.-' , of,Cinoinnati ." E W S' ··R.,EC,OR n < ,

Series BF I Z552 Cincinri'a1f1i, Ohi'q, Thu1rsday, December 20, "1962 Vol. XLVIII, No. 14

... Dr. J. M. Watson' Becomes Student. Court .H,asPower <:?C~llegeCo'ns~rvato~yDea n Over:ID .'Card .Viola,tors Effective June 1, 1963, University's Dr. Jack M. Watson, well-known "music educator and administrator, musi- by Glen'nStoup x with '10 card violations-a [ur- .non-legul terms to the important colo gist, and graduate of the College-Conservatory of Music, Hank Sheldon, Chief Justice of isdictionStude-nt Court has had parts of the revisions. University of Cincinnati, will be the College-Conservatory's the .Student 'Court, -appeared be- since its formation 2% years According to the revisions, dean. . fore Student Council at their last ago but has netexerelsed until "The Court has jurisdiCtion in meeting to, explain. the revised this year. Deans of, Men and all cases involving the misuse Explaining Dr.' Watson was .the the unanimous nomina- amendments to the Student' Court . Wome,n 'and the Univer'sity of an identification card," A tion of a screening committee, .r». WalterCiLangsam, .UC constitution. - Committee on Conduct has misuse means that (1)' a card has been 'used .by someone to The :revisions, 3:r~.'not ;ext~n- handled these violations in the president, announced the .appointment, . .' . whom it was not issued, ('2) sion. .of- the powers Of Student ;" past. The 11 - member committee a falsification of h.•formation on named in .Aug'ust by Dr. Lang •. Court but vrnerely the,detaiied , The 'text ..of the revisions are ga,ined at institutions large and the card, or; (3) the acquisition, sam represented UC; the Col .. procedures under which.the "court posted on the Union bulletin: small fremeeest to. coast. From of two or more ca,rds' by one lege-Conservatory, and boards is to-operate .incarrying out" the board around the corner froni 1939 to 1947 he taught" at Win- student at" one time. of the Cincinnati Symphony Or- full ~ex.teiit,of, its Jurisdiction: . the Un i on Desk but it was (Contiued on Page 15) An~xamp)e of (1) would be a chestra and Cincinnati Sum- 'The revisions are concerned thought.to give an explanation in , ., . ~ • ." ;:: student loaning his card to' a mer Opera. ~~l'I~lI.n'i!tl"Mtl.iMtl'l_l._l'I_h_h_l>_~~ non-student.: for the purpose .of Dr. Watson will succeed Dr. J. the non-student "gaining .entrance Laurence Willhide, 'who resigned to 'a 'University function. July, 31 as dean to return to An example of, (2) would be teaching asd, at Dr. Langsam's .mis-stating the birth..date on the invitation, to serve also in 1:962- '-U),' '. '.-':,,:. ' ". U, ' ':1'· d' " -~,~~ .card , 63 ~s advisor' to graduate' stu- '-"An ~eximipie ~of -(3)' would 'be . dent\S'.", -: '.,' ~ a student reporting his original V~,p:p·y~~:~~-n'cQ:-'l' ·...UY·:§ IDcard lost in order to obtain an- '..Mrs'.' Marpora ' W~ Shank; who was. the College - Conservatory's other; The student. could then' dean of administration, has been Sell his, ID .card, -to a" non-student acting asdean-in-charge since the in _order ' -that the non-student College-Conservatory .was merged would' be able.co attend Univer- August-I' with the, University, ' .sity functions. This h~s 'happened quite frequently before impor- Native of Dillon, s:C.,'hr e " ' Watson ,atte'nded . elementary "tant basketball-games: such as the Bradley game.' :,., e and ,high 'schools there;. took, Even if a' st:_u~e:nt, loses his under-gracfuate work.at the,.Vn~ iversity of ,NQrth Carolina, 'Ge:" '-10 card 'il' good faith and the neva Colle-ge,.; '8'nd.th~ Gincin •.:, " card is found and 'v seC:!'by"some- one else' the; studeri,t ,can . still natiC 0 IIe:g.·e- Conservatory, whe're he 'received the Bache- . lie r'equjr'edto appea~ before lor of Music degree i'rl ..1930~ the' coort~Ac:cording to" Ch'ief His graduate degrees and dates Justice 'Sheldon,' "Whenever an are University of Southern 'Cali- ·10 is ,confiscated; 'no Matter what, ·the,~ir~",ms.tances, t-h a t fornia, "Master.. of 'Music," 19~Q, and Columbia 'University, Master student"will;,come .under the of Arts, 1945,' and Doctor of Phil- j u'ri sdiction .of,the '.court." .~ ~ osophy, 1947. .: ' .. ' . Studen ts ..are reminded, that the J3ecilu~e_.of'.his 'achievements .in :Url'iv'ersi'tyrequires all 'sfudents,Jo have an IDcard;/Cdn~equeht1y, ~1~emusic f~eld;;Z.Jhe·.c.oJ~:~ge,:G~n~ :' seryatQry ,'in '195R"~oiJJerredipn .if,'a: student loses; he should, re- ?,Mim" its ,'h~onohiry';'doctorat~" rle~ 'port; i~:iminedl,atelY to, the. Regis": ",",'t· \. , .. , \ gree.·' " . "...... trar'sOffice. ..u:ijonip'ayment of a: ,ius -undergraduate major. was ''-'$~ J~,~~(riQt; fiije) ,!~~iwill'h~iss,ued voice. His' Igraduate',studies ~~tCo~, " a.newone. Th.~i.reasQn·Jor(-the .$5 iumbi~ ·and Southern; : . fee is - because.' it costs; approxi- '; had .a three-w:~y emphasis-e-music '. rp.at~h~that ",mue1l2to:§~~d to Cp!- educationjmusieology, ;~~(h~\l&jc " cago -rtp~obtain:;:f' , theory. While' ,at, tll~,.Col~ege~Oo!l~ ~:th:e~,stY:d~n.rs:,:i>i~ture.:The In~sys;; , , servatorvhere he was "a-scholar; :tem'.is)la:n,· ":.~'!: ',';" -·'i,---' ..... '~cl~;ii~~~~s~C ~:'i':r).r"_Lf:nlofj',{(O"'.1''.''.',···.·.·.'1{ I. ''''.' .•... ,.....'..'.. ·'.'.'.l:·~','bb,,'1'",'.'. ,/ ., """ N .~1?t'.D~~e,s~~utte. ": ~Miss Lyla ; Haggard, DAA. ,.. ,- _ freshman,· has 'been" playing' Qt< , Christmas music.' on th-e' organ .in -< "'21.

~ ~. ' . the,'lobhY, ..of 4h~. student .union ,~ ...,. Q" •...u -- / lhe":past "wee~, ':'Mis{,Haggardfis ,,,..f;*;~_ 0' a';Ih~mb.er ,of. th~"{JC,'tl~e Club r ~' u· . '~nd~an:"orgahisf- fo{,~' chui-c'h :irl - ;', . ·"qq'vingion~,:~y':...::~~y.l,~'.\a~k~d!.~~r;," ,~'~,'-' :t .0 •••••• "~i~Wer'. ffh:'-P.etnii~Si9n':toprac,t~ce .. .•....••. on the union -organ. She was ' rU )oi',- ..~ t-. given' permission arid ..then vol- u;-< un teered to"play Christmas music ,,0 (j) ~ ~ ·z from12~p .:m-toI p.rn.everyday -:;:-.>c.:r• uJ· - this past week.ci.All' students are ...... ;.a . urged. to sing along' With. Lyla .~ }~ ...;., ::> :;) u ~. tomorrow. ", . "Due to -compfaiilts of neighbors ~ of the University, the union will notpipe-out music between class- ~--"'C>'--'-"C---~~~::~;'~;- )_~_ " ..•...... es this. .year " according to Dr. Brewer. In, past years music was piped from speakers in the union ,~:'.''.J,he'<;N~ws''Re('Q,rd Staff,:,:-- ~ . tower in between classes for ten minllt~s from 8 a: IlL to -4.p. m. ~._..- "'~ .. '_'.""".".' .. "'" -'_.'-'. -;., and "eouIQ~h.eheard by all ~n' ~£~r.»~~;':"'!"f':'f,0<.,;""~'''ii' ,,,"

11I" Page Two Thursday, December 20,' 196Z

4 Preps AtWi'son . DEPENDABLE 1963 UC Charter Flights The Four Preps will appear at WATCH REPAIRING Wilson Auditorium January 16. Tickets for this event-will-go on To- Orient --Europe . sale December 17. BRAND'S It is necessary for a good turn" All alumni are eligible for, the JEWE·LERS out~or this concert if the present UC ..Charter. flight .that- is. this 210 W. McMHlan concert series is., to become a year being organized for a vaca-. 621-6906 permanent part of the entertain- tion in the Orient. japan, For- K.NOWYOUR JEWELER mosa, Hong Kong, Macau,Sing~ ment program on the University .Campus. Serving Clifton since 1934 apore,Thailand" Philippines a-re some .of' the places that will be. visted. , This -interesting . vacation 'will - leave 'direct frO'm CincinpatL and costs will include first-classhotels, oneaq...~ meals, travel and ali tipping and . handling charges. . (Author of HI Was a Teen-age Dwarf",HTheMany Loves- of Dd1Jie Gillis", et'C.) Students, faculty, staff are also eligible. " information is available from Mrs. Amy Pathe, 265 Laurence Hall, Cincinnati 21, Ohio (phone DECK THE HALLS 861~8000, line 527) .. For information about the When you think o~' Ch:iist~as gifts yon naturally think of European 'Charter Flight-c-whieh Marlboro cigarettes, leading seller:in. flip-top box in all fifty will again take off from Cincin- states-s-and if we annex Wales,fin ali fifty-one-e-and if we an:' nati Airport and travel to London nex Lapland-s-inall fifty-two. This talk about annexing Wales and Paris, please contact ,Miss . and Lapland is, incidentally, not just idle speculation ..,Great Lorrayne Stork, Administration , Britainwants to trade Wales to the United States fOf a desert. Everywhere in the Orient, walled cities are evident as a reminder Building at UC (line 205). Stu- of the medieval times of long ago. You will' get a feeling of having dents, faculty and staff are elig- Great Britain needs a desert desperately on account of the . ,sut the clock back for all of two thousand years, as you view such ible for this three-week trip, full ,'tourist trade. Tourists are always .coming up .w· the .Prima sights. In many places, Korea, Kowloon and the New Territories, the details of which will soon be Minister or the Lord. Privy Seal orlikethat and saying, "I'tii tlumerous gates, as pictured, are well preserved and most picturesque. ready. not knocking your country, mind you. It's very quaint and picturesque, etc. what with BuckinghamPalae,e and, Bovril . and Scotland Yard, etc., butwhere's yQur'desert7."(Be£oreI forget, let me point out that Scotland Yard, ,l3ritain:s plain-. clothes police branch, was named after, WallyScotland",;and I Was Santa Claus Fred Yard who invented plain clothes·:~The.:Am:ericaht>!aiJ:I'" •• • Clothes force is called the FBI after Frarik B. tnchcliff,who' ... "and the pay is excellent." disposing of the menace. A ter- possessed all the skills of a re- invented fingerprints. Before Mr. .Inehcliff's invention, .ev:ety~· Being in need of a good Xmas rifying realization to imagine that butter. job, I dispelled my apprehensions" body's fingers were absolutely gla:;;sy,smoQth: Th.i~,<~$"y(\U and accepted the position, which all that stands between you and "Where have· you been?",' he may imagine, 'played hOD with the idel,ttif}.qation.of;'w~wborn Was, portraying Santa Claus at possible annihalation is a small inquired. babies inhospitals, '-From 1791 u~tH 1'904 no Anierican parent ", a-Iocal shopping center. boys strength pitted against that Santa, remembering the stock My name is Richard Surber. I of an excessively "gross 'canme.: ahswertothis question replied, am twenty years old and a fresh- Santa, with extreme agility in "feeding my reindeer." . man in. .the University College. relation to .his-: size, barricaded "Are they inth~re?""he!,asked; 'the following .anecdotes are true himself

8" Giant Hoagy .: Tuna Fish •• Ravioli _. Fish Baskets @ 1962 Max Shulmq ... ,. Steak Sandwiches -. S'pcighetti 'and Meat Balls • ••

T~e makers of M:arlboro cigarettes, .who take pleasure in 861~3552 - 281·9595 bringing you this column throughout the school year, WiBIf i~"'~: to,Joj,. Qld.·Jt[(I!5'. ia~.teQfUAg.lI.re~t.iDlll,ql.,th,P.~4;8R&,,,,,,.,. ...,,:' ~ Thursdoy, December 20, 19~2 UNIVERSITY OF CINCINNATI NEWS RECORD Rage'Three H. Sekinger· Band QueepNewArmy RO!C Program Will Compete In'·Contest St~h~t;1for~~fir!:?:~e~~~~~~~_ by Bruce Raymond y.ear 1?62.1963. Her major func~ cinnati, the Army ROTC is engaged in training future pilots On Thursday afternoon, Dec. 13, bon will be to spon~or and ~c. for Army aviation. At present, six Senior Arm ROTC af a mixer in the Union the Army company the band In all, of Its ...... ~ . Y Rlo.T.C. Band met the 'seven can. regular activities, including a Cadets are recervmg flight training, They are : Ronald A. didates previously nominated for trip to Jersey City iff April for Fry, (A&S '63); Michael E.Baughman, (Eng. '63); Douglas band queen. The seven candidates the . ~ational Reserve Offic~rs Hill, (BA '63); William F., Hum- - Included Barbara Buckley, T.c:<63 ~ralnlng Cor~s Band Ass~cla. mel, (A&S '63); Michael E. Mills, 'ty-one and one half hours of of Alpha DeltaPijKathy Hayslip, fien convention and national '. ".";; ...' . MEc '64 of Kappa Delta; Judy <'competition.- She will also par- (IBA ~~), and Martm J. Rielage, d u a I flYing· mstructlon, and - Heffner, TC '64' of Delta Delta' ticipate in a nationalc~mte,st (Eng. '63. \ eighteen hours of solo flying. Delta;' Ann Liles, TC '64 of Kappa with other Ar~Y'R.O'!:C,.:b~nd These cadets receive thirty· At the conclusion of the train- Kappa Gamma . Debby McKinley. queens. throughout.the country five hours of gro,und school . th 1 k d t "II ' . TG '64 of Kappa,' Alpha ,Theta;. , , to se I'ect th'e N' aficna". I"R.'.0' T'.C'. taught", by a Federal Aviation mg. ' ese" ..uc ,y ca. ,e s .WI re- Helen Sekinger, A&S ' zation in Finland-Swedish-Tsiter, wbofesom.e,recreational, aeflvl- Business meetings ·liave:;'inoved.- >ties.' " ,: at a .steady pace: All': freshman' at:y History.' ,," ,AWS elections have taken' place .. Dr. Barrel] wiUsp'e'a rc on The standards committee pre- IlLiterary Clutur'e in theR~,,~ , sented the 'rules" of. the Sophos aissance.'~Dr. ,MHes wiUdis- Dance, the Sig Ep ,Queen ,of cuss "John Colef and the Pro:' Hearts ,dance, and the Delt b{em of Heresy."., ' ,DIR'ECTORIES CASTLE. FARM Sweetheart which were passed, by A commentary by Dr. Miles, on Cincy's L,argest Dance. Floor . AWS Council. Council 'also re- John Colet will appear •...in the' Studeh{'[>,i'reCifories will H: ceived the reports from ,theIAWS Encyclopedia of Philosophy, to be avaitilbleoutside the Grill on state day at Denison University. published by. Macmillan. and, Cro-' Thursday 12·2 p.m, and Friday FRIDAY,'DEiC.21 In the next, week, .Kampus well-Collier. Dr. Miles.ireceived n-1 p.m, . King rules, and' procedures will the Cincinnati , Institute of 'Fine' be formulated. The service com- Arts" 1961 Sachs award fOF his' cards must be pre- mittee will function 'asaclearing boo.k "Joh~. Colet apq the, Pla- Mr. 'Showman house for philanthropic projects. tonic Tradition." , LIONEL HAMP,TON Students - Parents Alumni His Internq,tional· This COUPON good Orchestra and Revue for SOc o:ff 'on' your- . CHiRI'S'T'MAS, TREE SATURDAY"DEC. 29 Les and Larry Elgart Yo~rchcin~'e to have a. fine Ncitural, Flocked or Deluxe And Their Orchestra Colored 'Tree of reasonable prices of $2.50 and up. , Cdrne to 3275 Erie Avenue I~ East Hyde Park or to NEW YEAR,'IS EVE - , 10 i E. Amity Road off Reading Road at Will' Heuser Orchestra Wishing Well Restaurant

l ""," 4 Page Four UNIVERSITY OF CINCINNATI NEWS RECORD Thursday, December 20, 1962 _,,:::oJ. "Lettrers Rules Are· Rules TH_EMAELSTROM The University 'rule which states that "the use or possession of iiquor. beer, or wine . . .i's prohibited on or within the To The Editor premises of University building 9r'ounds, fraternity arid 'sorority To the Editor: ,by ',pat reeve~, chapter houses vsnd vented rooms," has been subject to much Class officers and the seniors controversy since the News Record brought ,the subject, up two of Engineering, Nursing and Having been exposed to many Christmases, it follows weeks 'argo. Health, and the College Conserva- that I have a favorite Yuletide story which, in spirit, I would.' 'From 'what the N!R has been able to learn, this rule is not tory of Music would like to thank like to' tell: , Dr, and Mrs. Langsam for inviting being enforced to its fullest extent, which means that 'as a rule 'There was a little boy of eleven-who looked as if htf .thern to their home for dinner on i,tis almost worthless, Because of !this the News Record suggests were nine, because he was so small, but who had as much' Sunday, Dec. 9. that ei'ther the rule be changed, or a more effioient means, of scrap and spirit as veterans of Ever since Dr. and Mrs. Lang- wars. The' description maY' enforcement be adopted. sound far-fetched, but it is true. sam have been at UC they have Should the law be amended, it could be done along the The boy was of a very poor been gracious. enough 'to invite These gym shoes had lead to~, three following lines. First, [alcohol could be 'arllrowed on campus famUy. His parents were hon- the seniors from every college to est and hard-working, and the story too: 'he had found in the' ~including the Union, fraternity 'and sorority houses, dormitories, one of the dinners at their home. child had a solid-if unfermed woods, the last September, a tire etc.) for sooial functions only. Second, it could be permitted -sense of values. His spirit Faculty members from, the col- . rim from a truck. The rim was' only in the privacy of do rrn, and freternity and sorority house had him in trouble many times, about twice his own weight. ~e leges represented are there also. but he was really a good boy. rooms. Third-and least practioal of all-alcohol could be per~ It is an excellent opportunity for This particular Christmas the took the rim by wheeling it, it'! mitred on campuss at aH places, la:tall 'time's. faculty and students to meet boy had read a story, called a a scrap iron yard, but on his way, 'If ,the rule remains 'as stated, however, there are several each other in a less formal atmos- "Christmas Carol", and he be- he had to defend his' honor and came quite concerned with. un- ways ft could be enforced .. One possibility is that Student Court phere than the classroom. the rim from two tramps, whe fortunate people and their plight tried to take it from him when, could periodicelly invesriqate the sNu1a:Nonand punish ali offend- The dinners are buffet style at Christmas. he crossed some railroad tracks. ers 'according to the court's own penalties. A second suggestion and delicious. Mrs. Langsam ,Being a very cold and snowy After the boy wheeled the .rim. lis ther 'the Campus Police could inspect ,the dorms and fraternity plans' the menu for each dinner Christmas, the youngster had an two and a half miles toth~, herself. The preparation of food opportunity to shovel snow and scrap yard, and collected the 90 and 'sorority houses-but 'this seell1s to be an unjust invasion earn the prodigious amount of cents it was worth, he went tG of the student's ,rights. The most desirable enforcement would usually begins on Wednesday be- one dollar and twenty cents (act- a cheap shoe store and bought the be done within the confines of the org'anizations' themselves. In fore the dinner and final prepara- ually he had done five or six last pair of 79 cents gym. shoes, tion takes place all day Saturday. dollars work,' but times w ere they had, which were two sizes 6 other words, each ,organization would see to i't 'that the rule Very few Universities have a hard, he had not been paid well, too large. Lt was now December, 'is upheld, so that the actions of a few would not tarnish the being 'so small and not knowing and there w ere holes worn' function like this to honor their a9tivity of the rrrajority. (We understand this is presently the- much about money) with which through the rubber soles, the seniors, and we wish to thank the canvas was ripped in as many means of enforcement, 'alt'hough i't is very lax.) Hnallv, a com- he was going Ito do his part and Langsams for all the time and try and help! the world. places as it .was not. His feet mittee of student,faculty, and edministretive representatives work done to' make the dinner He had a plan in mind, and were usually wet in this' weather could be formed 'to enforce fhe rule. such a worthwhile occasion. that was to go to church (very but he didn't have abetter paIr The News Record irs not advocating any of the aboveac- secretly, because he had read of shoes and he-loved them any-, To the Editor: once that a great man had, like way. i ttions. litlis, however, cri,Ncarlof the .existinq isituation, which con- himself, given huge sums to With all due recognition of the So he went to church the daYi sists of litt!le or no enforcement of an adrninistretive rule. Rules charity without letting on about before Christmas when no

. n Chl~f , ,.... ". GI~nn.St9~p »: ",that,.has:mote thancasua:I .contact·!>~r.',?' t~~:,:a_wl~el~..acce.pt~d;PrIn~~.···,~~52..: ,,/' ..'..:,'.,' .. ~"'" . .:Mana~mg Edltor . ; '. '1,' ...".~~ .·AJ,QuirnbY~·~.with':ca:nip.us_a~iivities~W_ili>.agr.~e·:·C.~PI~'

Assocl~te. Editor ~_'...... •.. ~.'.. <.c. Ka!hY :,Fa,r:!9het" ~~at,!~e;:,iCl~.Ulty;:a-dvis,(j~s"fYrnisli -;:Sl~~.~~}&X~U.ts;~Ii."""t~¢}1BS-1}Y,,of the ~rro~;: i.~~~~l,:tI:t'atJhe ;pn~i NeWS~dnQr ...... •...... ' : :·;,!>.:"l()Y~e!lt .~~ Social. Editor , .. '. . . . .~ _ 'Ie .'/' : •. -' ',~, gain~dZ Jr(jm',!y~ars",::we, ,do} nof:fa~!I,l~s:lIl't>~t\y~~n ~~re~ncf~fl:~·. '1/ tli~:,S~Drt:!1l;J.,'~~q.·(2). tOln,CJ;~S~. ~Theatre' Edit '. ..'., ',:'.' ~.,':'.~"~'~'!:c~S~tMe,I~, bave,.-~-ejlable"fheni,'to-';;iHde~cii;'::, .~?~~f,o:r-,e~~;WPlf;';t>Y-~lqO,,§av.~g>$a~.ingsr";ap~:.there:b,Y.t'increase, .h~~:~i~o .' ,or ....,_~~~~~:~~~~~~~~~. . "':"',' \ ".' ';' .! .•.•••• : Sue.Crumme.~""""'f·L ::·'ttit';'?:·f.~Tt":;/~' ',!'In,each .:lncome.

National Adver,~isin$J n ••••••••••••••• , ••••• : ••• :.'. :;,~.J:~ilkDonohoo Finally, .the~ditor, contendei:V,:rpajor rese~rch ' found,a.tion, ': ling andsaving.. ' ~coounts Receivable ' "...... •...... ,...Ja:~kie J,ansen,-that it $h6tlld'not' he: necessarj' " h.aye. concluded. ~hat "'tl!iS. -prm- B~lt "I cannot escapethe\.~n •.. ,cIrculation .... ' . .'. c: '-1 ill' ...... , ". , .' ;.,clpl~stems J-rom.lmproper mt.er~ . elusions that ,( 1).~any, faml~" -, . ,'jI,UU u·,,,·········~·'.,..-.~.".",,...... d '«. "_ar.o,..~;,,,~,¥!~,,,:,,~,.,.".",,,..,,{~.oJltipued,O}Lfi&e..§),,,,. '" "Pt~t~~~o(~t~roUY ••~Q\J~g~~"~ta.:,,,~ (,ContiAHl~'l.,cI!,l~~ge,1:6')

" ••••• .,~ ••"...•••..". I t ~."" __ Jlo ••••• (, ';~:'~ .~..;, ••••• , __ '. Thursdoy, December 20 1962 1 UNIVERSITY OF CINCINNATI NEWS RECORD Page Five ICrackerbarrel Letters • • • (Continued from Page 4) for an advisor to provide con tin- , Pilgrim; Pros -And. Cons .uity for a group, since the mem- bers .are capable' of building a self-perpetuating tradition of ex- M~ny students probably read' is living 'off the' charity of the and she walks until offered Peace Pilgrim says she be- .i the visit to Cincinnati of Peace world. Every meal and lodging shelter and fasts until offe.red celience.' The author is evidently longs to no organization, and unaware of many' groups whose Pilgrim (her name), who has she enjoys cis at the expense and food. seeks no fame. Ye·t, when asked walked 21,000 miles across the inconvenience of some hard work-: Miss or Mrs. .Pilgrim, while membership is completely or if she had received any acclaim largely changed for year to year :Ration following her mission of ing secularist. wandering over the face of the for her work-she "modestly" peace. . I will not den,y that there' is 'United States, stops in various for example the women's honor- lists her credits. She says she aries-Alpha Lambda Delta, Guid- l '-Reaction vary as to Peace Pil- -truth in these statements. Of cities .and towns to lecture to' asks 'for nothing and carries, all grim's. purpose .and there are as .course, the theory. o,f poverty anyone that will listen to what on, and Mortar Board-change her worl'dly pessessicns with their ,entire membership each many doubters as there are sup- would nor be applicable, to, the we must do to obtain . her-none of which is money. porters, In this week's edition mas~es. This. would. se!t civil- The basis of her lectures seems year. How, may I ask, can such But somehow she manages to groups be self perpetuating, of' the student column "Cracker- ized standards back in the dark to be a combination of all reli- have a spare new tunic to wear; building up their tradition of ex- barrel" we present two opposing ages. It would render all think- gions with her emphasis on she manages to, have handy, cellence from freshman to senior vi~ws of Peace Pilgrim. ing and ingenuHy vain. "trust" and "love." She offers in printed )info.rmation concerning year, when their members hold 'Th~ students ."are Jim ..Coltan There is no answer to this pro- her preachings her "magic formu- her cause and she also, manages active status .for only' one year? 'and Tom Tromey who are both' blem, for actually there is no la" for obtaining. peace. This "for- to send ou.t, "free of charge," It seems to me that there is taking Mr. Alan Wright's course problem. "Peace Pilgrim" only mula" is nothing new or different. 'a newspaper telling, of her mis- little sentiment among those in en magazine feature writing of- wishes for society to imitate" her Its ingredients date back to the sion to anyone thatwant·s it. student activities for the need to ,fered in A&S. Pea c e Pilgrim striving for peace, not forpover- days of Moses. She: ties

RESTAURANT

7715Reading LENHARD'T'S201 ~est " Road ." .'. ...•...... , . . . . . McMillan 761-2116 r,.!fitlat1/1:~t.If!f! f I 421-9331 Du Bois- Centra I~,urop:ea", ~nd~Am,erica n'Food SAUERBRATTEN'~,' ~OULASH ,. PAPRIK~S~H NINE KINDS OF SCHNITZELS BookStore VIENNA HUNGAR·IAN'TARTS f'Opposite: the' Campus" ROAS!B'!=EFand CHICKEN DINNERS ROAST, DUCK EVERYWEEK~E,ND Open Da·i1y,Except Mo.nday 11 a.m. to 10p.m, ' ~p..~..c~.·. "'.>"." __ ".tf~·."·", "~.'~:,.'.'.-'.";' ~ .. "~~."_.':~ 1/2 BJ.OC.K FROM CAMPUS , .< ,J~i:

..ti : t;,~3 ,:IJ JJ.i ' ~ /~"~.; ~'l'~{ '-f'" ~.,,.,j , ~t "..,.".,~ . .a.~~".... ,....• ..••...... -~, - ~~-_._._, _ .••.•.. ~~-,-.---~ .•..••••.'~' .•••••..-.- --,-.._-. .•--. .-'>-'.1-,;; -... __ .:;.' ;" .;" ••..•..••••. t..:-:..;.·_~.:..: ..•:.:..:>';;...·..:;..~;.. ~:'::·-~·-·';;."_1":,-._:~,-~::·",,: :"-.':'~'... Page Six UNIVERSITY OF CINCINNATI NEWS RECORD, Thursday, December 20, 1962 SAE Entertains Delta Sweetheart Last Saturday, the men of Sig- several elementary schools here ';' ma-Alpha 'Epsilo~ held their an- Injhe, city; spent a yuletide aft- nual Wally Lorenz Christmas' ernoon 'featuring a Christmas. movie. carolling, and refresh- Party for .some of the underpriv- ments. The afternoon was cli- ileged children of Cincinnati. maxed by the appearance of Each year this party is given in Santa Claus, played by Mike PINNED: commemoration of Wally Lorenz, Curk, and a distribution of the an Sigma Alpha Epsilon who was gifts ' to the children sitting Mary Jane Gordon, Alpha Chi; killed by an automobile while around a large Christmas tree. Bruce Thompson, Acacia. Christmas carolling. ' Before dy- Each childsat on Santa's lap and Linda Cox, Alpha Chi; ing; his last words were, "Do had a chance to speak with him. , Glenn Wagner, Acacia. something for the kids," which is Gifts c'>f food were also presented the thought from which this to the group to help brighten Carolyn Schneider ,'KKG. party stems. .their Christmas. Ron CosIer Dale Norris, 'SAE. The children, first graders of planned and arranged the party. Norm Levy; Beta; Rene Cohen.

ENGAGED:' Jackie Golding; .Iim Sachs. Carol Prior,"KKG;" Keith Eastirt, Beta. Ann Seaman, Chi 0; . " Kent(rl1~keiIieyer ,Princeton. Mimi Bronstrup; John McDonald, Acacia . .Kay Hoobler, Zeta; Dan Heineman, ATO.

<, II MelrOrapS " '" , .:: ~ • 1 • .~

;SeveliMen Miss Marilyn Burns a junior in Pleasure Isle, Kentucky. Miss, the School of, Education and a Burns, chosen from fifteen can- member of Delta Delta Delta didates, was presented with a Metro tapped seven UC upper- bouquet of roses, a Delt sweet:', was crowned Queen of Delta classmen at the Sophos Dance on heart pin, atrophy, and the best -Dec. 7. These men were selected Ta~ Delta last Friday night wishes of the two hundred people on the basis of leadership and at the Delt's Winter Formal .at in 'attendance. school service. They will be in- itiated on Jan. 13. The new Metro pledges are: Al Fisgus, Sigma Phi Epsilon; Art Church, J3eta Theta Pi; Bill Aber- nethy, 'Sigma Alpha Epsilon; Dick Crone, Sigma.Chk.Bruce Heyman, Sigma Alpha 'Mu; Dave Aitter, ~~¥~ti~~~

Sigma Alpha Mu; and Lloyd i Bernstein, Pi Lambda Phi. V!e couldn't help wondering when all the people clap and cheer' , . what the aver'age student would for him: This plan has an added

.,:' -r ; " , .' ,like to give UC as a Christmas '.advantage-the Communist. won't

present. Accordingly we Cal!e,d,.11, p be able to address the' students.' I,B·.9 B~ot'h,er.,Da'I:,' ',' n,ce the average student, but hIS hne , ' " " wa.s busy. Thinking he was talk- All . those 'people who object "t 'T .', J . 11 ing to some.'sociologist, we dashed , strongly, to having .a Communlst A. , , :o;pper I' an. ' outside-to find out what the man on campus are only worried about ',::, .on the campus was. thinking. He what .he wil Isay and how he will The annual IFPC· Big Brother, 'told usthat he hadn't given the influence the-students. As people .1 want a 'big beautiful ••• bicycle. Dance is presently in the final matter much thought, but now they like the Communists' and stages of preparation. Chairman that it was mentipned, he felt the consider them some of their best of this year's dance is, Jim Spaul- '- thing UC 'needs 'more ,tha,n any- . friends. ding of Alpha Tau Omega; , thing else is a new- mascot. We But even this plan has objec- Joe .Pifist~rnak,".1'reducer .Asststing him: 'on the various 'thought this would be a fine pres- tions. Some feel, that any CoIrl!~' committeesr.arq, Dwight Leimen- , ent, ,~ut wishing to,be thorough in : munist on campus· will .somehow,' ' (This story !s' courtesy of ruso,'i,Ulcive Me or Leave. Me," stoll, 'Theta Ch], Program; Lance our sampling of campus opimon be a bad influence.. This radical' MGM ,Publicity,'pepar-tment.) IIPlease Don't Eat the Daisies" Simpson, Tri~ngle, .Publicity' 7 we asked another student: Actual- group rallies jiround th~ slogan,' One, of Hollywood's most pro- an,d "Where the Boys Are." Guy Cukenberger, Phi,Delt~ ly we didn't ask him; he told us. "The only good. Communist isa lifle,and successful producers, Joe Born and educated in Szilagy- Theta, Tickets;tDave Keller, Phi He \Y.asstanding on a soap box dead one." We have an alterna- ' Pasternak has a life story that it- Somlyo, Hungary, Joseph Herman Kappa 'Tau, Invltatlons; Kenny surrounded by students. What this tive plan that will please even self would make an arresting mo- Pasternak completed high school, Eigher, Pi Lambda Phi, Recep- cam~us needs, he said, is a C0II'!.~ them. tion picture. then decided toJeave for Ameri- tion; and John Dilke, Lambda munist. Our depth 'study' com- Someone with pull behind the ca. His imagination had, been Chi 'Alpha, Decorations. The pleted .we _are ready to recom- iron curtain must obtain for us He came to the United State's theme for the' dance this' year ,mend our Christmas gift to UC. , from Hungary fired by his reading of American Stalin's. body. This shouldn't be will be "A Toast to Big Brother." We. think that VC does' indeed 40 'years ago history, particularly the story of hard. to do for they will be hap- Playing at the, dance again this need a Com.munist on campus - a penniless Abraham Lincoln. py to get rid of it. If we get yearwill be W~ll Hauser and his (if· you heard that guy en. the i m mig rant In 1921 he landed in Philadel- co-operation we can have Stalin ,orchestra. .l' soap box, you'd think so, too.) without a' phia, where his uncle found him su wrapped up in time to put trade. a n I y a job puncl.ing holes in leather It will be held at the Topper ' But thequestlen is what kind of u.nde,r the tree. After -Chrtstmas Club on January 11 from 9 p.m. a Com'munist do we need, or seven yea r s belts. Earning $11.50 the first we'll have Stalin lie in state as later-through week, he felt rich. He saved his to '.1 a. m. Tickets will be dis- what will he do once we get he once did in the Kremlin.) tributed by the pledges through him. Some people would want a combination money. It wasn't long before .he Mere redecoration of the pink. invitations to their big brothers the Communist -to be like the of hard work, worked up to $18.50. But reflect- room including the addition of and friends. . Poet we get every year. Each determina tion ing it has taken his uncle 16 years some dramatic lighting. year we could get some famous and. wise ap- to earn $22.50 a week in the same Notice the advantages of this Communist to give several lec- Joe Pasternak plication 0 f factory, he went to New York plan. We have one of the most fa- creative talent looking for another job. He found AWS PETITIONS ture to the public. The draw- mous Communists on our campus, -he had become an' associate one as bus boy in a Sixth Avenue back should be obvious: no one but there is no fear that he cab The petiti-pns for AWS elec- goes to free lectures. It would producer of motion pictures. The cafeteria at $12 a week. Living tions areavCfi'lable at the Stu- influence the tender formative . Pasternak saga has continued to in a room back-of a butcher shop, be bad taste to embarrass a minds, of our students. Because 'dent Union b8x. Section II pe- Communist on campus by ignor- spiral ever since' till today 'when ,he paid his rent by plucking chick- titions are due in the Office of of his location, students will grow he occupies one· the top niches ens for .his landlord" - ing him-it might even start an accustomed to his face. He will of the Dean of Women, by Friday, it:'ternatiOrial Incident. in the Hollywood hierarchy. Little by little, the movies got Dec. 21, 196~. For Semester become part of UC tradition. (Op- The secret lies in the other part Music, I~ughter. and fun with into his blood. 'Following his and Sedion~."studen,ts;peti'- posing teams willprobably dump a leveling of pictures with urge to be an actor, he went to tions aredu~ on Friday,Jan~ of' our survey. The Communist paint on him.) This trend need strong drematle, content are 18,; 1963., An)1>l)e interested in , shouldn't be just another intellec- not stop with Stalin. All kinds of a dramatic school for two-and- tual.. He should be, rather, the predominant in Pasternak's list a-half months. That cost all his' b~ing.a., officer of AWS-be famous men will, as their last re- new campus mascot. We can of 76' production which includes savings,-$150; and aU btt got out sur.etopick_~p'a petition. The quest, wish to lie in state at UC. IIThree .Smart: Girls," IIAn_ 'of it was a diploma. ' ballots'· will. bJJ pOMed at least dresshim in a clever' costume so In no time at all we can make ue '. he will.look Ilke a, Russian-Bear- ,chors Jlweigh,lIlIThe Great Ca- two weekS' be~reelectionti me. the most famous graveyard in the (Continued on,Page 7) . }i' 'cat. Imagine'how,happyhe'dbe. .world ...... -SHM, Thursday, December 20, 1962 U,NIVERSITY,OF CINCINNATI NEWS RECORD' Page Sever;l

-,Pas;te'rnak • e·.• r;t m ,C' '. 1- Holiday Amusements, (Continued from Page 6) Here. are some. suggestions for 8. Shung at Mansfield, Ohio. When he presented his engraved ~Q_~ -PUS.. overage certificate to the doorman of the 1.~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~. entertaln~ent In CInCInnatI over 9. UC vs. DaVIdson; De~ 22, , ". the holidays: 8:30 p. m.c-Fieldhouse. Paramount Studio on Long. Island, . KAPPA KAPPA GAMMA . To end the section and to create 1 I k ti g B t W d 10 UC Ohi U' it S t at the same time revealing his . '. Christmas spirit, a caroling party . c.e ~ a m. '. urne 00 s or . vs. 10 rnversi y, at- Congratulations to Holly; ShICk '11 b h ld F id '. Th Cincinnati Gardens. urday 29, 8:30 p. m.- eafeteria background, he was ad- f beii S hC t nd WI, e e .n ay evenmg. ey 2 Th . d f . T f . Idh or emg. on op os. our a will travel to four alumns houses . e Soun 0 MUSIC- a t FIe ouse. vised that the best way to get "up- Helen Schinger for being selected . • di ' t D 'D I . h Theater. 11. UC vs. Houston Jan. 2, 8:30 stairs" was through the kitchen .. ROTC Band Queen. . . ~~ I~1~~ aWillr'car~lcat~~~ ~o~: 3. A Far Country-Shubert, p. m.-Fi~ld~ouse. But Joe still yearned- to be an- The Kappas sang Chnstmashouse mother, the Delcarnps, .and Dec. 17-24. . 12. UC vs. ~Ichlta-Jan. 5, 8:30 actor. Director Allan Dwan then Carols t~thelr lVLothersla,st Wed- Mary Rowe Moore. Following will 4. The Ap~rt~ent-Entertam- p. ~.-Fleldhou~e. put him' into the part of yoiing a nesday at the. Mothers.' 9~b. be dancing at the Pike house with ' .rnent Nightly 620 Walnut. 13. For those stag nights: 13 soldier in the Foreign Legion.' At Thursday the Kappas had dmner . Christmas spirits for »u. 5. The Whisper Room-featur- Gayety. the end of one day, Joe was terse- with the Fathers' Club, Pappa ing Ada Lee through New 14. Imerial Follies. l~ informed that he had absolute- Pappa Gimrni. They,· gave. lIS. ~OPHOMRE CLASS Year's - 7608 Reading Road. 15: Visit and patronize your J,y no talent.for, acting. six new stero. albumns for Christ- On Thursday at noon the Sopho 6. Mutiny on the Bounty- U~i.versity Library. However, when another film op- mas. . . ". . '.-:' ~ore class officers cabinet. and Valley. 16. VISIt the Museum of Natural portunity presented- itself, Jhe ex·' Judy Routzang was selected co-chairmen of th~ Spirit' Ban-' 7. Living Room-s-Carmen History. actor took it: Although it meant Kappa of .themonth. .'. quet, ~U~ Sale; .and Sophomore McRae. " 17. Sleep .. sacrificing $64 a week, he accept- The formal at SUImUlt HIlls Beer Party, under the .direction ed the position of fourth-assistant Country Club was a hugh-success. of Joe Burnett and Jody Winkler director with Allan Dwanat $16. ' , will serenade the Dean of Wo- CHI ,OMEGA Pasternak-was on his way. Within .men's staff and the Dean of two years; he became first as- ·The Chi Omega ·.formal' was Min's staff in their offices. sistant director and drew $75. Merry· Christmas held last Frrdayat-Kenwood-Coun- .This will be done to show the His first individual enterprlse try Club: The.theme of the dance Sophomore's appreciation for all . Fro,m the Soci·aI' Staff: wasth(! writing anci ~irectingf was "M'agicMistletoe" and .the of the 'guidance. and - help that of a two.reel comedy IIHeip pledges did a.beautiful job of ex- the staffs have given' them. this Su,e Heil, Editor Yourself.JlDiredorWesley Ru,g- ecuJing;,~histhe.nie with their year making the class Of "65" Jody Winkler, Assistant Editor ,Iessaw .it and .took .Pasternak decorations.:" f the most successful Sophomore fo Universal as aS$ista!1t dlr.~c- Last Tuesday the Chi ..O'swent class of all. 'Staff: Judy Hilsinger Linda Jane Miller, Tessie, Burns, tor. I" 1928, CariLaemm~e.pro- to' Scarlet Oaks. and serenaded Anne Harper, Janet Sprague, Donna Avery. posed tha the go toE~fop,e as the women at. ~h.is Old Folks SIGMA PHI EPSILON associate producer. Pasternak Home: A{~~r.vlslbng here, the made but one conc;lition--:-that he Chi O's made their annualrtrip On Saturday, Nov. 17, Ohio go in the.finestsuit'obtainable. to their National Headquarters Theta chapter of Sigma Phi -On his .return, •..1~36, he turned which.is in Hyde Park:' Her¢th'e Epsilon celebrated the annivers- Gut the . box-office hit "Three President of Natlcnal.ChfOmega ary of its thirteenth year on the Smar! Girls,' which established gave the'girlsher'hol~d

19&~ ;It 10 ;l.m. PI KAPPA ALPHA for the evening;' Dr. Dubach's PENDANt: Last Tuesday I the. Pikes had a timely message outlined that' the [rom our Selection of members will be fireside \Vi~\1,Alpha Chi < Omega purposes and goals 'of a fratern-' il...... '".' made at-th~t time, No prevr- at the Pike house. . ity were to serve as a horne away vast collection T~is Tuesday th~y' held a from .home for its members, to ous experience is, necessary., Christrnasvdinner at the 'house. establish a decent moral attitude, iust a: strong desire t~ sho~ At this time presents ofa sweater, to serve as a intellectualstimulus, and 3: gold charm Were presented and to create a lasting, loving Charge your enthusiasm •. to their Dream 'Girl, . Maxine brotherhood. In delivering this Plus Taxes Accounts Spritzer, by President Bob Felts; messagevDr. Dubach also point- ' ed out the evils that confront the Invited fraternal system today, and that the only persons who can save Open Monday, Wednesday, Thursday, FridaY 'til 8 p.m. _this system are the present Tuesday and Saturday 'til 5 P.M. undergraduates. The official presentation of the U. G. Dubach Scroll, to Brother' Hard; and, the Scott Key, to didftdn g)timtmtd WuIIinJ Brother Edmonson, by Dr. Du- bach climaxed' the evening. A SALESROOM AT OUR FACTORY, SIXTH STREET BETWEEN RACE AND ELM song fest concluded the Founder's Day' celebration. NEWLY OPENED .... Leon's Vorsity Salon (Near Campus at 129 Calhoun St.) On--Sunday, Dec. 9, the men of Pi Kappa Alpha gave their annual Christmas party for the orphans of Riverview House. Here twenty-six Phone 281-3 1SO children' were entertained with presents, the magician, Chuck Somen- shein, and Santa Claus played by Jerry Mau'ch. Following ·the enter- tainment, food and drink were had by all. ------,Fashion First Jar the Holidays J At Leon's . " ., I '1 BE'RT'S PAPA DINO'S' I I Famous .Italian Foods .C,ut . }:$3' . ··'5·:0··: I, Sham.~oo ' ~'. .,,.,~.•.. ~. , , . I All Foods Prepared Fresh Daily Wave . .." '.' '.. I I • PIZZA,. . . , I . , • .• •.,$~•.O(t a~d !lP I S:paghetti • Lqsagna :t_;...:-:"~.:...--~_:_--"':'::..:- -~-:- ~~:~,•.~~:~~~~~ J 347 Calhoun Also Salo~s At-3896 Reading Road 861-5828 Downtown - 18 E. 4th St.... 381-1667 ~~'"

~ Page Eight . 0- ~. >'- - ,,' UNIVERSITY. OF'C·I N'elN'NJ\Tr NlEWS"RECORD . Tnursday, December 20, 1962."' The 'Kansas'., Trip UD,At:Garderis ,lTonlght;l; by Po u I -Voqe I'gesang, -.::

'Cincinnati's tour through the Midlands andInto Kansas happened ~#> without any .major -incidents although, during·a· brief lull' at .'Kansas The Bearcats.receive .four more ..challenges to .their un- < City, TWA and Central Airlines coordinated long enough, to misplace rerlCiclOu,s' i ,ti.~'.:: -.'__ .~:~,:':~ '1-;:' ,-, .;;",,::,_ .."'t. CdtS:~~:",.. ,::.,;:_i,..:.<.:::~ my luggage (for the ensuing' flight to Manhattan) which' I finally re- deteated .streak'. from.·"'~tirtiinportant!f·foes·"' before embark- trieved onour ireturn trip via~C some 'four days'later., . , ing on the ',.carnpaig~'fortheir'fifth>;c()nsecut{ve 'Missriurr "We arrived in Manhattan-around 3 p.rrl;~.S.T.'alld·aftera brief Cage:'"CldWtess;~ meeting the squad dejiartedfor Ahearn-Fieldhouse ·anda·briskwork~ Va~leY90nferen:ce chanipiqn~l1iP.<'~~' . ," ..•...... •.•. out .. Built in 1950,' the' arena 'accommodates nearly 12,500 and cunat- Theffrst'MVC,game will be 'January 5 ,with. ,Wichita .•at. Iz)S"::~:'t'"t' ··":,hi;".;#.. ,'. ..traetively reminds -one slightly of the. stockyards with.t its ,.."all-dirt ,,;;..'.a'e "'\";'.,wS· . .floor and dungy atmosphere .. .: ' .- .' . tile "UC'Jiel(Ul theva-rsitytrotlted from. th.e· floor, some' of· the: alums and .bOosters Tonigh:t Miami ,Val~ey., 'rival 6.~~sc>phomor~',.c;:.tnter.Joe.,Helt•.·~; nati's :,;tourin:g ""B~a're'ats"shOOlf'-off? ,long for the trip decided to.'Strut .their' stuH.·c ~ecaus~ of, he under- Dayton, will: take-on, the i national: zeit ,a~·hi9h~h~f·.al~,Americ~n,:::Y their- early.,.;first:-:lialf··'jitters,; withe Z standable.reludancy:"of:ct *"w, oilly' enough for twooPP9sin9' fo~r~. champions Ja6·8:.30t: at: 'Ci'ilciftnatr', '. whc>h.$',:a•••er.aged;,2~:,.pqit\ts'all~t . some'sli¢ks.J1~ting(alld,:ad~ogg~a ; mancrews.werecavail'abl..The Misfits, captail1ed'byCoachJ.ucker, Gardens. 'Th~ freshman game' be-. 11:-:eb9.vnJjil9.c~~,;:.~5:6~:~:)~efQre~ Cincinnati Enquireri dynamit: Dean Hilmar Krueger, ,and' hustling tween ..!he. t\\o'0 ,scho,ols\V)llpJ.:e~.: Dtieselt.·~,." '. "'r,. ,,:,c,; ~l'~""Y\IVo'oc;l\I;v.~n,si- 4~7..::t!er;,ry:;< >--Frank Berr',!t. ~CiI)C.y a,lum. 'Encountering this. fearsomefoursome.f Ahearp.,',Ri~Jdh()us({.;Fri<1ayt'nigQ(~ '.l'"":'-: - /-,. f 1\ ,- ",., ',' . ',il.. '. .•.. '; -~':' - ." _ '1"~ ,,' Captain' Tay~B.ker, called on doorway-dodger', 6-S' Gene' Kelley; re- Dayton, l~~~:NI;r('cl)ampion;",j,s" ..'.HolI~ndl,,~dr.604,8H,I'Beerl)1:a., •. .. Itt~~:a·blitz'9f1>u,Q~t$.'Qy:·Jt~~k iuveYriated Ralph'Mur'ray, Uni~l'r Supervisor 01 Placement· and .ce- coached-by. T.om::131ackbuPI1·'oIie,:T"e' ,~o..t~a?,s?~a;v:~;n",e~:m!!~, ,~ Bonha;m,,:aIlc''\GeQrg~;"Wil$on,plush . " , ,','" ./, ..",:, ,b&fore:.,~l)avld~!.,'~f~,u'r;;¥lc-. ordination, .-nd 'alu"", Bob Kluener to' form.hisR.ambling Redshirts.·' . ..ofsthe game's ,top m~nt~rs. In 15.' tor'iesrwereo~e-rE ••ski":JNQf':, cool: ossi: initial' stages mainlyon .the daz'~~ team would make' ittightertha'i) they' really did. ApparentJymany ~hl~lIelewskl. -.: . .'. ,;. . bility for.-placing second behind, Without .Ch~Iele:wskI;: stish, 6-5 forward, rugged Tony Cerkvenik, their leading,' rebounder up. . expected losses to ColoradQ ~nd Wilson's follow that. gave the and scorer, and dependable 6-8 center Art Becker. !Saturday ~the Bearcats come up ,S.anta Clara the Shockers are con- Beai'cats a 14·12 lead it never re.-: Kansas and Kansas State both have their stars, too: InexPeri- agains.t Davidson, a team that is sIdered a top threat. to dethrone leased. . en~ed soph, George Unseld, should impTove as the season progresses proving to be one of the nation's. the Bearcats. . Still the Wilde,ats refused t'o' I and is definitely the 'Hawkers chief asset. The lumbering 6-7 pivotman sleepers. The Wildcats went into -:..Leading Wichita is 6-6 guard- yield and continued yappi'ngat the '~ats', ..beels by .spHcing ~- clipped in 34 points for the two games mainly on his deft fade-away a second encounter with second- forward D a v e Stallworth, who rugged rebounding with some jumper from ten to twelve feet out. He still is overly aggressive and ranked Duke sporting a 4-1 re- averaged 20 per ,game last year. , cord, and ,the one loss was a 76- The Shockers also return rugged amazing outside. accuracy. With was whistled from both games for the limit of personals. 68 defeat by Duke. After years 6~8 Sam Smith and 5"10 sharp- UC barely in front, 17-16, Dale _ The Bearcats may have faced one of the .finer upcoming shooters as the Southern Conference door- shooter Ernie Moore. Two top Heidottingreplaced Larry Shin- in the Midwest in the Wildcats' Willie Murrell. The lithe 6-6 forward mat, Davidson came back with a newcomers are junior college. gleton to combat the backboard kept K-State in both the UC and the Arizona tilts with his fancy, one- 14-11 record last year, including transfer 6"0 Len Kelley, and 6c10 superiority of the Wildcats.· hand 'poppers. Tom Thacker had his hands full with the elusive junior a 12-game winning streak~ sophomore 'Nate Bowman .. After that the UC 'five steadily· who triggered 23 markers through the hoop, 16 coming in te opening clawed ahead of their rivals and half: Then the ne'Xt night against K-State he pumped in 25·points to left at intermission with a still lead all scorers. However, Kansas .State's development hinges around slim 40-34 margin.' - ' the progress of gawky ROger Suttner, their big but bungling 7-0 center, 1.':f~Y~.?· By halftirne,Bonham Jed:. the who tallied only 18 points and 'shagged' ninemeasely rebounds i~ twp basket br;igade on six of eight ! games. fielders and added six of six char-c: , One can not really say much more about'the 'Cats themselves ) [}ony f}aths. . ..' ity tosses for 18 points.Tlfack~r except,that they adjusted to the road tests and the hostile crowds. potted five. for nine plus two. free very credi,tably. 'George Wilson ~looks better itheach additional ,I throws,' and 12 tallies,·while. ~~(, perform,ance and probably was the differen'ce in both ourgam~s. State's l\1urrell flipped in' six of Ron Bonham, who Was nursing an irritating cold throughout the "How sweet it is." This is 'a Ken Cunningham, and F r i fz eleven and four gift chances to Classic, asserted h,im~elf well in the rebounding department. and typical statement o£,Coach Jucker Meyer, who execute the data com~ pace the hosts with 16. when a team member is,. able piled.. Oddly enough, the,. red With Suttrr.er sidelined at·. the stretched his string 'of charity tosses to 21 (two shy of Oscar's mark) to score repeatedly on 'his 6p- shirts do a better job than' th~ start of the seconq half, UGalert~: before failing. Tireless Tony Yates threw up hi$tightdefensive net ponent. .This. statement is ~fitting' oppOnents. ' ly began.feeding .the· pumpkin' to' as usual and, along with the press employed by Thacker and Shingte- after last week's. victories inth~ :Again, this ..Week, . ilnother. Wilson wh()cwas now"'guarded"by ton, enabled the Bearcatsto edge ahead of K-State for good midway . West. Kansas' and ~ansasState' challenge will confront the ever" the shiftier but 'smaller Murrell. in the first half. Tha.cker, described! by one Kansas paper as one are both good ball clu1)s. Ourimp~Qvin~Bearciit aggression., Time and again, the.nimbleWil" 61••• who has more' moves than a hula dancer," teamed with victories over these teams de- Torii~t, we~l~y hO$tto an ai- son wheeled past the .transplanted' Shingleton for the tourney's most electrifying thrill. Surrounded livered much needed.;con#dence. waY$ da~gerous DaytOn QUint.et~ forward for .several 'easy layups)' by three opponents ThaC;.kerunhesitantly flipped the ball. ba'ckhand- ) The behind tbe scene efforts Records'mean"very little \vhen that- helped swell the-Giricy,ad-"j to .Larry in the corner who wasted no time in syvishins:fII beauty of scouting reporrts'amr: effec- you' play a te'amcoached, 'by vantage. from there. tive ex'ecution by the 'unrecog- T~rtI Blackburn.- He always The Beareats' bulge 'continUed nized.! "red$hirts'l have ,been c(jme.$.upw.ith a, new trick or to .mount .liS WilsoniThacker, ,* * * * indispensibleto" our success. two. . 'For the benefit of those who might be confused about the eligibil- a~dBonh~m steadily ~'Iternated The stiuters tec.eive the public- pn 'Saturday we .gO against baskets' that, eventually pro- ,: ity of a pair of old-time, pests from Bradley-Mack Herndon ami Joe ity and public praise, but with- Davidson. EarlieI:' this ,year many duc.eel UC~s;widest gap, 71-54, Strawder. Mack still had one year remaining and what better way out the "red shirts" ~he' start- asked, "Who is ·Davidson?" After could it be spent than to harrass bitter MVC foe Cincinnati. Strawder, ers could riot.8(:complish their th~ir' encounter with Duke, rated with three minutes remaining. on the other hand, doesn't'return until second semester which is goal: '. . se'cond;;'itl which the game was Kansas Statedespel'atelY. began excellenfnews for the Bearcats since they face the Braves in Pe<>ria, Thesepeople'behind the scenes decided in the last few minutes" pressing the UC reserves at ,this Jan. 17, before the beginning of 'the last semester. include' Assistant· Coach Baker many disillusioned fans no longer point· but only: succeeded in shav- Incidentally, for any~ne interested, Bradley's tout:.e~ frosh and Freshman. Coa.ch powless, ask this question. ing.the,J17-marker .deficit to its final ..75-6( c.ount...... swamped their varsity 'mates,' 85.71,~·ii1their annuat scri'mmage con- who spend many hours traveling Th,e only t~ue analysis of the For the evening~ UC b~gged a test. Despite an oH-season in Bradtey.basketbaU Brave fans can 'and many nights editing film, to abilities of your foe is, not wholly confront us with .probabl~ game determined by past scores or fine 57% from the field to K- look with anticipation to next year and especially to 6~~frosh phenom situations. The others -'involved National ranking: any analysis is State's 38%:, Bonham, 'gripped by Ernie Thomp~on from Saginaw, Mich. All he did was hit 14 of 18 include Dale Heidotting, captain .proved or disaproved after the an agonizing cough, slacked .off from the field, flip in five for five gratis tosses, and hauled down 11 of the "red shirts," Larry Elsas- horn, blows for the opening tip in the second half but ,'finished rebounds. ser, Bill Abernathy, Gene SII!i!h, oft. _ '_" with ,a ,game high of 27 tallies. : Thursday, December. 20, 1.962 UNJVERSI:TY OF CI'NCINNJ\fl";N'EWS RECORD PaaeNine ·NrJ.ti9f1aLS~~neQlear$~As'NotreDame, '''it\, SAE Keep$ Crown,

" - D~ake. Buckeves 'C ontinue,\fo' Surorise Downs Phi .Delts by Ron Haneberg Irish have been walloping all op- Coming into view are the .basketball intramurals ..with position with three sophs up This .column. is admittedly something of an experiment. front. . " theseason tip-off.being Thursday, January 10. .Due Wednes.. H~pe~ttllYi: it·;Wi~l. replacethetrather tedtous.natienal.cover. ~frhe.,'Bifg-·Tenconference ..scene day, January 9"are .billiards-arrd table .tennis entries with age' .with amore in£ormaldj~c\l~~ion.Qftbe~:tr~nds:in "l1a~,becom~,. slightly Jess. confus- ~rti.cIe ing; 'Ohio State, 'which rallied .thematches scheduled to begin January 15. coHe~~;p.asf,~J~all'throughput4he"Co4ntry.: AJtho.ugq.it;:will past- winless TexasChristiaQ,' 74· .Tn the volleyball.championships --.------necessarily .bebased .on '1Ily·views,·it, will never .'degenerate ,·62,' and Minnesota, who-bounced .·.Sigma.Alpha:Epsilon'~ .:powerful-. "get .the -opportunity to meet .Pi.. int9a ~ompl~t~ly.subjective.series ;ofpre~,ictions l\Tor.will ,::B.r:ad'leY·,'73-63,remaiIied ·unbeat;.;. -team duplicated .last ~ea:r's .feat . lam, while Pike vdefeated ATO, i/j,el'l:,$o,did'anpther' J~ading can- of: dumping a~verYhar.d,'fighting league one .runner-up .. this cq~.u.~.~.,s{~plY':be:\~k.~s.(Q~/'·' .'...... '. . "., .," .,... didateJQr theloopcrowp,as,po- ,the scores of the importantgaines· adarkflorse.. tenilcillYLgreat."Illinois: crept by <'Phi-Delta Theta-team to. Win-the, :Als·o.reaching a climax is hand- pf the pre.vious'week;:Tl1e.Southeasternbattle- should :Io\VCl"state,"76-7~ ino,vertime.· University Championship. ,ball. Having thus -far reached the -Th.r:e~iH.be~only;one oth.r'" b~ ev.en more inter.estinl~., A cOIJJ~, The other. topsqtlad,Wiscon~in, . This~~wasthe 'second:rheeting -finals and waiting-to meet their " " •• " "'."".' C .""'l-: .:.. bmatIon·of·Adolph Rupp's:'propa- '10'8t:#11: ,aIIia.zing:.honlE~ game, to' of the year)J~t\VE!epit~ese,'teains; .: ,'f~~s,~re. Neil. Braum, who ·defeat. 9rp~~?r~I,;.~!~ ~~~a_~ca'rs,WtU,,:,ganda; .aiIe~sy. schedule, and. the ;little" indiart.a· State; 'Even inote' "be:·Ignored:.~lnC:e,'.they;a~ lmore'~,' school» :'segf~gation""PTjlicy.'!:na~ thefi):"si;,coming; in JeaglJecom-, ' ed J>:en,Van' Bruen in the quarter- ,sl1ocking··,:was"'rthe'faet ...that .':the. ·,peti#oniwith.i1:pe .ehamps.winning . finals. M.. .Cohen' Br,aun'~ oppo- ';t~an~ade'q"af~,ly,c:overed-::in'ttRt; '.~'.made"¥issisSiPpi:~~tate(an:( uri: ,'Badgersblewa6fj-49'lead; in the.: that'. one ialso: The scorescwere. . nerit, "beat hard.,!isg1:;ltingDan Metz or~~(~tti~le~'~bf: the sports ~'c..:; known •. They,jhave"four 's~arteri; ,:'87..86'loss .. 411 .. ten "starters' ··hit, , ..all cl()~eas:Phi -Delt tookvthe" .,of. ;Theta .Chi tin jthe .quarters to ;ti,~':, ~rhif ~~~~~':i~u~ie'F,t,:~i'1tba~k:.~ir?m, la~t· :,_Year's.,"~ui~t~t ,;douple·flgures.·', ..' ' •.•.. first ··game·, 15-12. SAE.;'.then:· >ill>ta,in'the .chance to .goon to the ·b4t:;lftC?~ ..,:gf1n~ral.·,.·thah;.us.ulll·';". which ~pcn the~,leag:ue'tltle;'p.e~t '1'he;Mi,ssouri r • Vall~Y:COf1fer.' stormedrbackctoaake" 1&:13 and :fin~ls;. .8.; brief: I;~k;;~f tH~ ;;!., Kent.uc}QY~;.and::',ba~'the:besf' re- "POW~rtiO\1SfS: ·elie. 'sf1ouldremain fhe,'top'l 15~12vict()ries .to achieve : .~'. ,." ..••• ';' ....• -,: tucky: 'lmd~ Auburn'.'."..,-n.ot.·tar'b. e· "tou9hi 10\fiO' $tat'.l'ulsa·'also c ~Ile· .. ~~ ,'appears' to "b'e'eveli"'" .' . . " .'" Pete, ···'DiSalvo~·~Sob·:Deddensl ..Chi. Kaplan's opponent as·of We3'ker'ltlian~~uS'iial "this"seas~n;::r hin~."...... :..~' " .' k~pt :its" slat~'cI~an,>wit" Yi<:~, John ·.L.eame" 'D,l c~"Mileham, " now '~asn¢. bee.,: dec;ide~ with St '. 'John) 'has - beenOOcimafed';'<:' ·RupP!s:W~ld~aits,·\VhO'.cOnquere~ tori.es .over' FlOrida .and· Arkan.; and ,[)av4it. Devor'CI.,Alternates Muber, of Thet.a ,Chi, yfrt ·toplay· by.gradtlations;'N~w Yorki;lJ' has .F!orIda'~ta.~~'. and'.Northwestern sas. Even, North Texas" State 'were 'Chuck, Rothenbush~ and .AlIan -Greenwald., When;.~the 'j . eek 'th~ee.s,tr.·i9htbefOie'~ii,9 lqs~do{Ir:;,:key.:'~players;:beoause,of easily .last· \\7 \,3;re' ra1her"srriall .won Larry" Swartz. Phi Delt,'s team'.winners Qf' these ~two matcheS. afademic. ~~ficie,~cies,.:;'l>nb' "Pro-'~' an~~m~y be'a.,yearaway,:.'Auburn, , "bulled -;~ver,..by.,Ho..,ston,. 76-6,9.· consisted of John Dolby, Rich 'are'decid&d the champ,ions.hip vidence.va- 64"5.7i·',victor"over -Stc- which also has' four 'returning .'However,the Big E'ightappears Halberg, Lor'" '.Warbei"g, . Jim will'be played 'December ~1. Louis<'ilasl~week";i:;811di,St .> -Bon- regulars.crernained.uabeaten with to '''ave lost most· of ifscl.ss; aventure, i.:Wboif-sM'rled,ttepick:t:tp< a .",fj7,,57',·:Win,,~Yer/ Texas/Tech. ·~.·o:nIY·CoIOrado s.ems··.to·,,,. of steam-with a~92;67.shellacking o£'. Tennessee}:whlch won, ,only".four ., nati~rtal ranking qualify_, . RentState,,·appear.:upto:na,tionill games .Iast. year,;. .surpassed .that :The .Far West's eventualleader stan'd-ards.:,:';Pennsylv,anja s > .who.v- tota~ with, .an!~asy 65.~45win'over will probably he' Beattle,Stan- ~ap;e,Y,anderbilt its".fo.:urt.h, Sewanee and -IS a ..real.Jongshot. Iord.c-Oregon -State, or' Arizona straight victim', 74-70,' is' the best.. 'rne, .Midwest .promises .to .re- State.': The' ;Arizonians'. victory lQng~~hot,hq~e.: .' .', -',... ; maip,:>the·.eapitol iof. college-bas- skeirr reached six with their 'wins , , .Tiie,'ilire~:big,coI.1ferences· ..in ketb~l,l. Unbe~te~ Bowling Green _over Kansas andJKansas ..State in, th~.~South -are vmuch more ipro- ~um~hate? MlamI,and:. W. On.ta~- the Sunflower vClassic. .Touring mismg. Second-ranked Duke with. 10 ,<,by trfty points 'each ..and Seattle 'prepared' for its big clash Jeff MtiHins and Art Heym'anat . s~~pp~d:past Western l{e;ntucky with-Loyola by spanking Dayton, forwards,' seems to be far super- by 25. Independent Loyola (Ill.) 'i75~58.Oregon State lost des se- ior to the other ACC .squ'ads'-The we~t ~ve~.~he ce~tury mark twice cond Of 'the year, 61-59 to Cali- Blue Devils.' walloped C'l" . more against -Iittle-known v.foes fornia; The Beavers, ·:·however, '. emson, rt Iidif thelr thi d I will 'have Mr. Football, Terry 92.-.67.). an,ds. .nea..,ke...d. 'past .L0u·.·.··.·.IS- •0501ki I.Y. ..N' I t err..D.' ir .-p. .ace'AP." viHe; 76"75,as'Heym~m'-totaled ranking, .0re ia~epon,tmued ',Baker, 'with them for the im-, 30 and 35 in the two successes <. on ,~ts:C0p1~b?~4(ichm1),.i~.W~tlJ,aq portant Kentucky Invitational.'. ~'., . ...",.'. amazmgly· SImple 74-48 conquest Baker averaged 11.prints a game " W~~t th.e~o:uth~~n , Conference of .a .solid. Creighton, squad, .for as floor leader for' 'the Beavers . ...' Vlr?lnla, with Rod Thorn,_ their sixth straight success. The last season. was eensidered the best ln all . '. . preseason polls. But unbeaten Virginia Tech has four starters back . from a 19·6 squad and Alumni Greats: -No. 10· now can' b,e considered a very Bart Satsky 'of Pilam attempts a spike in the semifinals ot the sl~ght favorite.' Davidson, who voUeybali tourney Saturday morning, as his teammate Stu Kaplan slipped past ,Furman 66·63, is Wiesenhahn, ·Former Great, watches and a Phi Delt player prepares to return the shot. ,.Phi Delt went on to win 15-11, 13·15, 15·10. _ ------U'C,· OippOnel1ts ~ow Plays ,For ABL Rens Cackowski, B r U ce Voge,lge- Dy uale wOlr Pressure· packed situations 5«1'ng,and Terry t Roof. While the B~arcats rolled along Bob Wiesenhahn, 6-4, 215-pound seemed to bring out· the best in In the morn in g semi's the champs knocked off weaker Pi many of their opponents had clos( forward for the,UC Bearcats was, the burly Wiesenhahn, a' Cincin- # games' last' week. Scores are al for two years, mainly a strong nati-native., In the closest game Kappa .Alpha 15-0, 15-5. Pike was follows: ' rebounderand inspirational lead- of 'his senior year, a 74·71 over- champ of league four play. Xavie-r 91, Gan:non 61 er for the touted national power. time win over HQusrton, Bob In a hard fought match between TOM CHERRY two very evenly matched teams, U. of Kentucky Bowling Green 86, Miami 36 He., along with his teammates, tallied six UC's last 11 points Lexington, Ky. Ohio U. 72, Marshall 71 was playing in the shadow of in the extra session, including Phi- Delt knocked off last year's Says, "Any funner-ups, Pi Lambda Phi. With student. man Minnesota 73, Bradley 63 / Oscar Robertson. But in his sen- a vital three·point play with 1:34 or woman, can ior year, Bob came ofage. PhiDelt winning ,the first match stay at Arizona State 71, Kansas 62 left. He finished the game with Chicago's 15-:11 the Pilams stormed back Providence 64,'St. Louis 57 r Entering the 1960-61 season, 20' points, one of !the 10 times YMCA Hotel h~ had scored a total of 353 to an exciting 15.13 win to tie and enjoy a Davidson66~ Furman 63' he'd reached the 2O·range that weekend for points in 52 varsity games. In season. the match play. Phi Deltreg~ined $15,00, Here is Wichita 67, Brigham Young 61 bow I did it." his final season Ihe bucketed their. original form and went on Detroit 93, Xavier 75 , Jucker was riot the only one tc 439 points in 26 games for a recognize Bob's value, for Coad to defeat the PHams 15-10 ·in the Bradley 79, Murray State 78 Fri. P.M. Dinner at YMCA Hotel $1.15 fine 16.9 average. At vari,ous Charley Wolf of the C.incinnati third' game. Kansas 75; Wyoming 57 ' tiin.es·he .Ied 'the, tea~ ..in .~~orin,9 Pilarrf had originally' won, their Chicago Symphony 2.50 Royals made· him the club's No, Coke .10 Tulsa 85, FloHda"79 al\d rebounding, ..and he never 2 draft choice. As Wolf saw it: play in league one and went on • "- Room at Y Hotel 2.-7:8 Drake 74, Iowa State 52 failed 'to deliver the clutch to beat Sigma Nu in the quarter- · St. Louis;69',Jowa58 "There were few big .men .lef1 basket when it was needed. and none' of them hit the board~ finals ..Phi Delt had ,beaten league Sot. A.M. Breakfast at Y Hotel .58 Marqoette72, Kansas State 71 "I've never. coached aplay~r or'had the desire that Bob has.' three champ Delta Tau Delta to Art Institute -Tour Free Xa:v:ierJ03;jacksonvill~94 with a finer' attitude' toward the Lurich at Bamboo Inn 1.45 Wisconsih 84, Mi'a-mi58 game,i' Jticker says o~ hiin:"tt's Seattle ·'7S;.Daytorl58 Sat. P.M. "Nat. ,Hist. Museum Tour Free not just the free naIl he grabs, :II ••••••.. Dinner at Y Hotel 1.t5 Of-do.U':62,Iowa,54, or t4~baskethe tips in wit.lj a St\-i,>Johns54;;St~::Louis,48 . .lCAsk One of My Sat. nite dance, Y Hofel .10 second effott~ but also the desire Coke date .45 LOYGla·(New'Odeansy 77, .North he;imprints to- 'the rest of t~e Customers" >< Room at Y Hotel .2.78 Texas St..66, team. that 'makes Bob so vaIu .• · Maryland.6!7,·,Virginia, 61;,'"'" able."" " , ,;~~,_ Sun. A.M. Breakfast at Y .,",otel .58 Worship' at Central Church Mr. Tuxedo Inc•." Lunch at Y Hot~1 1.?5 Sun. P.M. Bock to campus YOUR CONVENIENT FORMAL . TAD'S' ·STEAKS Total $14.97 '20' E• Fourth ·.Street ~. RENTAL SHOP ,MEN. WOMEN. FAMILIES Stay at Chicago's Offers YOMCA HOTEL 'STUDENTDISCO'UNT -PRICES '.', 826· South Wabash at the edge of the Loop cKcommodations for ~,OOO • rates $2.70 ond up AI·lfo'r $1.19' ..:". CornpleteFormal Outfit ....• ;,. '0 .~ •• 11'.2'1 ~ Write for reservations or ca1lWA2·3183 l,Open ,'til 10 p~m. Daily ·'TII.M'idnight Saturday .(.212,W'.McMillan 621-4244 Page Ten Thursday, December 20, 1962, Swimm,ers Blastlndianopolis· AC~,63.'!:'32; {lyer fresh Balanced Attack Paces .Third Straight,; Meet 'KLtte~s by Bud McCarthy Farr and, Russ Desserich, Win- . Racing to their third straight gard was second in the 500-yard . At Gardens win of the season, the University freestyle, although he' recorded John' Powless's freshman squad of < Cincinnati swimming team the same time as the winning lAC carries a 3-0 r~cord into ion~ght's swamped the Indianapolis Ath- swimmer, and third in the 200- encounter with, the Dayton' fresh- . letic Club over the weekend to yard freestyle. _ men. Dayton supposedly recruited , the tune of 63-32. Again Cincy , Penn came in .second in' the 50· . a 'fine frosh ..group this year' but' far outclassed the opposition as yard freestyle. Farr finished the YO!1ng Flyers have su'ffered' the Bearcats garnered seven of second in the one-meter diving " 'two losses in three games so far: .eleven first place finishes includ- and Desserich placed third in the ing one tie. "Indianapolis was 200-yard breaststroke. this' yearvone .to Bud's Cafe: the' pretty tough in some events but Commenting on some of the other to the Central State frosh~' didn't give us too much compe- perfcrmances, Hartlaub had .Leading Dayton are H~nry tition," reflected coach Paul special praise for Ter auds and Burlong from Dayton Roosevelt." Hartlaub afterwards. Sap.adin adding ,that the latte,r and Billy Cassidy from Louisville I . UC presented a balanced at- has "made a good comeback" St .. Xavier. Both stand 6-5, and tack with all sharing in the scor- after being out of the water all both are averaging 20.3 points pet; ing honors. Two-time All-Amer- summer because of a bout with game and 9.7 rebounds. ~ - ican Gary Heinrich won the 200- "mono." . John, Serbin, rugged 6-6 for- :yard butterfly, Gerry Sapadin :' Concerning the team victory ward from Hammond, Indiana, was victor in the 50-yard free- Hartlaub said, "It showed we're leads the Bearkittens in' both~ style, Ed Beck took the 200-yard on the right track. Everyone im- scoring (23.3) and rebounding backstroke, Danny Garteiz. cap- proved on their times. This early (14.0). Following Serbin in scer-" tured the one-meter diving and in the season you. don't want to ing are Reland West (15.0), Fred Terauds tied with lAC's come along too fast but just -im- D.jve Cosby (13.3), and Tom' Harton in the 200-yard freestyle. prove with each time out." B~e.denharn (12.3). The remain,ing firsts for Cin- The team takes a break in the I;)anny Garteiz, former Pan~Americandive'r, is silheuetted against The Bearkittens as a. team are cirnati came in the relay events. schedule over the Christmas va- the Laurence Hall wh,do\Vs as he soars past the high board. Garlteiz shooting a sparkling .462 from the John Heiman, Bill Edwards, cation, not seeing action until the and Bob Farr" give the Bear.cat aquatic crew unaccustomed stre~gth field. Leading shooter has been Tom Glueck and Phil Meng cap- weekend of Jan. 1i .and 12 when 6-4 guard West, who is hittingCi;t .ty..ed the 400-yard medley relay in "the diving events;' " . they travel to Indiana and Miami a fine .583 clip. Dean Lampros, and Sapadin, Glueck, Bill Done- of Ohio respectively. However, 6-3' springboard, is shooting .571, , hoo and Meng teamed for the the squad will workout right followed by Biedenharn (.533),' 4CC-yard freestyle relay. through the layoff ith p-ractice ' . '. 0'" . KU' - Cosby (.463), .and Serbin ( .4~9).. : Ii' Cincinnati's victory was further sessions taking place in the morn- Bear cat5 vercome·, I After Serbin the Bearkittens .supported by the performance of ings in preparation for the IU . .: " have been getting nearly equal . Clean Wingard, John Penn, Bob meet. ' I',' 6'4' 4'9 Y' ',. t ',''" rebounding from-Lampros; Bied- S.taII ..H eP$ .. -Ie ory ~sn~~~~:~n~::~t/;p~o~ee~7s~f bPI VI ' 49, outshooting them .462 to ,~413,: y auoge .gesan~ , 'and outscoring them 8I.T~"to ;70. : LAWRENCE, KANS.-Successfully completing their, The 'Kittens three victories have _ initial road junket of the season with but moderate difficulty, come -against National Cash R~g- , : " , ' , ,' . ' ister, and the "best-ever" trosh: DC s domineering -Bearcats muzzled scrappy Kansas, 64-49, . teams Of Kentucky and Miami. Saturday at Allen Fieldhouse before 8500 curious spectators. :;Another guard who has given, . Earlier in the': 'curtain raiser ' some good performances has been: Arizona State resorted to an in- 'Ca,ts stretched their le'ad to, serappyDan Jones, a non~~cholar~ . soluble zone defense and' a: whip- . 37-3'0 at halftime on a Bonham. ship. 'sparkplug from Me'Nicholas, ' pet-quick attack during the wan-Wilson bustout. "

iiW: minut~~'to 'sub~hi~ r battling . The"' second haIr, was contrast- ,Kansas Sta~e~ 77-72,m. an aChfn- i\lglY~··duli~r.:th.an its predecessor Ii • p,~cked. thr~ller: Th~ WIn, coup ed as KU went for nearly five min- :1!~leon Wingard' and Gar,ry Sapadin_of UCand Greg Mutz of Indi. WIth CI.I~cys ,~Itec,apv~rdl~t. and utes before ,regist8ring a field i anapolis AC get oH the starting blocks all even; The unbeaten Bear. .u;I~previous night s tw~n kIl~ngsi goal. UC followed a similar frigid /. ~~c~t finmen sank the defending AAU champs 63~32 for their third produced, a clean sweep 0 al pattern until Bonham snapped the j stra ight success. four games -by the two Sunflower spell with a free throw after al- r: - ClaSSIC guests. ,'." most three minutes. The contest actually was a Within the next six minutes, DANCING question of" how long. the young-Wilson directed a binge by 'drop- EVERY SUNDAY NIGHT. IMiami~Houston Top er Kansas squad~o~ld ;endure ping in e i g h t of UC's twelve '51. BERNARD EAGLES the relentless" attrition-llke ~e- points to place the 'Cats sriugly 4815 Tower Ave., St. Bernard, OhIQ. -" t· , . Phone 281·9435, fense of the Bea:c~ts. Despite out Of reach, 50-3.9. Music by George Kasper UC's forceful antics, the Jay- A real oddity occurr'ed under . Orchestra. rue All-Opponents hawkers appeared unruffled and the Bearcat basket in asc:vffl.e This Sunday Night matched the 'Cats bucket-for-buc- for the rebound whenl KU's Un,. f Dominating this year's UC all- standing player faced and was ket during the early going. seld tipped in a. two·p~inter tha,t a unanimous pick for the first !iOpponent squad are members of Wit h Ron Bonham 'finding .climaxed :the Jayhawker's frus- all-opponent team. Nomina, a :the Houston and Miami teams. 'trouble ze'r'oing in, George Wil· .tration for the, evening. UC mere 269 pounds, was selected IThree Cougars, tackle Pete Ni- son and 'To'ny Yates initiated then maintaineCli controH of,the' as top lineman met this season, ~'kirk, center Ken Chancelor, and Cin,cy's scoring a.nd pr'opelled ball wit h a c1ever'ly devised and was a recent Associated .'half Bobby Brezina, were named them in front 11·8. IHowever', stan that protected the final tto the first team, while end Bob . Press third team All-American choice. as Uriseld began flipping in his 64-49 margin. (Jencks and tackle Tom Nomina favorite fall.away [umper, the UC waxed hot for the ,game' Three more Redskins led the .'of the Redskins also gathered' Kansans twice crept within two, with a, 49 field goal percentage ':first team spots. second team which includes: end Bob Daumeyer, Xavier; end John a;f 16·14 and 23·21 before' the compared Ito KU's modest 40%. . Richmond's huge end, John Simmons, Tulsa; tackle Tony :Hilton; Tulsa's always-strong Ken Liscio, Tulsa; tackle Jeff Sla- -Reed, a guard; Xavier guard Joe baugh, Indiana; guard Richard ~Molimari.; Detroit's greatquarter- Farris, North Texas; .guard Or- .\bac~ Jerry Gross; speedy half- ville Stammen, Miami; center Now It's Pepsi Scholar dollars .back Nate Ramsey of Indiana; Ken Lehman, Xavier; quater- land North Texas's Dwain Bean back Ernie Kellerman, Miami; travel. farther lere named to the other spots. halfback Marv Woodson, Indiana; For ThoseWho~ with SHERATO~ I Gross, who led his dismal Titan half A. D. Whitfield, North Texas; i squad to ar, upset win qver the and fullback Tom Longsworth, HOTELS ;' 'Cqts, was voted the most out- Miami. Think: Young STUDENT. WHAT DO YOU BUY raCULTY WH~t~( YOU BUY DISCOUNTS

. Save on the going prices , GR~EGGI.SPRO'FE'S'SIONAL of going places at Sheraton Hotels. DRY CLEANING? Special save-money rates on singles and greater savings per YOU BUY A FINISHED PRODUCT person when you, share a room "Soils and stains have been removed. with one, two or three friends. Generous group rates arranged Trimmings and ornaments have been removed and replaced •.. for athletic teams, clubs Repairs have ,been made. - and college clans on-the-go. The original "feel"ha, been restored by sizing additives. , For rates, reservations or further information, get in Creases are sharp, and fabric is properly finished. touchwith: Your garment is ready to ~ear. MR. PAT GREEN College Relations Dept, Gre,gg CI~aners Sheraton Corporation 470 Atlantic Aven':;. 200 W. McMillan Street Phone 621-4650 , ~oston 10, Mass.' Thursday, December 20, ~.1962. UNIVERSI.TY OF CINCINNATI NEWS RECORD Page Eleven ~ A .Whi,te Christmas For Cincinnati?The Seton Journal Criti'cizes NR Story The following article is from a column in The Seton Journal of the College of Mount St. Joseph entitled "In Our Opinion." ~ ... the University of Denver Clarion overlooked many -','nice girls" who would disagree with its editorial sanction-

ing J?re~lnarital sex relations. f We also feel that the Univer- sity of Cincinnati News Record DJ. George Rouch showed poor taste in devoting, prime space in its Nov. 29 issue New Med School to an Associated Collegiate Press news . release. on.. the editorial which seems to treat sexual free- Assoc. Professor domfor unmarried co-eds as an Dr. George Roush Jr., inter- open question. . nist and specialist in industrial The editorial stated in pad: ,medicine, has been .'appointed "Today's" nice girl ~is well aware .~associate professor of industrial of the advantages and disadvant- medicine in the University. of ages :of premarital sexual rela- .Cincinnati College of, Medicine. tions. '... We believe, too, that the decision as to whether or not A graduate .of the University sex shall be participated in is one of Wiseonsin, Dr. Roush has' a that is-and, indeed, must be- doctor' of medicine degree from purely personal." Washington University vand .rnas- Even if the News Record is so ter of public health from', the hard up for copy that it must re- University Of Pittsburgh' Gradu- print this story entirely, it should ate School of Public Health. , On the way to Granny's last winter, we passed through the woods by the river and spotted this 'have principles Which would de- Dr. Roush has, served as medi- quaint scene which 'we thought we would pass on to you. So we got out our Polaroid, and here it 'is- cal, director of the Gallery Chemi- a 'White Christma,s for Clnclnnati! mand that it take an editorial stand on it. cal Co., Pittsburgh, and studied and ,taught occupational health at Pittsburgh. He was fellow with SKI CLUB the' Atomic Energy-Commission," Exams, ,The Ski Club announces a National- Heart Institute, .and, in :Languag~ 'Prof,ic;iency , .. ~ meeting to be held Friday in cardiology, University -of Louis- ~ rooms 306·7 in the Student ville School of Medicine, and Union. All interested parties clinical associate at the National Termed Mere, Ins~gnificant are invited to attend, while the Cancer Institute. first scheduled trip will be UC has just received a $23,627 St. Louis, Mo.-(I.P.)-The pro- "lip service" is paid to knowledge independent preparation. January 13. grant from the National' Institute ficiency tests in foreign languages of a foreign language, in reality (4LMore flexible scheduling, of Health to support Dr; Roush's required of most Ph.D. candidates the Ph.D. candidate often needs especially for courses which - research in the metabolism of in the United States have' become only to pass a brief reading ex- are sectioned, will be poss- 'boron, cadmium, chromium, and, "a mere gesture, having little amination. ible. Guidon petitions are now nickel. He is. determining the significance as a measure of true "Students by and large have (5) Problems of class attend- available at the Union Desk. amount of these metals' normally ance may be alleviated, They must be returned to the learning," according to Dr. Saul an uncon.cealed disrespect for' found in man in order to set up Rosenzweig, professor of psy- this hurdle and speak' of it as a since' each .class will be Desk by Friday, Dec. 21, for more crucial to the student. section to students, . standards of measurement for chology and medical psychology stumbling block • •• FacuJty normal blood levels. at 'Washington .University. .• • • tend, on the whole, not ,to (6)Th~ shorter term requires the student to start studying' - r·· .- In asur~ey o{ the 'use. of odify the requirement by en- " I foreign 'lang"uages since grad- riching standards but reduci~g immediately; a week or two uation among several hundred them or by instituting options . of delay would be disastrous psychologists receiving degrees for the evasion .of ,the require': in a shorter term. ESQUIRE, BARB'E~RSHOP between 1948 and, 1952, Dr. ment." (7) With each course using.% 'Flat Top .' Burr > Crew Cut • Regula'r Rosenzweig discovered ihatal- In some schools an option, such 'of a student's time instead most two-thirds of thei degree as knowledge of some special re- of, ,1/4 or 1/5, it will' be holders 'had not read a' single search technique, is' offered in feasible to carry out pro- Your 'Hair Is Our' Business artitle or book in the supposed- lieu of one language but no con- jects 'requiring large blocs Iy learned janguage in the seven tribution is made by such a sub- . ~of time, such as field work You Specifyc-~ We-.S9tisfy' or eight years since graduation. stitute toward a more~meaning- in the sciences, internship About 10 .per 'cent had made no ful 'mastery of .the remaining for prospective teachers or You try us' :-- You hove the best' oral use of the language:;. language. even term off-campus pro- grams 'for particular.vstu- 228, W. McMillan. St. ' , 'Cincinnati 1:9, 'In most graduate schools read- . *' * * Appleton; Wis. - (I. P. }-Law- dents ith carefully planned Pro John Apler .Ing examinations are required in individual projects, . two foreign languages, most 'often rence· College has shifted from its traditional to semesters a (8) Extra-curricular activities French and German. Dr. Rosen- can be better patterned. 'zeig suggested that the' stipula- year to the trimester plan. The For courses such as music, 'Hionbe changed to vrequire' committee on, instruction .has a fine ..arts .andTanguages, where ,;:mastery of a single language, with listed the following aducational advantages for' the-plan which -.skill -de'velopment~ 'cannot be . ~demonstrated compet en c e in forced, an alternate to the strict f speaking and writing as well, as .features t h r e e concentrated ,3-a is being-tested; i.e., that the ; reading. He said that the Grad- courses per, semester instead of, the flve In the past: i courses extend over the full nine ;,uate School of .Arts and Sciences month's, -.with fractional credit ':at-Washington University has now (1) 'I'hestudent can concentrate given.' . t' begun to permit students to pre- on fewer subjects at a UTIle.' sent a comprehensive knowledge, According to a study con- of one language as an option to d u c ted .by anthropology a reading knowledge of two lan- classes here, it was discov- -guages but that to his knowledge ered that under the old this practice is followed in only system most students spent an occasional university in other 50 per cent of their time, on parts of the country. one course, and neglected , About 83 per cent of the 681 one other almost entirely. respondents favored elimination (2) Faculty members WIllteach or revision of the foreign language fewer courses' at anyone requirement, . thus showing the time, even though the total general disrepute in which the number will be the same. superficial reading knowledge of (3) A larger proportion of the a language now required is held. student's time will be spent Dr. Rosenzweig saidthat although out of class, requiring -more A man needs Joc'!~!1support ,~jockey is for men. Made from 13· separate pieces to give the support and protection every man needs Attenti'on' 'Students'. A man needs a special kind of support for true male comfort. And only , Robert A. Cline Compa~y has furnished and un- Jockey builds a brief from ia sepa- rate, tailored pieces to give that sup- furnished apart'ments available within walking port-plus comfort. No other brief has such a firm, long-lasting waistband to "distance o·f the University~ Rents from $,65.' hold the brief up for COnstantsupport, and no other brief has the J ockey as- ~ ~surance of no-gap security. .- CaU·Bili Hofmann -,'. 611 -8600 Get the real t/1ing••. it Isn't Jockey .On;Monday Before 5 if it doesn~thave theJock~y Boy. Page Twelve UNIVERSITY OF CINCINNATI NEWS RECORD Thur~day, December 20, 1962 Murmurs From. Mummers . . • Sonny Stitt Entertains E:~;~r:~o:n~r~~:::Lnrqest-Crowd To' Dote A. p y. by Leonard Herring, Jr. -"'; __ $"'"," by Nancy Pundsack Before the largest jazz appre- .. " . ciation audience of the year Exhaustion reigns supreme at Mummers GUIldnow that (200), a session ensued. The the actions over for a week or two. All that's left to do now greying, but still musically youth- . -. ' ful, Sonny Stitt royally entertain- IS listen to comments and try to catch up on some sleep. ed another appreciation audience. In the eyes of the Guild "Threepenny Opera" was a big Backed by some proficient local , , musicians, as embellished by the success from many standpoints. presence .of Rusty Bryant, an ex- The audience was tremendous M - ,P , Nancy Wilson tenorman; Elwood Friday and Saturday nights. ,OVLe epe Evans on piano; Jimmy McGurty . . ' . (tenor); Larry Glatterman, a UC Thursday night the attendance IS ,_ -L trumpeter; Lee Tucker (bass); always small m?stly b~~~use of Next UtuonF l m and Phillip Pa~l ~drums). of the the lack of-parking facilities due '. Modern ,Jazz DISCIples, Stitt per- to night school. The actual pro- formed swingingly, ~hough brief- , '. ' -L 'ly. d For a larger bill. of fare, a duction of the show was also a big At W L son Au. visit to Babe Baker's Jazz Corner success. The action of the show would be in order since Stitt moved professionally as pertain- Because of technical difficulty, will be there until January 6. Ing to sets and costumes, Prof'es- "Flower Drum Song" will not. be Sti~t !s on~ of the select group . 1 di . 1- . d shown as the Union's next film of original exponents of modern siona ISCIpme reigne supreme . - havi b t 11 . Instead "Pepe" is scheduled for Jazz, avmg een a sear per- during performances. Everyone , ' _ former even in the forties, and who participated enjoyed himself showmg. his music reflects even today his as we11 as . workimg har d for a The Mexican film star, Cantin- exposure to the, tempe,r of that . 1 t t flas, who endeared- himself to time. espite the inevitable bash- good show. It IS unusua o· ge .', .' ., th h d f Ch li , . American audiences as Passepar- ing me, s a ow 0 ar ie ,such, good cooper alton when over tout' m "Aroun d The World In Parker. and thus being' . inexorably three fourths of the cast had nev- D" '11 . thi influenced by the stylings of that 80 ays, WI appear m IS . 1 Stitt rna d t er appeared on stage before. smgu ar, 1 manage 0 emerge .. ,comedy about the baggy pants, from that shadow to create some And no~, Sonny- S,titt . . • ~Everything will get ba.ck to' mustachioed little, bullfighter who sunlight of his own. Stitt is an normal now. Members Will re~- feels such great affection for his uninhibited swinger although un- tum to classes; Parents will be horse -Don Juan, than he can't doubtedly conversant. with some happy to see their young stars . of the. new c.onstructlO~s of. the Opera Workshop Planned . , bear to, be separated from him. post-BIrd period, he still clings at the dinner tables; and the A s Dan Dailey, a movie producer, with some degree of nostalgia to will be seen on papers once buys Don Juan and takes him to the music which was spurned dur- more. It is expected that the Hollywood. Pepe and the horse ing his youth, proving again that At CoLLege Conservatory audience liked the show as much pine fo.r each ?ther u~til in ex- good wine can be found in old . . . .asperatton, Dailey brings Pepe bottles. as working' on It was liked by from Mexico to care for Don Stitt is. a true virtuoso. He has ttfose who participated. Juan. From then on its Cantin- an amazing range combined with Mummers Guild next production flas' show as Pepe romps through sonorous tones played at what- will be somewhat different from n:any songs, dance~, co.mic bull- ever speed.'~h.at might suit .his . . ,,_ fights and funny situations, An mood. "Utilizing the' classical the- wild mUSIC of Threepenny example of the humor is the time morsel, "Old Folks,"" Stitt was Opera." It will be the classic com- Bing Crosby, mistaking

Stage set, designed by Mr. Engleman for Opera Workshop. David Bar-Il1an' Dec.' 21& 22 The Opera Workshop of the Col- seph Faucett. lege Conservatory of Music, will \ Mr. Engleman is stage director Max Rudolf and the Cincinnati present a double-bill of, opera at and will handle scenic design; Symphony Orchestra present the 8:30 p.m, Jan. 13 and 14, in the Kipp Rabbitt is .assistant set. de- young pianist, David Bar-Illan at College Conservatory's Hall, Oak signer and stage manager; Miss Stre.et and Burnett Avenue: Music Hall this Friday afternoon Eva Parnell is dialogue coach and' assistant stage director. at 2:00 p.m. and Saturday evening Under the direction' of Wilfred Engleman, "Saritrl" by Gustav' Conducted by Haig Yaghjian, at 8:30 p.m. Mr. Bar-Illan is a fa- , Holst, is the curtain raiser fol-' College Conservatory' Orchestra> miliar face to Cincinnati music lowed by Mozart'st'The Impres- will be accompanied by a chorus, lovers, and will perform Beetho- sario." under the direction of' John Loes- ven's concerto NO.4 in G Major Students of the conservatory si. for Piano Archestra. participating in the singing and Each year the Opera Workshop, , speaking roles are: Sharmel originated to train voice .majors ~orn .in Israel, Bar- IHan began Shrock;' Marietta. Dean, Sue 'Pic- fof work on the opera stage, pre- , his musical training in Haifa, and cone, Alice Pfingstag, Sandra sents this concert, usually 'featur- was soon awarded scholarships of Laird, Suzann Dyslin, Samjl or- ing one standard and one contem- further study in the United States don, Frank Riegelman : and Jo- porary opera. , where he received degrees from Juilliard and the Mannes College of Music. His musical studies were -·WGiU(;------. interrupted for a time when he re- turned home to join the Israeli G~rmany; 8:30 p.rn, Drama .. :,:: army in their War of Independ- Sat., Dec. 22: ,1 p.m. Matin~ Medley; 1:30 p.m, 'Misterwo~~, ence. Mr. Bar-Illan has concert- 4'p..m, The Searching World; 1:30 ized -extensively in, the United 'p";m. Evening At East~an; 5;~O States as well as Europe and p~'In. p'ortraits· of Americ'~; ',::45 'South AmeriC\l. P;p,. Back ,Fence; ~ p.m, Dip. net Concert; 7 p.m, Uc Jazz I Among the selections "offered ~;tes;7:30 p.m. National Sc~-ri~; DClVid Bar-lIlan will appear with the Cincinnati Symphony Friday by Mr. Rudolf and the Orchestra 8;;:30 p.nf;~.Masterworks. ,,:{ and Saturday. Tickets discounted to a $1.00 are' available at the Stu- will be Hayden's 'Symphony dent Union Desk No. '·Sun.:,. Dec. 23:12:30 p.m.S~- 96 inD Major and Waltzes 'from day Matinee; 1, p.m, Di'scoverv the Opera, "Del' Rosenkavalier" and Dec,ision;2 p.rn. Internati~nal by Straus. Tickets areo~ sale at Concert; 3 p.m, TheR~c{der: George Brengel; 3:30p'~m. Hel-. the Student Union Desk at a dis- land Art and Music; 4:30 p.m. Ra- count rate of $1.00. dio Canada Recital; 5:J5 p.m, Thursday; December 20, 1962 UNIVERSITY. OF CINCINNATI NEWS RECORD Page Thirteen 'Profile .Founder . LoSolle Quorlel Pions Tour; .Writes 12th Book Eur,opeoD .·Counlries On Sked by Milton Silverfish The Violent Weddin~, and The Nearly, a dozen, European European. premiere of Rosen- gin, and Travis; Sweden-i-Stcck- countries will be included in the Prince of, Pride Starring. berg's third quartet. holm; Findland-i-Helsenki, where Robert Lowry, former DC stu- sixth international concert tour Continuing t h r 0 ugh mid- three performances will be pre- o dent has just completed his All of these novels have dem- of the noted LaSalle String Quar- March, the tour calling for 34 . sented; Denmark - Copenhagen; twelfth book, Party of Dreamers, tet of the College Conservatory performances, will open January Holland-Amsterdam; France- Dr. Lowry, a resident' of Hutton onstrated Lowry's unique insight of Music, University of Cincin- 18 with a British Broadcasting Paris; Germany-Cologne, Mu- St. in the East end of Cincinnati existing society in American life. nati. The Quartet announced de- Co: performance in London, :Eng- nich, Darmstadt, Muehlheim, majored in English and was grad- tails of its approaching tour. land. Other cities where appear- Wupperhtal, Bremen, Hamburg, This insight is particularly mani- uated Phi Beta Kappa from the Metropolitan Cincinnatians had ances are scheduled are: arid Itzehoe; Yugoslavia- Ljubl- University of Cincinnati. His wife, fested in The Party of Dreamers opportunity to hear the quartet Norway-Oslo, Stavanger, Ber- jana and Zagreb; Switzerland. the former Myrl Ricking, like her which was published on' Decem- prior to its leaving when it pre- husband was also an English ma- sented second of its last annual jor and Phi Beta Kappa at UC. ber 3, 1962 by the Fleet Publish- season of four programs at the TOM HOUSE CHINESE RESTAURANT While on campus, Dr. Lowry · ing Corporation of New York and College - Conservatory, Tuesday, Located at 1321 California Avenue, Bond Hill, serving Chinese saw fit to expand UC's, students London. This book is a result of Dec. 18 in the concert Hall, Oak and American food. Now open Saturday, 11 a.m. - 9 p.m.; Street and Burnet' Street. abilities and talents along the lit- "almost thirty years of writing ef- Sunday, 4 p.m, - 9 p.m.; and Monday through Friday, 11 Tuesday's program included a.m. - 8:45 p.m, erary lines. It was because of this fort, concerning itself primarily . desire that Lowry founded Pro- Vivaldi's "AI Santro Sepolcro," For Carry Out Service, Call 531-9576 file called the Little Man at that with stories about University of Schubert's "Quartettsatz in C- time. During his entire four years Cincinnati students. Of special in- Minor," op. posth; Haydn's "Quar- at UC Robert Lowry remained terest will be B!ond Hair and tet on F-Minor," op. 77, No.2; Editor and chief, of this magazine and the world premiere of Wolf · Blue Eyes which follows Richard - Rosenberg's "Quartet No.3." protecting it and expanding it dur- · Black, the hero of The Big Cage ing these years. The LaSalle Quartet's approach- through a day after his return to Active not only in the writing ing tour will be' studded with WFIB· "firsts." The noted Cincinnati sphere of campus life, he partici- Cincinnati, Nancy Williams, the heroine of T,lle Big Cage, also as- ensemble will make its first ap- Your Student Rad'io Service at pearance in England, will present sumes a prominent 'role in Party its first public concert in Paris) The College -,Conservatory of of Dreamers. France; and, in Yugoslavia, Music of The University·· of will play for the first timeIn the Upon publication of this book, cities of. Ljubljana and Zagreb .. Cincinnati. Dr. Lowry returned to Cincinnati During an early February con- I where he plans to take up perma- cert in Cologne, Germany, the nent residence with his mother. LaSalle Quartet will give the cigarette-.have a CAM EL

pated inmanyUCfunctions serv- ing. and improving-college activi- ties. ' Upon graduation Lowry toured the country with a fellow PhiBeta " Kappa in' order .to broaden .his scope of life and thereby give him added prospective with which to -write- his novels. Obviously this experience benefited him / for shortly after hi~ tour Lowry'sfirst novel, The Big Cage, was pub- lished. Continuing with this. success he went 'on to write Casualty then Find Me In Fire, Happy New Year, Kamarades, New York Call Girl, The Last Party; The Wolf That Fed Us, What's Left of April, Page Fourteen UNIVERSITY OF CINCINNATI NEWS RECORD Thursday, December 20, 1962 UC TaLent To Pe~rform On Faculty Promotiens Announced; TVlnA Series Of Programs Gifts~Grclnts~Bequestslndicated Facets of the varied talents among University of Cin- (Continued from Last Issue) nal medicine Heart Station Pete F. Bonbentre, f:leil C. Dav- Fund. cinnati faculty and students will be featured in a December.;' Effective retirement dates are is, Nicola DiFerrante, Jehn P. January DC color television program at 10 a. m. Sundays on January 1, 1963, for Dr. Roberts, $26,000 from Andrew Jergens Dorst, Bruce, G. MacMillan; WLW-T, channel 5. and September 1, 1963," for the to the College of Pharmacy; Harold Perry, Fred Dichenberq .•... others. "- $2000 from A. M. Kinney, Inc., er, Fridtjof Schroder, E;dward Paul Rutledge, DC associate professor of speech and to the Nuclear Science Research L. Wolfley, and R'a I p h M. These changes in title were au- Building fund and Heart Station Knapp. director of the campus Mummers Guild, undergraduate dra- thorized, all effective September matic society, will .be master of ' Fund; $3000 from the Ohio Lions From instructor to" assistant 1, 1963, except in the two cases , Eye Research Foundation to the ceremonies. ment previewing a Mt. Everst- indicated: Ralph C. Bursiek, professor-i-Eleanor M. Behrmann, Department of Ophthalmology, The Mummers Guild in dra- climbing expedition of which he from vice president and '"<.leanof Kornel Huvos, William R.' Martin, Laboratory Fund; $2000from the matic and musical comedy ex- will be a member. University administration to sen- Rudolph F. Verderber" William' Skillman Foundation to establish cerpts; Metro variety skits; the ior vice president and dean of E. Gates, CarlB:. Osterbroock, the Benjamin Pilhashy Memorial UC International Club in music University administration. William H. Tholike, Y. G. Tsuei, Scholarship Fund in the office of John B. Goering, .Te-Chaun Chou, and dancing from" around the lie Boo,k 'Contest Frank T. Purdy, from executive world; tricks by the DC Magicians the dean of men. Marshail Ginsgurg,Edward O. director 'for development .to vice Hill, Bonnie L.McNeely, Gerardo Club; the cooed Modern Dance Open To Seniors; president for development. $1200- from Smith; Kline, and French Laboratories to the de- R Polancov .Janice Gee, Robert Group; presentations of Cincin- Dr.' William R. Carter; jan. partment of surgery Dennis Fabe,' Lowell Leake Jr., and nati's changing face by the His- $1000 ToWinner 1, 1963, from professor of educa- Jackson Fund for 'Anesthesia Ruth Bunyan. ' - torical and Philosophical Society " ... tion to professor of education of Ohio; and Prof. Richard Emer- University of Cincinnati sen- arid assistant dean of faeulfles. Research; $6000 in< equipment From assistant clinical pro- son of the DC sociology depart- iors hav~ been in~ited ~y the UC Dr. Fred O'Flaherty,' January from the .Standard Oil Co. To fessor to associate clinical pro- Book Prize Committee to compete 1 1963 from administrator of the department of chemical and fessor-Richard E. Goldsmith, COLLEGE GRADUA'TES f?r the $1000 Amy Loveman 'na- University research, director of metallurgical en9ineei-i~g;. $93,- Robert E. Howard, Gerson ~'may have a career with a national 964.17 from alumni, corpora- Lowenthal, Robert Perlman, "company' expanding its Cincinnati tional award. the Tanners' Council Laboratory, office. We need two men who can The award has the same gen- and professor of basic science in tions, and friends of the Univer- William Ransohoff, Louis A. qualify ~(i)r challenging and lucra- sity to the UC Fund. Safer, and, Theodore H. Vinke. tive positions in sales. eral requirements as. DC's annual tanning research to associate . A generous income for S-uccessful Bertrand Smith book prizes for dean ,of the Graduate School, Appointments included: College From assistant professor to as- candidates will be established from the start of the three-year train. outstanding student personal Ii- director of the Tanners' Council of . Engineering-c-Chaeo-Peh Li, sociate clinical proressor-xr. Park ing program . braries. Laboratory, and professor of basic visiting associate professor of Biehl. .Call Miss Makin ,- 721-2270. Open to all full-time DC stu- science in tanning research. aerospace engineering; Dean S. From instructor to assistant /I - dents under 25 years of age, the - Joseph E. Holliday, from pro- Shupe, instructor, in mechanical clinical proressor-s-Ronald Wein- Smith competition has a $50 first. fessor of history and -assistant engineering. College of Education, traub. prize, with one or more addition- dean to professor of history and and Home Economics-s-Joyce 1. From instructor to adjunct as. WESiTENDORF al prizes totaling $25 awarded at associate dean; Dr: RobertH. Thomas and Laura L.' Wilcox, sistant professor--:Cynthia Oem. JEWE'LER the committee's discretion. Wessel, from professor of eco- part-time adjunct instructors in ber, Robert. Mills, and Kalya The $1000 Amy Loveman na- nomics to the David Sinton pro- speech and audiology. College of Springer. FRATERNITY tional contribution, open only to ,fessorship of economics and head Medicine-s-Michael Carsiotis and From clinical instructor to as- 'JEWELRY, seniors, is' sponsored by the of the department; and Dr: Dieter John C.Loper, assistant professors sistant clinical professor-i-Donald Book-of-the-Month-Club, Saturday .Dux, from associate professor Q'f sors of microbiology; Sylvia Cow J. Blaney and Marcus M. Key. part-time instructor in psychiatric Artcarved Diamonds Review, and Women's National political science to professor of The DC Board voted to sell to Book Association. political science and head' of the social work; Martin A. Rush J'r., the State of Ohio for $2500 ap- Clocks. Radios ::Watches UC 'Book Prize Committee department, all-in the' McMicken part-time instructor in psychiat- proximately two and one-half .Trophles & Engravings members are : Dr, Leland Miles~ College of Arts and' Sciences. ry; Dr. Harold Spitz, assistant acres of the northwestern part of associate vprofessor of English,' Gifts, gralits,and ~equests of .professor of radiology. College of UC's 64-acre .Hazelwood Botanical ',228W;McMill:an 621-1373 and Arthur T.' Hamlin, UC Iibrar- $1000 or more accepted by,th~ . Nursing and Health-s-Sandra Preserve. .ian. UC board Included: $103,500 Faust, instructor in nursing and from anonymous d~nors to the health. . Walter", H. "Bucher' fund~ inge~ Effective,~an,uary. ~~ 1963, Lt. D.... r.,··N,ICO· hi' ,as 'oIogyi: $66,038.56.to fhe;:.Nl.i~lear CoL ,Thompson S. Wliltaker Jr., , Science Labor'atory Fund; ;wa.s.promoted from, associate pro-: ' 'T' , ., T, '. h' ' 'HaO'from 17 donors to, the'Beta ~fe~sor to professo~., . '.0," eo c Theta Pi' Building ,Fund; $2000 'oAlan Freemond was premeted 'from Mrs. A.B. Cohen to the from associate clinical profes- Dr. James Nicholas, just re- Contingent Fund for awards' for sor, effective September 1, 1962. turned from three years of-serv- excellence in teeching; $3525 These appointments will be ef- ice as a psychiatrist with the D~S. from Bernard Keteen, the How- fective September 1, 1963: Army in the Pacific, has been ap- . ard Morgens,' Foundation" and From associate' "professor ' to pointed" instructor, in the' depart- professor-s-Carl Union Central Life Insurance 'Evert, Fred E .. ment of psychiatry in the 'Q'ni- Co. to the depa rtmer:tt' of inter- Westerman, Michael Hoch, Wil- versity of Cincinnati College. of liam J. Schnitzer, Leland: Miles, Medicine. He completed ':'his resi- Frederic T; Kapp,Robert W~Day- dence training in that specialty ton, Karl H. Merkel, Mathias J. at DC. ' Noheime, EmilJ. Quayle, and 'D r. Nicholas .Leslie J. Schwallie, will be teaching From assistant professor to associate professor-Rich a r d in a program of TOM CHERRY A. Day, James M., Vail, Odin psychiatric and U. "ofKentu«ky Elnan, George D. Moon, Boyd , Lexington, Ky. psychos om at 1~ Says, "Any C" Tingo, Sr·yce. E.Adkins, training for res: student, man Dorothy Beatty, Leona rd M. or, woman, can idents in non- stay at' Cbaffee, Robert Hornyak, Charf-. Chicago's psychiatric clini- YMCA Hotel es E. ~eigel,·'Mary E. Wolver- andenioy.a ton, Cyril Ling, 'Donald F. cal departments weekend for $15.00. Here is Pabst, Rebert. ,T. Blnhammery . of the Cincin- how I did it," nati Ge n era 1 I Fri. P.M. Dinner Qt YMCA.Hotel $1.15 Hospital, major" Chicago Symphony 2.50 Arc:adeRestaurant Dr. Nicholas teaching bospl •. Coke .10 GOOD FOOD tal in DC's Medical Center. Room at Y Hotel ' 2.78 The program is financed by the I ~Iifton Ave. at Calhoun Sat.' A.M. Break'fast ,at YHotel ,.< .58 . National Institute of' Mental Art Institute Tour Free $5.00 Meal Tickets $4.65 Health and is directed by Dr. W. lunch at Bam'boo Inn, . 1045 Donald Ross. '

Sat. P.M. Nat. Hist.Museum Tour Free _r "·A A.InRED --. ,',"I -... __ Dinner,.at Y Hotel 1.15 Sat. nite 9ance, Y Holel .10' CLIFTON '.TYPEWRITER SERVICE Cok~ date .45 Statistic! Room at Y Hotel 2.78 R,ENTALS --SALES -- REPAIRS Sun. A.M. BreakfQst at Y"Hotel .58 PORTABLES - STA~DARDS -.: ELECTRICS The other day our vice president in charge of good Worship at CentrclChurch lunch at Y Hotel 1.35 news announced that someone, somewhere, enjoys Coke ADDING MACHINES < Sun. P.M. Back to campus 68 million times a day. You can look at this 2 ways: TECHNICAL,AND FOREIGN KEYBOARDS " Either we've got an incredibly thirsty Total $14.97 Olympia MEN ". WOM,EN •. FAMILIES 'individual on our hands. Or Coca-Cola is the Olivetti Underwood Drink Stay at Chicago's ',,- . J>est-Ioved sparkling drink in the world. Royal--' Remington We lean to the latter interpretation, fI'lrila YMCA HOTEL Smith Corona 826 South Wabash .~~; 21.6 W.McMilian St. BE REAllY REFRESHED at the edge of the Loop (At Hughes Corner) ac:commodotions'or 2,000' • rates $2.70 and uP" 80ttledunder authority of The'~Coca-Cola Company by Write for reservations or call WA-2-3183 381-4866 .THE COCA-COLA BOTTLING WORKS COMPANY ThursdaYI .December 20/' 1962 UNIVERSITY'OF CINCI.NNA-rl NEWS RECORD Page Fifteen ',~tudent (;ourt.~"·,•. from~~ge 1 Bowling Green Shortens Recess; , kept there. commendations to the President r :

C -d C' I' • . . . SI'. .' •... 0 '. N '- · , A $5 fine is usually charged of the. University, Dr. Langsam. ...•.. " ....•.. "" . fori..the first offense in an ID Actually, ultimate authority lies 'L ,oe sann,ot . .eel' nose card violation. Whereas only with the President. three .justices' sit ih 'on traffic Decisions of'the court are post" Bowling Green once a week after washing hair, was taken and it was found that violations, the full court of seven ed in the Law College and the A faculty vote at Bowling Green especially if the hair is dried eve,rymale who was infer. justices sits in on ill violations. Union Building. In the future, the 'State University, Bowling Green, immediately. A number of the viewed spent at le'ast two hour' This is to give the student .the -N·ews· Reicord hopes to publish Ohio; has shortened Christmas beauty operators stressed that a week on the kissing. bridge-. full-benefit of the court. breakdowns of. outstanding cases. recess. The recess was cut six heir shouldn'·t be wo,und too In 'the his,tory of Witte'nberg, A student will, not be' fined days, to a two-week period to ,tight because, upon drying, hair the total' of these man hours for merely losing his ID card. He make possible a later opening of contracts ande'nds spl'it.Pin- would be enough to build on&1' · will, however, bechaTged a '$5 RE.P rog reJ,mGives the' fall vcerm. The G-G News, riing the .rollers too close to third of the grea,t wall of Chiria! '. feeto obtain a new card. Another campus. newspaper,' said 'at least the scalp was another com- This sore spot is one of the ' 'point which should be mentioned ,Second Seminar three professional meetings made plaint. most unfriendly places on cam- is .that .a student will not be it desireable .to begin later than The operators commented that pus. Try to show visitors around • fined without ahearing before the' Religious Emphasis Program the second week of September. texture and conditions of hair in this area some evening and court, . will sponsor a second seminar for make a big difference. Fair hair, you will see just how unfriendly Kansas State '.Concerning defense ~ttol"- all student chaplains of .campus bleached .or tinted hair damage one place can be. It's dangerous, neys, a student 'appearihg- bi~ organizations on Jan. 13, from Coeds, how many. sleepless, ag- easily. They advised magnetic too. Besides the possibility. of fore the court ma,y conduethis 2-2:30 p.m. onizing, nights are spent trYi.rlg rollers, sponge curlers or smooth falling fro m rickety bridge, to .sleep' oriyournose or spent own' defense, .but it is recorn- Students will .discuss the prob- rollers. But these present pro- there's the chance that students with your. head balanced six inch- . mended that he ask the court lems .of' how a chaplain can fie- blems 'too. Sponge rollers flatten will walk in a daze for two or OU. the bed on a. billioriHttle to furnish defense' eeunsel.: come a dynamic influen-ce' within- es out under pressure and cause' flat three days after spending only -i5 spikes? Counsel will be a full-time law his or her group. curls. Magnetic rollers slip out minutes on this bridge. student in good sta,nding at the Monsignor Earl P. -Whalen, 'The Ka,nsas State Collegian" as the hair dries. Where does the br'idg'e, com. UC Law College. Robert Gillette, and Reverend Kansas 'Sta:te University, Man- What price beauty? from,? Nowhere,. Where does

Paul Pretzloff will act as dis- hatten, Kansas, adds: II Anything it go? No,where. What does it, Students do have' the right of Wittenberg Univ&rsity appeal to the University Commit- cussion leaders. for :thesake of beauty, but are cross? No,thing., So what we tee on Conduct. This committee Reservations are appreciated . we 'serious about 'aniything if The Alma Mater is fine, fresh- have is an expensive,tim,e- man beanies are wonderful, but is the highest disciplinary body and can be made with Ed Daw- it mean's losing our helr as well consuming, unfr'iendly, da1nger. kissing bridge must go, So says in the University and is composed ley, Box 149, French Hall. as our sleep?1I ous ·br·idge that goes nowh.'" Sandy Mitchell in the Torch, Wit- of: Dean Barrow of the Law' Col- The newspaper 'interviewed 18 to nowhere and crosses nothing. tenbery University, Springfield, lege, chairman; Dean Johnson, SPHINX CLUB local beauty operators. Five came Ina few montlis the matter Ohio. dean of women; Dean N e s t.e r, The Sphinx Club. of Alpha out strongly for brush rollers. can be placed before the board of dean of men; Vice-President Hoke Phi; Alpha is having a IJMistfe- The other beauticians dId not ob- For one :thing, it is expen- directors for discussion. Mean- Greene; and the dean of the col- toe HOp" F-riday, Dec. 21 from' ject to brush rollers as such, but sive. The latest figures avail- while, the only phase of study Iege in which the student inques- to the" w~y they were used' and able are for 1959, when, the to be completed is practical re- 9 -1 in the UC GrilL· Admisoi tionJs enrolled. This committee slen is 75c and the' public is the frequency of use. '-"girls i'n Femcliff spent $687.89 search. In the interest of science, hears all' evidence and submits -a invited, , Most of the cosm.o·tologists On German high-power,ed binen- therefore, this reporter issues a report' of their findings and re- said the rollers could be used cular alonne, In 1960 a .survey call-a call for volunteers.

Dean'•••

(Continued from Page 1). r-., r ihropCoHege,'in his native" South 'Ca·rolin~;:.thenext;two yea'rs,as associate, professor of. rnusic and education, at New York Univer'sity; during a 1952- 53;"semeste,r and 1953;,;a,nd 195,4' ,; ~sll'jtlri1er""se;~i6ns' ;'etf Soufh~r:'~7J California as visiting professor of music and. 'education; .and since 1953 af' .,nrdiana". ' cTherl( he h!:l~.been professor of ,'ml1~i,c'apd, ~ha~i;n~'n;"ot:.t"herr:~sic dei?artwent and, slpc,e September 1~62,direct()r or gra4u1:l!testudies . a~d: research jriIU's School-: of . Mp.s~r;. " ,;;,.';; ., r; Dr',Watsop· Jsa,p.rolific writ"!: ~~< of,p~'ri9dic;a~.arti~les,rno~().' 9ra~hs,: and, boo I

~,. • ~.;,;;;:~ _~.:_ - . ~~" " , {f ., .:".: ~ ~ ~ · (Ddge Sixteen UN IVERSITY OF, CINCJ NNATI~ NEWS RECORD _ Thursday., December 20, 1962' S~A.M.~Alpha Kappa psi" .Teur "F~~ulty:.F~~~u" ••• ftom ~a~e 4 " " WIll increase spending by at least contrast, my analysis indicates '· .. , .'.' d A .t ·-A·' ,'se'nn b''I·y·::'p.."I'a'·"'0"'" t···· . as much as'the tax cut and (2) that such a tax cutwould induce 'N".orwoo . ·.U. 0' '.s .'....'.....~..,.../"jlt!iet:s; 'Yin'use the increased i';:':inflatio,n.' Fnrth~rmo~e, the in. ,~'.. ". come as down payments on large flation would be fed, in part, by On Wednesday evening, Dec. to ,head light installers. ~orty~' I~dustnal safety, .and public rela- , outlays, therebyincreasing.spend- increased cQnsu.mer borrowing, 12, twenty-five members of the three cars can be produced m one _ tions. .' , ing much more than the tax cut.. draining off sayings which were .Society for the Advancement of hour and one car completes its .All ' of our members ar~ anx- The tendency of aggregate spend- expected to be ~available for busi- l'yTanagement and ten, of their 'cycle in fifty-five minutes. 'iously anticipating our next in- ing to increase faster than. in-' ness investment. guest colleagues from Alpha 'At present the popularity of the 'dust~i;:ll to'!r being planned" by come during receht'recoverie~is GLENN E. BURRESS, Assist- ,Kapp,.a Psi took an interesting Chevy II has made the operation our program co-cha.irman,. Dave some indication of the importance, ant Professor .of Econo:nics" a~~ tour through the Chevrolet As- of two shifts, working ten hour-s ,Allen ~ndPave MI~ter, m the 'of the-latter behavior. ' .Local., C.?~ordmator" for. T~e .sembly Plant at"-Norwood. Mr. -a day, essential. The entire faciI- near. future. _.~. .. ,,' . . ,..... ~.me~I~~n Economy;' University Howard; a night shift foreman,' -ity at Norwood is primed for max-?n :--the baSIS of the prmcl~l~ of Cincinnati. , t d id d d i.mum efficiency with safety as ~---~-, ---- ••.••~-;. mentioned by Dr. Heller, Jet us, ·.,ac e as gm e an answere any ~ . ' P.CE .. c '..... ",~ . .questions that were asked. t~:keynote. Pi .: Chi EpSiloh~;~th~ Girl's '"~~~urr1~t~?t th~ proposed tax' ~ut - The Norwood Plant produces The. unanimous opinion of Honorary Tn Business Admin- _is expected to 'tncreasa spending -exclusively the popular Chevvy those in attendance was that this' istrefien and Engineering, will just. enough to generate-full em- ·It 'The 'assembly line is approx- , was truly an evening well spent.. hofda Bake Sale .en T~ursday, ployment without inducing infla- 'imately500 . yards long and is -.Eac.h one, of tho~e ,present felt, Dec; 6 in Freneh and. Dabney tion' and at the 'same time in- 'manned by 175 assemblers whose . enriched m the principles of mass' Dorms ,at 6 p.m, ," ': . ,' .. 'activities->"... range --from inspectors 'production, industrial psychology, , crease the flow of savmgs .. ~In

/1

• UC Student and FocL!lty'Guests ~O% Reduction,with a·CardfrQmDeanof Men's Office

Oak'at~Burnet .... , . John Corco,ran