Observatory, page 2 Duke Ellington, page 3 Editorials, page 4 THE NEWS RECORD Calendar, page 6 . NEWSLINE- 475-27_4'8 ADVERTISING- 475':5901 6 P'ages Vol.- 60 Number 25 .c1ncinnati, , Tue~ay, January 30, 1973 _ rr Intimidation Food Workers' Comtn,llee· Charges Is Charged Cook Fired For Her Committee Work Saga's violation of the commitment, Jost said' the bringing in of new because Moyer never signed the BY MAURICE CRETSOS personnel was direct violation of the · document, but rather it was the By Residents agreement the university had made university who violated the "This reminds me of taking a play with the Canteen workers. The point commitment. BY RON LIEBAU on the road," remarked Paul Kaplan, at issue was the university's At this point, Moyer remarked that assistant professor of sociology. He commitment on behalf of A number of dormitory residents with the exception of technical was talking about the Cafeteria management to rehire all full time claim they were intimidated when problems in two points of the Workers' · Grievance Committee help from the previous year, and that they signed a petition concerning the Canteen agreement, Saga totally: bringing up their case again, this time the university's knowledge continuation of the football accepted the terms of the agreement.: before a Food Service Advisory beforehand of the change in program, reports Bob Fogarty; A&S The question of the status of part­ C_ommittee, headed by Robert Nye, personnel was a break in the faith of junior and sponsor of the petition. time employees was brought up by director of fmances. the agreement. The charges involve the petitions the grievance committee. One The meeting held Monday in The The. cornmi1tee .. expressed their which were in Siddall cafeteria. The Speaker's Lounge of the Student member of the grievance committee belief that Mrs. Canada, was not asked Saga management if Saga two petitions asked whether or not Union included members of the hired because she had been an active recognized student worker seniority. the residents were in favor of the grievance committee, Saga Food Residence Halls Association (RHA) member of the Canteen grievance Jack Voss, manager of Saga at management, representatives of' the committee. decision to back the American Center Board, and members of the TUC, replied that they do not Association of University Professors Food Service Advisory Committee. Towner denied that Mrs. Canada recognize student seniority, at the (AAUP) demand that football be was not rehired on the grounds of request of the university. Then a Five basic issues, three of them _discontinued at jhe end. of the vear. TUC IS FOR winter are her activism in the committee. member of the grievance committee specific cases, two general problems, The purpose of the petition, appreciative of the suet offering outside an office in the Union. Photo by Towner then pointed out to the asked if part time people are given were viewed by Nye as the major Fogarty said, was to see if the dorm RICH FRUMKIN advisory committee that under the seniority. The Management replied, points of the workers' committee's residents supported the RHA agreement the university signed with "generally no." case. It is these points the Food decision. Instead, he added, it turned the Canteen workers, the stipulation Kaplan said from the worker's Service Advisory Committee will out to be an "emotional" petition. of the rehiring of full time employees point of view, part time help cuts investigate, Nye said. ' Rickie Pierchalski, DAA junior and Add_ Fee May Increase requires that the position which the down work to a level where fringe Calhoun Hall president, said when he The Grievance Committee started employee fJ,lled exist the next year. benefits need nqt be given because of went to sign the petition "a group of their testimony with the case of a With the change of management such hours. "It is easy to blame part-time people came over and yelled at me." With Mail Registration first cook, Mrs. Marcia Canada, who a position did not exist, therefore the help for high rates of absenteeism," Pierchalski added that the was employed by Canteen last year. university and Saga had not violated said Kaplan, "if they have no job. BY CATHY STUMP immediately solve his registration pro-football petitions were spread According to Richard Towner, the agreement, Towner argued. security." The charge for adding courses may problems. Goering solved this by Towrter replied that part-time help out on the table; the anti-football director of TUC, Marcia was not Kaplan said knowing full well that be raised and students may still be -. explaining that the number of errors is not advantageous for management petitions were stacked on top of each rehired by the incoming Saga Foods, Saga was moving in new personnel, closed out of courses when the new ·will be decreased by the use of but because of the nature of the food other. This, he said, gave the because the change in management should have honored Mrs. Canada's Demand Analysis Registration primary requests supported by an service industry, with few peak impression that all who signed were resulted in one less cook's position seniority at the university no matter a System (DARS) is implemented in almost equal number of logically hours, part-time help is a necessity. for football. being available. By seniority, Mrs. who had the contract. Pierchalski also said the table next May, accoridng to John B. Goering, chosen alternate requests. Canada was the one left go. Moyer temarked that Saga gives university registrar. . Since the student chooses a Towner replied that the university to the petitions was occupied by Larry Jost, assistan-t professor fust consideration to those who have Although Goering would not considerable number of course said in their bidding guidelines that football players and when he signed philosophy, and member of the worked with Saga before. whoever got the contract must hire the petition they drew attention to elaborate, he said the registration req~~~ts, DARS has enough grievance and food service advisory Two other cases were brought up. office is "considering a change in the flextbth,ty to make adjustments at from the university first. Saga him in the whole cafeteria. committees, said Saga moved three In one case, the grievance committee became the successful bidder. Mike · Scherer, A&S junior, said drop-add fee." He said he could not the time· cooks from another university to UC. charged Saga with employing a be specific because the change must Goering said only students who do worker with two job descriptions; there were football players who were Richard Moyer, district manager of When the university saw that there first go through the fees committee. not get a full schedule 01 are closed both as a porter and a cook. making a public spectacle out of Saga said because of lay-offs at the would not be enough positions, the Course close-outs are still possible, out of a particular section must come Both Towner and Moyer confirmed· signing _ the anti-football petition. other university, Saga had promised university tried very hard to fit Mrs. Goering warned, because only a into the registration office and this but pointed out that both jobs This, he added, could very possibly three cooks new positions at another Canada in at another place, which certain number of sections are open personally work out their difficulties. started out at the same level of pay. have intimidated a lot of people. Saga operation which turned out to they did in November at Xavier for a course. He said if a course fills He said the problem of educating Kaplan summed up the workers' Beverly Shapero, N&H freshman, be University. quickly, non-priority students may students about the new svstem is 1:he uc. case with, "when you are at a place said "some of the football players Moyer said these cooks were Nye remarked that if the cooks at find difficulty in entering a immediate assign~ent. A where the management is always made it very difficult at times." She promised jobs last June, a few the other university had been non-essential course. communications committee promised jobs before Saga won the changing, the workers have no said they were occasionally months. before Saga won the TUC Goering explained that DARS has comprising f~culty and students, th~ assurance of anything. There is a lot ridiculing the people who were contract. Moyer added that this was contract then the charge was a signing the anti-fqotball petition. several disadvantages. The main sys terns department; and other legitimate one. of talk at this university about the knowledge ot the problem is that a student "will not planned publicity activities will do~e ~th humane treatment of these resources Jim Blazer, A&S freshman, said the untversitv. Jost then said the problem was not people at the tables hid the know his schedule when he turns in distribute information about DARS. unless there is some sort of anti-footba]l petition completely. He his request." Goering says that some continuity in dealing with workers." added he was glad that the of this problem will be solved by the J ost added, "I think the best thing petitioning was stopped after one logical order of the sequences of to do is to require the contractors to ..._ classes. abide by some sort of agreement. We I day because the whole process was RHA Begins New Judicial System unfair. Another possible problem area, feel some sort of continuity should Pierchalski said the petitions were according to Goering, is in student BY MARGARET SBERNA · level, the students advance until a necessary action is undertaken. be set." not authorized by , RHA and the co-operation with the system. The Residence Halls Association fmal decision is reached. The Referral Committee also has Towner remarked, "This seems to whole thing was handled very poorly. First, the students must (RHA) has instituted a new judicial Conflicting parties first go to the the option of sending the case be the root of the problem. We (the Fogarty also said it was not done take advantage of advance system that places the emphasis on floor mediator, a student selected by _directly to civil authorities, campus university and grievance committee) registration and then, they must properly. mediation among peers. the Screening Committee. This authorities, or professional are looking at the situation through learn the importance of filling the ' ' The petition was also available in "I can best sum it up as a system committee is composed of a resident counseling. different eyeballs. We (the ' the Sander Hall cafeteria, but there· schedule in correctly, Goering trying to give students as many counselor (RC), resident advisor "This new system can be , university) feel the agreement was were no r"ports of intimidation explained. - options as possible in resolution of (RA), and several students chosen by considered one of the most unique followed through," added Towner, there. Calhoun Hall houses· According to Goering, one major conflict. It is a system totally of peer the hall president. Each conflict is peer judgement and mediation "I believe they have attempted to approximately 70 to 80 football difference between DARS and the judgement, of students trying to help taken care of on the floor where 1t sy sterns in the country," said deal fairly with the workers." players. present system is the computer other students solve problems," said arises. Fogarty. Kaplan ___suggested that Tiie food According to F.ogarty, the final which arranges the smoent's Bob Fogarty, RHA coordinator for "Mediation has had a lot of - "Uitimate-confidence is placed in service advisory board should result after one day showed 20 more schedule. the Hearing-Mediation system. success," Said Fogarty, "One the student's competence in dealing compare wages of workers in similar supporting the continuation of Because of this, the student will The Hearing-Mediation system is mediator told me she was up until with the majority of his or her· operations at other universities football. not be present when his schedule is composed of several levels. If the four in the morning working on a problems. The new system gives us investigate the treatment of student processed, and therefore cannot problem cannot be solved at one problem." the widest array of options in and non-student workers, and take Those situations that can't be determining who will aid us in testimony from the workers resolved are sent to the Referral resolving our conflicts," he said. themselves. Committee, composed of an RC, Hall Campus Wide Evaluation Planne·d Mediation chairman, and Hall Hearing Committee chairman. They Health Board Advises Council decide on the best method for Insight, an A&S publication which evaluations together and to president and provost for academic solution. evaluates faculty members and standardize them. We've contacted affairs, one from each of the The Mediation Committee is one courses will not be released this year. all levels of the university and they're tribunals and four faculty members option open to the Referral To Pay UC For Hospital losses Instead, a teaching-learning board has all for it." chosen by the Tribunal Affairs Comffii.ttee. It consists of a chairman, been formed to organize campus The teaching-learning board Committee. RC, and mediator from a different . The Cincinnati Board of Health Council pay the entire $1.3 wide evaluation of all the colleges. consists of 20 voting members. These The tribunal affairs committee is in floor then where the problem will Bruce Henry, secretary of internal consist of three appointed by Debbie its' first year of operation. Formerly Tuesday issued a statement advising million deficit. originated, The case is sent back to City Council to pay the University of' affairs of student government says, Ludlow, student body _president this was the council of tribunal Dr. William R. Elsea, health the Referral Committee if no Cincinnati only for deficits incurred "Our future goal is to pull alr tfi.e one from Robert O'Neil, vice presidents. commissioner, said a Board of Health adequate resolution is found. from patient care and not those representative should be on the . Henry state-d the new publication Another option, the Hearing incurred from medical education at will possibly be in book form. "We committee that City Council Committee, is composed of a General Hospital. suggested be set up to oversee the hope to combine the efforts chairman, RA, and three or five David Mann, Board of Health Unjversity's operation of General Dabney Council Tries reflecting a higher degree of expertise students depending on hall size. chairman, said that the Medical Hospital. The UC Board of Directors and best utilize the man power These students are selected by the · Center's. own records show that has yet to set up such a committee. available. Insight has given their General Hospital's cost for services Screening Committee. Maintenance and technical workers To ·Depose ·Kimmel equipment to the board." The Hearing Committee was much less than the $1.3 million reported by the University. at General and Holmes hospitals and "This will be the pilot project of adjudicates the ca~es sent to it. They The Dabney Residence Hall Goldperg, because he attended a Mann also said many people on the the teaching-learning board. It may notify in writing both the defendant Council will meet tonight to once Seals and Crofts concert. But General Hospital's payroll are Thursday voted to accept a new two not be published by next year. The and plaintiff as to the cause of the again try to depose council president Goldberg said Kimmel knew his spending two thirds of their time year contract. The contract was first year will be to upgrade the action, time, place, and date of · Mike Kimmel, DAA sophomore. removal was to be discussed at the working for the University's medical recommended by a neutral board of present evaluation system. In the adjudication, right to counsel, and Kimmel was removed from his meeting. education instead of hospital patient review. second year it may be released. The right to present witnesses and other care. · position at a council meeting last At the Wednesday meeting, The agreement provides for board will act as a research center for substantial evidence. The University claims the Board of Tuesday but was reinstated "Goldberg said, Kimmel argued that pro-rated wage increases up to a evaluation~ The defendant picks a Hearing Health has no way of knowing the Wednesday at what Phil Goldberg, the Residence Hall Association maximum of 5.5 per cent for those Financially, there are two ways in Panel of three v·oting members from Medical Center's fmancial details and and council vice-president said was constitution provides that a council now earning $7000 or less annually which the publication may be the Hearing Committee to act as that the deficit was incurred from an "emergency meeting." ' president cannot be removed in his _ and progressively lower increases for funded. Henry says, "Insight alone jury. If he has no preferences, they treating the poor. Goldberg said there were no absence. Ralph Bursiek, executive vice those earning up to $13,000. cost $7,000. With the combining of specific reasons for the council's are appointed by the chairman. president of administration and Workers included are janitors, food the evaluation it may run to Burden of proof rests upon the removing Kimmel, but said it was a Goldberg said Kimmel was operations, said, "the University is service employes, maintenance $15,000. We may go to the budget series of things. He said the members reinstated because "he twisted our plaintiff. not taking more in services from workers, licensed practical nurses, board acting as a student Decisions are determined' by a of the council simply "cannot get minds." General Hospital than it is giving." attendants, pharmacy helpers and organization or attempt to get a two-third vote. Failure to achieve along with Kimmel, and it was better "We're going to get rid of him this He also said, "the repoit is technicians, X-~ technicians, seperate allocation from the for the whole council" to oust him. week," said Goldberg, "and I'm this results1n acquittal. erroneous" and even with the Board laundry workers, truck drivers and university. This is something the · of Health's recommendation it is the Kimmel was not present at the going to take over. Then we'll have If guilty, a letter of sanction or laborers, parking attendants, board will have to work out." University's understanding that City Tuesday meeting, according to an election for a new president." censure is sent to the defendant, and storekeepers, and dock workers. January 30, 1973 Page 2 THE NEWS RECORD Neighborhood PlanConsidered Observatory Part Of University; ,, The most important issues on the University Senate's agenda, according to Mrs. Ethel Siefert, Senate Computer, Not Telescope, Is Tool secretary, are recommendations from · · · building of a new observatory. The the External Affairs Committee on a BY RICHARD FIRESTONE This was the start of the Cmcmnati tone for the new observatory Astronomical Society. Each member corners_ . Ar d neighborhood-institu tiona! planning 1873 district, and a resolution from the Secluded in a small section of Hyde was then allowed access to the was latd m Au~st · oun Park, J'ust off Observatory avenue, 1900, a new 16 mch telescope was Academic Affairs Committee relation observatory. h b t '1 to the term appointment resolution. stands a part of the University of Nicholas Longworth, in 1843 bought for t e o serva ory, The meeting is scheduled for Feb. 5. Cincinnati few people know. donated four acres of land on Mt. according to Herge~. The old 1B~ The recommendations on The Cincinnati Observatory was Adams for the observatory. On Nov. inch telescope, haVIng been taken neighborhood-institu tiona! planning founded in 1843 by Ormsby 9, 1843 John Quincy Adams spoke down "had no place to go," replied McKnight Mitchel, a professor at the Herget. A new build!ng, to house the will be presented to the senate in the Cincinnati College. It was the first at the laying of the cornerstone. old telescope was built between 1904 form of a study report and proposal Mitchel went to Europe to secure a on the feasibility of a planning fully equipped public astronomical telescope. In Munich he found one and 1908, said Herget. district for the UC area. observatory in the United States. with a diameter of 11 ~ inches. The In 1878 the city of Cincinnati \ t This report was done by the To obtain money for the building c 0 s t was a b 0 u $ 1 0 , OOO, acted to maintain the observatory by of the observatory, Mitchel sold $25 taxation. In 1918 the city tax for the External Affairs Committee at the • is men shares of stock to 300 subscribers. considerably more than the society observatory was combined with that request of a senate resolution of look at computers instead of stars. had raised for it. April 10, 1972. Photo by GREG CHACHOFF For each new debt encountered, for the entire university. "The University now gets about $4 The report includes-a discussion of Mitchel asked the society to give a million out of the city every year. I previous planning projects, little more money. The telescope think that's a close estimate to the considerations for a project in the Alternative Aids College Students arrived in Cincinnati in February real figure. Out of this, five University of Cincinnati area, and 1845. The building was ready for use hundreths of the two mills is really in recommendations for a co-ordinated in March 1845. the name of the observatory," school and neighborhood planning The observatory remained on Mt. project and policy. Adams until 1872. It \)ecame commented Herget. The area referred to as "district" Break From Four Walled Education apparent the society could no longer The present function of the maintain the observatory without observatory. however, is not includes Clifton, Corryville BY CAROUNE EICHE obtaining these experiences. Implicit opposed to traditional programs of means of income. In 1872 the observing the stars from a research Fairview-Clifton Heights and parts of in both of these purposes is a desire study. She says she finds many of Mt. Auburn and Avondale. them necessary for develop~g Cincinnati Observatory merged with viewpoint. Speaking of the telescopes, Four University of Cincinnati to stimulate creative thinking about Mrs. Siefert indicated that another ways of learning, she says. specific skills in a student's area of the newly founded University of Herget explained, "Right now possible "hot issue" might be ·the students in the College of concentration. What she says she Cincinnati. they're practially worthless, because resolution from the Academic Affairs Community Services have seen a All of this began when Miss wants made available, and what she The original site on Mt. Adams was the observing site of Cincinnati is Hollander was trying to break out of Committee. The. Committee will need for an alternative to the and her fellow students in ruined for observing because of the completely ruined by the city. Not recommend that the senate ask traditional college education, and the, four-walled classroom aspect of Community Services are doing smoke from the industry in the Mill just the present pollution. It was no learning with its required texts and President Bennis to see that all have done something about it. something about, is simply an Creek y alley, according to Paul longer possible to see the stars which colleges report their Bylaws by April Vicki Hollander, a CCS junior, and competitive examinations. alternative means of intellectual Herget, present director of the had formerly been observed. three friends in that college have 1, 1973. "There was nothing to be had on growth. observatory. The present site near "So, ever since the war was over, The · rationale for the conceived and brought into reality a experimental programs in the The Alternative will be staffed by Ault Park was chosen because "this the research program of the resource center which they have recommendation, according to the libraries I went to," she explains. Miss Hollander, Kathy Creahan, was considered to be way out, and to observatory has depended upon an ; . named The Alternative. r committee's print-out, is that the "The standard college bulletins Wendy Gray, and Gail Silverstein, all be a clear place," said Herget. approach which does not require that board of directors term appointment Miss Hollander explains the students · in the College of John Kilgour donated four acres of we do any observing. We've engaged purpose of nie Alternative as were there. But were there no resolution, April 4, 1972, "is being alternatives:·, Community Services. land and $10,000 toward the in work which enables us to use implemented at greatly disparate two-fold: to provide information electronic computers," stated Herget. about experimental programs already Miss Hollander says she was rates by the colleges." "We receive the observations of offered throughout the country to "amazed" to find alternatives minor planets from all over the undergraduate and graduate students, through her own research. In fact she found no less than 268 programs, Raymond Walters DBA world. This is 1:(he minor planet and advise students who seek and many more are being created, center of the International non-traditional educational she says. Astronomical Union. This requires experiences on the means of we do a great deal of computing. ' ' Information on these programs is Plans New York Trip "We use these to compute the Black Studies Department Moves now available for anyone's perusal in orbits of these minor planets and to The Alternative office at 30IA TC. BY RANDAL F. KLEINE coordinator for UBA, said the give out the predictions where The department of black studies is Also available are the names of inspiration for the trip arose when they're going to be. But, we don't do moving out of McMicken into the persons in the Cincinnati and the UC The United Black Association "some of the membership had any observing," explained Herget. space previously occupied by the LARGE community who can guide students · (UBA) of Raymond Walters College, expressed interest to get away for According to Herget the speech department, in the Old to local programs, either the Blue Ash extension of UC, is their spring break." observatory telescopes are too small Commons. EFFICIENCIES educationally, vocationally, or sponsoring a trip · to New York City He said the trip will be limited to and antique for research observing. "The department of black studies personal growth oriented. I durinsz sorin~~; break, March 16-21. 38 seats on the bus to and from New "This isn't peculiar to us," Herget is progressing and to meet the I • FURNISHED AND The Community Services program The tour called "the Big Apple," York. Allahku said first preference added. "Most of the astronomers in demands of the increasing enrollment at UC is itself an experimental and will include a three-night stay in -the will go to Raymond Walters UBA . the eastern half of the country, for 01 J,. ,n? ?' ,V~~URNISHED of students we are forced to move to individual oriented program, Miss Hotel Edison in Manhattan, members, second· to other Raymond about a quarter of a century have ~·~4~ ~~ ~~• AtR CONDIT'IONED larger ab.d better facilities," :said Holland says. However, she adds, according to an itinerary published Walters students, . third to main depended upon observations from William D. Smith1 director of black campus UC students, and forth to • SWIMMING POOL studies. "There is a lack in Cincinnati by the UBA. Scheduled daytime the western part of the country. 1' universities, compared to sister activities include lecture tours of any other person. When ~sked how the department · There is a national observatory universities, of programs where Harlem, Chinatown, · lower "So far I know of about ten people outside Tuscon which was built FROM $97 warranted the facilities. Smith said: who have paid for the trip already," "I submitted a proposal to the space students can take a more a<;tive part Manhattan, Rockefeller Center, the specifically so the astronomers from in learning." said Allahku, "but many more have committee of the College of Arts and NBC television and radio studios, the east could go there and make Adults- Convenient to Wall Street, the Statute of Liberty, expressed interest." He said the total their observations," said Herget. Sciences. 'They asked if we wanted Miss Hollander said she has Downtown, University and Madison Square Garden)said the ·. cost of the journey will be $89.25. Herget advised one who's the rooms in Old Commons and I received aid and cooperation from and Hospitals itinerary. "We're going economy economy interested in astronomy to take consen ted." TC which has provided room 301A, class;" remarked Allahku. The group will also have reserved either a major in physics, electrical \ ~ "The department is staffed with and from Milton E. Foreman, BY APPOINTMENT ONLY seats for an evening performance of Alvin McCurdy, unification engineering . or math as an I ' twelve faculty members and two director of the counseling service I"· " Don't Bother Me, I Can't Cope," a coordinator for the UBA, said a undergraduate and to go to some of secretaries. The office in Old who has agreed to refer· students to 481-1207 musical with an all-black cast that private group with both university the few observatories with a large Commons will be adequate to The Alternative. She has also gained Take Hopple Street Viaduct to won the New York Critic's award for and non-university members, the astronomical faculty. Some of these accommodate our needs now. We support from individual faculty "Friends of the UBA," is helping 1964 Westwood Northern Blvd. the best off-broadway musical for are Harvard, Michigan, and Chicago would like to increase the members who are willing to act as 1972,said the itinerary. sponsor the trip., he says. There are presently no department so we would have to resource persons. "They understand the plight of EQUAL HOUSING OPPORTUNITY Allahku Allahku, administrative astronomy courses at the University move again next year," he said. Miss Hollander says she is not ' I black students and desire to he.lp us Says Herget. • I in our projects" said McCurdy. He Commenting on the percentage of saf((th.at any surplus funds from the women in astronomy, Herget says, " I trip will go to this group, which he think it is a simple fact that there is a MARl N E CORPS says "wants to operate higher percentage of women in anonymously," to aid in future astronomy than any other science." projects of the UBA at Raymond I The few people who do know of Walters. the observatory often confuse it with J "This trip is a kind of trial to see the Abbe Observatory. The Abbe how the two groups can work Observatory is a weather bureau together," said McCurdy. founded by Cleveland Abbe, the Allahku said main campus UBA second director of the Cincinnati members are welcome to participate Observatory. ' in the trip. He said, however, that The observatory is open to the "we operate independently from the SUMMER EMPLOYMENT main campus UBA." public by reservation, when the stars I \ our out, says Herget. AT $380/MO. 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FRESHMEN, SOPHS, JUNIORS- Call the Marine Officer Selection Officer in Cincinnati at 784-2845 for more information. ·write: Urban Studies Admission Bradford College ~---~--- Bradford, Mass. 018~0 (near B;ston) •• STUDENTS IN ASSOCIATE DEGREE PROGRAMS- Sign up for interviews or call us about our flight program openings. • • 1111 January 30, 1973 THE NEWS RECORD Page 3· 'Duke' Ellington Creates Music, Mood, Sincerity No One Seated After BY DAVID STEININGER orchestra played a very moving, were Paul Gonsalves on tenor sax, one of the most pleasing sounds I contemporary arrangement of Norris Turne~ Ol!. flute, _ Harol~ have ever heard. The Initial Climax Before the "Duke" appeared on "Caravan" which flowed out of the · Johnson on trumpet and flugelhornJ The only real disappointment of· BY JIM SLAGLE More graphic than the hackneyed stage Sunday night~ the atmosphere horns like a heavy wind storm. and Harry Carney on baritone sax. the evening was the fact that wet dreams, were the shorts that ill Wilson Auditorium was one of --tile evenmg was aoorned with At one point the music drifted into Ellington, himself, was not featured The Best of the First N.Y. Erotic Film Festival confused me as to the concentrated on the solo sober anticipation. I was surprised at solos by virtually every member of Ellington's "Mood Indigo" arranged as much as I would have liked. And meaning of "erotic." Webster performances of female this because I, myself, couldn't help Notable them trio and orchestra. It was often while he was performing he masturbators. Alan Ruskin's ''Sport" being a little excited at just being would be drowned out by his informed me that erotic means "of sexual love," which is where the artistically voids the generalization there. Even as the musicians began to orchestra. "you see one, you've seen them all." drift on stage, (some of them looked When the "Duke" wasn't at work festival aimed, but I'm sure that ' > Eros, god of love, would be ashamed His Levis and track shoe clad heroine ( as if they were dragging themselves) at the piano he didn't get up and ' to have his name connected with the satisfies her jock fetish by balling not the audience seemed to applaud become a bandleader. He became a the bat, but a soccer ball. them reluctantly as if they weren't token fan of the fourt!;len individuals Film Society's offering. The general mood of the evening "The Appointment," directed by sure this was even the orchestra. in his band. After over forty years of . Chuck Vincent, began very was boredom, which is not surprising But it was indeed the Duke being at the top one could tell that promisingly with black-and-white Ellington Or;;hestra and as they all Duke Ellington still thoroughly since the films pandered last year's eroticism_; the more recent Second shots of intriguing characters crossing warmed up together one could see a enjoys what he and his orchestra vast scenes. Then it descended to a bright spirit replacing road-fatigue. produce. Annual Film Festival will probably not be boring until next year. speeded-up sexual cyclone to the. A city councilman, substituting for Throughout the evening the . tune of the William Tell Overture the mayor, stood on stage hemming Ellington orchestra not only Tired sexual images were as relentless as the Chinese ·water (who's copying whom?), and was and hawing, embarassing himself as entertained the audience but finally insulted by another short torture. Filmic incoherence within he tried to have somebody get the promoted an intimate feeling of short of a speeded-up quickie "Duke" on stage. His job was to oneness with the audience as if we individual films made it apathetically impossible to t e 11 which without the Hitchcockian proClaim Sunday "Duke Ellingtont were all their closest friends. techniques. :Dax." Duke Ellington said he loved us thunderstorm or raging ocean was whose climax. The audience The festival had so few highlights The band seemed to find this · and "the kids" in the band loved us. that you could catch the best of the entertaining. But eventually the Through their sincerity and music ' desparately entertained itself by identifying body parts: "It's a bird, best over a mediocre cup of coffee. benevolent bass trombone player they made us believe it and love (A good cup would be too diverting.) strutted across the stage to wake them, too. it's a plane, it's a finger!" somebody up to the fact that it was time for Duke Ellington to appear. When he finally did appear there was 'Tojmorrow' Jerks Honest Tears a thunderstorm of applause. With the ceremony out of the way Ellington sat down at the piano and the music By .· Pushing Iambic. Eniotionalism began. "Tomorrow" is a sentimental The "Duke's" program started with "Tomorrow", adapted from a many years, long before he was . picture, depending on reactions, a trilogy of numbers that settled a William Faulkner story, is an honest "discovered" in "The Godfather." y~ur either excellent, adequate or silly. w.arm, smokey, "Chicago nightclub" tear-jerker, if not an honest Usually he played, and quite well, Photo by GREG CHACHOFF Admirers of Duvall should see the spirit , over the house. Then the THE "DUKE" paints that Indigo mood. emotional experience. Director too, insane killers and mental retards. film, if only to recognize his limits. Joseph Anthony attempted to make His skill is revealed in some The picture is bravely, and an artsy classic. He completed an inarticulate moments, such as when excellently photographed in black New Criticism Creative, Exciting intermittently interesting, but minor he picks up Sarah's baby for the first film. time. But every time he opens his and white (by Alan Green), but someone should have recalled the The simple plot concerns a solitary mouth, the illusion of effectiveness value of another antiquated cinema man, Jack~on Fentry, . acting as a dissipates. Say.s MIT French Scholar Jones . technique: silence. caretaker of an isolated sawmill. He discovers a woman, sickened by a' BY LINDA BRUZGULIS Their study is scientific, rather "Rather they are concerned with reasonably advanced state of • than historic or aesthetic. "One must the initial impetus which compelled pregnancy, whom he brings to his Multi Media Echo Terminal The strengths of the new critics delve into the consciences of critics the author to write a work of art," hearth, and guards through her term. musician friends, she used the I expand the domain of criticism itself to see what makes them work," said said Jones. He added that these This is a situation replete with BY KATHY OLSON ' I J terminal as the setting for her unique in passing new light on a work of art Jones. critics (following Freud) are forced emotional possibilities, and each one Music '73, Cincinnati's These critics are "concerned with composition. by bringing other realms of human to return to experiences m tne is played upon shamelessly. But the Contemporary Music Series, will WGUC taped the ~ssion which knowledge to the art, explained discovering the origins of art," Jones childhood of the author. tender, human gestures, such as present a multi-media performance employed a variety of instruments Robert E. Jones, critic and professor continued. They are not critics with "I think the greatest of these new Fentry's buying ·the woman 4~ of called "Union Terminal" at 8:30 including train bells, soprano sax, of French in humanities at dramatic conventions of hi s t o r y. critics is Barthes," said Jones. "He is hard candy for Christmas, are P:m. tonight iri Corbett Auditorium. Massachusetts Institute of They assume that this has been done able to combine academic and new certainly better reasons for tears than : flute, trombone, french hom and Technology (MIT) Wednesday at by the academic critic . . methods of looking at art." Jones Ali McGraw croaking in "Love "Union Terminal" by Terry drums. Miss Sheridan explained that McMicken's lecture room. added that he does what other critics Story.'.' Sheridan, with slides by Gregory the echoes are so great that three or are not able to do. The laconic screenplay by Horton Thorpe, was made to exemplify the four instruments sound almost like. ' · Jones' lecture, "New Methods of to please or orchestra. · Literary Criticism in France," was "He puts himself into Racine's Foote proceeds relentlessly. "feeling" of Cincinnati's famous presented by the Charles Phelps Taft , • world and becomes Racine," Jones Dramatic tension is non-existent. The railroad station. . In describing the composition, she continued. "Barthes treatment is so characters speak oddly, almost in Miss Sheridan, a native said: "It's a very powerful piece. The convincing that it seems there was Cincinnatian, explained that she has combined music and slides seem to M~~~~~s~~:: a ll~C!~~~ flAQ~yon f', to!. I n..s l.l u( t blank verse. This i~ supposed to send th:e"1 aistenef'1nW: orne other in a society whete stan®rds are 1 • • t soni~ sort of ESP between Barthes infuse a certain taciturn nobility of always been fascinated by the _terminal's unique natural acoustics world.'' • 11\lr,. ' .~ T influxed;" Jones said. "A critic • t t•Wedn6sday, JanuarY ' '.N, the and Racine over the centuries." speech, but it never fails to sound establishes the values of a Philharmonia Orchestra under the The new critics have, closer than artificial. and has always wanted to explore Also on the Music '73 progrlrn is generation." direction of Robert Sadin will anyone else, been · able to suggest As much as Robert Duvall should them further. "Young Goodman Brown," a new Pointing out that criticism is perform Haydn's "Symphony No. 88 what the origins of art are. "This is have been the most valuable of the Miss Sheridan said that she had no one-act opera adapted from the necessary in an age where the values in G Major ," Schoenberg's "Five extremely important. It does, or can, films attributes, he is a major publicity purposes in mind, but that Nathaniel Hawthorne short story by are being undermined and surpassed, Pieces for Orchestra, Op. 16," lead us to seeing a pattern or formula weakness. He wrenches, deforms and if the composition helps in even a the same name. Robert J. Haskins, Jones said that the trends of the Stravihsky's "Symphonies of Wind among critics come closer to the mutilates his words in an excrutiating small way in saving the terminal, it who composed the music, will modern critics tend to be scientific. Instruments," and Debussy's "La general law of what makes a person drawl, placed in a vocal range will be well worth it. On an October conduct the opera. There is no "In the 20th century, there's a dual Mer" at 8:30 p.m. in Corbett write or paint." seemingly an octave below his night, with the help of 20 or so charge. purpose to criticism, to study a work Auditorium. There is no admission "It's criticism that has become normal one. It is an accent more of art and its process of creation." charge. creative," Jones added. "It's more suited to a Mississippi Frankenstein Jones cited Freud as an influence "Sapporo: '72 Winter Olympics," a exciting. I hope that this is the _than a cotton chopper. on modem critics to fmd the implicit photographic essay, will open Jan. 28 direction of the English critics." Duvall has been a fine actor for structure of the creative processes in the TUC Art Gallery. Gallery behind a work of art. hours are 12-5 p.m., Monday-Friday "A critic is human. He can't step and 1-5 p.m. Saturday and Sunday. out of his skin and into into the skin The show closes Feb. 16. of Racine, and let that world speak "The American Resident Theatre: for itself," said Jones. "Yet this is Problems and Prospects" is the title most difficult as most critics tend to of a talk to be given today by Robert extract a work from its time and Orchard, Art Administrator of the look at it without its historical Yale Repertory Theatre, at 1 p.m. in background." . the Faculty Lounge. , The new critics choose to study The next free performance in the authors who have monomania, Jones popular Noontime Dance Series at added. They seldom deal with the CCM is Thursday, Feb. 1 at 12:15 ''Titans of literature." p.m. in the Patricia Corbett Theatre.

As a part of Wctmen's Week the Women's Affairs Council is sponsoring a Craft Show and sale February 15-16 from 11:00 to 3:00P.M. in the Rhine Lobby. Each artist will be expected to display their own work during these hours. The show is open to Concernedaboutpregnancy individuals only-no organizations. Anyone interested in Free and private pregnancy examination participating, please stop by th'e Women's Center, 4278 T.U.C., ·Plus other help or ca II 4 75-3967. Call AH1-LIFE (241 -5433) r------,' . : JANUARY SPECIAL : til 1 This coupon worth 1 Hz ~ Bertolt til re l ' 50c I p:; Brecht ~ I On Purchase Of Pizza, Worth Over $2 < I Monday- Thursday ~ CAUCASIAN I Lunch - Supper - Late Snack Not Good On Deliveries §5 .. • CHALK • ASK FOR OUR DISCOUNTS • FOR PARTIES • Come enjoy our modern dining room, and sizzling hot real •0 CIRCLE Italian pizza. 0 . .-l til- I til PAPA DINO'S Hz ~ feb.l,2,3,9,~0 § H PIZZA til s:30wilson 349 Ca lhou• , 221-2424 ' §5 TICKETS AT DOOR , TUC, OR CALL 475-4553 ------~ January 30, 1973 Page 4 THE NEWS RECORD Mighty Manfred SOMET/MfS I fE~L TH~T l'D Sins Of Ommission? RATHEA I r bureaucrats' children "would have a Europe in the State Department. PEGGY KREIMER place to play when visiting their D-u r i n g .t h e E i s e n howe r . Editor-if!~Chief _· parents at work ..." Administration he was the subject of DANIEL ANDRlACCO There are some 600 taxes on a an espionage investigation by the FBI Associate Editor single egg ... on the basis of having transmitted "News Editor •••.••••••••.•..•••••••••: Editorial Board, ; •••••••••••••••• · Robert Behlen Last Fan Rep. Otis Pike (D.-N.Y.), secret information to agents of a Editorial Page Editor •••••••••••••••••.•.••.•.••••••.• :-;_: Elena _ Du~g_l_ _ chairman of the House Armed foreign power. The case was ·sports Editor •.• : •.•..•.••.•.•....•.•.••.••.•.•.••.•.•.. Joe Wllslluk _ Services Subcommittee, asked the presented -to William P. Rogers, ,ContrJbutlng Editors ....•.•..•.....•. : . •..•.•.••. Cathie Royer, !"1111 §!.l;.ll•J:_,'_ Defense Department to furnish him Attorney General at the time (and of . Editors· with one copy of every standard late, Secretary ·of State), but he ·Arts Editor .•.•.•..•.•• : •••.•• : ••••••••• ·; ••••• ·: • • ••_ .: ~. ,_...~.Jill.!ll.•~ form used at the Pentagon. He Photography Editor .•.•.••. ~ .• ; • :. :· ~~:: • ••••••••••.• •••• Greg Chachoff. declined to prosecute when the State Typing Editor ••.•..•.•.••.•.•.•••••.•.•••..••..•.••••.. Jean Bratchel\ received a total of 11 ,916 forms. Bad Department refused to make Advls'or ••-. ·:: •. · •.•.••.•.•..•. : • .•.••••.••••••••••••• : ·••.• Jon Hugh~s ,_ as that may seem, one federal available the contents of the secret 'copy Editor .....••••.•••..• •.•..•...•... < ••••••••••• ·: •• : .Jane M~rks . employee has the job of counting documents in question. Sonnenfeldt . DAVID M. BOGGS': different kinds of forms the federal was not terminated after the incident ' . . Business Manager . . government puts out. He is at in question but was employed at .Ad -vertising Director .• _- •• ; •.••.••••.•.•. , ' .•.•.••.•.• Edward W. Hussey r 700,000 and still counting.. . State until Kissinger selected him to Sales Director .•• : • •••••. , •••• ·• ; ••••.•••••••• ; ••••••••• . craig R. Jon~s Office Coordinator ..•..•.•...... •.••.•••.•••• , .•.•...• Kathy A. I-aker There are an estimated 600,000 be one of his top assistants .... • The News Record. Is edited and published b.y th~ students of the University of ;; heroin addicts in this country today Then there's the time not so long Cincinnati. Editorial policy Is determined by the editor I" consultation with the as compared with 50,000 ten years editorial board. Offices are ' 411·412·415' TUC, University of Clnclnnati,Ohlct ago that Yale University where a -Phone 475·2748, News; 5901·, Advertising. Subscription for one year Is $15.00; ago, says Don McAuliffe, an official World War I cannon was under siege 5econd class postage paid at Cincinnati. The News Record 11 a member of National of the 'Justice Departments' Office of Educational Advertising, Inc. by the Treasury Department's National Narcotics Inte,_lligence. This Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and means that the estimated number of Firearms. Even though there is no / heroin addicts has multiplied twelve firing mechanism and the barrel is times in the last ten years... plugged with cement, the Bureau was • The Nuisance Fee Cometh Folksinger Malvina Reynolds of trying to confiscate the piece because Berkeley, California, is a regular In a world of flux and uncertainty, there are two events which it was not registered under the 1968 contributor to "Sesame Street," a Gun Control Act... University of Cincinnati students can depend upon every public television program for (Wallace Crawford is a senior in spring-the return of warm weather and the announcement of children. Malvina Reynolds was ­ Business AdministrationJ tuition increases. Students will be delighted to learn that, barring identified as a member of the the advent of a new Ice Age, the recurrance of these events will be• Communist Party in sworn testimony I eternal. This year, however, there are prospects of even greater by Kenneth 0. May, a former official r felicity. There has been speculation by John Goering, university of the Communist Party, in public testimony before the House Decision Makers View Football registrar that, in addition to a possible three to five per cent tuition increment, drop-adds and other "nuisance fees" may also Committee on Un-American be increased. Activities ... At a recent conference of Expe-rience has taught us that to raise our voices in protest With Rose-Colored Glasses European and American businessmen where rna tters of fmance are concerned has much the same effect and political leaders, held in when the winning touchdown is one of the most successful high as planting a stop sign in front of a glacier. But, since "nuisance" is Washington, it was admitted by BY BILL McGEE school coaches in Ohio's football ) I j J the name of this game, we humbly suggest that the system might Helmut Sonnenfeldt, Chief Deputy scored. Representing 40 percent of What concerns me most about the history. His contract is the envy of be made recipricol. That is: If ll student is required to pay $5 to for European Affairs on the staff of the full time faculty at UC, their football dilemna is the decision other conege coaches. his college each time he adds a course, let him receive $5 from that presidential advisor Henry Kissinger, thorough investigation leaves me no makers' current, unrealistic fantasies Possibly, the administration hopes college each time he is closed out of a required class, or each time that, the United States has been doubt about their absolute sincerity about its future on the UC campus. that a fme winning season with a carrying on secret unilateral and accuracy. his college's requirements are changed. In view of the present financial spiced-up football team will draw negotiations with Russia on A substantially lower figure is used If a student is required to pay SO cents for every day a reserve deficits of $1.4 million for 1970-71; enough ticket paying Cincinnatians European security. Sonnenfeldt by the Athletic Commission, the library book is overdue, let him receive from the library 10 cents $600,000 for 1971-72 and $1.5 supposedly non-biased group created to severely lower the deficit. ' shocked his audience by supporting 4 '· ~ for every book which he requests that is missing or unaccounted million for 1972-73, as reported in to investigate the status of the entire My objection to this argument is for. the seeret U.S.-Soviet talks on the Cincinnati Horizons, January 1973, grounds that these negotiations had inter-collegiate program at UC in a that the thousands desiring to see a If a student is charged $5 for parking without a decal, let the consider the following evidence. report. After the budget for 1973-74 winning team defeat mediocre teams university pay the same amount to every student who pays for a The analysis of football income has been fmalized, their report is like Miami, Xavier and Ohio Column and Letter Policy sticker and finds no place to park. and expenditures submitted to the due. Universities will be mostly The column and letter portion But these suggestions will probably not be taken by the local chapter of the American But, football's future for 1973-74 non-paying students. of the editorial page serves as an Association of University Professors and possiply 1974-75 has almost Masses of revenue-generating administration, they would be too much of a nuisance. r I ~ open forum fo~ campus opinion. (AAUP) analyzed a reasonable but certainly been decided by the Cincinnatians will come to UC only I . I The News Record welcomes all still conservative estimate of appointment of Anthony Mason, if the Bearcats have a good chance of 1 football's net cost for 1972·73 to be months in advance of a commission defeating respectable teams like _S__e _ n_~ te . F 00 tb a II Ref eren durn ~;~~nms~~d ~~%~:~ th~/di:~ $621,900. report to investigate the status of the Memphis or Louisville. A bill calling for a campus referendum on the suspension of university. The Athletic Department has entire inter-collegiate program at UC. No coach, however good, can intercollegiate football was referred to an ad hoc committee of the ·- A colunm should be the submitted their figure on the net cost The November 10, 1972 issue of The consistently do this unless more Constitution and Rules Committee at Wednesday's Student Senate author's opinion, observations or of football as $333,629. The latter News Record has recorded this as the money is spent. Football costs reflections on a subject of general figure is made possible by ignoring reason for the conunittee's creation. excluding income total, $784,400. meeting. interest. Originality and wit ~~e administrative and general expenses, Ohio State University spends $4 We urge the committee to consider well the practical encouraged along with serious plant operations and maintenance Mason is an excellent coach, but one does not usually do the million. Only Ohio State comes close effectiveness of such a referendum; a referendum which has considerations of problems and estimated and directly attributable to expensive, absurd action of hiring a to breaking even. If no other state already been determined by the attendance records at the football issues on campus and off. football, scholarships and travel coach and buying him out of his university in Ohio comes close to games. Colunms should be no longer expenses for the band, cheerleaders breaking even, it is unrealistic to If the football question were added to the ballot in the student than 800 words. Longer columns, and selected members of the athletic contract only five months later. Mason's excellence almost certainly expect UC to do so. body elections in April, students would be voting before the May however, will be considered. committee. means that football ·will have a Conceivably, football could spend report of the Athletic Commission-something the Senate itself Columns should be typed 40 The Athletic Department claims the huge sums of money to build an felt ill qualified to do at its Jan. 17 meeting. characters wide, double spaced, that these expenses would not season this year and probably next year. impressive team but Ohio State, Also there is question of getting a truly representative opinion, and must include the author's diminish if football were eliminated. unlike UC, has a huge stadium, . name and phone number. "Their figure (The Athletic If the future status of foot· considering that last year approximately one-tenth of the student Letters tu the editor may be on tradition, and a surrounding city Department) differs so much from ban was intended to be decided by · which has no alternative pro team to body turned out for the elections. any subject. They should be typed ours (AAUP)," said AAUP chapter the May report of the athletic Aside from the mechanical aspects of registering student 40 characters wide, double watch. presiden.t Lowen Leake, associate commission,then a coach caoable of Bearcat has the last two opinion, we question the advisability of interjecting student spaced, and must be signed. We revitalizing football would not have professor of mathematics, "since attributes, which enables the team to opinion on something it should not directly influence. reserve the right to shorten letters. George Smith's figures leave out so been appointed until a favorable almost break even. UC football lacks The dropping of a football program should not depend on the Deadlines are noon Wednesday much." · report resulted. all of these attributes. likes or dislikes of an inherently transient population. The for Friday's issue and noon Friday The local chapter of AAUP is not a Of course all new coaches, great or I argue that football can never pay question is not do we want to drop football, but do we need to for Tuesday's issue. Columns and small, left wing group of eggheads mediocre, promise a fine winning for itself unless private gifts and drop football. It is a question of the amount of red and black ink letters may be mailed or delivered who see a football game once every season but Mason is good enough to contracts ($46,059 for 1971-72) in the final financial statements of the university. It is a question to The News Record, 412 TUC. ten years and scream "a home run" accompUsh this. He is believed to be greatly increase. In a sellout game in which 8000 seats would be lor fmancial feasibility and educational guaranteed to students, 20,000 p~~ T T E RS TNo RETH E E'D ITOR ticket-paying seats at $3 a seat, amounts to $60,000 per game. With five or six home games, the total j ranges from $300,000 to $360,000, presuming that monetary guarantees He'd better learn a far cleverer programmed in the direction- of levels of the administration. As · iii · . Frazee Reverses Thorpe we could afford what I believe to be that UC receives from home teams . twist an unnecessary drain on the funds of students. most cases, there are a few who are To the Editor: That will his words and content The first aid course is open to not part of the problem and are part and presents to visiting teams would a University facing severe financial cancel each other out in most cases. Like most "mechanical men," His motives and method defme problems. ANYONE-according to the Health of the solution but they are few and Service who is sponsoring it. I'm Alternatives sources of income James F. Thorpe, M.E., M.S.M.E., If he wants his bad poetry equal to If we have to cut back our far between. Ph.D., P.E., Head and Professor of mine! taking the course and I'M a staff There are people at this university from the state for the next biennial academic programs. (It's already member. So is my boyfriend and he budget will barely cover inflation. Mechanical Engineering, College of Cynicism has its place in prose, who are "out dated" both physically being considered, isn't it?), how lives and works in Dayton, Ohio. Accordingly, that source seems dry Engineering, cannot read doggerel, But in poetry, its ill use always and mentally and don't belong on a many of the best football or Thanks for the compliment of for the next two years. for the ''verse" was not shows college campus yet they still remain. basketball players will want to come being mistaken for a student, but In this column, the pro football "denigrating." I saw and heard Tony Unless the verse is artful, "witty," One imagines a purge likened to that to UC? A really bright sportsman please help to include everyone in supporters do not automatically Mason on TV and read about him or gay doesn't want to just make the sports classes as worthwhile as this is. Let which was in affect during, include President Bennis, although and saw quotes attributed to him. And not only reprimands but arena. So, doesn't it follow that to the University community know that "McCarthyism" in '57 to rid the With his personality, "wit," and chases blues away. not just students make up the government of communists. This some officials in student government keep basketball in a position to insist that Bennis has indicated background, I think he would even We still don't need football and attract good players, we must keep population here on campus. isn't the way. I wish every Debbie Malone favorable views on revitalizing the make a great director of all the might I suggest the academic side of the University administrator as well as professor Evening College program. The Bennis administration, athletic activities. That the Athletic Department have in good shape? would undergo a truth session to while innovative in non-controversial Also, since Thorpe can say, because instead a poetry contest. Clara Mann Frazee Administration: determine personal university I'm a meek, shy, modest, demure areas, is cautious in striking ground And don't think I'm kidding or English Instructor Faculty Or Students usefulness. female, that I never had. a chance to being silly, But you see, that isn't possible. So in new areas, which may be the case University Conege in football. play football, I need not point out For some football players write To the Editor: the university and the students suffer that I never had a chance. In fact, poetry real pretty. Ambulance Squad There are many problems or rather because there is no direction from The AAUP, The News Record, how come the gals' sports are only And, for now, I'll close Teaches All difficulties on this campus but administrators only "check this" and RHA , myself, and others, while recently starting ·to get financial 1\nd trust Thorpe responds in prose numerous ones can be said to " try this person"- Why not try a insisting that we do not dislike To the Editor: 1 support for their athletic activities? Or else takes Creative ·Writing II originate with the administration. little centralization and try to forego football, can insist until we're (Or is that another bag of worms I So an ENGLISH INSTRUCTOR "Ambulance Squad Teaches Warren Bennis, in giving his first egos and prestige and relate not only exhausted that academics must have shouldn't open up?) can ten him what to do. Students to Save Lives" (The News address to freshman (71), stated that with students but more importantly, priority or non-academics as long as a · Since Dr. Thorpe does not know But doggerel is so very easy to Record, January 26) change can come from the top but with other administrators and budget deficit hanp over our heads. me and suggests I'm wasting my Wron g ! Wrong ! Wrong! We can continually state our opinion write "Ambulance Squad teaches it's difficult and almost impossible if faculty? Then maybe you couldn't time, I'd better admit the following That even by mail one might there is no change from the be negatively labeled just another but can do damn little to change the was written in the bathtub-and it students, faculty, staff or Anyone views of the decision makers. Only correct his sad plight. else interested in saving lives!" So subordinate levels. part of the bureaucratic system. was indeed a short bath- and I don't fmances will accomplish that. Some of my best students have few staff and administrators realize Last year I firmly believed the fault Think about it and then submit your take too many . .. been and are football players and I what a potential wealth of to lie with the students but after criticisms. (Bill McGee, a Bus. Ad.junto.r, is a. If Dr. Thorpe is going to use poetry do wish, because of the football information is available to them on reexamining the situation, I realize'd Ginger Schmidt regular columnist for The "News as a fist, players I've known and know, that this campus because everything is that the problem lies in the lo:-ver A&S senior Record.) January 30, 1973 THE NEWS RECORD Page 5 Lose to Drake Bearcats Romp, Ashnault Blasts Catlett Following his Indian's 110-68 half of play. UC still rolled to a 26, 25 and 17 points respectively. us and deserved to win. They are one defe~t at the hands of UC's Bearcats 60-32lead. Batts, rebounding from a 4 for 18 of a few teams with overall quickness last Saturday night in the Fieldhouse, The Cats literally ran over and night against Drake, hit on 13 of 21 greater than ours." . William & Mary head coach Ed through the Indian's porous defense from the field, while Dickey, who The Bearcats actually lost the game Ashnault nearly ran from the court. and applied a rugged defense of their simply outclassed his W&M from the free throw line as UC hit on He was upset, to say the least. own that produced several steals and defenders, connected on 12 of 16. 16 of 26 attempts while the Bulldogs In his mind, and from the spectacle numerous William & Mary turnovers. Harris, who has steadily improved in hit on 18 of 19. Both teams made 28 he had witnessed on the court before The second half of the game was a UC's last four games, hit 8 of 12 field goals. him, Ashnault believed and replay of the first, for the first ten . attempts from the field. The Bulldogs, who were led by publically stated that Cincy coach minutes anyway, as the Cats could Jesse Jemison also. turned in a fine super quick, hot-shootin~. Gale Catlett had deliberately tried to do no wrong while the Indians could performance with 11 points on 5 of undefensable David Langston with humiliate the hapless Indians. do no right. UC's starting five had 6 attempts. Greg Jurcisin added 9 to 32-points, jumped out to an early So when the fmal buzzer sounded, extended the Cincy advantage to the UC total. 10-4 lead but had to put up a rugged Ashnault immediately jumped from 91-50. High scorer for W&M was battle against the Cats who managed his seat and walked to the visitor's At this point, with 9:20 still substitute forward Jeff Trammell to stay within one or two points of locker room, disregarding the remaining in the game, Coach Catlett who scored 16 points. · the DU lead. At the half Drake lead traditional handshake of opposing inserted his third string players into by four, 42-38. coaches following the game. the contest to face the same W&M In the second half the Bulldog!\ Coach Catlett, baffled by players that started the game for the managed to extend their lead to 10, Ashnault's accusation and reaction Indians. 52-42 with 14:53 on the clock. after the game, simply explaining In nine minutes UC "ran up" the Catlett called a time out, put his that he has never run up to the score score with 19-points. Denny Deurmit team in a zone defense, and with on any team and never had any sank a free throw with 4:10 on the Against the last 9:46 in the game the score was tied intentions of doing it against the clock to give Cincy a 100-point total Thursday night Coach Catlett at 56. Indians. for the fourth time this season. probably wished he could have ran From there on it was nip and tuck "I'm sorry Coach Ashnault feels The Cats hit a scorching 67% from the score up, at least enough to win, ali the way before Langston hit six this way but believe me, I've never the field connecting on 50 of 85 as the Cats dropped a hard fought straight free throws in the fmal tried to run up the score against attempts. The 50 baskets tied a UC 74-72 battle to the Iowans. minute and a half of the game to ice anybody," said Catlett. record for most attempts made The loss was Cincy's first on the the win for Drake. Most of the 4770 partisan UC fans during a game. The last time any UC home court this season and ended a Lionel Harris turned in an who . watched the Bearcat romp, team scored that many was in 1960 12-game winning streak in the outstanding game for UC pouring in Cincy's tenth victory of the season against North Texas State. Mark Fieldhouse. 24-points. His showing was against sever, losses, would find it Brackman made the 50th for UC "Drake had a very fine team. They complimented by Dickey's usual fine NO STOPPING MURPH! Once the speedy 6-0 guard has decided to drive in difficult to accept the accusation of against W&M. were one of the toughest teams we've game 'as the popular senior scored 18 for a score, there are very few people quick enough to stop him. Derrek .the William & Mary coach as Catlett Lloyd Bat~s, Derrek Dickey, and faced all season," remarked Catlett. points. Batts was UC's only other Dickey (40) and Lloyd Batts (31) watch their teammate in action. used ten Bear~at players in the first Lionel Harris paced the Cats; scoring "But they outhustled us, outplayed scorer ill double figures, with 13. Photo by RICH FRUMKIN I • J I Here Tomorrow Miami Matmen Tie UC in Last Match BY PAUL FOX has rested in the UC trophy case only Sullivan of MU 7-7. Dayton, Smith Attack UC UC's Bearcats and Miami's once. At this point the score read 14-7 in -BY JOE WASILuK - -- 'Redskins battled to a 17-17 tie on Miami won the first match, the favor of UC. But the lead was short Sports Editor . Jack Kill are lettermen guards who VonLehman from Covington ·.the mats Friday night in quest of the 118-lb. class, with Paul Schonauer lived as Miami's Skip Shroeder and help out with scoring chores. Mike Catholic and lanky Steve Lawrence, a .Judge Robert Marx trophy, an decisioning UC's Renard Haskins 3-1. Jack Goss decisioned Cincy's Otto 1 i Don Donoher's touch down in the Armory-Field­ Sylvester, a 6-5 junior from 6-10 senior from Newark, Ohio: All annual award given to the winner of The Cats then took the lead winning Liske and Pat Lindholt in the 167 house tomorrow night at 8 to defend Cincinnati Moeller, sees some action three players are lettermen. the contest between the two schools. three of the next five matches and 177-lb. weight classes. The score UD's highly-cherished two-game as a guard but is also used as a UD annually faces one of the most The Bearcats appeared. to have an starting with Howard Fox's 13-3 now read 14-14. winning streak over UC's Bearcats. forward to give the Flyers extra respected schedules of opponents in upset in the working with a 14-7lead decision over Rich Gowdy in the In the next match Doug Tabor, the · 126-lb. class. Cat's 190-lb. competitor, decisioned There used to be time when the rebounding strength. the nation and this year has been no after the fast six matches but the exception. Included in the Flyers' Redskins, heavy favorites going into Jake Holloway, competing in the Miami's Doug Brendamour 4-0, mere mention of Bearcats used to Other Flyer forwards, all standing 134-lb. division, continued the giving UC a 17-14lead. strike fear in the hearts of Dayton 6-8, are Joe Fisher, the top scorer win-loss accumulation this season are the match, rallied to knot the score losses to Michigan (81-78), Alabama at 14 and then again at 17. winning ways, decisioning MU's Rick The final match between the basketball players and fans. For 13 from last year's frosh team with a (77-76), and Louisville (75-58, Miami's record is now 9-1-1 while Mad~on 6-2. The 142-lb. heavyweights, UC's Frank Sberna agonizing years Flyer teams fell 22-point average, leaper Allen Elijah 7 4-73) and wins over Illinois St. Cincinnati stands at 3-5-1. The competitiors battled to a 6-6 tie with and MU's Jim Feucht, was won by victim to the Cats as Cincy and Rick Thalls. Jim Testerman, a {81-75), Akron (74-69) and Redskins retained possession of the Gary Maciejewski competing for UC Feucht by a slim 5-4 count and completely disregarded UD's 6-5 sophomore from Cincinnati Northwestern {73-66). Marx trophy for another year. Miami and Mike Salupo for Miami. Miami had salvaged a 17-17 tie with hearalded basketball tradition. Loveland, also puts time in as a forward. The only common opponent UC was awarded th~ trophy again this Jim Steedman of UC then beat the Bearcats. But in 1971 the fl~pf j,inx over At center 'Donoher callsrupon 6-7 and.B:eJD have faced this season is year on the basis of their ~972 .win Miami's •Tom Chambers A~ in 1tha: UC's next match' •is 1'-lnitsday •in t~ .Flyers end,e~.as UD pulled one of Miami. The Cats lost to the Redskins over the Bearcats. In 18 matches 150-lb. class before 158tlb.·, Norman; .JtOklahoman.aigainst · tilt· ; the greatest upsets in their roundball senior John B[tter, i graduate of 63-61 early in the season while the between the two schools the award performer Kevin Keller tied Larry always powerful Oklahoma Sooners. history defeating UC 70-69 on the Cincinnati North College Hill and Flyers beat the Skins 68-61 last Bearcat's court. Since then the ball UD's third best scorer and top week. has continued to bounce in favor of rebounder last year, 6-8 junior John the Daytonians "as they handed the ·Roll on to 7-0 Queen City boys a 76-60 humiliation last year in Dayton before 13,169 hysterical UD fans. The Flyers' margin of victory was j -. '\ , their fifth largest in 23 wins in the JV's Continue to Crush Foes series with UC, which Cincy leads with 32 victories, and the worst since UC assistant basketball coach record, making shambles of a few to town with a team that is expected 1954 when UC was slapped down Kenny Cunningham is all smiles these highly-regarded teams along the way. to supply a big boost to Marshall's 96-66 at UD. days and he has every reason to be Take for instance the junior basketball future but the Cats paid' With all of this in mind UC coach that way. His junior varsity roundball Bearcats' 87-73 victory over Marshall no mind to the rumor and rolled out Gale Catlett should have little team has rolled to a perfect 7-0 last Saturday night. The Herd came to a 45-37 halftime lead. trouble getting his team psyched for It was much the same story against the annual Queen City-Gem City Ohio State last Thursday as the showdown, one of the biggest Cincy team simply overran the bigger basketball rivalries in the country. Eastern Kentucky Falls Buckeye squad and held a "I know our players are looking commanding 44-27 advantage at forward to this game. They haven't halftime. From then on it was all UC forgotten the beating they received 11 0-95 to Cat Gymnasts as the Bearcats won by an 85-60 last year in Dayton," said the UC count, leaving OSU with a 5-2 BY NANCI HNELY U C 's a 11-around stand-out coach. performer and potential record. Garry Kamstra, Cincy's highly "But I've seen Dayton play twice All-American Mike Thompson turned Cincinnati's gymnasts, with a 3-1 thought-of 'freshman recruit froin this season, I saw them beat Miami, in a fme performance winning the record, host Georgetown College of Rossville, Ind. where he established and I'm impressed with their size and stiU rings competition with an 8.0 Kentucky this Saturday afternoon in himself as the Hoosier state's top physical strength," added Catlett. score with 10 being a perfect score. the Laurence Hall gym after an schoolboy scorer last year, turned ·in "Their record isn't too good but they impressive 110-95 home floor win Thompson also finished second in have a strong team, a fine coach and two brilliant performances that . last Saturday over Eastern Kentucky. the parallel bar competition and some fine players. That Donald accounted for 51 points in the two : third in the horizontal bar event. 1 ballgames. : Smith of theirs is a fantastic player. The Bearcat team tallied four fl..St Rounding out Cincy's flrst place Proving that he is not afraid to : He can do it all!" place finishes while out-scoring victories during the day were Larry shoot from the outside and doesn't : The Flyers come to the den of Eastern in all six events. Cincinnati's · Penwell on the horizontal bar and 1 have any qualms about driving to the ! Catlett's Cats with a 7-9 record, meet score alone (110.6) was a Dale Pontis in vaulting with a score which really doesn't mean much triumph as the Cats, decked out in . bucket for a score, Kamstra poured of 8.6. in 30 points in the Ohio State when a Don Doncher team is new red and white uniforms, totalled Uhlmer Renfro and freshman Tom humiliation and 21 more in the concerned. Donoher's 1967-68 squad the highest number of points thus far Wilson contributed their skills on the stomping of Marshall. had the same record but ended the this season surpassing the 110.5 side horse in gaining third and second Mike Artis, another of the Cat's season with a 21-9 mark winning the scored against Miami. place honors respectively. freshman recruits, also played two National Invitational Tournament in Leading off the afternoon victories Other gymnasts to place in the fine games turning in a 14-point New York City. competition for Cincy were Jerry for UC was John Knight with a fine effort against OSU and 23 against The Flyers also come to UC with floor exercise routine for fust place Thompson, third in still rings and Marshall. 6-0 guard Donald Smith, a sure followed by teammate Terry Gary Johnson, captain of the Bearcat WHAT DO I DO NOW? William & Mary's Matt Courage (51) isn't really UC's third freshlllan recruit, Hal · All-American candidate. A deadly Hanauer in second place. squad, second in the parallel bars. y left-handed shooter with great speed looking on high for help, he's just looking. up to see if his lay-up went in, it Ward, was injured early in the ) and quickness, Smith is currently the .did. UC's Greg Jurcisin {35) is there making sure Courage's leap into the air is contest with the Buckeyes and . nation's 11th best scorer averaging followed by a safe return to the court. finished with a total of nine points. · 25.9 points a game. He is also an Photo by TOM HOLZER Still suffering from the injury, Ward ·

~ .J.:::W.::::::;~:;:;::~«.~::-:·:~o/..m/~.:;:;w~":w."~::f~=:;::~~~ • ., Bearcat Swimmers Win Two extremely accurate free throw m@i®l@@i%1~\t¥i:W@@.@'"<>'<''"*"'"""'"?'%'.W.i>~"''B"''*"'"'""'""'"-===>===w.--l···. pumped in eight points against the shooter as he ranks tenth in the Roy Lagaly's Bearcat swimming Illinois 76-37 and beat the host Herd. The 6-4 guard from Loveland country hitting on 90% of his shots team competed in a dual meet in Western Michigan Broncos 74-39. had scored over 20 points a game in from the charity stripe. Waterwomen Upset Kalamazoo, Mich. last Saturday The Cincinnati mermen are now 5-2 the three previous contests to the But Dayton doesn't rely on Smith afternoon and returned home that on the season. one with Ohio State. alone as 6-3 Gordy Gahm and 6-1 Cincy's waterwomen began (1:05.9) and Debbie Kibler in the evening with two victories. At press time individuals results of Craig Patterson, a 6-3 sophomore preparing today for this Saturday's 50-yd. breaststroke (34.2), 100-yd. The Bearcats defeated Northern the two meets were not available to from Cincinnati Withrow who made LOUISVILLE TICKETS meet at Bowling Green after falling breaststroke (1:15.9), and the print. the jv squad as a walk-on last year as · Tickets for UC's Feb. 5 basketball victim to Ohio State last Saturday, 100-yd. individual medley (1:01.9). ' a freshman, raised a few eyebrows in game with arch-rival Louisville, one 60-53. Tina Lipe won the 400-yd. IMPORTANT PHONE the Fieldhouse with a 23-point ' of the country's highly regarded The Bearkittens, who suffered their freestyle with a time of 3:34.4 while NUMBERS outburst against Marshall. He also ~ first defeat of the seasbn, completed Jeannie Foltz repeated last week's played a big role in the defeat of teams, will be put on distribution Laurence· Hall gym (concerning without Heidi Lipe and Jacki Hirsty, performance with another first place Ohio State scoring 14 points, several today from noon to 2 p.m., hours open, etc.) and handball courts two of UC's top swimmers. Despite finish in one met~r diving. of those coming on some beautiful . tomorrow from 9 a.m. to 11 a.m. (reservations) call 4351. and from 2 p.m. to 4 p.m., and on the loss of power Cincy still captured Sue Rusconi joined Lipe, Kibler lay-ups. , eight of 13 first place honors. and Jones for the 200-yd. medley Laurence Hall pool, call 3744. The junior varsity's next g.lllle is Thursday, Feb. 1, from noon to 2 I nformation on athletic event p.m. Co-op students only may pick Multiple Bearkitten winners were relay and Cincy won with a 2: 05 tomorrow night against the Dayton Alice Jones in the 50-yr. butterfly timing. tickets, student basketball card jv's beginning at 5:45. The junior . up tickets on Thursday evening from pickup hours, etc., call 3536. 6 p.m. to 8 p.m. (:28.7) and the 100-yd. backstroke UC is now 3-1 on the season. Flyers are 6-2 on the season. ... January 30, 1~7 _3_ THE NEWS RECORD Page 6 . - -· -. THE NEWS RECORD l ccM & English Tony Mason Says Bad Press I· CALENDAR t . Budget Cuts Studied Discourages New Recruits No faculty memoer carries more BY DOUG FULLER of alumni support. Robert Orchard ARTISnc ADMINISTRATOR OF YALE REPERTORY CCM costs are much lower than than two sophomore sections in Mason, remaining rather optimistic major schools of performing arts in THEATER will ~peak at 1 p.m. today in the Faculty Lounge, on " The addition to other assignments. In "I've gotten many letters from in the wake of the current assault on American Resident. Theater: Problems and Prospects. " other large universities, according to some cases it would give instructors Ronald D. Ross, assistant dean. alumni who said they will now UC football, said, "Many season Dr. Ebabeth Kubler Ross, author of ON DEATH AND DYING, will speak 80 sophomore students instead of earmark their money to football tickets have already been sold and The figure was as much as 25 per 60-an increase of one third. at 6:30 p.m. Wednesday, in the Great Hall, TUC. Price of tic~e ts i ~ $1 in cent lower, he said. rather than to general funds", new many more will be sold. I'm going to advance. Ticket requests can be mailed to UC College of Nursmg Tnbunal, The freshman sections will remain UC head football coach Tony Mason win and fill the stadium and then I'll In addition to the cost per major the same, with an average of 26 31 00 VIne Street, Cincinnati, Ohio 4521 9. comparison, average salaries of peer students per class.__ said Tuesday. · decid~ who jumps on the English classes for foreign students and/or wives will start on Thursday schools were also compared. "I will not support this. We want bandwagon.~ The advanced creative writing evening, February 1. Classes will be held in the Speaker's Lounge, TUC. For "Average salaries here," Ross said, classes had been saved previously by to encourage support of the - Mason -said - that"- the football "are lower in all ranks than our peer further information call 721-7660. staggering the advanced creative university in general and earn program is a facet of the athletic WGUC-FM, 90.9, presents a series of special reports on two major problems institutions." poetry course with the fiction course finances for football through ticket department, like other varsity sports, He explained thqt the source of the in the United -States today-alcoholism and marijuana smuggling-on ALL on a yearly basis. sales, broadcasting rights, and in which gifted athletes can excel. THINGS CONSIDERED . .. National Public Radio's week-day news data was the National Association of "This is one of the few places a concessions", continued Mason. Schools of Music (NASM). NASM is He said, "Intramurals is general magazine, during the week of January 29-February 2. ALL THINGS student can get individual attention," Mason was referring to the math; football is the advanced math the only recognized accrediting says Wiebe. _ CONSIDERED . .. is heard Monday through Friday at 5 P.M. on WGUC. · agency for schools of music. response that the recent attack on and advanced math is for those who Tickets for Edward Albee's production, ..A DELICATE BALANCE," which Budget review committees "We're trying to keep the small ' football has wrought from alumni. excel." _ will premiere Feb. 1 at Playhouse in the Park, are available to members of meetings and hearings are now held junior and senior sections which Mason said that if the university He said that his greatest concern in includes advanced creative writing thhe Young Friends of the Arts, (YFA). According to Dian~tf_g}_onel, YFA nearly every day, according to Ross. dissolves its football program it regard ~o the current attack on UC courses and seminars in literary Director, members are encouraged to attend on a Tuesday, Wednesday, or~ The committees, which include would produce dire results in terms football is in the area of recruiting. Sunday night, as Friday and Saturday nights are sold out l

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