevant anymore 'find ourselves spread so. thin that ticipate in it and to help in' some to the American political scene. a radical change will be inevit- way. I might mention that another Sondra Fa'be I think that a new 'dimension able. gratifying thing that has occurred and needs to be added to American Q. I wondered perhaps if the in my abse~ce is the new look, politics and I think, this will be Claude' Allen middle-class, disenchanted stu- the new policy, and the new staff "Friend" added by the forces that I men- dent has any recourse other than of the News Record. His career as a radical started .tioned. But, to call it a Communist 'L.__ ------1 when a Texas policeman clubed apparatus, -or to pin a label on it, him on the head. He continued his I think does disservice-to the best out spokenness here in the of American idealism. Que.en City. Q. How would you

Page UNIVERSITY, OF CINCINNATI NEWS RECORD Tuesday, January 3D, 1968. LeuderdaleTrips 921-,974~ The University Center, as a service toUC students, ! is hand- ling arrangements for. a Ft. CALL Private hilUs Student Board Meeting - January Lauderdale group flight during Fraternities \ the .spring break. . ~1, 6:30 P'IIl' at Hillel. ' -As of, now only. 40 spaces. are Sororities Hot Dogs will be .the main fea- available on a' Delta Jet flight to Miami, Florida, which is within Socials ture at Friday noon lunch, Feb- cab or bus distance of Ft. Lauder- / QUEBEC GARDEN,S'\ ..•. ..- - ~ dale. ;. ruary 2. Meet.ings 2291 Quebec Rd. Cin., Ohio 45214 Metro Show Sat. Feb. 10, 8:00 p.m, Catering Just 5 minut~s from University "Young Adults on a Kibbutz" will Tickets 'Available at be the topic of a discussion led Unioh Desk, Dorms, F rat. by members of Habonim fol- ~ APT. FOR RENT lowing7:3Q- Shabbat Services, 5 large rooms; 1 block from U.C., ENGIN·EERS February 2. $120 •. Call after 6 p.m, 861-3534. 'SCIENTISTS -. ADMI NIS'TRATIVEand f!!.!.·...X(.:.;.:.? •.;..:.·~.'.:.:.·.f".•.•.: ...:.1ii..::·.~.••...•.•.:.~.·.'.·.:.:.~.1.·.:.i.·.~.:.·.:.:.~.C.t.:.%.,.~.· ...:.,._•.:••.:.ffi,.'!i.;..~i.' . ." c., ..,-".,,,,,,,,,,.'t("&i ~a..I'.Ie·~' ti'T ... . '---TECHNICAL- PE!RS'O'NNE'L- .~ Our.' NEED is yourOPPORTUN'ITY at CRANE! ~II'Ja\~l' , WE'RE INVOLVED with microelectronics, avionic equipment,missile fuses, prec'ision orthe rotating. components, miereeleleatcal det.erioration, pyrotechnic, research, production engineering, development and design, alr and water polluti.~n, industrial and explo- sive safety. In the area of ,testing alone, Crane has some of the largest and best equip- pedlaboratories anywhere. Our sophisticated data processing sy~tem has remote inquiry and real time capabilities. • \1111\ ~Dolls CHOOSE A CAREER IN FEDERAL CIVIC SERVICE and grow with ,NADCrane where your advancement is assured. Outstanding opportunities in,:> ENGINEERING SCIENCE ' .... .ADMINISTgATIVE and , Chemical Industrial Hygienists TECHNICAL Electro!'ic Physicists' Computer Programmers 'ndustrlal Mechanical. and Analysts Safety' Accountants Sanitary' Management Trainees CLIFT!ON~_TYPEWRITE·R S·ERVICE NEW HIGHER SALARIES for Engineers and Scientists start at $7239•.00 to $8759.00 per annum. Of course, all Civil Service benefits ~pply - along with paid tuition plans Rentals - Sal~s - Repairs" and adjusted work schedules for job related graduate courses. , Recruiters representing the U. S. NAVAL AMMUNITION DEPOT, Crane, Indiana, PORTABLES"':'" STANDARDS - ELECTRICS will be at the University of Cincinnati on 6 February 1968 te- interview students for Olympia - Smith Corona - Royal - Hermes - Underwood, permanent and co-operative em.ployment. Interested students should register with the Placement Office. - . XEROX COPYING SERVICE ~Copies Made While You Wait

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;' The Center Concert Committee Presents

'I

.... 'with. PEE WEE and the, YOU H'G" SET 5UN.,'FEB•.-4th at 8:00 p~·m. in the U,.C.-FI£'L,DHOUSE_

" ( , STUDENTS and FACULTY (with I.D.)' $1, $2, $3, Tickets On Sale to Students and Faculty

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-: UN'IVER'SITY CEN'TE'R· DESK ~ 475-4553