ent Eections Today, Tomorrow University of Cinoinnati NEWS RECORD Series BF 1 Z552 Cincinnati, Ohio, Thursday, February 28, 1963 Vol. XLVIII, No. 21 UC Sponsors Two FLights Council Outlines NCAA Festivities Student Council approved the following motions in reo gard to the NCAA celebrations last Monday evening: (1) There will be a send-off of the team prior to the finals in the event that UC wins the regionals. (2) There will be a bonfire rally on the Tuesday before finals in the event UC wins the regionals. (3) There will be wide screen TV at Wilson Auditorium for (4) There will be a rally in the both the regionals and the fieldhouse on the Sunday after the finals. There will be a dance regionals and the finals, win or after the regionals. This will be lose. sponsored by a private promot- or and will depend upon his (5) There will be a party Sun- acceptance of the idea. day evening at Music Hall after the finals, win or lose. (6).Student Council will ree-: om mend to the Administration Senior -Gift . that a holiday be granted on Monday if UC wins the finals .. Committee '63 met Sunday to . other discussion c e n tel' e ci formulate plans for selecting 'a around arrangements that could senior gift to the University. be made concerning festivities at Aberdeen, the fantastic fishing village near Hon~ Kong offers a· truly bewildering sight, for here in All seniors will be contacted Fountain Square.' This will be the center of its crowded harbor you will find the noating restaurant of Aberdeen, where you can trace and solicited following a meeting looked into in the coming weeks'. your dinner all the way from the sea to the table. Be sure to loolc for the magnificent junk fleet and tha of Committee '63 to be held In election news, Jim Knox re- blue top sampans that are used to ferry patrons from the Quay to the flotaing sea food restaurant. March 10. ported that DAA failed to open its polls for the Section I elections Seniors will have the oppor- by Alan Wright to all-students, parents, faculty, Leave, August 5; return, Sep- tunity to vote on three pro- in that college. This election will Had enough of winter? Many and staff. The flight will leave tember 9. posals to be selected from the be held when Section I comes direct from Cincinnati; and costs back after its coming' work sec- DC students are forgetting their It is hoped that the remaining . several by the committee. The cold-weather blues by planning will include firstclass hotels, 'voting will be done by ballot tion. seats will quickly be filled by Tom Seifert informed Council for their summer vacation on one meals, travel, and all tipping and in the News·Record or by per- students, for students will find that representatives from the Na- of DC's two 1963 Charter Flights. handling charges. sonal letter. Voting will be open immeasurable benefit from such tional Student Association will be It isn't tCJOearly-seats are going For full details of this ex- a trip. As one student said on her March 14·22, with ballots ap- fast! citing all-expense-paid vacation, present at the meeting on March return from last year's vacation pearing in the NR March 14 and 11. These sudents will be from There are only two UC-pTomot· get in touch .with Mrs. Amy in Europe, "It was more useful 21. Pathe, Room 205 Laurence Hall, Xavier and Western Colleg for ed flights-the annual European than a whole year's course on The Committee will meet again Womn at Oxford. o on Campus. Phone: 861-8000, Jet flight that takes off direct European studies! " Call Miss Sunday, and results of the meet- Also, Dennis Shaul, the NSA from Cincinnati, and a new, ex- Jint~ 527. Remember, everyone is Lorrayne Stork (line 205) for de- ing will be published in the News- otic trip to the Orient, also leav- , eligible for ·thistrip. tails about this flight-and hurry. Record next week. (Continued on Page 3) ing direct from Cincinnati. UC The annual European Flight is students are eligible for both. filling up rapidly. Only bona-fide The' Far-East ,trip will take UC students, their immediate off on June 17 and return on families, faculty and staff arc Accent On Youth In International Affairs; July 16. Among the interesting eligible for this flight. The con- . places to be visited wilt be tract is signed and the aircraft Japan: Formosa, Hong Kong, will again take off direct from Macau, Singapore, Thailand, Cincinnati Airport. Dates' are: Idea Of Conference For College Editors the Philippines, and a stop-over at Hawaii on the way back. by Glenn Stoup assistant press secretary to Presi- This special-rate trip is open dent Kennedy; and the Sunday Jablonski ... " A Free Press for a Free session which was held at Colum- World" was the theme for the bia University which I was un- fifth International Affairs Con able to attend. ference for college editors held in New York City this past week- Although some of the conference cJ') end. could be termed as public rela- uJ tions for the National Student Sponsored by the Overseas a. Association. It did much to in- 0 Press Club of America, the U.S. 0 form me as to the real purpose Student Press. Association, and :c of the organization. 0 '" the National Student Association uJ The conference was distin- uJ in cooperation with the Reader's n::: guished not only because of the ::t: Digest Foundation, the confer- N number of outstanding foreign l- ence covered a wide variety of topics ranging from the role of correspondents in attendance )0- but also because of the out- cr <.: American students in internation- ..:: r_ al affairs, the reporting of inter- standing students. 0 national affairs, to the freedom Melvin Meyer, University of U Alabama editor, was present. 'He . :c of the campus press. -' 0 The conference was divided into attacked Governor Barnett and . u three sessions: Friday night, reg- his position on integration during v . istration and reception wit h the Mississippi crisis and has had ..- N 7 0 speaches from James A. Wechs- crosses burned on his fraternity (..) >- house lawn, his life threatened, ler, the editor of the New York I t- Editor .Jp .-<l: and since September, has been U. Post, Leon Dennen, author and -) s: under police protection. 0 columnist on Sino-Soviet politics, the Scripps-Howard newspapers. C· .1 Congressman John V, Lindsay Sidna Brower, the editor of Foreign students were repre- (.) The Marek Jablonski concert ::>- ~. 7 will be this Saturday night. (R) of the 17th New York dis- the University of Mississippi, sented by John Shingler of the ., trict, and others; the Saturday attended the conference. She National' Union of South Africa (..) 0 Tickets are available acress ~ ::> from the grill every noon. This session, consisting of area semin- called for calmness and obedi- . students, who delivered a bitter is the last of the concerts for ars and addresses from Thomas ence to the law during the talk against Verwoerd's apar- this school year. The time of the -Sorensen (brother of Ted), the Mississippi. riots and for this theid (in response to a question concert is 7 p.m. in order to Deputy Director of the USIA; received a citation from the about why he did not form a form- allow all fans to Me St. .Bob Considine, nationally known Mademoiselle magazine and al pressure group against this he n I .rMbjp ~ .(Coo· u d on P~e ~) :evis '. Il\I!\s.t,~d ·~olp). Kildll14 - I •• , Page Two UNJVERsrtvoF CINCINNATI NEWS' RECO,f{D Thursday,February 28, J963' AROTC Captaid9hosen : .# Ce-ncer';t;eliqic. Established, To '':AftendStaff .goLlege Anti-.Ca'ncer.Drugs Used Captain Alfred Quartin, MSC, entered the U. S. An~y as a 2nd". '...' ~ . ., U. S, Army, Assistant Professor Lieutenant' in January 19'53. He Nearly 40 lung-cancer-patients four-year grant totalling $34,851 help patients' who are notnaw of Military Science at the Un i- served at vari- and many vmore .patients ' with from the NationaliInstitutes of hospitalized but who have active, versity of" Cincinnati since Sep- ous posts in other malignant diseases have Health .. 'Co-principal investigator cancer," Dr. Horwitz points out. tember 1060, has been notified the United been treated in the first year of .with Dr. .Horwitz is Dr. Thomas "Usingc e r ta i n anti- cancer by the Department of the Army States' u n fi 1 operation of a new chemotherapy L.Wright,assistantprofessqr of drugs, we areexploring ne,,: wa1..tf that he has been selected to at- January 1955, clinic at the .University-of Cin- medicine at DC. of giving-them to see if we •• tend the Command and General whenJhe vwas cinnativMedical Center's Cincin- "We feel. we may be able to 'better exploit their potel1talitie~tJ Staff College at Fort Leaven- assigned to the nati General Hospital. -----~-~--~-~~-,.-- . ' ~l worth, Kansas, in August 1963. U. S.. Army, Aimed at preventing recur- Captain Quartin joined the . Europe. .' renee' after radical treatment or United States Marines in Decem- ' Upon his re- in certain .cases- aimed' 'at sup- bel' 1941, and was discharged from ; turn to. the.U.pressing amalignant process, the the USMC in January 1'946. He '·'S:~jn January clinic-uses drug.fherapy in long- . _Capt. Quartin :',1!)~8; he' at-, term treatment of c~rtceF patie~ts. - T .":' .tended ". t h e Dr. Harry Horwitz, UG·ass-Ist- .
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