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Due to the unex­ pected winter storm, the New~Record was forced to delay publication by one day. We're sorry for the inconvenience.

Vol. LXIV no. 19 . UNMRSilY OF Wednesday, January 12 1977 Bennis to resign after six years at U C

This is the first in a series ofarticles elect Jimmy Carter's cabinet, despite the University of Cincinnati. I would pending a bill introduced by State concerning UC President Warren published reports in the local media. very much like to see him continue Rep. James Rankin. D-Cincinnati. Bennis' resignation and his tenure at "'s hard for people to believe I here, but I'm not pompous enough If Rankin's hill is passed, all of UC. The second installment will be just want a change for myself," Ben­ to expect him to monastically com­ UC's current board members would published in Friday's NewsRecord. nis told the NewsRecord Monday. mit himself to the University of Cin­ be allowed to complct~: the remainder cinnati for the rest of his life." of their term>. Currently. Gov. James By Harold Perlstein "They think I was forced out or L. Venchael Booth said Bennis was Rhodes may name an entirely new NR editor pulled by a better job. I really just "not quitting because of a lack of · hoard under Ia\\ when the state takes "There's never a good time to want to do some other things." board approval. We're losing a great over the U nivcrsity. resign. The decision to end my term is Bennis said he was "really not sure" what he would do after Sept. I, leader. We're fortunate he's staying not something that's abrupt. I've con­ Member, of UC's Administration but he added he would "not want to until Sept. 1." sidered it for quite awhile." and the state legislature have preside over another large university "He's brought a new look, a questioned the constitutionality of UC President Warren Bennis of­ system. ficially announced his resignation, progressive look to the University. this hill. Two legi,lators contacted by We certainly don't want to go effective Sept. I with these words "I have no desire to be president at the Ne\vsRecord called Rankin's bill backwards," said board member Sunday at his Clifton home. another university. That may sound "strictly polmcal." Marion Spencer. like I've had enough, but that's not Bennis' resignation came one Bennis' concern that Rhodes really true," Bennis explained. "I just Board member Charles Barrett ex­ month after he made an extensive would name a new board hostile to can't imagine a more exciting place to plained he tried to change Bennis' financial study of the University and Bennis mav have hastened his deci­ be a president as here. Where in the decision to resign. "! asked him to only five days after announcing plans sion to res{gn, sources told the New­ hell else could you have all these really give this serious consideration. for program evaluations. He said he sRecord. still intends to attack these two damn things happening." I asked him to ask himself, 'Is this problems "to the hilt" until he leaves what you really want?' I did not want Bennts. howev~.:r. said he "wasn't Members of UC's Board of Direc­ to see him go without tremendous fearful of a new board. It's a mistake office. tors expressed both surprise and dis­ reflection on his part." to put my resignation in terms of There was speculation Bennis may at Bennis' departure. liberals and conservatives - it isn't ' Dorothy Dol bey refused comment decided to resign after discovering that at all."' UC's dismal financial forecast - a Jane Earley, chairperson of the on Bennis' resignation until predicted $191 million deficit by 1984 board, said, "Everyone was sur­ Tuesday's board meeting, and board He added that his resignation -but Bennis denied this. In a written prised. I was assured that he was ac­ members Ambrose Lindhorst, Bill "might give some more tmpetus" to statement to the press, Bennis said ting on his own best judgment." Keating and Philip Meyers could not rassage of Rankin's bill. UC's financial "solvency" had been Earley added she did not attempt to be reached for comment. While serving his final eight change Bennis' decision on resigning. months in office. Bennis said he "assured." The present board may or may not hopes to av01d hecommg a "lame He also denied he was under con­ Board member William Kircher be reappointed when UC becomes a t ( PH.I--SIOENT WARREN BENNIS sideration for a post in President- said, "Weep not for Bennis; weep for full-state affiliated university July 1, -continued on page 5 Financial problems may postpone opening of UC's new library

By Terry Kramer "mandatory," "essential," and "de­ The first priority is a continuation lv R news editor sirable." budget from last year. The second UC's new library, scheduled for a Due to the library's financial dif­ priority is designed to make up past Nov. 1977 completion, may not open ficulties, Schell listed other priorities deficits on serial budgets. Currently its doors until July, 1978 when more before the request for more staff the library is $85,000 in debt for un­ money wlll be available to hire per­ members. McCall suggested that paid subscription invoices. sonnel. according to Hal Schell, dean since half the biennium would be The third priority requests money of library administration. over by 1977, it would be possible to to cover inflationary increases over John McCall, acting vice provost delay the library's opening until1978, serials. Last December, UC library and senior vice president for said Schell. administrators projected a $100,- academic affairs, asked Schell to "I suppose it will be acted upon," 000 deficit in the library budget for rearrange the priorities of the said Schell. "The possibility is a real next year, a result of compounding library's proposed budget of 1977-79, one.'' serial subscription debts and infla­ Schell said. because of the Univer­ UC's current library services were tion. sity's cUTrent financial problems. reduced by II hours last October due The fourth priority listed on the In the proposed budget, "28 to the lack of funds to hire student proposad budget under "mandatory positions required fer the opening of personnel in the current library. requests" asks for an inflationary in­ the new building" were listed as a Eight other mandatory priorities crease for monographs (single writi­ ninth priority under "desirable" for are listed before the request for more ing books). There was no provision 1977-78. and ninth unaer "man­ personnel for the new library. These set to replace the 250,000 books !\lark Oa• ;,/the New

By Joe Levy ministration Building. crew. anonymous source. In fact, the N R features editor The continued presence of the jeep "What do you think about that stu­ reporter's rationale for being on the Live and on-the scene: Channel 9's dent reporter?" I asked a camera crew \"as the original"lead" attracting the I // scene was that The Cincinnati Post Instant-Cam unit was covering the camera crews to the Administration member. had run a story that Bennis would front of the UC Administration Building. But there is no intrinsic I./'-...._, He mumbled something about resign. Whether Bennis would really Building. news value in the Bennis jeep; wanting to get to meet her in a non­ resign, whether he was actually in the A barrage of spotlights illuminated someone must have told the 9 news I journalistic context. building -'these issues were unim­ the front steps. A lone cameraman crew the significance of the jeep. It After a few minutes of light banter­ portant. steadied his optical bazooka and was as though some UC Deep Throat ing, the camera crew member Channel 5 News pulled up on the caught the Instant-Cam reporter in had met a reporter in the CCM gar­ suggested, "You could do a story on heels of the departing Instant-Cam. his sights. age and whispered, "Follow the D us." Cameraman and reporter headed up The camera swept in the scene and jeep." Unfortunately, the source "That's what I'm doing." the steps and stopped at the locked carried the image to the Instant-Cam forgot to tell the TV men that Bennis "Well, then, his name is Alfred Lee doors. truck, which microwaved it to the is not the exclusive driver of that jeep, Shitmore" he said pointing at the Unable to advance, Channel 5 Channel 9 studios. The on-the-scene or that Bennis has several other cars. curly-haired reporter, "And I'm-" retreated to the bottom of the steps report was blended with the studio But back to the Administration He was interrupted by a man with and prepared to shoot from there. setting and transmitted across the Building. a walkie-talkie .who was receiving The mustachioed reporter explained city and into the livingroom of my What student reporter tipped them some message about "dynamite" and that the security guard had prevented Clifton apartment. off?! "stake out." his entrance. "What the hell is going on?" I said I couldn't imagine. Both Perl(the I finally summoned the courage to "I even tried the brother rap on to myself. News Record Editor) and I had spent ask the crewman, "Why are you him, but it didn't work,'' the reporter A few minutes later the airwaves the entire day on the telephone in here?" lamented. "]\" othing works anymore brought my answer; "Bennis is search of information about the "To sell commercial time," he but money." believed to be inside," the Instant­ resignation. But we had gotten answered. But when he realized that I I climbed the steps to interview the Cam agent reported. nothing. So I phoned Perl to get had quoted him, he added in ex­ security guard for myself. "Listen, I What had Bennis done to merit some an&wers. planation that the camera coverage know you can't let me in. I just electronic surveillence? He had, of Perl was also surprised by the was an important part of the news. wanted to have you turn me away to course, decided to resign his UC report. He asked me to go to the Ad­ reporter answered. "Could you see "A short blonde girl. She's with a The curly-haired reporter was see what it's like. So tell me what you presidency. That unnatural act earn­ ministration Building to find out who me reading off of the pink sheet?" guy with a mustache. They went that heading towards his Channel 9 auto. tell people to keep them out. And ed him a place on the local media's these mysterious reporters were. But "No," I answered. way." I stopped him with a few questions: rememher I'm quoting you." · ten most wanted list. Bennis' hungry for a story, I needed no coer­ He wanted to know if they used I ran that way as fast as I could. "Listen, why did you quote a stu­ "I'm sorry but the buifding is clos­ elmiveness brought him to the top of cton. any slides with his report: The couple answered my salutation, dent reporter in your broadcast? Our ed to everyone but administration that list. By the time I arrived at the Ad­ "Yeah. They showed Troup ... and "Are you student reporters?" by tur­ paper takes a lot of flack. People will personnel." But Channel9 is hard to outfox. At ministration Building, the Instant Clurie Bennis ... and Bennis... and, ning around. assume that you talked to a New­ By the time I returned to the street, that moment, the hunters were savor­ Cam assault was dismantling itself. I urn, Dr. A. Barrett, I think." "Oh you're Julie Smith," I said in sRecord reporter," I said. Channel 5 had left. I was now the ing two ncwsdroppings: a student hurried to the reporter, introduced "What about Rhodes?" disappointment while sighing inside, Haq they verified her information? only reporter on the UC campus. I reporter had told them Clurie Bennis myself, and opened the conversation "And Rhodes. In your report "! thought it was a real student "How am I supposed to know if phoned Perl for further instructions. had confirmed her husband was in­ with a compliment: "You really look­ you mentioned student reporters. reporter - no a radio (WFIB) she's credible?" he said; explaining He told me to "wait around the Ad- side typing a statement; and Bennis' ed good tonight." What student reporters did you talk reporter." that he was safe because he had at­ jeep was parked outside of the Ad- "Oh thanks," the kinky-haired to?" I sulked back to the Instant-Cam tributed the information to an -continued on page 3 .--- 2 Wednesday, January 12, 1977the NewsRe

By Terry Kramer Bennis later however stated in UC is a tend~ncy to teach few students on faculty increases is not in prepara­ N R news editor This Week, "whatever... flaws may, in per teacher ratio," said Shapiro. This tion for upcoming AAUP contract fact, exist, none was made ... to put causes a "distortion" in total negotiations, said Shapiro. UC President Warren Bennis the finger on any one group within student/ faculty ratios," said Shar­ Shapiro added that Bennis could "minimally" consulted the faculty the University community." piro. have avoided errors had he contacted and stated "inadequate facts" in The report stated that since 1968- The sharp increase in faculty is also the faculty before presenting his preparing his recent financial report, 69 full-time faculty for the total Un­ report. "We have a contractual a~ree­ the result of a "catch-up process,'' By Edward A. according to Herbert Shapiro, iversity have increased by almost 44 said the AA UP News. In the 1960s ment with the Administration to con­ NR ass't university president of UC's chapter of the per cent, while student enrollment student enrollment rapidly increased, sult the faculty on these matters. My understanding is "whatever faculty The controversy American Association of University has increased by almost 24 per cent. while faculty numbers slowly in­ hotly-debated public consultat;on existed was minimal." Professors (AAUP). The report also stated faculty salaries creased. Since then, the faculty has has resulted in a now Shapiro said the report "whether have increased over a three-year "More faculty consultation could grown to accommodate the 1960s which will be put into by intent or not tended to create the period, 1973-76, nearly 27 per cent. enrollments. have prevented some ofthe errors the the end of the month, image that the faculty increases Part of the discrepancy in Bennis' AAUP claimed," agreed Bennis, in In addition, faculty salaries have The law, Section 3791 created UC's financial problems." figures is "because of the growth at January 7's issue of UC This Week. not increased to "keep-up with infla­ Revised Code, Bennis cited in his report that the Medical School, where Last Thursday the executive board tion," said Shapiro. designate, identify and faculty and administrator growth student/ faculty ratios are quite low," of UC's AAUP and Bennis met to "From 1971 on, with the exception smoking areas within the rates and salary increases are one of contended an AAUP response in the discuss faculty input. "We (executive of last year, increases have run from 6 Such areas include the "main ~auses of the University's AAUP News. board) feel there has been a chaotic per cent and under," Shapiro said. ture halls, libraries, financial di{iculties." ad-hoc managerial style for a few Within the Medical School "there Bennis has denied that his report rooms, the bookstore years now here at UC. A stable long­ fieldhouse. range view-point on how the finances As official "no smoki are managed is needed," said T.J. Wehrung/the NewsRecord posted throughout the Shapiro. The faculty is willing to Two Hollle-Ec prograllls dropped assist in this planning, added This young Bearcat booster wonders why the UC band doesn't have a all areas designated as n Shapiro. saxophonist. the smoker versus no troversy is still far from By Andy Telli Services Job Training, according to college used to offer master's level r ed. Opponents of the N R ass't university editor the bulletin, prepares students to courses, but because of a lack of Vaccinations lose vocal as arguments at pu teach Child Care Services and to qualified teachers has had to concen­ This is it continue from both sides. In a budget cutting move, Hendrik trate on undergraduate level courses. Gideonse, dean of the College of supervise "Pre-school programs af­ filiated with vocational programs." He added that because students Are you as tired of reading against VD virus Education and Home Economics, is have to go elsewhere for graduate considering a recommendation that According to Armstrong, there are these "help wanted" ads for programs, high school students go to writers as we are ofwritingthem? members of this year's freshman class approximately 50 full-time students Worried about contracting one of produce its own defenses, an­ On th other institutions with stronger You say the NewsRecord has be the last admitted to the Home and 25 part-time students enrolled in the lesser joys of sex? Are you secure tibodiew, which will attack and kill 'rograms. Economics Education program. the program. been cluttered once too often in feeling that a shot of the old cure­ foreign substances. Even after a case Gideonse said he is committed to The memo released by the college, The college now has three instruc­ with these insane "special all, penicillin, will eradicate any of of measles; mumps or the flu, the tors to teach the program, pleading" ads? body will build up resistance to ward providing the necessary requirements cited several reasons, other than those nasty, painful symptons that m1mstration Building Armstrong stated. Because they are Well, we don't like it any more the disease off the next time around. for graduation for those students budget cuts, for the recommendation come packaged with venereal dis­ something came up." untenured, there is no legal require­ than you do. Do you realize how One health official in Denver, presently enrolled in the program. that singularly would not be suf­ eases? Did it ever cross your mind But nothing came up. I ment to retain them, but Armstrong difficult it is to be creative while Colorado said that 90 per cent of the Betty Armstrong, associate dean, ficient, but, considered collectively, that one of the little buggers may be Administration Building said she felt there was a moral com­ writing these nifty little tidbits adult population over twenty have said the college would offer some led "in only one direction," accor­ immune to all known cill'es? into the grey mausoleum mitment to help them. that must pull you into the herpes antibodies already built into courses in the summer if it was ding to the memo. The National Center for Disease for moving shadows that NewsRecord office? If you've their circulatory system. These will necessary for all students concerned One reason stated in the memo was Control reports there is a new strain dicate human life. The read this far you obviously know gobble up some of the herpes virus to graduate in a minimum of three the size of the program, which was The recommendation must first be of VD catching both the public and in an upstairs office and how difficult it truly is. entering the body but the disease can years. described as "small." Because the passed along to the provost for the medical community with their of the president's Help us end this farce we must still be caught and the symptoms are Gideonse added he would not br­ program is small, income generated academic affairs and the president pants down. It's called Herpes shadows. I continued by tuition and subsidies could not before going to the Board of Direc­ force on you helpless students. quite painful. ing the recommendation to the Board Simplex Virus and there is no known building. Waiting, ""a""·'"' of Directors in its final form until he match the costs of faculty salaries tors. Gideonse, the provost, and UC When are you going to volunteer cure. The more common version, HS Recent studies confirm that your services to the cause ofjour­ I watched the was assured of this. and other direct costs resulting in ap­ President Warren Bennis are aware 2, is generally called Genital Herpes women who have herpes have eight door, the side door, the The program in question has two proximately a $6,000 loss per year. of the recommendation but have not :Jalism? and its increase as a communicable times greater chance of getting cer­ We've asked you to drop by Maybe even the Silver options. Homemaking and Con­ Gideonse said the costs of seen its final form. disease is causing public health of­ vical cancer. One medical text es­ would show up and I sumer Education, and Child Care labotatory and classroom space and John McCall, acting senior vice 426 Pharmacy or call 475-2748 ficials to have more than an oc­ timates that six per cent of the women and ask for Valerie Brown, Andy elusive interview. The pro Services'-Job Training. The utilities are hard to calculate but are president and provost, said the casional headache. who have herpes will get cervical interview with Bennis Homemaking and Consumer Educa­ also expensive. recommendation would by examined Telli or Eddie Perlman. They're Herpes is not your everyday infec­ cancer wtthin five years. One of every not going home until new writers mysterious visitor, and the tion option is designed for students The memo also stated that the by his office and then sent to the tious disease. Unlike gonorrhea or four infants of mfected mothers die at I could see something who wish to become teachers of college has had difficulty recruiting Academic Affairs Committee of the come in. Eddie's mom has syphillis, which are bacterial infec­ btrth. Children that do survive may already forgotten what he looks printable, kept me home economics at the junior and teachers with advanced degrees who Board of Directors, and then to tions, herpes is a virus. But unlike have serious complications, in­ the cold weather. senior high school level. would be qualified to teach graduate Board would examine the like. We mean business this time. other known, curable virus infections cluding brain damage. After 10 minutes of The second option, Child Care level courses. Gideonse said the recommendation. (i.e. - Hong Kong flu), herpes will While the virus itself cannot be bored. But with the lodge in the nerve cells. Permanently, killed. local treatments may be that something was go antibodies already present, or in­ applied to reduce pain and prevent soon, I hung in there. jected, have little or no effect. infection. Several other treatments ting to feel stupid and t Save $10.00 to $59.90 if you act now. Normally, the human body can are now being studied in Seattle, feeling was turning into Wa shington. Doctors recommend no I had to either disturb sexual contact if a person has lesions, soon or risk falling aslee CASH or open sores. Any sign of the above scan:~ed my mental file symptoms warrants an immediate If you've been thinking about You can ear.1 up to ploys and stopped at $70.00/mo. visit to a doctor or local health New York Times repo by becoming a clinic. famous for · getting a programmable, plasma donor at- -College Press Service. crowds and waving at American Blood PROFESSIONAL recognizes. So I decided ing. I waved at the cars J&E DRY CLEANERS Texas Instruments has a Components I waved at the buildings. 916 McMillan Trousers, Skirts $5 00 the parked jeep. 6 or Sweaters • I went to phone Perl. special offer for you OR talking wh.en the campus 3 2 Piece Suits crept sil~ntly past the Sometime. Somewhere OR $6.00 Building and into the Your life May Depend On 3 Plain Dresses GUARDIAN Perscmal Protection Spray Plain Coats NOW 50 Bursts Range - 12 feet 3 c?o~h $7.00 Instantly stops attacker! Formula approved by US. Governmenlfor use by Expertly Cleaned & Pressed Send for your Cash and Carry Only page, mail order ca $1.00 to cover 10% Discount with UC 1.0. handling. 300 East McMillan St.-221-7768 At Highland Avenue McDermott Open Tues.-Sat. - 8 a.m.-6 p.m. -~11 Wilmont Avenue Whote Plaons. 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By Edward A. Perlman Anti-smokers cite the health and NR ass't university editor rights of non-smokers while the The controversy surrounding the smokers contend their constitutional hotly-debated public smoking issue rights are violated by anti-smoking has resulted in a now Ohio law, legislation. which will be put into effect at UC by Is the new Ohio Ia w banning public JACK WALDENMAIER the end of the month, smoking fair and reasonable? Should NELVA MARTINEZ GRE<; SHUMATE MAHA SAMY The Jaw, Section 3791.031 of the a law be enacted to protect the rights to be able to smoke in class, but I can think people can wait till after class 'tion to the law was Nelva Martinez, and when they want to." Ohio Revised Code, requires UC to of some while infringing upon the understand the other students not for a cigarette." an A & S freshman. "[t can't tell peo­ Another student supporting the designate, identify and enforce non­ freedom of others? And, most impor­ particularly wanting to be in a class John Costello, A & S freshman, ple whether they can or can't smoke law is Ricky Payne, a sophomore smoking areas within the University. tantly, is such a law enforceable? with smokers. However, I feel the commented "I won't go to school if I in certain places. Students should studying real estate and finance. "I Such areas include classrooms, lec­ These were some of the questions smoking will continue in the can't smoke. I need to smoke a have the freedom to decide for can see how this Ia w can be necessary. ture halls, libraries, elevators, exhibit the NewsRecord asked in a random classroom". cigarette in class because I get ner­ themselves. If other students don't Some of the professors who don't rooms, the bookstore and the sampling of both smoking and non­ When asked about the law, Valerie vous. Someone who is addicted to like it, they can get up and leave." tolerate smoking in class won't have fieldhouse. smoking students. Generally, the Jones, U College sophomore, cigarettes can't be told not to smoke." Maha Samy, a biology major, was to constantly tell the students, 'no As official "no smoking" signs are smokers responded negatively to the responded, "I think it's good, because Jack Waldenmaier, CCM com­ supportive of the law. "It's a good smoking allowed."' T..J. \hhrung/the New•Record posted throughout the University in law but admitted they would comply, I don't smoke. I don't like to have to position major, was asked if the law is idea, because smoking does bother a Kelly Mefford, U College the UC band doesn't have a all areas designated as non-smoking, while the non-smokers literally breath somebody else's smoke. I enforceable. "I don't see how it will lot of people." Maha, however, was freshman, vehemently rejects the new the smoker versus non-smoker con­ breathed a sigh of relief (instead of hope the law is enforced." work. Many professors themselves apprehensive about the law going so law. "] don't understand why the troversy is still far from being resolv­ smoke) when told about the new Kathy White, A & S freshman, smoke in the classrooms all the time far as to ban smoking in the libraries. government can say who can smoke ed. Opponents of the law remain legislation. said "I'm.half-and-halffor it, because and I don't see how a sign in the back "Libraries should only be divided here or there or how they can deny vocal as arguments at public hearings Greg Shumate, fourth year urban people are disturbed by smoking. But of the room will be a deterrent." into one section of smokers and one you something that gives you per­ • continue from both sides. planning student said, "I would like if tqey ha"Ve to smoke they will. I One who expressed ardent opposi- of non-smokers. The organic sonal satisfaction." chemistry li~rary has that already." Pamela Knox, a freshman s.tudy­ v1rus Jill Pad way, an A & S sophomore, ing law enforcement, expresses much said she is in favor of posting "no faith in the smokers. She said, "I feel its own defenses, an­ On the trail of The·· Silver Fox smoking" signs, but "students who that those who smoke will go with the which will attack and kill smoke will smoke where they want to law and I will too." substances. Even after a case -continued from page 1 les; mumps or the flu, the will build up resistance to ward ministration Building m case motor and the headlights shut off. NR editor applications disease off the next time around. should have been home, working on ing down one of the escaping U C ad­ something came up." Two figures- a short thin man and his health official in Denver, my senior thesis "The Jew in ministrators between Bozian's persis­ I But nothing came up. I circled the uniformed friend headed for THE Any UC students interested in run­ Feb. 15 in the NewsRecord office. orado said that 90 per cent of the Elizabethan Literature." Now that's tent pleas that I leave the man alone. Administration Building and peered building. I dropped the receiver and ning for editor-in-chief of the New­ The staff will vote following the inter­ t population over twenty have the kind of investigation that I like to into the grey mausoleum searching ran towards them. I'm sorry that I missed the broad­ sRecord may obtain an application View. antibodies already built into do - sit in a warm library and read. I for moving shadows that would in­ "Sure is cold out," I said, forget­ mean, that's what University life is all cast. The highlight of the report came in room 340 TUC from Douglas • Communications Board will r circulatory system. These will dicate human life. The lights were on ting to wave. when a student onlooker hurled a Nygren, publications advisor. meet at 7 p.m. Feb. 15 to interview ble up some of the herpes virus about. That and sex, dope, and going in an upstairs office and in the offices "Sure is," the short thin figure Bearcatty. snowball at the reporter. The shot The application must be com­ the candidates and will vote follow­ · the body but the disease can of the president's secretaries. But no answered, while disappearing. knocked his earphone off, but the pleted and returned to Nygren by 4 ing the interview. be caught and the symptoms are Unfortunately, that's not what I shadows. I continued to the Later 1 would find out that this wanted to hear, not after five hours in reporter was quick to recover. p.m. Feb. 10 • The staff vote counts a total of painful. building. Waiting, waiting. man was Eric Now lin, a friend of the cold. But at least Bozian had The procedure for selection of an three votes apportioned according to eccnt studies confirm that 1 watched the doors, the front Bennis, who is helping him with his "Having a little snowball problem editor-in-chief is as follows: the number of staff votes cast. The who have herpes have eight brought the hot chocolate. door, the side door, the back door. resignation. But for now he was just a It was 10:50 now and the Chanel9 here," he said, half-smiling while he Communications Board vote totals greater chance of getting cer­ Maybe even the Silver Fox himself new piece of the puzzle. And why was put the plug back in his ear. • The News Record staff will inter­ nine votes. A simple majority is cancer. One medical text es­ Instant-Cam returned for phase-two would show up and I would get an ex­ the police officer carrying the puzzle­ of its attack. Bennis had still not been Well, that's showbiz. view the candidates at 12:30 p.m., necessary for election. that six per cent ofthe women clusive interview. The promise of an pieces into the building? sighted. have herpes will get cervical interview with Bennis or any I got back on the phone with Perl. within five years. One of every mysterious visitor, and the hope that He suggested I get reinforcements Meanwhile, three administrators infants of infected mothers die at I could see something bizarre, yet from the reportorial staff. I knew that sneaked out the side door of the "COMPLETE HEALTH FOOD SUPERMARKET" . Children that do survive may • NATURAl VITAMINS & PROTEIN ~ • ORGANIC { ~~~~~,fyE: f ~'/.ir, 'c~iNl printable, kept me circling. That and he couldn't come in person because building and crossed Instant-Cam's • CONTINENTAl YOGURT & KEFIR 1 serious complications, in- the cold weather. he had to stay near the telephone in field of view. They were ignored by e HONEY e ICE CREAM • • COSMETICS • BOOKS • APPliANCES brain damage. After JO minutes of circling I got case I called. the camera crew, and would have es­ • BULK GRAINS • NUTS • SEEDS ONEH~:ar~Vf~fm.m~iT!~~1 OF the virus itself cannot be bored. But with the gut-level feeling caped completely had Telli not forc­ , local treatments may be that something was going to break CLIFTON WESTERN HIL'LS HYHYDDEEP·RPK PALARZAK Later that evenmg, the News­ ed an interview. He got nothing. OPEN ON SUNDAY & EVENINGS ~ to reduce pain and prevent soon, I hung in there. But I was star­ Record reinforcement arrived in It was 11 o'clock and time for the NEAR FERGUSON 321 -771 7 Several other treatments ting to feel stupid and that gut-level the twin forms of Russell Bozian and Al Schottelkotte Report with Hugh 651-5288 . 251-2901 201'h W. McMILlAN (NEAR U.C.) S013 GLENWAY AV 3870 PAHON now being studied in Seattle, feeling was turning into hunger. Andy Telli. Telli was a model Dermody. The Instant-Cam panned 'DEliVERY IN CINTI ARFA MAIL ORDERS ANYWHERE" shington. Doctors recommend no I had to either disturb the routine reporter-he stoically watched the the Administration Building. But 1 contact if a person has lesions, soon or risk falling asleep. I quickly building with one hand on his Busch missed the show because I was track- open sores. Any sign of the above scam:ed my mental file of journalistic beer can and another hand on his ms warrants an immediate ploys and stopped at A-Apple. The reporter's notebook. Bozian was a to a doctor or local health New York Times reporter, Apple, is pain-in-the-neck intellectual. famous for circulating through "Why are we here tonight?" he kept -College Press Service_ crowds and waving at people he asking me. "We could be home recognizes. So I decided to start wav­ reading the latest bulletin of the PROFESSIONAL ing. I waved at the cars that drove by. center for the Studs of Democratic J&E DRY CLEANERS I waved at the buildings. I waved at, Institutions." Trousers, Skirts $5 00 the parked jeep. Bozian was right of course. or Sweaters • I went to phone Perl. We were still OR talking wh.en the campus police car YOU and YOUR 2 Piece Suits crept silc;:ntly past the Administration LOVER Building and into the back circle. The Do Something SPECIAL Plai~~resses $6.0 This Valentines Day­ Plain Coats Have Your Portrait c?o~h $7 ·Q 0 Thousands of Topics Taken. A $5° Discount On Expertly Cleaned & Pressed Send for your up-to-date, 160- A Beautiful Color Portrait. Cash and Carry Only page, mail order catalog. Enclose $1.00 to cover postage and 10% Discount with UC J.D. handling. East McMillan St.-221-7768 RESEARCH ASSISTANCE, INC. 11322 IDAHO AVE., If- 206 243 Calhoun St. At Highland Avenue · LOS ANGELES, CALIF. 90025 (213) 4 '77-84 74 861-1252 Tues.-Sat - 8 a.m.-6 p.m. Across From Calhoun Hall

I students interested Tie-Kwon-Do. at: & Thursday MARQUISE P.M. ht by Mr. William DIAMOND Mr. William It & theit h1ghly A_ Fine Selection It i.Qstructors: . Fred Hargrove, 1st Dan of Marquise Diamonds Lewis Blackmari. 1st Dan In Fiery Color and will be held on Excellent Clarity at Schmidlapp IMarquise Diamond Amazing Grace those nights. Compare Only to attend. . _;, At When Grace Slick canceled her reservations on the Jefferson Airplane and booked passage on the 1/2 Carat of Diamonds...... $175 $125 Jefferson Starship, her switch was at least nominally symbolic of a new musical era for the White 1/3 Carat of Diamonds...... $275 $199 Rabbit crew. But there have been few changes in the mind of the lead singer. Now, totally spaced and a mother besides, Grace still has no inhibitions aside from the Chevy engine in her Aston Martin. Amazing 1/2 Carat of Diamonds ...... $399 $299 Grace brings us all up to date in the current issue of OUI. Some other Sixties holdovers are those FBI 3/4 Carat of Diamonds ...... $699 $499 files oh radicals. Robert Wieder, also in the current OUI, tracks his file down­ 1 Carat of Diamonds ...... $899 $599 with great difficulty-in Nailing Your Files, while Anita Hoffman, Abbie's better 1.07 Carat of Diamonds ...... $1 ,400 $999 half, tells you what's in the folders of the famous. Meanwhile, David Dalton attends a charm school for transsexuals to divine the mysteries of feminine behavior and OUl asks, "Where has everything gone?" in Strange Vanishings, an investigation into the disappearance of just about anything. Naturally, there's more-B movies, Mexican food, tennis addiction, CIA blunders, cross­ country skiing and more than a little bare skin. But you have to ask for it at your ne\\!Sstand. That's easy, though. Just say OUI.

TO ALL cen er CHARGE e U.C.STUDENTS ACCOUNTS OUI 8e sure to . 605 RACE STREET INVITED ask for it. CINCINNATI, OHIO 0 1976, Playboy Publications TEL. 621-()704 4 Wednesday, January 12, 1977the NewsRec.oRI OPINION&.. Today COMMENT An outdoor recreation "Wilderness Alps of Stehe will be shows at 12 noon i Faculty Lounge, TUC. Ac sion is free. * * * Mountaineering Club m~ will be held at 7:00p.m. in F The end of an era 308 Swift. Seminar on Rockclimbing will be ~ Backpacking trip to Red Gorge for Janua1 Warren Bennis assumed the UC presiden.cy Sept. I, the fiscal realities of a university the size of UC. 17 will be planned. Call 1- ILJ71. lollowing the climax of a national period of Deficits became more important than the quest for 475-4966 for information. student activism. Exactly six years later. Sept. I, student input. Financial survival became as impor­ "Critics on Criticism" ILJ77 . will resign as UC president during a tant as Bennis' ed ucationat goals. Bcnni~ begin tonight at 8:30 p~riod of. what he terms, national student apathy. TUC Room 401 A and ll C's !acuity also gained more input under Bennis, With an unparalleled background as an interper­ jam in Demott will be the hut then professors sought higher wages through this evening. The series, so nal communications expert, Bennis was im­ collccti>e bargaining. After months of talks, the so red by DAA, is designed ll1 l' tii.tt ~ ly prcs'ied to put his theories into practical laCLtlty received its new contract, but only after quire into the nature and u ~~ . II "' pn: d~ccssor. Walter Langsam, had grown claims of unfair bargaining were levied against Ben­ of the condition of the t t nre ~pon -,i \c to student concerns in a time of cam­ Ill~. science of criticism. pt t'> unrest. He has since been accused of financial mis­ Letters ••• lmmcd Icry visible, present president." On million University deficit by 191:14. would like to publicize overly drastic and unjustified. Before ( kt . l. l 1.)71. one month after Bennis assumed office, Still. Bennis believes the University has started to to lose by abolishing football. Also reading to be given by su-::h a rash decision can be made, I tlh· :\c11 ~ Rc c ord reported, "Trying to be a visible ).!a in control of its financial problems. Starting July Silent majority Student Senate's vote should not be Benedikt at 8:30 p.m. in would urge all other alternatives be prc-.idcnt. I >r . Bennis has been talking with students I. liC will reap the benefits of full-state affiliation. To the Editor: construed as a negative student opi­ 40I-B TUC. Benedikt is considered, for we know not all the on the Union bridge, and spent Sunday night at lknnis spearheaded the drive towards full-state Did Student Senate really repre­ nion toward football, but rather an York-based poet, awareness of a financial problem fac­ ramifica tions of abolishing football. l{ l: lkct ton-, (nm\ Lighthouse Limited), a student -,tatu~ \\hen he realited UC could not financially ex~ sent the attitudes of the ma_iority of translator. UC students by their vote to abolish ing the University. If student government is truly in­ n i)! hl '- P• >I ... i~t in its city state owncrship setup. terested in representing the student * * * intercollegiate football'! Was it right Presi dent Bennis certainly There will be a for Senate to suspend their con­ represented the student's feelings in body, perhaps they would be willing Forum on The Cuban In it ~ lir'it editorial about Bennis, the l 'C's financial worries are far from over, but with stitutional rules and vote on this issue hi s statement to support the football to initiate some fotm of campus-wide tion in commemoration \. c11-.RccPrd 11rotc in the same Oct. I, 1971 issue: t ull-~tate status. the machinery is in place for in­ of major importance at the meeting it program. The views of the silent ma­ input. niversary, at 8 p.m. in R " lmpt e ~ ~c d hy hi~ energetic and open approach, we crt:ased future funding. Bennis is also still. for­ was first brought to the floor? Should j ority of the University community It is a shame that on such an im­ Swift. Sponsored by the l!l l l' our 1 otc of confidence as he begins the difficult mulating cost-cutting plans for the University to the vote be accepted across the nation have been appropriately expressed portant decision as our football team Socialist Alliance. j, u,in c., , ol tran-,lating his vision of UC in the 1970s lcs!>en t hc scvcrity ol I ut urc deficits. as a feeling that UC students hate by his statement, and it is definitely that 13 student Senators rather than * * * ll lt P d tll icult realtt) ." football? time for some positive University 30 were voting . This is hardly Asa Briggs representative of 30,000 students. I I he role ol uni>ersity president is precarious. As These questions can only be publicity to offset the boisterous History and allegation made against the football should hope that you 13 reconsider '-.tudcnt -, bcc:tmc an integral part of the Univer­ l ' <. · president. Bennis must please a myriad of answered by the students themselves, University of Sussex, will and will most like be answered with a program. your vote, for much of the student sent for an informal ''' '' -, t, Pl'l lln: \\tth lknni~. Opinions of student -, ttuknh. laculty and alumni and still lobby for definite "NO!" For any program to be successful bod y is thankful for Kenneth tion 2:30-4 p.m. in the J• 'jl iL'": ntatti L's were actively solicited by 'Bennis, lin;ttH: ial \llpport from Columbus. The University From a financial viewpoint, we requires the positive attitude of those Spruce's one vote. Laws Lounge. 11 llll 11 11 " ' .t rt ra ti '.L· polic.\ . t lie nc 't pcrsl!n '' ho m:cupics it Sept. I. enrollment and the tuition received to see these positive attitudes to try pre-med junior from a large student body, and other and find a solution to a problem Editor's note: Miscellaneous But a ' '>l lltknh began infiucncingcampus affairs, factors. Will the money from these rather than drastically" abolishing If 13 votes do not represent 30,000 Dr. Bibb Latinc, a tl ll'tt tlm-, t lor lllPt'L' input grew. It was like giving a The legacies Bennis will leave behind at UC can areas decline from the lack of a foot­ such a vital part of our university as students, who does one vote chologist from Ohio p ~ tv1n "a little freedom," the more he gets the more only be judged with the passing of time. Until then, ball program? Of course it will and football. represent? iversity, will speak ·,, 1\ :tnh. I he thirst became. and remains, in­ the News Record encourages the campus community that means lost money to the Univer­ Bill Soltesz '>d t t;t hk. not to turn Hennis into a "lame duck" during his last sity on the whole. Interfraternity Council president Theory of Social uuv"'''' Book Exchange day, Jan. 14 at 3 p.m. Football is more than just a Satur­ I Ill' td co~ li '-1 pr -c ~idcnt then began grappling with eight months at the helm. Faculty Lounge, TUC. day afternoon pasttime. It is an in­ To the Editor: More football Due to the T UC renovation, the • * * tegral institution and essential link The U.C. Video Student Government offi ce has been between the University and the To the Editor: currently showing the public. Its merits cannot be denied as As you may well recall, Student closed down and with it the UC Book Bowl of 1976, Jan. 10-14, a strong basis for instilling in­ Senate asked for the abolishment of Exchange. Please bear with us and N egl~cting human minds stitutional pride, financial support football (13-1-2 vote), at the last we'll be in full operation in two weeks and student involvement in campus meeting of the fall semester. at 475-BOOK. affairs. It is my opinion that Student Please don't forget to use this ser­ At the end of this quarter, UC's Walk-In Clinic community, the clinic is a vital link between UC and Most people seem to be of the opi­ Senate has failed in its responsibility vice to buy and sell your winter and will have to close its doors unless enough money is the outside community. As part of a presidential nion that some compromise is possi­ to represent the myriad of student in­ spring qua rter texts. genera ted to save it. statement to the UC B-oard of Directors last week, ble, whereby the football deficit will terest on our campus. Charlie Foster T he clinic needs $9020 to pay staff salaries for the Senior Vice Presidents John McCall and Stanley be reduced without going to the While I do not deny the need to Greg Gunn remainde r of the fiscal year. Although funds were Troup addressed themselves to the importance of drastic measure of eliminating the study the fo otball situation, the ac­ Susan Ross actually depleted by the end of December, the staff UC retaining a good relationship with its surroun­ program entirely. We have too much tion taken by Student Senate was UC Book Exchange <~g r ee d to work on a voluntary basis until the end of ding community. If this vital link- the clinic - is this 4uarter. allowed to dissolve, will other links become equally F ro m its inception in 1971, the Walk-In Clinic's untenable? The client syndrome fina nces have been precariously obtained. In its se­ Disregarding the aforementioned reasons for the co nd year of operation, William Nester, then vice Walk-In Clinic's existence, what will happen to Nicholas von Hoffman provost for Student Affairs, allotted the clinic those persons depending on its services? UC has no other comparable agency to absorb those ap­ $3000. Because the Walk-In Clinic could not employ WASHINGTON ( KFS)- Carter terms, the client becomes both the had no resources to deal with pover­ proximately 2900 persons who annually require help top-notch counselors for pittances, U C President and his people are putting greater output AND (emphasis McKnight's) ty. There were, however, many Warren Bennis provided an additional $10,000 in in dealing with emotional problems. store on the qualifications and com­ the input. His essential function is to resources for professionalized in­ t 974-75. Although the University's financial difficulties are petence of top appointees than did meet the needs of scrvicers, the ser­ stitutional service." The end result is After !974-75, however, Bennis stipulated that far from resolved, surely there must be some budget even Nixon-Ford. With each new ad­ vicing system and the national that by exercising the tools of their future funding would have to come from the Student or budgets capable of coughing up $9020 to save the ministration less emphasis is placed economy. The central political issue profession, these highly trained ex­ Affairs Budget. Keeping in line with this directive, Walk-In Clinic. Last month UC administrators, on appointing people a president becomes the servicer's capacity to perts, these qualified practitioners, the Student Affairs Division provided funds for the albeit with difficulty, were able to find ways to agrees with and more on the ap­ manufacture needs in order to ex­ broke up the families they were sup­ pand the economy of the servicing 1975-76 academic year, and in an emergency balance the budget after discovering a $2.1 million pointee's asserted expertise. Where posed to be helping and turned their once it was assumed a president system." (From a paper entitled measun.: , allotted just enough money for the clinic to shortage due to losses in tuition income and in­ children into clients with problems. would pick an important political " Profess ionalized Service and Dis­ In one way or another the same story survive through December. creased utility rates. ally or "crony," i.e., a friend, for a job a bling Help," presented at the First Barring the location of $9020 within the Univer­ transpires in law, medicine, educa­ like Attorney General, the Peanut is Annual Symposium on Bioethics, the tion, all of the major service systems. sity's constrained budget, a campaign managed by According to Robert Carroll, interim vice provost getting attacked for it. The selection Clinical Research Institute of Mon­ It is the ultimate in empcror's­ for Student Affairs. the Division's budget has no the University as a whole may save the Walk-In of Cabinet officers today must be treal, Oct . 1976.) clothesism when you can convince money to pump into the clinic. Carroll said what he Clinic. In 1975-76 the University was able to raise justified on the basis that the person All of that wouldn't be as depress­ people to pay for something which is can do, though, is provide the clinic's director, funds from outside contributors to provide busing to is "qualified." A qualified black, a ing as it sounds if these elaborate and making them sicker and weaker and Milto n Foreman, with a list of contacts in the com­ Riverfront Coliseum for basketball games. Last spr­ qualified woman, a qua lified expensive systems were realizing less and less able to fend for munity. With all other doors closed to it, it appears ing, thanks to the efforts of the campus community, Chicano, etc. their stated goals, but the suspicion is themselves and get them to say thank doubtful the clinic, with its small staff, will be able to UC garnered enough support from the community Thus arc the most elevated policy­ growing that they are actually con­ you. One of the ways this is ac­ tributing to the spread of the very solicit enough contributions to make,it solvent once to become a full-state university. Presently, the UC making positions turned into non­ complished is to lay more and more woes they arc supposed to remedy. Development Office is attempting to raise $900,000 political, technical jobs in which stress on qualifications. Only a gam. "The question," as McKnight poses The Walk-In Clinic is an integral part of the Un­ to balance the University's budget. beliefs, values and principles are sub­ qualified people may speak of any of ordinated to competence. So the it, "is whether we get more sickness these matters so that we now have the iversity and the community-at-large. Graduate UC's Walk-In Clinic must be saved .either by Carter administration has already from more medicine? Do we get more experts defining the problem and locating funds within the University's budget or students in counselor education, psychiatric nur­ closed down the possibility of ex­ injustice and crime with more defining the solution. sing, psychology and rehabilitation counseling generating money from outside sources. The Univer­ amining, much less executing major lawyers and police? Do we get more McKnight and others have noted rccei1e valuable experience in on-the-job training at sity cannot stand idly be and watch the treatment of policy changes in some of the most ignorance with more teachers?" And that the tendency is to define the solu­ the cl inic. Along with student training, professional and attitude toward mental health deteriorate. important areas of our national life. so forth and so on. tion by teaching the client how to mental health personnel also receive training in crisis It would be sad indeed, for an institution of higher Not that Carter ever said he would The Carter administration's satisfy hi s or her professional worker. intervention at the clinic. education - which is in the business of shaping take any deep second looks. The answer to those questions is no. The It is the replication of what transpires problem, Carter and his -associates Because the Walk-In Clinic welcomes members of human minds - to neglect those minds when they most he promised was that he would between the professional teacher and think, is purely one of management. the general public as well as membets ofthe campus cry out for help. manage what the government is the student in the school situation. alreadv doing better than his rivals. But good management can't help if Educational success is learning how the problem is being created or to please the instructor, so now we Editorial Staff He will fail. He will fail because he aggravated by the very services the ftnd doctors teaching their clients Harold Perlstein ...... 1'• •• .. •.•. •. • .. •• Editor Bob Hankey ...... Sports Editor doesn't understand that many of the manager has been called on to make Karen Diegmueller ...... Associate Editor Annette Uhrick ...... Ass't Sports Editor successful "patienthood" while other programs he has promised to run Trrry Kramer ...... News Editor Glenn Miller ...... Entertainment Editor more efficient. Take this example professionals inculcate their more efficiently and expeditiously Sandor W. Sternberg ...... " ...... : ...... Copy Editor Mike Williams ...... Ass't Entertainment Editor cited by McKnight: customers with the norms of .Joe Bobbey ...... News Manager Tim Morey ...... Photogrephy Editor arc inherently unworkable. All the "A recent study of children who successful "clicnthood." Val erie Brown ...... University Editor tim Samad ...... Ass't Photography Edl~or care programs - Medicare, became state wards exemplifies the A In the meantime, the organs of 111l y Telli ...... Ass't University Editor Steve Karmele ...... Graphics Editor Educare, Judicare, Socialcarc and Edward Perlman ...... Ass't University Editor Steve Perlman ...... Cartoonist process. The children were legally Psychocare - fall into that category, government over which Mr. Carter Joe Le vy ...... Features Editor separated from their families because will shortly assume at least nominal Business Staff for their principal purpose is to help the parents were judged unable to the professional service providers, control .arc ever on the alert to find John Ehmann ...... Business Manager Scott Lipps ...... Ass't Local Advertlslnc Mana11er provide adeqw~tc care for the new needs for new professionals to .Jeff I.ipp' ...... · ...... National Advertising Manager Beth. Wright ...... •• . Classified Advertising Mana1er not their clients . children. Therefore, the children service. Will it be suicide crisis J im Winnegrad ...... Lotal Advertising Manager "The client is less a person in need were placed in professional service than a person who is needed," writes centers or a special program for the institutions. Nevertheless, the relatives of alcoholics who are not be­ The NewsRecord is published semi-weekly, Tuesday and Friday, by nati, Ohio 45221. Phone.475,2748. John McKnight, professor of Com­ professional case records universally the Communications Board under the advlsorship of Douglas Nygren Business Office-426A Phannacy, University of Cincinnati, Cincin· ing cured by the government's nati, Ohio 45221. Phone.475-5901. munication Studies and Urban Af­ portrayed the children as the during the regular academic year except during vacations and ~cheduled fairs at Northwestern University. "In programs for the alcoholics examination periods. The NewsRecord is a member of National Educational Advertising problem .. . the officials ... in­ business terms, the client is Jess the themselves. No, improved manage­ Editorials are the opinion of a majority of the editorial board and do Service, Inc. Advertising deadlines are 1 p.m. Friday for the tuesday volved ... agrccd . that the most corn- ment techniques are the least of it. not necessarily express the opinion of the University of Cincinnati. issue and 1 p.m. Wednesdty for the Friday issue.OnesubKriptlon Is $1~ consumer than the raw material for . mon reason for removal was the Copyright, 1977, by Editorial Office-4268 Pharmacy, University ofCincinnati, Cincin- payable in advance, second class postage ll•ld at Cincinnati, Ohio. the servicing system. In management economic poverty of. the family ... they King Features Syndicate the Newslecordwednesday, January 12,1977 5 UC President Bennis resigns Calendar -continued from page 1 Today 5 p.m. as seen by TVTV in the Old Lobby of TUC. duck." fresh outlook but also a lot of An outdoor recreation film departments are going to be mad, I thought it was going to be. There's "1 hope l have the capacity not to sizeable and substantial connec­ and the schlockers (lowlier "Wilderness Alps of Stehekin," * * * nothing in my background that has English classes for foreign just become inactive. Lots of tions," Bennis added. programs) are going be mad," ex­ will be shows at 12 noon in the pre pard me for what I'm doing now," students' wives begin Tuesday decisions we' ll have to look at are Bennis refused to speculate on who plained Bennis. "Let's work with out Faculty Lounge, TUC. Admis­ Bennis explained. and Thursday, 7-8:30 p.m., already underway," Bennis explain­ would succeed him as president strength and not think we can sup­ sion is free. "I would have thought, when I Chemistry Building, Room 623 . ed. "I feel my relationship with our although administrative sources port every damn thing. That makes it came here. I would be devoting * * * Come to the class or call Mr. senior vice presidents is a good one. termed Winkler the logical successor. Mountaineering Club meeting impossible to support excellence - myself to education and leadership,'' Pete Bauer at the Travellers Aid We are all together." "Even if 1 did have a candidate in ever." will be held at 7:00p.m. in Room he added. "But what I spent my time Institute, 721-7660, for more in­ Faculty coHective bargaining for a mind I wouldn't mention it. The During his tenure at UC, Bennis doing most of all is politics - and 308 Swift. Seminar on Lead formation. Small fee charged. Rockclimbing will be given. contract is one problem Bennis said worst thing for me to do would ob­ said he has been distressed he has had now financial management. Whether Backpacking trip to Red River he hopes to solve before his departure viously be to make it public," ex-· to spend so muc,h time with politics I'm the best man to do these things, I * * * Sept. I. plained Bennis. Gorge Kentucky for January 14- UC Korean Karate Club: and financial management rather don't know. There are probably One reason Bennis said he resigned Bennis encouraged the presidential than with education and leadership. 17 will be planned. Call Hal at Registration is being held for all hctter people to do those kind of without worrying about the future of search process "to get cracking as "The role is so different from wh~t thin)!' ... 475-4966 for information. students interested in learning the University was his confidence in soon as possible. the art of Karate/Tae-Kwan Do. "Critics on Criticism" will his senior vice presidents to take over "Everybody has to feel insecure a Registration and classes will be responsibilities once he left. begin tonight at 8:30 p.m. in held at Schmidlapp Gym on little bit about who is named presi­ Formet ~student "I really do feel good, for the first dent. Will he make changes? Will he TU C Room 40 I A and B. Ben­ Tuesday and Thursday from 7-9 time since I've been here, about the be faculty-oriented? Will he be jamin Demott will be the speaker p.m. Public demonstration top administrative group," Bennis athletics-oriented?" Bennis said. "It's sues CIA this evening. The series, spon­ classes will be January 11, 13 and commented. "I felt good when I saw a very anxious period." sored by DAA, is designed to in­ 18 at Schmidlapp Gym from 7-9 our three senior vice presidents (John Bennis,however, stressed, "What The CIA is getting it from all sides1 quire into the nature and origins p.m. For further information call Weissman, who was active in McCall, Lawrence Hawkins and we have to do is pretty clear,· no of the condition of the art or 281-5982. these days. National Student Association (NSA) science of criticism. Stanley Troup) take control of the matter who the president is, as far as One of its latest headaches has activities while he was a student at the * * * financial state of the University at financial aspects of the University are been caused oy Gary Weissman, a A plant sale will be sponsored University in the late fifties, and also Tuesday's board meeting." concerned." former student at the University of by Mortar Board Wednesday a friend of Tom Hayden, first re­ The "tough choices" concerning Wisconsin in Madison, who is suing and Thursday, January 12 and quested the information in February Th~ English Department Henry Winkler, UC's executive UC's academic programs must be the agency for its refusal to hand over 13, in the Great Hall of TUC 1975, after he read that the CIA was would like to publicize a poetry vice president as of Feb. I, will made, according to Bennis. "We've information obtained about him dur­ drastic and unjustified. Before from II a.m. to 6 p.m. "ma,king investigations on people rash decision can be made, l reading to be given by Michael strengthen the Administration, ac­ been supporting some programs that ing a five-year investigation the CIA slightly to the left of Attila the Hun." Benedikt at 8:30 p.m. in Room urge all other alternatives be * * * cording to Bennis. are questionable and not giving sup­ said was conducted for purposes of He suspected the CIA might have in­ 401-B TUC. Benedikt is a New The deadline for nominations red, for we know not all the "Winkler, undoubtedly, is one of port to quality and strong employment. Weissman has stated formation on him because of his York-based poet, editor, and of graduating seniors for Who's the top university administrators in programs." r.~~ton••• of abolishing football. Who Among Students in that he never applied for a job with background. translator. this country. He brings in not only a "When you do that, the good the CIA. A federal judge ruled last March ent government is truly in­ • * * American Colleges and Univer­ in representing the student sities has been extended to that release of the information would There will be a Militant be a national security risk. Weissman perhaps they would be willing Forum on The Cuban Revolu­ Jan. 12. Turn in names to 105 countered that the judge "was not iate some fotm of campus-wide tion in commemoration of its an­ Beecher Hall as soon as possible. dealing with questions of merit." The niversary, at 8 p.m. in Room 308 Acupressure classes offered * * * case is now before the U.S. Court of a shame that on such an im­ Swift. Sponsored by the Young Appeals in Washington, D.C. decision as our football team Socialist Alliance. All student organizations By Michael Kiefel promotes circulation and "wakens" Weissman based his request on the student Senators rather than should pick up their 1976-77 Af­ and neck muscles. He shows ways of * * * NR contributing editor the nerve lines. Freedom of Information Act which voting. This is hardly Asa Briggs professor of firmative Action and stimulating the entire nervous system Beginning Tuesday, Jan. 18th, a These lessons include not only requires federal agencies to hand ·ve of 30,000 students. I History and Vice-Chancellor, Membership evaluation forms through foot reflexology. three-week acupressure massage practical massage techniques but also over information they have collected hope that you 13 reconsider University of Sussex, will be pre­ from Pat Brown, 340 TUC. Chaumont explains nerve points course will be offered on the second the philosophy behind the method. on an individual, if that person asks for much of the student sent for an informal conversa­ Reports must be returned by and to what they relate, using both floor of Craw's Too, 117 W. Mc­ In Oriental massage, the health ofthe for it. is thankful for Kenneth tion 2:30-4 p.m. in the Annie March 4, 1977. For further infor­ charts and willing subjects as visual Millan. The classes will run from 7:30 body is viewed in its overall integral, The former student said 'the CIA one vote. Laws Lounge. mation call 475-6201. aids. He demonstrates stretching ex­ Richard Berkemeier * • • to 9:30 p.m., Tuesday and Thursday synergetic Oneness as well as in its ercises using heaven-earth has acknowledged that it has 44 pre-med junior nights. specific components - the many and (gravitational/ anti-gravitational) documents on him, but that they are Jorge Chaumont, who has studied note: Miscellaneous the One. principles, and gives detailed withholding 26 of them, using the "Hatha Yoga" classes will and practiced Oriental healing votes do not represent 30,000 physiological explanations of vital national security blanket. Dr. Bibb Latine, a social psy­ begin the second week in techniques, including herbal s, who does one vote Having taken the course last year organ functions and how they can be "Obviously they are hiding chologist from Ohio State Un­ January at St. John's Unitarian medicine and acupuncture, for the from Chaumont, I've given no fewer aided through massage. something," Weissman said. iversity, will speak on "The Church, 320 Resor in Clifton. past five years, will teach the class. than 300 massages myself and have For those wishing to take the "They're willing to fight it because it's Theory of Social Impact" Fri­ Classes will be held on Wednes­ Acupressure massage deals with relieved numerous people of arthritic course, they should make their $20 much broader than this. If they give k Exchange day, Jan. 14 at 3 p.m. in the day at 7 p.m., and Fridays at 5 stimulating the same points on the pain, sinus and migraine headaches, check or money order out to "Cincin­ them up to me, they'll have to give Faculty Lounge, TUC. p.m. and 7 p.m. The cost for 10 nerve meridians on which acupunc­ Editor: aching backs, sore muscles and excess nati Aikikai" and mail it in to: 2365 them up to others. · session series is $20.00, or single ture needles are applied. Acupressure to the TUC renovation, the * * * tension. Ravine St. #6, Cincinnati, Ohio "If they're keeping stuff on an un­ The U.C. Video Network is lessons for $2.50. For further in­ removes energy obstructions, relaxes Government office has been Chaumont includes methods of 45219. known like me, who knows what they currently showing the Super formation call 961-1938 any fatigued and stiff muscles, breaks up down and with it the UC Book self-massage;: in his course that relieve For further information call 381- have on others," Weissman added.­ Bowl of 1976, Jan. 10-14, 9 a.m.- weekday from 9 a.m. until2 p.m. calcium deposits in the joints, nge. Please bear with us and sinus headaches and tight shoulder 1585. College Press Service in full operation in two weeks BOOK. don't forget to use this ser­ buy and sell your winter and quarter texts. Charlie Foster Greg Gunn Susan Ross UC Book Ex NITE

BEARCATS VS UNIVERSITY OF DAYTON WEDNESDAY- JANUARY 12, 1977 I,·, resources to deal with pover­ re were, however, many for professionalized in- 8:05 P~M. RIVERFRONT COLISEUM 1service." The end result is exercising the tools of their ROCK WITH THE BAND & ROLL WITH THE TEAM , these highly trained ex­ these qualified practitioners, up the families they were sup­ ' to be helping and turned their ~~~~ n into clients with problems. way or another the same story HUDEPOHL - BEARCAT · in law, medicine, educa- ~ITII 1 of the major service systems. the ultimate in emperor's­ BANNER CONTEST m when you can convince to pay for something which is them sicker and weaker and udepohl less able to fend for 1 and get them to say thank Bring a :' t One of the ways this is ac­ ~ ~,,,;J ished is to lay more and more HUDEPOHL-BEARCAT BANNER on qualifications. Only - ~ -;; people may speak of any of so that we now have the to the game. defining the problem and the solution. night and others have noted tendency is to define the solu­ teaching the client how to ALL STUDENTS AND/OR STUDENT ORGANIZATIONS his or her professional worker. replication of what transpires SPONSORING HUDEPOHL-BEARCAT BANNERS the professional teacher and in the school situation. SHOULD MEET AT THE EAST END, OF THE PLAYING success is learning how se the instructor, so now we FLOOR BY THE BEARCAT BAND AT7:30 P.M. JUDG­ actors teaching their clients "patient hood" while other ING WILL FOLLOW IMMEDIATELY. THE WINNER ssionals inculcate their WILL RECEIVE A FREE NIGHT IN THE HUDEPOHL mers with the norms of I "clienthood." BIERSTUBE FOR 25 TO 50 PEOPLE, COMPLIMENTS the meantime, the organs of ment over which Mr. Carter OF THE BREWERY. rtly assume at least nominal I -are ever on the alert to find for new professionals to Will it be suicide crisis FREE IRON-ONS FOR THE FIRST 3,000 STUDENTS THROUGH THE GATES!!! or a special program for the of alcoholics who are not be­ by the government's ALL IRON-ONSARE NUMBERED. PRIZES WILL BE GIVEN AWAY AT HALFTIME rams for the alcoholics USING THE NUMBERED IRON-ONS!!! No, improved manage­ techniques are the least of it. Copyright, 1977, by i The Hudepohl (;rcwing Co, 1976 C1nctnnat1, Oh•o 45203 King Features Syndicate 6 Wednesday, January 12, 1977the NewsRe<:ord Wrestlers defeat Akron, Xavier Ten By Bob Silver N R sports writer If anyone wants to know By Tom Hofbauer UC's first points on the board with University of Alabama and N R sportswriter his second pin of the day. Greg iversity of Tennessee are The University of Cincinnati Burns, at 142, was the next grappler among the top five swim wrestling team hosted a tri-meet here to score for the Cats with a pin. in the country, ask the UC on Saturday and walked away with "They're both tough both victories to up their record to 3- The Bearcats were behind 15-12 mented sophomore Jim 1. The Bearcat wrestlers, under coach until Rick Moyer, another double "They're awesome." Robert Triano, defeated a well winner, recorded a 2-1 victory to tie "They intimidate you seasoned Akron team 27-21 and up the match. Then Kunkle, Shoen, power," added Bearcat topped Xavier University wrestling and Liske scored points with two Kevin McSweeney. under a new head coach 43-7. decisions and a fall, respectively, to The Bearcats, missing two starters put the match out of reach. in the lower weights, started off the Shoen, one of the days two time day with 6 points when John Burvan winners and a very dominating was awarded a forfeit at 118 lbs. Ken wrestler, weighted in at 190 after sit­ Atkins, one of UC's double winners ting out all fall quarter with a knee in­ and the day's top performer, increased jury. Shoen was third in the Regional the Bearcats team score to 12 when he tournament last year. pinned his opponent. The Bearcats were missing two The Cats dropped the next two starters due to injuries. Dave Ware, matches but came st01 .ling back at 134, is out with a severe lower back when Dan Kunkle won by a fall and strain and his return this year is Otto Liske, senior co-captain and questionable. Mike Reeves, the other double winner, breezed to an 18-7 man on the injured list at 150 lbs. is victory. Rick Moyer, Charlie Shoen, out with torn ligaments in his ankle and Steve Winslow scored points and may not return this season. with forfeits to top Xavier. Triano, commenting on the match, The Bearcat matmen, in beating said the Bearcat wrestlers "looked Tom Holbauer/ the :'1/ewsRecord Tom Holbauer1 Akron, got revenge for the loss to pretty good" and he felt that "each In wrestling, the thrill of victory is merely relief. them last year. Atkins, at 126, put weight class is coming along." A Bearcat wrestler attemps to take down his opponent. The greatest winter sport BEARCAf BRIEfS By Annette Uhrick common and seemed to be the most up . . .in a grocery shopping cart. durable. Although fruit baskets, Each time before he pushed off, he N R ass't sports editor - . For years in Norway it has been a cardboard boxes, and garbage bags received a blessing from the crowd, The UC women's basketball team Miami, Norwell lead all scorers with traditional winter activity to take a all performed well, their low survival who showered him with snow, since will be the front end of a 18 points and 18 rebounds. Spence hot shower, go outside, and roll rate did not make them popular. An confetti was not available. doubleheader tonight when they face had 14 points, Ventura 13 points and U C's Steve Sb.epller'lll around in the snow in the nude. UC improvement on the cafeteria tray Most people who had tried various the University of Dayton at 5:15p.m. Rohrmeier 12 points. students have combined this little­ idea was found in a cookie sheet. vehicles agreed that the person who Gale Catlett's boys will play the The women's record is 1-4, but knownNorwegian custom with the One of the smoothest and most en­ had the piece of Masonite had the Flyers in the following game at 8:05 they traditionally start slowly. we ll- known snow sledding tradition joyable rides seemed to be found on a best ride. This resourceful man had p.m. -Bob Hankey and have come up with a new sport. gigantic inner tube that nad been dis­ the piece of material left over from a Gates will open at 4:30 p.m. Shut­ Try-outs for People have been traying at UC for covered at a truck stop. Eight people fall quarter DAA project and had tle buses will be leaving at the same women swimmers many years, but since Cincinnati piled on il and it softly glided down time however, that being between taken it out to see if it would slide, The Bearcats' women's swimming never gets much snow, they really the hill, spinning as if it were a ride at 6:30 and 7 p.m. A near sell-out crowd and ultimately, found he had the team debuted on Dec. 18 with a 63-32 by Ned Silver haven't had an opportunity to make King's Island. is expected -Bob Hankey swiftest ride. loss at Miami. Despite the score, UC N R head sportswriter it a major production. On Sunday Two other gentlemen rode down In any group, there will inevitably Women basketballers did enjoy a few bright spots. Amy Remember the song, eveni ng and Monday morning, the hill on a plastic Big Wheel which, be purists. The body sliders, at one Bay, a sophomore, performed ex­ Must be Missing an Ange however, the 1977 Traying Season hit split in tourney they confessed, they had stolen from point, succeeded in getting 12 people cellently in the 200 back and 1000 that angel must've been its peak; at least 150 students were on Competing m the Northern Ken­ a poor, defenseless' child. They stacked up and pushed over the hill in free, while senior Carol Conners did Xavier uniform Saturday the favored Sander Hill Course at tucky State Invitational, the UC couldn't be sure about how long they one pile. The person who receives the very well in the fly events. .Xavier (Chicago) blasted that time. To drown their sorrows on women Bearcats lost the opening had been outside, but since the frost­ "Stamina of the Evening Award" is Karyn Slack provided the spark in after being pummeled seeing the pro football season pass round to host NKS 84-65. The bite had reached their kneecaps, they the man who wearing cut-off shorts, diving by winning the three meter 4 in a Friday night away and on not having any Monday women won the consolation game estimated that they had been sliding tennis shoes, and a Mean Machine and placing third in the one meter, Coliseum. morning classes to get excited about, against Miami 68-64. for two and a half hours. football jersey, calmly handed while Cindy Ellick finished second in Friday was a good night many students found solace in a ride Leading scores in the loss were someone his beer can, walked to the the three meter. cinnati teams at the down the hill. UC women l Gina Seifert with 15 points, Bev Ven­ Suicidal tendencies were most ob­ edge of the hill, lay down on his Anyone who is interested in join­ Stingers trounced tht: Ve hicles utilized by students varied tura 12 points (and 12 rebounds), vious in the person who was insane stomach, pushed off, and body slid to at the Coliseum ing the women's swimming team is Bulls 7-1, and the lcecats greatly. Cafeteria trays were very Linda Norwell II points (and 13 enough to ride down the hill standing the bottom of the course. encouraged to see Bob Groseth or Xavier 12-4. J ~rry ------~---, rebounds), Rainey Rohrmeier 9 points, Cindy Spence 8 pqints. Suzie Tomes at the Laurence Hall Chuck Stout each tipped In the consolation game against pool between 2 and 6 p.m. during the three goals a piece. week. Scott Himmel, Brian - Annette Uhrick D.J. Schultz, Kerry. Siedzik, and Brian Walsh Sports lay-out by SET for the rest of Cincy's Schnabel and Scott four assists each. Tom twice while Tom Szwa ABORTION Jeff Kurey netted the other Pregnancy testing and goals in a losing effort. Increase your ..... related counseling. Cincin­ outshot St. Xavier, 61 as much as 100%1 nati Women's Services. A eluded a six goal outburst med1cal fac1l1ty offering the START JAN. 28 highest quality care. Call (513 ) 961-0404 Collect. 12-Student Avg. Classes Chris Walsh, 5 Specialist Instructors Engineering 18 Class Hours "It's really boring to read the way most people are taught. This way, you look at a page of print-you CINCINNATI see the whole page. It's great!" HOLIDAY INN 800 West 8th Street [1fil aJa~11 Want to be on the MU5'f FIRS'f BECOME. FOLLOWERS. Committee? Petitions "vooil"t'J"I BECOME A LEADER BY FOLLOWING- JESUS CHRIST TUG Information For information or registration call A':J A PR IEST, SISTER OR Sl1ornER Call SOS for all your typingN SOG-243-4 767 CONTl\CT: VOCATiON O"F/C£ tations, thesis, Manuscnpts 5440 MOI!LL£R f\V£ • ROOM 677 uaranteed. 441-7287. 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Puts you that much V.S.I. - 961-3542 to maintain an A average:' evening, I'm finished:' ahead of everyone else:· NON·PROFIT STERILIZATION CENT ER FOR MEN All it takes is one free lesson and you can zip through homework a lot faster. In fact, you can cut your study time almost in half! Hard to believe? Put us to the test. Come (!JJQ~Q ~@OO~ti\~ ~ffi\OOti\ lim ~[b(!JJOO and discover the secrets to easy speed reading, better concentration, greater Registration · comprehension. These copyrighted techniques, taught in over 300 cities throughout the Registration is being held for all students interested U.S. No gimmicks. No obligation. It's easy. It's fun. It works. in learning the art of Karate Tie-Kwon-Do. ' Registration & Classes held at: · Schmidlapp Gym on Tuesday & Thursday Get it while it's still free! • -\ ,.,. from 7 to 9;00 P.M. )" "' Qlasses are directed & taught by Mr. William TUESDAY, WEDNESDAY, AND THURSDAY 'Scott, Sr., 4th Degree blackbelt, Mr. WiUJam .. Scott, Jr., 3rd Degree blackbelt & th .~ir high(¥ 4:00 P.M. or 8:00 P.M. qualified staff of bJackbelt instroctors: ' HOSPITALITY INN Ms. Letty Reifel, 1st Dan · Mr. Fred Hargrove< 1st Dan TREADWAY INN CINCINNATI Ms. Dawniza Scott, 1st Dan . Mr. Lewis Blackman, 1st Dan 2880 CENTRAL PARKWAY MONTGOMERY RD. Public Demonstration Classes will be held on HOPPLE ST. EXIT OFF 1-75 AND 1-71 Jah. 11th, 13th, and 18th at Schmldlapp TM Come Ski with Gym frorn 7 - 9:00 P.M. on those nights. TION CENTER. ~EVELYN WOOD READING DYNAMICS All interested are welcome to attend. 0 ::opynqht 1976 Evelyn Wood RParhnq Dynil m:c:c; Inc For Further Info Call 281-5982

' . the~ Wednesday, January 12, 1977 7 Tennessee, Alabama dunk swimmers

By Bob Silver Alabama blitzed UC Thursday to face Big Ten foe, Purdue. sophomore Be!lrcat swimmers. Bob N R sports writer night, 84-29, in a dual meet at Remembering the lessons taught to Krenbrink, an All-American selec­ If anyone wants to know why the Huntsville, Alabama. The Crimson them Thursday and Friday nights, tion in the 1976 NCAA cham­ University of Alabama and the Un­ Tide dominated the contest, winning the Bearcats ripped the Boiler­ pionships, and Steve Shepherd both iversity of Tennessee are ranked II out of 13 events. makers, 70-43. The UC swimmers won their events in all three meets. among the top five swimming teams The following night, the Vols of won all but two of the 13 events to Krenbrink won his specialty, the 200 in the country, ask the UC swimmers. Tennessee gave Cincinnati an instant regain some of the pride they lost to breaststroke, while Shepherd took "They're both tough teams," com­ replay of the Alabame meet by drown­ Southern Conference schools the 200 individual medley. mented sophomore Jim Ritter. ing the Bearcats in Knoxville, 68- Alabama and Tennessee. The Purdue Ed Bachman added the only other "They're awesome." 44, taking 10 out of 13 races in the victory evened the Bearcat's record at Bearcat win against Tennessee by "They intimidate you with their process. 2-2. capturing the 200 butterfly. Jim power," added Bearcat tri-captain Saturday UC limped back to the There were several good perform­ Ritter was nosed out by five tenths of Kevin McSweeney. friendlier confines of Laurence Hall ances by a group of four a second in the 200 freestyle at Alabama by Jack Babashoff, a member of the 1976 Olympic Team. UC coach Bob Groseth was a little disappointed with the outcome ofthe meets. "We didn't do so good," he said. "I had hoped we would swim better. It was a long and hard trip, both men­ tally and physically, but I think it will pay off in the long run." "Our guys have to get used to swimming against top-flight com­ petition," explained Groseth, "and Tennessee and Alabama are two of the best in the country." A pair of legs sticking out of water.

Kevin McSweeney agreed. "I think They stayed the night in Knoxville "A lot of it is my fault," he con­ Tom Hofbauer/the NewsRecord it's good for us to swim against strong and returned to Cincinnati Saturday tinued. "I didn't give them enough down his opponent. schools like Alabama. When you to face Purdue. rest." swim against an ex-Oiympian or a world record holder and he just "There is no question that all the When asked why the swimmers touches you out, you start thinking, ' travelling hurt our performance," should travel a thousand miles to 'Hey, this guy ain't so tough.'" said Groseth. "Everyone was ex­ swim in two meets, Groseth said, "It's hausted by the time we got home from hard for us to schedule meets with The Bearcats left Cincinnati the bus ride and staying in strange Ohio schools, like Kent State or Thursday morning, traveled by bus motels. When we swam Purdue Cleveland Srate. Last year we went 9- to Huntsville, and swam Alabama Saturday afternoon, it was like a 1 in the dual meet season and that evening. Friday morning they boxer in the 1Sth round, staggering clobbered a lot of teams who normal­ iami, Norwell lead aii scorers with piled back into the Greyhound and to stay on his feet and win a deci­ ly beat us. Now they don't want to 18 points and 18 rebounds. Spence Tim Mony/the •~e>..,.KecoJro drove to Knoxville to swim the Vols. sion." swim us." 14 points, Ventura 13 points and UC's Steve Shepherd (foreground) tucks for entry into the water in a match with Purdue Saturday. ier 12 points. r The women's record is 1-4, but try's best teams against each other in a series of All­ traditionally start slowly. Star gladiator performance. The Mt: Everest of the -Bob Hankey Not so bowl games is the Super Bowl, a battle that was. carried out in Pasadena last Sunday. St. Xavier divides Icecats I found the 1977 pageant particularly distasteful, Super Bowl for several reasons. To begin with, I hold a special The Bearcats' women's swimming grudge against both the Raiders and the Vikings. debuted on Dec. 18 with a 63-32 by Ned Silver period. outhustled us," stated UC coach Joe "They came together on a hot afternoon in Los During the regular season, each team beat the at Miami. Despite the score, UC N R head sportswriter Golden Skates, normally a friendly Zieleniewski. Angeles, howling and clawing at each other like wild Chicago Bears by one point. Remember the song, "Heaven atmosphere, proved hostile on Satur­ beasts in heat. Under a brown California sky, the id enjoy a few bright spots. Amy In a quick look at the statistics, I have a certain affection for the Bears. Never in the Must be Missing an Angel?" Well, day, allowing Szwabowski to hat fierceness of their struggle brought tears to the eyes of , a sophomore, performed ex­ Schnable leads the point parade for history of professional sports has a team displayed that angel must've been in a St. trick UC. Frasco and Brad Harrison 90,000 God-fearing fans. They were giants, idols, lently in the 200 back and 1000 U C with 23 goals and 17 assists for 40 the ineptness and bumbling of the Bears of the 70's. Xavier uniform Saturday night as St. hammered home a pair each. Rick titans ...... while senior Carol Conners did points. Captain Snyder is right Long ago I embraced the Bears as my favorite team in Xavier (Chicago) blasted UC 9-3 Wagner and Kurey rounded out the "They stood for everything Good and True and ry well in the fly events. behind him with II goals and 27 the NFL. They are fun to watch- a fan never knows after being pummeled themselves 12- scoring. Kurey also wound up with Right in the American Spirit. And they yearned for Karyn Slack provided the spark in assists for 38 points. Netminder Jeff what to expect - and a Bear's victory is always just 4 in a Friday night contest at the four assists on the night. Schnabel, the Ultimate Glory, the Great Prize, the Final Fruits · by winning the three meter Graff has a goals against average of cause for a celebration. Keith Schultz, and Walsh scored for of a long and vicious campaign. placing third in the one meter, Coliseum. 4.12, a far cry from last year's effort, Further, since the Super Bowl draws 60 or 70 per Friday was a good night for Cin­ the Cats. UC surprisingly outshot St. "Victory in the Super Bowl: $15,000 each." - Cindy Ellick finished second in which was under 2.3 goals a game. Ed cent of the viewing public, the other networks are cinnati teams at the Coliseum. The Xavier 55-47, and was in the game three meter. Stutz has also had his difficulties with Hunter S. Thompson, "Fear and Loathing on the terrified to put any good quality shows, like an Errol Stingers trounced tht: Birmingham after two periods, 4-3. St. Xavier then Campaign Trail '72". · Anyone who is interested in join- a 4.26 mark. Cincinnati, known for Flynn movie, up against it. If you chose to ignore the Bulls 7-1, and the Icecats ripped St. beat on its Tom-Tom with It never changes, Hunter. Year after year, early in the women's swimming team is an explqsive offense, has already game last Sunday, you had the option of seeing an old Xavier 12-4. Jerry Prephan and Szwabowski and Frasco leading the January all across the United States, people swarm to see Bob Groseth or tallied liS goals, as opposed to 74 for Audie Murphy western or worse than that, an old Chuck Stout each tipped his hat with attack. around their televisions like moths around a street Suzie Tomes at the Laurence Hall the foes. This gives the Cats an im­ Elvis rerun. "We looked like the Montreal light to worship a spectacle of color and violence, the pool between 2 and 6 p.m. during the three goals a piece. pressive 6.8 goals per game average. So like 70 million other Americans, 1 camped out week. Scott Himmel, Brian Schnabel, Candians one night and the Bir­ Super Bowl. in front of my TV Sunday afternoon and saw the - Annette Uhrick D.J. Schultz, Kerry. Shaffer, Jim mingham Bulls the next. Friday night The lcecat record, which stands at For 20 weeks, from August to January, the Raiders mash the stuffing out of the Vikings. By half­ Siedzik, and Brian Walsh accounted was our best performance passing, 12-4-1, challenges former Olympic American public devo4rs all the football that is fed to time it was all over. I turned offthe sound on the tube, Sports lay-out by SET for the rest of Cincy's scoring. and Saturday night we thought we star Doug Ross and his Ohio Univer­ them; scores of regular season games, high school, put on a stack of Emmy Lou Harris records on the Schnabel and Scott Snyder posted could just put on the uniforms and go sity Bobcats Friday, January 14, and college, professional. stereo, and settled back for the second half with a four assists each. Tom Frasco tallied through the motions. When a team is Saturday, .January 15, in Athens, One would think by New Year's Day, Americans fresh batch of Jameson and egg nog. twice while Tom Szwabowski ·and laid off two weeks like we were, it's Ohio. In a pair of games at Golden would be glutted with football and ready to turn their Except for the snow, it will be the same next ABORTION Jeff Kurey netted the other St. Xavier difficult to outskate a team that's Skates this season, UC had little attention to something less bloodthirsty, like ice August; the same players on the same fields, the same Pregnancy testing and goals in a losing effort. Cincinnati been practicing. We ran out of legs in trouble disposing of the Bobcats, but hockey. announcers babbling the same drivel, the same fans related counsel ing. Ctncin­ outshot St. Xavier, 61-48, which in­ the third period. St. Xavier was at a foreign rink, the story may be Not so; New Year's Day marks the beginning of howling for blood in the same stadiums, and for nati Women's Services A cluded a six goal outburst in the third hungrier for the win, and they simply different. " postseason games, a phenomenon that pits the coun- what? Not much. -Bob Silver medtcal facility offering the highest quality care. Call (513) 961-0404 Collect. OASSIFIEDS Announcements Announcements Miscellaneous Miscellaneous Wanted for Sale SUNDA NEW YORK TIMES Delivered on BALLROOM CLASSES AT THE UNIVER­ TYPING : Fast, Accurate and eff1c1eni. 661- Yours for the sniffing T.G.G.U.W.Q.R. MEDICAl SCHOOL STUDENTS 3rd and 1974 Vega Hatchback, 4 speed, low Sunday. 861-9191 SITY "Y", 270 CALHOUN, CALL 221-5410 6861. Wednesday and Thursday. Great Hall, 11 4th year; Interesting, rewarding, part time mileage, very good condition. must sell to OR 861-2?00. TAUGHT BE PAT & JERRY TYPING: 60C per page. 861-9191. KATHY'S OFFICE SERVICES. a.m.- 6 p.m. employment in medical field. Call 241- continue education, call Jeff 861-0055 flt1 tJ~ {;.'1] HAGERTY . Hustle starts Tuesday, Reasonable rates. Call 831-8933. 8201 for details, or 231-0684. Want to be on the 1977 Hpmecoming Janu81)' 11,7:30-9,3 weeks, $10. A1r Hockey Tournament, Tues. 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