Ballot For Beer Here - UC Libraries · Ballot For Beer Here\ I • I am in favor of making beer...

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\ Ballot For Beer Here I I am in favor of making beer available to students at the chaperoned parties of recognizee :ampus groups (fraternities, residence) in th_~ Student Union, J;.- I am opposed to the above suggestion because: / I donlt think irs necessary am morally opposed to beer Ballots may be returned to boxes in rhe Union (at the main desk), in. all Residence HaUSI and at the NEWS RECORD of- fice. Fraternities and sororities are asked to collect b~llots from their members and deposit them i'n one of the afore-men- tioned locations. For the firsf time in longer than anyone , cares to remember, every stu. dent has the chance to express an opinion •.. so get Ol,lt'and vote! Please read the ballot to the right and express an opinion~ St~ents are often heard to complain that their opinions mean nothing in UCls wonder- land of bureaucracy" • • weill 'now youlve got the chance, We urge you to express an opinion" on this important question. We hope to. present the id- ministration with another show of student support. ' I don't like beer so I don't think anyone else should drink it . I accept fully the' reasoning of the Board of Directors in its last state- r: ment opposing beer ~ ....................................... . ' Other (please specify) University of Cincin:q.ati \ NEW,S RECORD Cincinnati, Ohio, Thursday, March 3, 1966 No.' 20 Vol. llli .Guild· Presents '~Death' ·OfA Salesman'! -, Beer _Poll t Referendum Included On Election Ballot . by Judy'McCarty Reorganization Reterendumvhave Monday evening's Student Coun- been drawn up and circulated by cil i meeting resulted in the de- NR columnist Mike Patton. Pat- cision to place two current issues ton's petition, which received of the election ballots. Both the . signatures of three per cent of "Beer ~on-Carnpus"- question and the. student body, requests a ref- the "Council Reorganization Ref-' erendum and ._~.!1.g~e~ts. that the erendum" will be taken to the present student Body-structure be entire student body. ch~nged to a~ystem based o~ the II II • chief executives of promment The Beer on Campus Issue student organizations, class presi- will appear on the ballot in sur- dents, two commuters elected at vey form. Students will first be large, one co-op elected at large requested to voic~their eplnlen from' each section, and four stu- as to whether or not they ap- dent body officers elected at prove the idea of beer on cam. large. pus. If they favor beer on cam- The petition suggests that the' pUSI .there will be three de- elected Council for 1966-67 be grees of change in campus beer (structure under these guidelines. policy which they may consider. Although the referendum will There will also be an area for definitely appear on_the ballot; individual comment. Council responded .to Patton's Petitions proposing a "Council Plan with mixed emotions. One Council memi?er' men- tioned that this referendum could result in an unrealistii vote since all those who sign.ed the petition were in favor of change. "Students who want to keep the present Council are uninformed, while the others are emotionally worked up over this. They'll flock to the polls. II The opposing point was made - that those signing the petition merely requested that the issue be placed on the ballot, not that they were actually supporting the issue. Members of the SC elections committee were -especially' dis- turbed with the referendum. Jay Wright, chairman of elections, , mentioned that the elections com- mittee .had felt they should have more jurisdiction concerning ques- tions to appear on the ballot. One major objection to the new structUre was that it would disturb the present system of representation. Presently, each student is represented only once, by his college representative. ,With the new system l a student "Death of a Salesman" opens on Wilson stage March 4' and 5 at 8:30 p.m. Reservations are av~ilable by ca1ling 475-2309. The roles of Willy Lomanls immediate family in Miller's "Death .of.a Salesman" are am9ng the most difficult sup.- porting roles on the American stage. Lindals character must display the sensitivity and con- cern of the suffering wife and still r4ttain the strength of char- acter th~t does not arouse pity. Happy an~ Biff are charaicters showin,g the m.ixed feeling of ever- aged adolescense. These last two rol~s are therespons- bility of Mike Weiner and Ken Stevens. At .this point the spot- light is on Mike Weiner. Mike has won the role of Biff, the older son once a high school hero, now an unemployed un- skilled 30 odd year old victim of his father's dreams. "Such a character," says Mike, "demand's an- awfully lot of time, not only c in rehearsal time, but in charac- ter study." The emphasis on such a role requires a certain spark of hope' mixed with a heavy gloom bf despair that Mike must inject into the part. He achieves this by experimenting with different attitudes in the role to hit on the particular blend required for Bill. I Mike is a sophomore in Arts and Sciences College with a variety of study interests. He lists his major field as -;-pre- , medicine and his course has a heavy emphasis on Mathemat- ics. He ,includes a strong in- terest in philosophy and-is/tak- ing as many theater arts courses as possible. Besides his membership in Mummers Guild,; Mike is • member (of Sigma " WARREN TRICKEY, Mike Weiner, Myron Hamilton and Tom O'Neill rehearse for the production-of "Death of a Salesman ll to b~ given March 4 1 5 in Wilson Auditorium at 8:30 p.l1). Tickets can be pur- chasedat the Union Desk or by calling 475-2309. Inside Story was made easier because of the cooperation displayed.' Usually .mailing out of the cards, letters, to regular Mummers patrons ani. city-wide radio stations is a two week fulltime job for two or three people. But for "Death of a Salesman" .the cooperation- made it a two hour job. Some of the pledges went on and worked at the dorms, cover- ing them and the Clifton and Lud- low' area with .green and yellow posters spreading the news of the "Arthur Miller" production to all the campus social spots. To meet the cost of this show (the royalties -alone) thousands of people must be contacted, with the 'hope that about 2500persons will attend the performance to be in Wilson Auditorium. Student prices are $1. Alpha Mu and 'Sophos and Young Friends of the Arts • Other Mummers Guild produc- tions are credited to Mike's stage experience. He has appeared in "Flowering Peach," "Summer and-Smoke" and "Brigadoon" on the Wllson boards. The Lambda Chi Alpha pledges along with the Theta Phil pledges' stuffed envelopes and addressed letters to every faculty member in three UC colleges; announcing "Death of a Salesman." They stuffed and addressed literature to hundreds of off campus thea- ter/ goers who follow the Mum- mers Guild productions. Publicity of any production, us- - ually the most difficult of jobs, Candidates' Platforms ... p. ~ ..;; Tradition Upheld ..... p. 4 Military Ball p. 6 "c?n To The NCAA ... ~. p. 8 Student Involvement ... p. 14 Students On Dope .... p. 15 (Continued on Page 19) - -

Transcript of Ballot For Beer Here - UC Libraries · Ballot For Beer Here\ I • I am in favor of making beer...

Page 1: Ballot For Beer Here - UC Libraries · Ballot For Beer Here\ I • I am in favor of making beer available to students at the chaperoned parties of recognizee:ampus groups (fraternities,

\

Ballot For Beer Here I•I am in favor of making beer available to students at the chaperoned parties of recognizee

:ampus groups (fraternities, residence) in th_~ Student Union,

J;.-

I am opposed to the above suggestion because:/ I

donlt think irs necessary

am morally opposed to beer

Ballots may be returned toboxes in rhe Union (at the maindesk), in. all Residence HaUSIand at the NEWS RECORD of-fice. Fraternities and sororitiesare asked to collect b~llotsfrom their members and depositthem i'n one of the afore-men-tioned locations. For the firsftime in longer than anyone

, cares to remember, every stu.dent has the chance to expressan opinion •.. so get Ol,lt'andvote!

Please read the ballot to theright and express an opinion~St~ents are often heard tocomplain that their opinionsmean nothing in UCls wonder-land of bureaucracy" • • weill'now youlve got the chance, Weurge you to express an opinion"on this important question.We hope to. present the id-

ministration with another showof student support. '

I don't like beer so I don't think anyone else should drink it .

I accept fully the' reasoning of the Board of Directors in its last state-r:

ment opposing beer ~........................................ '

Other (please specify)

University of Cincin:q.ati\

NEW,S RECORDCincinnati, Ohio, Thursday, March 3, 1966 No.' 20Vol. llli

.Guild· Presents'~Death'·OfA Salesman'!-,

Beer _Pollt ReferendumIncluded On Election Ballot

. by Judy'McCarty Reorganization ReterendumvhaveMonday evening's Student Coun- been drawn up and circulated by

cil i meeting resulted in the de- NR columnist Mike Patton. Pat-cision to place two current issues ton's petition, which receivedof the election ballots. Both the . signatures of three per cent of"Beer ~on-Carnpus"- question and the. student body, requests a ref-the "Council Reorganization Ref-' erendum and ._~.!1.g~e~ts.that theerendum" will be taken to the present student Body-structure beentire student body. ch~nged to a~ystem based o~ the

II II • chief executives of prommentThe Beer on Campus Issue student organizations, class presi-

will appear on the ballot in sur- dents, two commuters elected atvey form. Students will first be large, one co-op elected at largerequested to voic~their eplnlen from' each section, and four stu-as to whether or not they ap- dent body officers elected atprove the idea of beer on cam. large.pus. If they favor beer on cam- The petition suggests that the'pUSI .there will be three de- elected Council for 1966-67 begrees of change in campus beer (structure under these guidelines.policy which they may consider. Although the referendum willThere will also be an area for definitely appear on _the ballot;individual comment. Council responded .to Patton'sPetitions proposing a "Council Plan with mixed emotions.

One Council memi?er' men-tioned that this referendumcould result in an unrealistiivote since all those who sign.edthe petition were in favor ofchange. "Students who want tokeep the present Council areuninformed, while the othersare emotionally worked up overthis. They'll flock to the polls. IIThe opposing point was made

- that those signing the petitionmerely requested that the issuebe placed on the ballot, not thatthey were actually supporting theissue.Members of the SC elections

committee were -especially' dis-turbed with the referendum. JayWright, chairman of elections, ,mentioned that the elections com-mittee .had felt they should havemore jurisdiction concerning ques-tions to appear on the ballot.

One major objection to thenew structUre was that it woulddisturb the present system ofrepresentation. Presently, eachstudent is represented only once,by his college representative.,With the new systeml a student

"Death of a Salesman" openson Wilson stage March 4' and 5at 8:30 p.m. Reservations areav~ilable by ca1ling 475-2309.

The roles of Willy Lomanlsimmediate family in Miller's"Death .of.a Salesman" aream9ng the most difficult sup.-porting roles on the Americanstage. Lindals character mustdisplay the sensitivity and con-cern of the suffering wife andstill r4ttain the strength of char-acter th~t does not arouse pity.Happy an~ Biff are charaictersshowin,g the m.ixed feeling ofever- aged adolescense. Theselast two rol~s are therespons-bility of Mike Weiner and KenStevens. At .this point the spot-light is on Mike Weiner.Mike has won the role of Biff,

the older son once a high schoolhero, now an unemployed un-skilled 30 odd year old victimof his father's dreams. "Such acharacter," says Mike, "demand'san- awfully lot of time, not only c

in rehearsal time, but in charac-ter study." The emphasis on sucha role requires a certain spark ofhope' mixed with a heavy gloombf despair that Mike must injectinto the part. He achieves thisby experimenting with differentattitudes in the role to hit on theparticular blend required forBill. I

Mike is a sophomore in Artsand Sciences College with avariety of study interests. Helists his major field as -;-pre-, medicine and his course has aheavy emphasis on Mathemat-ics. He ,includes a strong in-terest in philosophy and-is/tak-ing as many theater artscourses as possible. Besides hismembership in Mummers Guild,;Mike is • member (of Sigma

"

WARREN TRICKEY, Mike Weiner, Myron Hamilton and Tom O'Neillrehearse for the production-of "Death of a Salesmanll to b~ givenMarch 41 5 in Wilson Auditorium at 8:30 p.l1). Tickets can be pur-chasedat the Union Desk or by calling 475-2309.

Inside Storywas made easier because of thecooperation displayed.' Usually. mailing out of the cards, letters,to regular Mummers patrons ani.city-wide radio stations is a twoweek fulltime job for two orthree people. But for "Death ofa Salesman" .the cooperation-made it a two hour job.Some of the pledges went on

and worked at the dorms, cover-ing them and the Clifton and Lud-low' area with .green and yellowposters spreading the news of the"Arthur Miller" production to allthe campus social spots.To meet the cost of this show

(the royalties -alone) thousandsof people must be contacted, withthe 'hope that about 2500personswill attend the performance tobe in Wilson Auditorium. Studentprices are $1.

Alpha Mu and 'Sophos andYoung Friends of the Arts •Other Mummers Guild produc-

tions are credited to Mike's stageexperience. He has appeared in"Flowering Peach," "Summerand-Smoke" and "Brigadoon" onthe Wllson boards.The Lambda Chi Alpha pledges

along with the Theta Phil pledges'stuffed envelopes and addressedletters to every faculty memberin three UC colleges; announcing"Death of a Salesman." Theystuffed and addressed literatureto hundreds of off campus thea-ter/ goers who follow the Mum-mers Guild productions.Publicity of any production, us-

- ually the most difficult of jobs,

Candidates' Platforms ... p. ~..;;

Tradition Upheld ..... p. 4

Military Ball p. 6

"c?n To The NCAA ... ~ . p. 8

Student Involvement ... p. 14

Students On Dope .... p. 15

(Continued on Page 19) --

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Page Twot-" ~ '1 ~ :) -. .: ; -J ,/ "',. J.J ~ J' f •• ,~~. ~ \~; '\ 'l'" •• 1? S-~ C , J 1 I- j

LJNIVERS-IT't OF CINClNNATI NEWS RtLUt<D

Donald, Hall'Concludes SeriesWith Readings, Of His Poetry

by John Breitenbach

The' annual Elliston PoetryLectures, consisting this year oflectures on modern poetry by

1

prominent American poet DonaldHall, came to .'a conclusion thisweek.

The first seven of these lec-tures were an. introduction tomodern poetry, le~ding up to areading by Mr. Hall of his ownpoems last Friday evening. Inthe final two lectures Mr. Hallpresented his views 0'" the fu-ture of American poetry.

_ In the lectures prior to thereading, Mr. Hall explained thevarious schools of contemporaryAmerican poetry and of- Ameri-can art in general. Most preva-lent-the externalization of an in-trinsic emotion; primitivism-anostalgia .for the simplicity of

values found in the past; organi-cism-a portrayal of life in termsof nature; and the opposite oforganicism, . mechanicalismwhich views man and life 'asthough they were machines.

'Except, for the last, each ofthese art forms Were present inMr. Hall's readings last Fridaynight, as the following excerptsindicate: "a tiger-lily comingthrough the roof~'; "Ieva Is likethe claws of a green lizat:'d whoclings to the wall for days-andis gone" ; "the things that youmissed, or thought you had tomiss, w~ltake your breathaway"; and, in his "self-por-trait as a Bear";-!-'it'is eatingflowers which makes him sofat, but in that paunch arefields of lupine."However, according to Mr. Hall

the fact that poetry contains the

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elements of contemporary trends,does not make the poetry trulymodern. Considering himself tobe a modern poet, Mr. Hall isnevertheless, unwilling to typehimself by giving adefinitive de-scription of one. Instead, duringhis eighth lecture .last Friday, hechose to let his poetry itself tellthe story.

As 'he observed, his earlierpoems'are "a kind in whichthe snake bites its tail"-thereare no open ends: they admitof only interpretation. Since,then, his poetry has experl-,enced an evolutionary process,the end product-his more re-

. cent poetry-being "an animal-on a long walk" by itself at

'night-who knows what it \ isthinking?" This "animal" is themodern p.oem.Poetry has not been the only

literary effort of Mr. Hall. Hehas also produced a biography-of the sculptor. Henry Moore;an autobiography; and a playabout Robert Frost, entitled "AnEvening's Frost," which will openin London this fall.

( ;j) r,,: ('.r ,'\ \ ". t ;

Thursday, March 3, 1966I

,Men Of Dcbney ContinueTo Collect ItemsFor.Viet

\

by Jim ,Carr

"-Dabney Hall's "Operation First-aid" is currently in its secondweek. The men of Dabney areendeavoring to collect soap, tooth-paste, and medical supplies forthe displaced people of SouthVietnam. Last Saturday and onWashington's Birthday successfuldoor-to-door canvasses were un-dertaken in the Cincinnati area.

A kick-off rally was held Sat-urday, February 19, in the UCFieldhouse, to assist' the stu-dents and public in understand-ing the significance of DabneyHall's' efforts. Contributi~ns atthe Tulsa game were quitegood, but subsequent contribu-. tions at' the Drake game werealmost nonexistent. Having' re-',ceived thewho!ehearted en-"dorsement of- the IFC and thePanhellenic Council, the fra-ternities and sororities are inthe process of collecting' con-tributions from their members.The project has received. con-

siderable community support. Awoman in Indiana, upon hearingabout -"Operation F'irst-aid'"

I•.•stitutes Receive Gran~sFrom Science /Foundation

\

National Science Foundationgrants have been received by UCfor two summer institutes forsecondary school teachers ofmathematics. They will be heldJune 20-July 29 by the UC Sum-mer School.

Faculty of the institutes willinclude Dr. H. David Lipsich,professor and head of UC's de-partment . ·of mathematics andinstitute director; Dr. Gaylord.M. Meriman, UC professor ofmathematics;-- and Drs. Ray-mond H. Rolwing and CecilCraig Jr., UC assistant profes-'sors of mathematics.Running concurrently, the in-

stitutes will each accept an en-•rollment of, 30 teachers. One in-stitute is' designed for junior highschool teachers, the other for sen-ior high school teachers.

NSUFree "How to pick a new car for below$2,000 - a factual .comparlson of .18 im-ported automobiles", Write for free reprint,color brochure ,& address of nearest dealerto: Excl. U.S. Importer: TranscontlnentalMotors, 421 East 91st Street, New York,N,Y, 10028. Teh (212) Tff 6·7013. Spareparts nationwide.

Subjects of the institutes willbe: "Topics in ElementaryNumber Theory," by Dr. Craig,and "Elementary Geometryfrom an Advanced Standpoint,"by Dr. Rolwing, both for thejunior high institute; and "TheStructure of the Real NumberSystem/' by Dr. Lipsich, and"'~Linear Algebra," by Dr. Mer-riman, for the senior high in- /stitute. r:Stipends of $450 will he award-

ed to each participant I in thejunior high school institute and$400 to each . participant . in thesenior high school institute. De-pendency and travel allowanceswill also be provided from UC'sNSF grant.Six graduate quarter credits

will be awarded upon satisfactorycompletion of the' courses. Reg-istration will be by mail. .This is UC's sixth summer math

institute under National ScienceFoundation auspices. Five in-service institutes' for math teach-ers have also been conducted byUC with the aid of NSF grants.

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wrote, "I feel we can all help insome way by helping those(South)' Vietnamese civilians whocome in contact with our thrcesto understand that we, the Ameri-can people, are sincere in want-ing peace and freedom for allnations. I believe that help fromall of- us through such a: smallitem as a bar of soap or a first-aid kit, can do much towards'cleansing and" healing' the Viet-namese or any other people 01the 'filth and sores' of Commu-nist oppression!" Already someof the items collected have beensent to South Vietnam throughthe campus Air Force ROTC unit.On campus, contributions may

be made at drop off points in themain lobbies of Siddall, Memor-ial, and Sawyer Halls, at theUnion desk in the UniversityBookstore, and in,the Fieldhouse.There will be boxes for donationsat the high school basketball tour-nament this I Friday and Saturdayin the Fieldhouse. In Greater Cin-cinnati area contributions can bemade at specially designatedTresler Comet and Sohio gas sta-tions.

Car Design WinsHonors For ProfA UC faculty member may have

designed the super-compact, ten-tatively called the" "Suburba-Car," which can help cut downurban traffic congestion.

Popular Mechanics magazineannounced in New York Citythat its international contest todesign the body of such a pe-tite car has been won by Nor-man K. Niemi, instructor indesign in the UC College of De-sign, Architecture, and Art.The Suburba-Car, seating' two,

is primarily suitable for snortneighborhood trips. Almost 1,300contest entries came from everystate and ten foreign countries,from Nicaragua to Turkey. I

From 2S fina lists selected byPopular Mechanic's' staff mem-bers a panel of expert pickedNiemi's creation., Body designs were for a chas-sis created and built by studentsat the Illinois Institute of Tech-nology at Chicago. The, three-wheeled frame is just over eightfeet long and less than four feetwide, exclusive of wheels.

Niemi submitted three de-signs-a sporty roundabout, astation wagon type, and a han-dy pickup truck. As contestwinner, he is to receive a com-plete chassis with motor and atour, including Detroit to dis-play his work.Native of Wakefield, Mich.,

Niemi received his Bachelor of'Science in design degree in 1961from UC. Three years later hewas called back to be on the fac-ulty. He was an, interior design-er with Woodfair Interior, afterhis UC. graduation.

NAVY·The naval aviation recruit-

ing team, from Nas Grosselie, Michigan, will be on cam-pus at the Student Union March3 and 4. The Navy is seekingapplicants who can qualify asaviation officers.

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Page 3: Ballot For Beer Here - UC Libraries · Ballot For Beer Here\ I • I am in favor of making beer available to students at the chaperoned parties of recognizee:ampus groups (fraternities,

Thursday, March .2, 1966 UNIVERSITY OF CINCINNATI' NEWS RECORD

Davis, diGenova, Enqle, Lied/State'. Platf0rmsRich Davis

A&S, Philosophy _Accum: 3.33Activities: Student Council Rep:resentative (znd year), ChairmanConstitutions Committee, Chair-man Free Speech Alley Commit-tee; Sigma Alpha Mu, President;"Sophos, President; Metro; ODK;Union Board, (past) Treasurer.In the, upcoming campus elec-

tions, you, the students, of UC,are asked to elect student "lead-ers." Do if you need to be ledanywhere?-I doubt it. Could Ilead you there if you did?-Idoubt that too. Just what then isall the noise about campus elec-tions, particularly about the af-fice of student body president,that, office which is supposed torequire the utmost in leadership?. Leadership is what the officeisn't. What- it is is somethingquite nearry the very' opposite.Tbe ,office of student body presl-dent, as I see it, is a' positionof servitude. The tacit contractfor that servitude involves thatthe officer in question receivethe honor of such a high electedpost, experience that such a postwill hopefully give him, and in-cidentally, room and boardvalued at $870 in a residencehall, this money coming out ofour hard earned tuition. ' -Does he receive this because

he is to lead? -Hardly! He re-ceives it because he is to serve..He is to devote full measure ofhis energies and thoughts r toserving the "students," not theexpressed desires of the students;the word is "students," not "ad-ministration," not' "faculty," not"alumni," not "board of direc-'tors," not "Cincinnati 'popularpress," not "city council" andnot "taxpayers;" for it is we, thestudents, and only we who electhim: it is we who are party to. the "contract."

Admittedly this must sound abit abstract, but it quickly be-comes concrete in terms of issueslike beer on campus, dorm hoursand visiting privileges, speakerpolicy, library hours, studentevaluation of professors andcourses, etc. What I propose isnot radicalism, nor do I meanAo imply that adiministrative of-ficials or any of the' other entitiesI mentioned stand in oppositionto students. However, though alldesire the betterment of the uni-versity, differences may arise intheir conceptions of "better-ment." In such, circumstances, Imaintain, the president of, thestudent body has an absolute dutyto assertively represent studentinterest-even if that requires"rocking the boat." This is howI conceive of the office of studentbody president, and this is how Iwill execute it if elected. I be-lieve that a vote for Rich- Davison election day is a vote for stu-dent representation with a back-bone.

loe di GenOl,aAcum. 3.4, A&S·Political ScienceActivi ties: Student Council (1

year), Chairman Of Suggestions- and Improvements Committee,

Metro, Mummers Guild, NEWSRECORD, Former President ofMen's Residence Hall Association.An alternative is always an in-

teresting facet (of political life.So it is with this in mind that Ibelieve the students 'must havean alternative choice for Student (Body President in the .form of an \independent. One group hasclaimed to be "independent" butthis is a false assertion. I haveno affiliation whatsoever, and mycampaign remains one based ontalking- intelligently with the stu-dent body not demeaning theirintelligence by insane statementsand political maneuverings.. Let us digress from the usualtrivia of student elections for awhile and see what can be done.I could, suggest dissemination ofbirth control material throughthe' Health Service, but itwouldn't do any good unless youwere interested and the Boardof Directors were members ofthe Planned Parenthood Associ-atien, However, if you are Inter-ested something might be work-ed out-you never know. If Mr.Quill were alive, I mig'" pre-pose. that he be our students-administration mediator-in alldisputes, but what purposewould it serve since getting theescalators to 'run on time in themorning in the Union is ob-viously not bothering anyone oris it?I do believe ..• however, that it

would be nice to have someone ~other than' a puppet as presidentof the student body. In conjunc •.-tion with this, I believe that thestudent body president should' beallowed to be elected from anyone

. in the "student body, including aNegro, not just a man who hashad one year on council. If that'sa valid qualification-some peo-ple are rather naive. If you don'tmind your student body presidentflying to New York, Philadelphia,or Chicago to do a night dub en-gagementonce in a while thenyou have no problem. I'm surean occasional recording sessionOr television appearance wouldn'toffend any of you. -If so, make- a choice. Do some-

thing different. Add a little colorand flourish and dynamic charac-ter to your government. Thingsmay not run smoothly at first,but it'll be enjoyable _watching the-developments. In. the process IIyou'd like to widen the, gym road

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We'll be on campussoon to talk about anewbreed of engineering youcan't get a degree tn,

or open the .beer taps in theRhine Room we'll see what wecando. Besides, just think you'llhave a president who can actually _sing the alma mater and the na-tional anthem-on perfect pitch.

Bob EngleDid you ever wonder- what YOur

tribunal has been tloing lately?If a monthly, comprehensive re-port was mimeographed and madeavailable to the student bodythrough the Union desk, you'lknow not only what your owntribunal is (or isn't) doing, butalso what other tribunals are ac-complishing in comparison toyour own.

Did you ever wonder why ittakes hours and hours to regis-ter for the same courses youtook last quarter? In somecases the schedule is merelyhanded to you to--Copy twelveor so times. A revision in regis-.tration policy would be a wei·come change; I'm sure:Did you ever wonder why we

have a journalism honorary andno journalism department? It'sprobably because we have a con-siderable number of publicationsrepresenting -UC, but only twoA&S courses to aid the studentin approaching anything close to'a journalist. The time has arrivedfor such a need.

Qid you even know that 1:00on Tuesdays and Thursdays isknown as a eemmen hour andthat no classes are held at thistime? You probably didn't, be-cause there' are so many clubsmeeting and spea~ers speakingat that time that you didn'treaUze that there aren't classes.It would be -so much easier tobreathe if there were five eem-mon hours a week. It w.ouldbeharder to -schedule classes, but,on the' other hand, we iust maybe able to hear a few of those

• ,

<,

speakers."It - is the task ..of the StudentBody President to see that suchtangible, realistic goals are met;too much time has been spent onphilosophy and idealism. Other

. possibilities include the broad-casting of Student Council meet-ings and a meaningful Cabinet ofPresidents. These are goals with-in OUrreach.I" have the qualifications, the

desire, and the ambition to ac- _complish them. Cast your votein my direction and we'll workout our problems together.

/. Jim LiedIt is good to see the increased

interest on campus elections, anot so common thing five yearsago. A change in voting proced-ure two years ago under theguidance of Student Council Presi-dent Lynn Mueller, allowed KenWolf to become the first StudentBody President elected by thewhole Student Body. This pastyear, President Heis has been ad-. vancing Student Council so thatits existence has been moremeaningful. As Council becomesmore meaningful.Lmore peoplewill participate in its activities.

This is' the dawn of the '''Uni-versity Community," a com-mun~ty where classwork and'active experience can be co-operative. This should not· sug-gest that students should runsuch a la:rge institution, butperhaps students could,. ,bymeans of parallel committees,give the administration studentviewpoints. It does call, how-ever, for a more u'nited school;-a body of individuals sharingmany more experiences than acommon seat in Wilson AUdi-torium. The university shouldbe more than grades 13, '14, 15,and '.16 or the real vaTue is lost.The university is people and

Page Three

iedas guided by desks, doors, andhallways. Student gave .r h men tshould allow everyone exercisewith those two primary ingeredi-ents. To the _work already com-pleted, here are my ideas forthe next year.A. To start-Council meetings at

8 instead of 7:30. This changein policy -would not only allowbetter, more effective committeemeetings at 7, but business atthe regular meeting would betransacted faster. Com mit teemembers would be invited to stay.and feel more a part of the stu-dent council.

B. To cha'nge the concept oftribunals. They would be like a"Congress." The Student Coun- -cil would then be compared toa liSen ate," except that thestudent would still have controlover tribunals. The purpose isnot only to allow ioint meetings,but also to obtain better com-munications -in stud.ent govern-.mente Joint meetings wouldprobably number 2 or thr~e perquarter and most likely have aspeaker.C. To organize a Spring Leader-

ship School. Mter elections, .new-ly elected persons and others whowere interested would be able- togain valuable information in par-lementary :procedure, pub I i cspeaking, publicity; etc.D. To continue and expand the

Student Discount Program.To be a student, not an admin-

istrative liason.To use the authority of the of-

fice to reflect student opinionsand not be satisfied until solu-tions are confirmed.To work with the NEWS REC-

ORD to solve more of our com-munications problems.To organize a leadership school

for better campus leaders.To make- the campus more a

part of the athletic scene .. ,"To re-evaluate our student gov-

ernment structure.To act, to accomplish.

"

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i

Page 4: Ballot For Beer Here - UC Libraries · Ballot For Beer Here\ I • I am in favor of making beer available to students at the chaperoned parties of recognizee:ampus groups (fraternities,

Pag~ Four UNIYERSITYOF CINCINNATI NEWS RECORD~--_._------------------------------------------------ •..._--------------------------_ .....•------Thursday, March 3,1966

Mclinta~ining·:A:Fine',~Tradi:tionI' Student'~·'23rd Psalm' i

The road was ~ugged· for a freshman coach and a group of ballplayers who had. to per-form more consistently in order to better last year's record of 14-.12. But UC Coach Tay Bakermanaged .to obtain the best efforts of his team which surprisingly gained an NCAA· berthafter claiming the Missouri Valley Conference championship.

Throwing its hat in the ever-questionable MVC. ring, UC was awarded in return only the'rim with a poor seventh rating in the conference. Talenf:laden Bradley and Wichita achievednational recognition but even this ranking was withheld from the Bearcats until mid-season.After several outings, UC did arouse natio~al attention and appeared irregularly in the Top·Ten and Twenty -ratings. _

While the over-all performance of the team this past season has been sporadic,they didwin the important games and certainly learned through experience. Constant pressure, a newcoach, and untrained sophomore starters created problems for the team but through determi-nation, dedicatiori.iand .ability they performed successfully in the majority of their contests.

j

. Lacking national heroes like Kelly Pet,e and Wesley Unseld, the eight or nine starters'and those who supported them in' the various 'positions' developed a team effort and care-fully coordinated play pattern that removed th .e. problem of not hcivingone star. Through suchcooperation, tile team was also able to elimin ate the threat imposed by the one man aroundwhom the opposing team centered.

A title in the MVC is a major tribute to any basketball team in any year but the honor iseven more notable when it has been achieved by the same fearn in seven of the past nineyears. UC has evidently established a tradition in the last few years and has proven that thestar-laden teams are not necessarily the best in the nation. The NCAA winner has often beenthe "dark horse" and, conceivably, discipline and determination, rather than spectacle and specu- .lation could claim the crown this year.. Certainly the UC Bearcats, a fine team with a fine coach

. should be outstan~ing in the competition.

Ar.,,-Chair CriticsDoesn't it seem rather ridiculous that a weekly campus news-

paper should devote editorial space to defending lack of cover-age of national and international events? Unfortunately, we areforced to do so due to the complaints of a small segment ofcampus who contend we are ignoring Vietnam, Congress, birthcontrol, dope, and free love. Naturally, most of these individualsare totally unfamiljar with publications procedures or those twofine institutions known as the press deadline and timeliness.

/'

While we would definitely enjoy devoting space to hap-penings beyond the limited confines of our campus and thecity, we find, such coverage impossible. We are not avoidingsuch issuesrwe a're not adverse: to such copy; we' ·are not Anti-Vietnam, Republican, family-oriented, LSD-using, sex maniacs .....We are very simply. a staff of approximately 15 members inaddition to ten editors (none of whom has journalism training)attempting to meet a Monday deadline for a Thursday publi-cation. Without a journalism school to. provide trained sta.ffers,we are unable to expand our coverage; to' force our currentreporters to do so would tax them to the utmost llrnit; With thepresent press deadline, 'most news from, the national and inter-national scene would be f"our days old and very probablycomplefely changed.

We do attempt to publicize campus events and "issues"and also outstanding occurrences in the city. Naturally, .we alsofeature certain developments because we believe they. will ap-"peal to a large segment of campus. Obviously, we do misjudgevarious items ahd pay the penalty of criticisms and complaintsfrom the group which fails to appreciate our reasons for adopt-ing a particuJar "crusade."

As a campus _newspaper, we believe we serve our statedpurpose-to cover campus news. Only in this 'year have we ex-panded to 'fuller discussion of city'!wide events and increasedpublicity to previously neglected areas of campus. Last quarter,we had hoped to implement in-depth studies of contemporary

, problems frem Vietnam to Ecumenism. Regrettably, the indi-viduals who planned to conduct these investigations were forced.by prior committments and/or academic problems to relinquishthe task .. No - other persons from the' staff were available tocontinue this scheme.

We are Ivery tired of being labeled liberal and provincialat the same time. We are disgusted with those critics who rageagainst the paper and seriously believe they could do a betterjob but who fail to understand the paper's problems and whodo not offer their ideas and talents to its' production.

We claim this is .a student newspaper-that it is and it isopen to all students who have the time and energy to devoteto its publication. We are obviously not infallible and we certainlywelcome new and different ideas for the NEWS RECORD. Atall times, we are happy to discuss valid, rational criticisms andto accept schemes th-at are feasible and newsworthy.

NElVS QECORDUniversity of Cincinnati

M~mb~r: Associate Collegiate PressNational Advertising Service, Inc.

Rooms 411-12-15,Union Building, Cincinnati 21, Ohio475-2748,2749

$3.50per year, 10 cents per copy.Second Class Postage Paid, Cincinnati, Ohio.

The Curve is my shepherd.

I shall not worry.

it maketh. me to sleep through class periods

It leadeth me to believe in false intelligence

It restoreth my self-respect.

It leadeta me in the path of hard courses for prestiqe:« sake.

Yea, tho' I uxilk: through the valley ?f F's

I shall fear no Draft

For the Curve is with me.

Thy median and thy mean, they comfort me.

It prepareth a grade scale before me' in the presence of theAdministration

It annointeth my grade-point with B's.

My honor points 'runneth over.

\Sure~y goodness and my transcript shall follow me all thedays of my life

And I shall dwell in the house of the Curve [oreoer,

(Editor's note: This poem was written by Ron Roat, a re-porter for the Michigan State University STATE NEWS. I~appeared in the February 16, 1966 edition, -and is reprintedhere in full.)

Letters to the EditorUNFAIR SEATING

To the EdiJor:) .I want to thank the Student

Union for bringing the NewChristy Minstrels for the concertthis" past Saturday. It is an assetto our University to have suchoutstanding entertainers performat reasonable prices on campus ..The concert was a grand successif we ignore the ridiculous mar-ner admissions was. handled,which caused confusion and un-necessary crowding ~and pushingat the door. and also the fact wecould not hear the entertainers'very well. during the first half.I question the seating policy at

the concert (and; at the recentMetro Show)' which set asidelarge blocs' 'of the best seats < fororganization men on our campus(fraternity and dorm men). The >

rest of the audience paid the, same price as the men who belongto theseIavored organizations andwere' told that seats were on afirst come first serve basis. Thrtwas obviously not true. The gen-eral public and non-organizationmen ought to have been fairlywarned when.they. purchased theirtickets. Even the now illegal andotherwise repulsive' concept ofsegregation allowed separate butequal accommodations for bothclasses. Apparently the presentsocial structure on this campushas relegated the non-organiza-tion men to lower status than seg-regation imposed 011 the negro.The non-organization men werenot even given separate butequal accommodations, yet werecharged the same price.,I am' a member' of a goodfraternity and am proud to be-101"9. Yet, I was ashamed at theconcert when 'one 'elderly ladybega~ to step' up to the .reservedseats, She did not realize hermistake until one suave, well-mannered fraternity man stoodup' to represent the group andshouted: '''Old ladies aren't al-lowed in the FRATERNITYSECTIONI" CertainlYI the fra-ternities are sounding their owndeath knell.

David HartlebA&S '66

QUEEN OF HEARTSTo the Editor:My date and I had been look-

/ ing forward, eagerly, to the SigEp's annual Queen of Heartsdance. We had made plans tomeet OUr friends. there, hopingfor 50 seats altogether, in our"customary spot," on' the left sideof the room. We arrived early,anticipating a large turn out, tobe sure that we could all sit to-gether. As we arrived on thefloor, much to our dismay; all thetables located anywhere near, or

on the dance floor, were all re-served for the fraternities. Itwas my impression that this wasnot a "fraternity" dance, despitethat fact that it is thrown by afarternity. We thought it was aschool wide and open dance forthe entire student body. Thoughthe Greeks playa large part in theactivities on this campus, I seeno need for them to regard thosewho have not gone Greek, for anynumber ofr~asops, as people withno rights, and therefore to bepushed around. I 1 would -r-. haveliked to see the tables open toanyone and' everyone on a firstcome, first serve basis, as hasbeen the custom in the past.

Naturally, this was the basisfor many discu<ssions amongstour party, and others that wehad spoken to. The next th~ng

The Ponderer

we looked forward to was theNew Christy Minstrels, beingpres.ented the following night.My date had purchased ourtickets a month in advance, in-quiring about reserved seats.He was informed that there wa·sno such thing, but again, on thefirst come basis. You can im-agine our disgust when ween-

\. tered the field house, and foundthat the 'entire center section ofthe middltf price range seatshad been blocked ~ for thefraternities. If there were noreserved seats, how could theyhave_purchased a "bleek" andhave them. reserved? Ag'ain theind'ependent student, is beingisolated. It seems to me' that itis time to rea lite rights, after

(Continued on Page 5)

Attit~des Toward Votingby Mike Patton

"You know as well as we do- that right,' as' the world goes, isonly in question between equalsin power, while the strong dowhat they can and the weak suf-fer what they must." This wasthe classical Athenian attitudetoward the Spartan colony Melos.Ponder the attitudes of studentstoday.Our country has prospered un-

der the ideal that all men deserveequal opportunity, preserving theworth and dignity of each indi-vidual. However, at the sametime the distance between idealand action is infamous.The question that students to-day face is whether or notflhey will perpetuate the hy-pocrisy. Each person at UCwill answer the question twicethis year. The first responseis the reaction to student elec-

t .tions; the second is the oppor-tunity tp participate in a Cin-dnnati vi,ter education andregistration project.'The student vote should form

the essence of a student mandatefor self government. If studentsdon't vote it can only mean thatthey don't care or that they arenot ready for self government.Either is a tragedy. .It would" appear that' students

have begun taking lightly themost important symbol of their\freedom-=-the' vote. Some laughat talk of the heritage passed onto us at the cost of sacrifice andoften death. For them there is

only pity.For others, let them know that

the fight for .equality continues,and that in many places it isbeing courageously led by stud-ents. During SpringVacation Cin-cinnati students can participatein a YWCA sponsored voter edu-cation and registration project.We're no longer talking 100 yearsago or 500 miles. away, but righthere in our own backyard.This is far more than sim,ply;'registering voters.' It is an edu-cati ona I"p'focess coping direct-Iy'with enslaved attitudes, pov-erty, and ignorance. Here liesthe real struggle-it is a fightbeing carried on by studentswho believe that the' weak canbecome strong in self determi-nation-they can suffer less-they can vote., Students participating in theproject will be experiencing .first-hand the essentials "of the demo-era tic process taking shape. Itwill be an experience in watch-ing men come alive to theirrights and responsibilities. It de-mands students who are alive aswell.Talk is still easy, and glorify-

ing old ideals is a common past-time. But, action is a heavy re-sponsibility, and inaction is aheavier tragedy ..This year students must face /

their responsibilities in self gov-ernment both by voting in cam-pus elections, and extending thevote off-campus. Ponder action .

Page 5: Ballot For Beer Here - UC Libraries · Ballot For Beer Here\ I • I am in favor of making beer available to students at the chaperoned parties of recognizee:ampus groups (fraternities,

Thursday, March 3, ,1966

Lf!tters,tJ~IVERSITY>~F'GINClNNATI ~.~S 'ReECORD

\Sp~aking~ ~u,t•

(Continued from Page 4)

all, we receive ,iequal andnotseparate" rights" for, we arepaying the same tuition, sittingin the same classes, and havesimilar interests 'as do. theGreeks.I think it would be a very wise

thing to have this brought' up atthe next student council meet-ing, as I'm sure that there aremore than just our party of tenwho were a bit aggravated bythis overwhelming POWer of· thefraternities, as shown in: the oc-<curances of this past weekend.Maybe something. can be doneto eliminate this in the future.

Alice GreenTC '66

NEW CHRISTY MIN5-TRELSTo the Editor:To all those responsible for :the

New Christy Minstrels concertI Saturday, Feb. 12.

Thank you for holding to thefine tradition .of destroyinganything decent that appea.rs .onthe campus. Thank 'you to thosewho had parking lot No. 1printed on the tickets and tothose who refused to let theticket holders 'park in lot No.1without paying 50 cents. Thankyou for making everyone standin the lobby until twenty min--utes before the starting time andthen opening one door on each-side to admit 5000 people.Thank you for .refusing to let

me sit in the seat' in the sec-tion I paid for because theywere reserved for the alm'ightyfraternities. ( I sat there any-way).' And, flNlI." ilia •• youfor the marvelous amplificationduring the final half. It was sonice of you to let us hear thatpart.This was the last UC sponsored

function I will ever attend. Onlythe talent Of the New ChristyMinstrels saved the evening frombeing a total loss. From now onI intend to save my moneyrather than risk an evening suchas the one of Feb. 12.

Gary WeberDAA '66

GIRLS AND FRIDAYSTo the Editor:This ~quarter the Union has

been sponsoring TGIF parties inthe Old Grill, which is on thesame, floor as the Rhine Room.There has been a band at eachof the parties held so far . There -

• •Great ~Discuss~on Be,gins

by Bill Ruehlmann.

is a fabulous opportunity here toreally have a good time after aweek of studies and Classes. AsI understand now, there will bedances every -Friday afternoonuntil the end of this quarter andthen' a series of dances in theSpring quarter also. The numberof students who have been at thesedances is very good-close to 200each time. However. of the 200 atthe TGIFs, at least 80 per centhave been boys. Being a guy my-self, 'I am just curious to knowwhere the. girls hide themselvesevery Friday and why they don'tgive us men much of, an 'oppor-tunity to dance. Surely, there mustbe some girls around our campuswith whom I could dance withouthaving to fight off five or tenother guys who also want todance. How about it girls? Thereis no reason in the world whyour 80 per cent has to just watchthe band play instead of dancing ,to it. Let's see' you at this Fri-day's TGIF! '

Don PrahlBus. Ad. '68

It's been. a long time sincesomeone ran up' to me- on thestreet and congratulated me OQ,my devout optimistic nature, and-I'll admit that when I offered upthe suggestion for a series ofstudent-faculty .conversations inthis column several 'Weeks',ago,I expected a response about asoverwhelming as a three-inch.tidal wave. But, gratifyingly, anumber of informed, articulatefaculty members nave expresseda serious interest and a willing-ness to take part; and many stu-dents have spoken to me of their-enthusiasm for the idea.

/50 I take more than. modestpleasure in anno~ncing the first

'-- meetings 10' the Great_ Dis..-

"

tr6 OUfl. UNI\jE..~\TY AND WE-\LL-Mo'L1> rT\N CUR OWN lMAEre.H ~w /'Plrr txJWN

I

-rHJ.\f \3E.~R AtJD CO~ "5l1 ON M'I U\P'jOW TrULL):, l"HTuDE:NT n

ALL THE PIZZA YO'UCAN ..EAT' ,FOR .$1.00'1(~:~Tues. Ni,tes - Tues. NitesllONLY A BUCK I \ ~ ••• -

A HEAD'

FUN FOR' EVERYONE

HOT .SLfCES OFDELICIOUS I'TALlAN~AUSAGE, SPICY PEPPERONI,CHOPPED GREEN PEPPERS

( , .

MUSHR-OOMOR C,HEEZE PI,ZZAS.(OUR DOUGH MADE FRESH DAilY)

ATZINO'S314 L·UDL<OW-,

281-3774TUESDAY INIGHTSS P.M. TO MIDNI'GHT

cussion, to be held in the Phil- 'osophy Library, Room 219 Mc-Micken, from 12:30 to 2 o'clockon Tuesday, March 8 (Dr. Pad.-'geft and Dr. Heinlein, and from12:30 to 2 on Thursday, March10 (Mr. Clow and Dr. Work-man).The week's theme will be

'''What's Bugging You?" To kickoff the series of discussions, itwas felt that the students shouldbe afforded the opportunity toexpress their concern for prob--lems of the contemporary world,with the emphasis lying in theirdifficulties and their angers., The atmosphere will be en-tirely informal, and the con-versation entirely free-wheel-ing. The only restriction is re-spect for opinion; the only pre-requisite is an open mind.Hopefully, the G'reat Dis-

cussion will continue twiceaweek with a new' theme eachweek. But, it is still in the ex~peri mental stage; for its con-tinuance, the initial meetingsrequire ( support.. If you, thestudent body, want this kind offree exchange of ideas andleaming to go on, you're goingto have -to carry the ball fromhere.I would like to extend my sin-

cere thanks to Mr. Paul Burrell,)lr.Jay H~ Clow, Mr. RicharddeMaagd, Dr. J. C. Heinlein,Mrs. Dorelle Y. Heisel, Dr. Ed-ward. Padgett, Dr. Roy Schenk,and Dr. Rollin Workman; whowill be taking part in these dis-cussions, and who have -helpedwith many suggestions and con-tinued patience with a harried,disorganized Ruehlmann.rwould also like ..to thank Dean

William R. Nester for his assist-ance and direction, and Mr. NealBerte for his kind ald.

When vou can't /afford, to be dull,sharpen your wits.with N~D~oZTM

NoDoz Keep Alert Tablets fight offthe, hazy, lazy feelings of mental. sluggishness. NoDoz helps-restoreyour natural mental vitality ... helpsquicken physical reactions. You be-come more naturally alertto peopleand conditions around you, YetNoDoz is as safe as coffee. Anytime, . ,when you can't afford to be dull,sharpen your wits with NoDoz.

SAFE AS COFFEE'

Po'geFive

These 'Are-The

Underdogs.Jim Li'ed

Student Body Pres.

,Denny' Re,ig'le

.Sr. Closs President

Ron Kemnitser

Sr. Class Treasurer

~Weissenberger

Closs President

Kaplan,

Jr. Class Treasurer

"(~erring

Soph. Class President

-Bob Read\j /-'

Closs, 'Treasurer\

Page 6: Ballot For Beer Here - UC Libraries · Ballot For Beer Here\ I • I am in favor of making beer available to students at the chaperoned parties of recognizee:ampus groups (fraternities,

"-'loe Six, UNIVERSITY OF CINCINNATI NEWS RECORD"

I

Traditional Military~Ball To FeatureHono~~arv Cabet Colonel Selection

KD's Barbara ,~urgAnnouncedDeLta ,Sigma . Pi .Rose Queen

Cupid'sCorner

by Marty BrownPreparations are in full swing

for the 1966 Military Ball whichwill be held March 5 in the Mu-

, sic Hall Ballroom. The theme ofthis ' year's ball - is "HarborLights." Entertainment will beprovided by Charlie Kehrer andduring the intermission,' by theUniversity Singers.

Invitations, besides going out,to the highest levels of bothArmy and Air Force, and toVI pIS in both local and statesevernmenr, including GovernorJames, Rhodes, have, also beenextended, for the first time, toleaders of many campus organ-izations - that have no connec-

PINNED:

Jan Weigel, ADPi; _Dale Wolf, SAE.

Dana Dalton, Tri-Delt:Bernie ,'Heckmann, ATO~

Toba Feldman, -SDT;Gordon Gladstone. HUC.

.~

ENGAGED:

Mary Rottmueller:SkiLl Jackson.

Marcia Logan;Marv Goldstein, AEPi;'RIT,- Rochester, N. Y.

Barbara'Marx;John Irwin.

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TaeWaeNa's 30 Seconds from CampusWAY -OUT pierced earrings"Jewelry'. OFF-BEAT ques-quetntls; c h « lee 0 S, apparel• WILD dorm-decorated 06jects• AS-U-Like-IT made-to-ur-order-jelfelry . . . engagement rings,2.'i% DISCOUNT (show -I.D.)FRAT-SORORITY J~WELRY forless • Precious, S. P. Stones.

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B'..,'nJJWegiIMtMe

Q IAJOfI t¥ ti#!On the campus, for casual"wear, everywhere. -c; Weejunsare favorites. You'll be ex-

- actly right in the _ Weejunclassic elegance which only-Weejun hand-sewn moccasin

- detailing gives. Weejuns (irescarce. But Ludwig's re-'ceives periodic shipments."You'll find it worthwhile tokeep trying at Ludwig's for'~-our pair of Weejuns.

Ladies'. S13~Ien's: Sli

~Ien's tie, S26

1.••• 11.·.College Hill_e Mt. Healthy - J-Swifton Center

t· . -h th R'OTC Barbara Burg of Kappa. DeltaIon wlf e " .Th ·1' f th Milit B 11 <.sorortty was announced by the, e C trn ax 0 e I I ary a '"

is the presentation of the Hono- men of Delta SIgma. PI as theirrary Cadet Colonel for the com- 196..6 Rose Queen at their annualing year. At this year's ball, fol- dance, Feb. 26, at the Friar'slowing tradition, the five candi- Club. As Rose Queen Barbaradates and their escorts will en- . \. -.ter the ballroom at midnight received a dozen long-stemmedthrough an arch of crossed sab- red roses, a crown of red roses,ers. The five finalists are Mary and a trophy. First runner __upBail, Carol Bertoglio, Sondra Fay, was Carol Kayser of Scioto -HallMarilyn Hintermeister, - and Don- 'and second runner-up, Pat Brownna Shank. The five finalists will of Delta Zeta.walk to the front of the stage B';rbara served as rush chair-and all of the lights will be turn-' man for her sorority and was aed out. In the darkness, one of member of the DAA Tribunalthe-escorts will tell his date that and Mummer Guild. She is ashe is the 1966 Honorary Cadet junior in.,BAA, majoring in fineColonel. He will take her up the arts. ' ~steps to the center of the stage As Delta ....Sigma Pi Rose Queenwhere she will receive -the sym- Barbara will compete for the na-bols of her office once the lights' tional title of Rose' Queen. All ofare restored. the chapters sponsor candidates.

The Department of Militarf The national queen receives anScience was established on theUC campus in 1919, after thefirst World War had shown thatnational security. req~ired are-serve of <young oHicers for thearmed servlees.. Af first Mili-tary Honorary Cadet Colonelwas Miss Gertrude Betz whowas chosen in 1928. The depart-ment of Air Science was es-tablished in 1949 and the Mili-tary Ball became a .Ioint' func-tion of both Army and AirForce units.The Honorary Cadet Colonel is

chosen ( by both military units.She will receive a dozen redroses, the white Honorary CadetColonel uniform, and the officialsign of her office, the saber whichpasses ..from one Honorary CadetColonel to the next. She servesas official hostess for all ROTCfunctions, appears at military re-views, and unofficially; serves asa morale booster to the ROTCCadets. The present HonoraryCadet Colonel is Miss MollyWhyte. -

Thursday, Morch 3, 1966

ell-expense·¥ork.

paid trip to New

Miss Barbara Burg-Photo by Frank Farmer

Alpha Phi Alp~ SponsorsState Undergrad 'Workshop

/

PLACEMENTAll seniors who intend to ac-

cept .employment in June areinvited to an informal meet-ing sponsored by the Place-ment Department in 'the Lo-

\ santiville Room in the StudentOnion at "3 p.m. on TuesClay,March 8. -

Placement Department rep-resentatives will discuss ,theplcrnt visits which many sen-

I. iors will .be making duringspring vacation.

by Randall Maxey

On Feb. 26, the Alpha Alpha- and Dena Gamma Lambda chap-

ters of Alpha Phi Alpha ~rater-nity hosted an -Ohio State 'Under-'graduate Roundup and Workshopin conjunction with their Mid-western Regional Director's Heet-ing. _

The program began with a ,luncheon at 11 :45 a'.m. in theLosantivilte Room of tl1e 'Stu-dent Union. After the presenta-tion of Sweethea rt ..Queen J ud-ith Johnson, Forest Heis, presi-dent of Student Council, extend-ed a welcom,e to visiting' A:lphaPhi Alpha brothers. JackBoul~ton, IFC president, spoke brief-ly, as did Sam Hannibal andRichard Cunningham, respect-ively presidents of Alpha Alphaand Delta, Gamma Lambdachapters. The Midwestern Reg-ional Vice---President, Mr. BillyJones, offered comments on therole ·of the fraternity· in- thebuilding ..of the productive in-dividual. Roger 'Miller, as IFC

f-. president of Miami University,gave the keynote speech onmodern rush procedures.The luncheon was followed by '<.

a state meeting at two o'clock.From three to five seminars and

- workshops were held.. and the af-ternoon was completed with aninter-chapter song battle. (Alpha Phi Alpha's purpose in

organizing this function, besides-that of cementing regional broth- -erhood, .was to conduct an inves-tigation into the question of therole of the predominantly Negrofraternity on the predominantlyWhite campus. The Roundup, withits seminars and workshops, of-

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fered an opportunity for the chap-ters to discuss problems, -share'experiences, and benefit in amutual move for solutions; andin providing educational, citizen-ship, and voting programs, AlphaPhi Alpha men further hope toachieve a positive answer to theproblems confronting their mem-bers in the contemporary world.

Prizes AwardedAt Fasching Ball

by Da,vid BraceyThe Fasching Ball sponsored

by UC'sGerman Department andthree other local, .colleges washeld Feb. 21 at Kolping Grove.The Fasching festivity, the Ger-man equivalent of the MardiGras.xis characterized by endless

/ music, dancing, and beer. InMunich where the Fasching isheld <annually, costumed partici-pants cavort around the streetsfor days.

The party-goers .came fromr: UC, Xavier University, Our

Lady of Cincinnati College, andthe College of Mt. St. Joseph.Professors from all four schoolsattended. About thirty I' peoplewere in full costume. A prizefor the two best costumes was f

~hared by UC graduate assist-ant Shirley Campbell and MarieBourgeois, the only coed atXU and daughter of XU pro-fessor Dr. Joseyh. E. Bourgeois.Entertainment was provided by

the Lorelei Club, a group of sing-ers from OLC, the HeidelbergClub from XU, the Donau-Schwa-ben Dancers, and a group of stu-dents from C-CM who sang ex-cerpts from' "My Fair Lady" inGerman. Music was - provided bythe Flying Dutchmen.The Fasching Ball was organ-

ized by Dr. Starkulla, a renown-ed German scholar' who is guestprofessor from the University ofMunich, Mr. Joe Scott, directorof the German Language Lab, andthe UC German Club .. Dr. GuyStern, lie ad of the UC Germandepartment, commented: "We areconvinced by Monday night's suc-cess that this Fasching Ball willbe an annual affair."

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Page 7: Ballot For Beer Here - UC Libraries · Ballot For Beer Here\ I • I am in favor of making beer available to students at the chaperoned parties of recognizee:ampus groups (fraternities,

/ Thursday, March 3, 1966 UNIVERSITY ·OF CINCINNATI NEWS RECORD Page Seven

Mortar, Board Conducts5ilverOpi nion Competition

vDuring February and March,

Reed and Barton Silversmiths areconducting a "Silver OpinionCompetition" in -which valuablescholarships totaling $2050 arebeing / offered to duly enrolledwomen students at a few selectedcolleges and universities.

UC has been selected to enterthis competition' in which the,First Grand Award is a $500cash scholarship; Second GrandAward is a $300 scholarship;Third Grand Award is a $250scholarship; Fourth, Fifth and. Sixth Awards are $200 scholar-ships; and Seventh, Eighth, andNinth, and Tenth, are $100scholarships. In -addition therewill be 100 other awards con-sisting of sterling silver, finechina and crystal with retailvalue of about $50. 'In J;he 1966 "Silver Competi-

tion," an entry form illustratestwelve designs of sterling witheight designs of both china andcrystal. The. entrants simply listthe three best combinations ofsterling, china and crystal fromthe patterns illustrated. Scholar- I

ships and awards will be madeto those entries matching or com-ing closest to the unanimous se-lections of table-setting editorsfrom three of tire nation's lead-ing magazines.Mortar Board is conducting the

"Silver Opinion Competition" forReed and Barton, Those interest-ed· in entering should contactBarbara Stewart, 2920 Scioto'Tower, 475-3366for entry blanksand for complete details concern-ing the competition rules. Entry

~ blanks are also available at the'Student Union, sorority houses,

"and women's residence halls.

College Queen OualificationsAnnounced" For Annu(aL ContestThe search is on again to se-

lect the "nation's most outstand-) ing college 'girl." The Pageantat which the College Queen- isselected is an annual event whichgives recognition to girls fortheir combination of scholasticability, campus activities andleadership.

Alr~ndergraduate girls, fromfreshmen to seniors, are eligfreshmen to seniors, are elig-ible. A candidate may send inher own name, be recommend-ed byclas.smates, 'friends, so-rorities, fraternities or campusclubs. The girl's name shouldbe " sent. to· National 'CoU~e9ueen Contest, 1501B.roadway,N.Y.C. 10036.Every girl who enters the con-

test receives a questionnaire. In. this she is asked to give a com-plete description of herself andher activities. The judges selecta winner from each state and they ,are given a free trip to New YorkCity, to participate in the finalsof the competition.The Pageant is sponsored by

the Best Foods Division of theCorn Products Company. The girlwho is chosen queen will receive

many prizes. They include a newcar, a trip to Europe-a vaca-tion tour of London, Paris andthe Continent. In the field of fash-ions,she will be awarded a com-plete wardrobe of suits; dressesand sportswear. She can selectover $500 worth of her favoritestyles.

During the national finals,the candidates are tested ontheir intelligence, their generalknowledge of. current affairs,their, qualities of leadership,and their personalities. Duringthe Pageant the girls participatein open forum type discussions."the .judges conduct these dis-cussions-town meeting style-and the college girls are askedtheir opinions on a, wide rangeof topics.All the candidates for Queen

will be treated. in a royaldashionduring their ten-day stay in NewYork. They will be taken toBroadway shows, dine at-famousrestaurants, and appear on tele-vision. Last year during thePageant the Finalists toured theUnited Nations' and were honor-ed at a reception at the AmericanEmbassy. •

FORECAST FOR SPRING. Aswinging, flared skirted spri,ngcoat 'in "pale blue linen fastenedwith chalk white frogs. The snoodof beige linen printed with paleblue and white flowers, completesthe ensemble. The coat is de-signed and constructed by\ SallieRaymond, 'iunio~; the hat design-ed andc'onstructed by Jane Bruch-er Duning, senior; t~e ensemblesketched by CaroIR,aines, sopho-more; Fashion De$ign department,College of Design, Architecture,and Art.

Engin'eers' BallThe annual Engineer's Ball

sponsored by the EngineeringTribunal took place Friday, Feb.26, at the Cincinnati - Gas. andElectricC:ompany Recreation. Cen-ter. ' ,

In charge of the danee com-mittee was Gary Adams; public-ity was Loyal Peterma,ni tick-ets was Gary Schumacher;physical arrangements was KenSmith; door prizes waiS DougStone; invitations was MikeDevanney; and a,rrangementsfor the dea'n's reception weremade llY Bob Niebuhr. Chap.erones - were Dr. and Mrs.Robert Delcamp and Dr ..& Mrs.Robe,rt Raible.

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I MemorL.aLHoLd's'First C.otiLLion

by Sherry Levy

Although the dragon on the wallwas a paper one, the enjoymentof those who attended the Resi-dence Hall Cotillion on Friday,Feb. 18, was real. 'The formal dance, sponsored

by Memorial Hall, was unique inmany ways. It was the first such \dance ever to be presented by' aUniversity Residence Hall oncampus..

The chaperones, Mr. ClaudeAllen, Dr. and Mrs. DavidSterling, and Dr. Rollin Work-man, were chosen by the girlsin Men:-orial. They -and, otherhonored guests danced to themusic of George Kasper's er-chestra. The intermission en-tertainment was provided bythe University Singers, accom-panied by Bob Engle. To carryout the medieval theme of "AKnight to Remember," the Sing..ers included songs from Came-lot" 'in their performance.Another unique feature of the

dance was the announcement of'the outstanding' freshman womanin Memorial. Cynthia Thompson,studying In the School of Design,Art, and Architecture, was chosenon the basis of her outstandingparticipation in Hall activities,her academic proficiency, andpersonal standards.These features, amidst the ban-

ners, shields, and flowers madethe evening a "royal" experi-erice for those who attended "AKnight to Remember."

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Page 8: Ballot For Beer Here - UC Libraries · Ballot For Beer Here\ I • I am in favor of making beer available to students at the chaperoned parties of recognizee:ampus groups (fraternities,

Pcqe I::ight UNIVERSI·TY OF ;CINCINNATI NEWS RECORD Thursday" March 3, 1966

C ~'<" ~,., ',"., '. ,,' "~'''' "'. ,d":' t·"·~,· "A'" ',: ,:" :,·"-..·.,,·~.;.-». ;t 'T"~ ", Imcmne I.g,oln .. ops nBearcats CopMVC'CrownWith Drake Win

by Randy Win,ter

Spotl~ghtOll

Cincinnati Star Pivotmen

of It, "I'm looking forward toplaying against Lew Alcindernext year. It should be quite anexperience." ,Big Ron found it hard to single

out one team as the best: he feltthat on any given night anyMVC team could beat any otherone.

Looking forwa:rd tot h echances of Cincimati in NCAAplay, Ron didn't want to say'much."We play in a toughleague, and should be used tothe constant pressure and com-petition. Besides, we don't .know Yet who, we'll have toplay."Whoever .the- opponents may be,

they had better watch out for thecenter in Tay Baker's revampedoffense, which, ever one it maybe,

by Bob Plotkin

NR Spo,rts Featu re Writer

One of the main reasons for the / gresses. ,success of the' Cincinnati Bear- "MVC scouts are a,t all yourcats this season has been the games, each one is so import-clever manipulating of players by ant," he said. "You have toCoach Tay Baker. Baker has al- come up with a variety of of-ways "been able' to come up with "fenses ana defenses to keep thethe right man' at the right time other clubs guessing. Baker hasand save a ball game. One of his put' in a couple of extra playsmajor feats in this area has been for the center in order to takethe shuffling in and out, of cen- pressure off of our forwards."ters Ron Krick and Mike Rolf. Both men felt that Wes Unseld ,

I decided to speak to both of Louisville, was the best centerRon and Mike about this juggl- they've faced all year. They wereing, and see how they reacted somewhat impressed by 'Richto Baker's strategy. "Of course Parks of St.Louis, but felt heI'd like to play all the time," wasn't as tough to stop offensiv-said Rolf, "but winning is the ely or off the boards as Unseldmain thing. As long as it helps was, .us win, I'll go aln09 wif~ it." The' best team Mike felt heKrick added, "1 think it's faced was UCLA, out on the coast

a g,reat move, on Baker's pa,rt. in an early season game. He feelsHe'll have someone with ex- they are still a tough team, al-perience ready for next season. though they've had a hard timePlus, I've always had a foulproblem and there have been in-iuries, so with two men readyto go at center you've got anadvantage." ,Rolf is the smaller of the two

at 6-6, but what he gives awayin height he makes up' for with anexcellent shooting touch. Mikehas made the switch from forwardto center 'just this year, and Iasked him how he compared thetwo positions."Well, offensively it is more of

a' job of screening and rebound-ing at center, the forwards getmost of the shots. By the same -,token, the job defensively at cen--ter is easier, you're in the keymore, not chasing those fast for-wards around." •I pointed out to Krick that the

centers seem to be taking moreshots and scoring more often thanthey had earlier in the season.Ron agreed, a-nd pointed out thatit is necessary to make changesin your offense as the season pro-

NCAAI'; March 8, In'L~ubbo.~k, Teqs,undefeate~ Texas West~rn Uni-versity and Oklahoma CityUniversity will, knock headsfor the right to. play. UC in thesecond round of the MidwestRegionals of the N<:AA Bas-ketbal(l'ournament. '

tAT6< - 'rf))) _

~~,

MVCChamps FaceX-MusketeersIn Tuneup

by Rich Dineen

With the Missouri Valley Con-ference and a trip to the NCAAMid-West Regional under1heirbelts, the DC Bearcats should berelaxed and, ready when theytake the floor against the XavierMusketeers on Thursday night.The game will not be easy in anysense of the word, but it shouldbe a good tune-up' for the up-coming tournament play.

Xavier is 13-12 on the season,but they have played some ofthe best teams in' the countrywhich notably include: Day-'ton, St. Joseph, DePaul, andLoyola of Chicago. They are ledby 6-6 sophomore forward BobQuick who is averaging over21 points per game and 15 re-bounds a contest, Bryan Wil-liams, a 6~5 senior:' guard, isjust now coming into his ownand the last two· times ()ut hehas scored well.Rounding out the ••Xavier start-

ing five are ~6-8 pivot John Gor-man, who took ~)ver for EdgarLacey when he became ineligible'due to grade problems, TimO'Connell at the other guard andBen Cooper at the other. cornerspot.As far as matching up withUCin the height depattment,Xavier is. very close to theBearcats. This fact should make'fora'n interesting game on theboards as both teams are ex-cellent rebounding teams. In

- fact, -against St. Joseph, Xav-ier's front line-Quic~ Cooper,and Gorman-accounted for 34oft-he Muskies' 53 rebounds.Both teams play aggressive

defense and there should be agood head-on head battle betweenDC's fine defensive guard RolandWest and the Muskies' Bryan Wil-liams. Against St. Joseph's how--ever Coach Don Ruberg electedto go with a one-three-one andthen a two-three zone. So it maybe that the Bearcats will see azone dn Thursday night at theGardens.- Last year -when fhe two teamsmet to decide the mythical"Cincinnati Championship," theBearcats emerged victorious bya substantial 102-72 margin_The Muskie's and Coach Ru-berg, no doubt, remember thistrouncing well and will be outto make amends for this humil-iating defeat. Both Coach Bak-er and Coach Dieringer willprobably keep this in mind as,they prepare the Bearcats forthe contest.The Muskies should be well

prepared for the Bearcat style ofplay because Coach- Ruberg hasseen the DC team play at leastsix times this season. This exten-sive scouting indicates the desirk·and interest which .the Xavierpeople must have in this partic-ular game. A victory over theBearcats could make the Muskies'season and: this is what they wrllbe shooting for on Thursdaynight.

A victory ever the Musketeers,will boost the Bearcats' seasonrecord to 21-5 and will help toprepare them fOf NCAA play. Toachieve the 21st victory UC willhave to come to pla.y becausecross-town rival Xavier willbe there .for one purpose, toknock off the Missouri ValleyConference Champs.Four Bearcat seniors will make

their last appearance before a. home-town crowd. Centers TomBiedenharn and Ron Krick, for-ward Don Rolfes and guardRoland West Senior Dean Lam-pros' career was shortened be-cause of a back injury. These fivemen are especially eager to main-tain ,\~heir winnin~. ways over,cross-town foe Xavier.

#

. UC's Bearcats are Missouri Val-ley Conference basketball cham-pions for the seventh time in nineseasons after one of the most hec-tic races in recent history cameto an end last Saturday in their56-49 victory over a stubbornDrake squad.'Sophomore John Howard drop-ped in three straight free-throws in' the last minute of. play, and Ron Krick finisheda strong scoring effort by tap-ping in a missed Howard free-.throw.This five-point run gaveCincy the victory after Drakehad closed to within 51-49.Krick '.led both teams in scor-

ing by posting 19 points and inrebounding - with 9 grabs. DonRolfes and Howard also tossedin 14 points apiece for the 'Cats.A pair of Harolds, Jeter and ,AId-KNEELING (left to right): Mike Luchi, Dean Foste~, John Howard', Paul" Weidner, Mike Leurck,'ridge, led. the invade.rs, with' 16 'Dean Lampres,' Jerry Couzins 'and Dick 'B~~IClih:~ " . ..--and 10 pomts, respectivly. . / .The. 'Cats sfarted'slowly"hi' . ,STANDING (left to right): ,Ass't Coach Ray Dieringer, Charles Houston, Ken Calloway, Ron Krick,the tight defensive struggle Tom Biedenharn, Mike Rolf, Don Roifesl ~oland W~st-and Head Coach Tay Baker.and seemed to have trouble inmaking their offense work.Part of this was caused b~ theextremely rugged defense thatwas thrown at the Bearcats byDrake and part of it was a re-action to the immense pressure.Also, Roland West, usually agood early-game scorer, washaving trouble finding themark. 'The game was tied at the half,

21-21, and with slightly morethan twelve minutes to go, Cincytrailed 37-36. Cincy then ran offten straight points while Drakefailed to score, and hung on un-til the final minute when -Drakeclosed to within a basket. Cincy'srecent intensive free-throw prac-tice then paid off with the vic-tory.UC was aided greatly by

.Louisville and Westley Unseldearlier in the afternoon. I..

Thanks to the Cards 81-66 vic-tory over Wichita, the 'Catsneeded only a win to be MVCchampions.Saturday's win was especially

gratifying since the Bearcats hadmissed a chance to wrap up thecrown on Tuesday. That day, theWichita Shockers beat Cincy by86-76 at Wichita.The Wichita loss was a bruis-ing game which was not reallywell played by either team. Be-tween them, the 'Cats and theZhockers combined for 50 turn-overs. Only at the end was theWichita margin comfortable, asCincy led with only about fiveminutes to go by a 66,.65 score.Wichita then whirled off ninestraight. points and outscoredCincy 21-10 to the wire· tostretch their victory margin.Although the players felt some

disappointment at losing to Wich-ita, they still felt that they wouldbe visiting Lubbock, Texas, forthe NCAA. Against Drake theywere good when they had to beand proved themselves right byearning the trip to the NCAA.In spite of their loss, the 'Cats

won praise from Wichita CoachGary Thompson, who calledthem "the best team we, haveplayed at home this year." ~Vet-eran Shocker' fans were alsoimpressed by the 'Cats, espe-cially with their first look atthe playmaking of Soph D~anFoster.Wichita's own prize soph, War-

- ren Armstrong was the differencein the game. scoring 24 'pointsand upsetting Cincy's defensewith his outside shooting. DonRolfes led the 'Cats with 20points. Armstrong's heroics, how-ever, merely set the- stage for '.the h-ectic' finish to the league:race-on Saturday.-'

Page 9: Ballot For Beer Here - UC Libraries · Ballot For Beer Here\ I • I am in favor of making beer available to students at the chaperoned parties of recognizee:ampus groups (fraternities,

Thursday, March 3, 1966

i:~~ -, I

UNIVERSITY OF CINCINNATI NEWS RECORD Page Nine

Scramble For' RankingsShakes,' Up Poll' Ratings

top ten after two 'weeks off thelist.This week's Top Ten Teams,

with records, total votes received,and posit jon on last week's poll:

last

votes' week\1. Kentucky (23-0) , 98 1

2. Chicago

Loyola (21-2) ".80 4

3. Duke (20-3) .. " .. 75 2

4. Texas

Western (~2-0) ., 62 3

5. Kansas' (20-3) ."., 59 66. Cincinnati (20-5) 44 5

7. St. Joseph's,

Pa. (21-4) , .. ,.,43 8

8. Vanderbilt (2i-3) \ 42 I 79. Michigan ,(15-6) .. 11 9

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NCAA Picksr:

by Frank KaplanAss/t Sports Editor\ /

i Now that Cincinnati has suc-cessfully wrapped up the MVC,they must now turn their atten-tion to the upcoming NCAA tourn-ament.This tournament, composed of

the nation's best, will 'decide thenational champion. Following isour analysis of who that cham-pion might be.The tourney is divided into four

regionals; the' East, Mideast,Midwest and West. Region byregion it looks like this: -<

East-Several highly ratedteams competing in this area.D!l-vidson, winner of the South·ern Conference and its qualify-ing tourney, faces the YankeeConference champ, Rhode Is·land. Give the edge to David·son.St. Joseph -(Pa.) meets Provi-

dence in the top- Eastern gameand the Hawks should win. Syra-cuse, with Dave Bing, shouldhave little, trouble,' wlth:~the~_IXyLeague winner, likely to be Penn.Duke, Atlantic Coast power-

house, must win a conferencequalifying tournament b e for emaking it to. the regionals. TheBlue Devils should do this, butthey could be upset by 'any ofthree teams in the ACC.

Should Duke make the region-als, they will likely win it. Adark horse could be Syracuse.Mid -east could be the toughest

of the four. Dayton should .havelittle, trouble with MAC winnerMiami. The Flyers wHI probablyfind the going a little rougherwhen they square off against Ken-tucky in the next game. In theother Mideast bracket WesternKentucky, winner of the not-too-strong, Ohio.; Valley ,.,'Conference,will be no match for Independentpowerhouse Loloya of Chicago.Loloya will have a battle on

their hands when they meet theBig Ten champ (probably Mich-igan), but should win out in aclose game.

This will set up a battle be-tween Kentucky and Loyola. thatcould be the game of the tourn-ament. As seen from here thegame is a toss-up.Midwest-a-Should be very tough

competition in this region. Allteams are very evenly matched.In a pre-regional match Okla.homa City opposes third ranked ,

, Texas Western. The Texans shouldwin, but barely. I •

, The Miners will they. play Cin-cinnati, MVC winner. Cincy has'played a rough .schedule, and willshoot Western down to size.On the other side, the Big

Eight. champ faces the South-western Conference victor. Al-though there may be a playoffin the Big Eight between Kansasand' Nebraska, Kansas shouldprove far superior. Texas A&Mand SMU are currently headingthe SWC but neither will provideKansas with any competition.

The Midwest shapes up as abattle between Cincinnati andKansas. If the Bearcats can

hold the boards and stop mam-moth Walt Westley (7-0), Cincycould very well walk away withthis region.West-appears to be the weak-

est of the four regions. FeaturesWestern Athletic winner Utah,West Coast Conference champ'(probably University of Pacific),Pacific Athletic Kin g OregonState, and Houston and ColoradoState from the Independents.-Either Ore gin .Btate or Utahshould win this. one ..College. P(irk: fans will' prebab-

ly see Duke, Kentucky (or Loy-ola), Cincinnati, and Oregon Stateplaying, the Round of Four. '

The Bearcats should whipOregon, but in the East thechoice is not clear. A'ny of thethree teams have an equalchance. Cincinnati would like-Iy have the edge over Loyola. if the Ramblers were to make,it.()Ij' the. other hand.iDuke would

be a favorite over Cincy if theDevils advanced. A UC-Kentuckygame must be considered a toss-up. ,The final winner would be al-

most impossible to pick unless ,theBearcat's opponents were known,so let's leave' it at that and waitand see.

* * *.UC Assistant Athletic Director

Dr. William Schwarberg 'was ex-tremely pleased 'with 'the festivi-ties last, Saturday night.

Asid~ from the big champion-ship game, ivhich was of course.very sweet, Dr. Schwarbergwas very happy about the rep-resentation of activities from all.parts Qf the campus. He called- it "an all.University occasion/' .referring to the list' of eventsbeginning with the Intramuralbasketball . championships 0 fboth the Fraternity and Inde-pendent Leagues' and endingwith the presentatlen \of a·plaque to Coach_ Baker fromthe student body.Sandwiched between these were

the presentation of the band, theintroduction of the cheerleaders,andthe pre-cise drilling of the UCROTC unit.

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As the regular basketball sea-son draws to 'a close, a wildscramble has developed for postseason tournament berths. This'scramble has shaken up/ the newNR poll and added some interestto the games stili to be played.

Kentucky, '23.0, .stlll has a'command o,f 'first place; but'itis' no longer unanimous, asDuke polled two first placevotes. , But the rest of the poll.sfers took notice of. a Duke ·Iossto Wake Forest; and as a resultthe Blue Devils slipped to third,the lowest they've been all year.Chicago Loyola jumped from

'fourth to second, sporting a 21-2 'record. Texas Western slips fromthird to fourth despite continu-ing to add onto its unblemished,record (22-0).Kansas ~W9ft "the

week.xwith Nebraska, handily,and moved from 6th to the fifthspot, trading places with Cincin-~ati. The Bearcats split a pair'of games this week, but coppedthe MVC tilte in so doing.

St. Joseph's of Pfl. has comeon strong in its last ten. games,running their record to 21.4,and they have now moved .up tonumber 7,' a gain of one spot.Vanderbilt handed two teams25 point losses this week, and

. gave St. Joseph's a-run for theseventh position. They werenosed. out by one vote, andfi'nished eighth.Big Ten leader Michigan has

continued its scoring rampage,and jumps up from 10 t09 this-week.' Filling in the 10th spotthis week is Providence, who justedged Dayton.' This is .Provi-,·ilence's-fir-st appearancev in""tlie

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Page 10: Ballot For Beer Here - UC Libraries · Ballot For Beer Here\ I • I am in favor of making beer available to students at the chaperoned parties of recognizee:ampus groups (fraternities,

Page, Ten. -; UN IVERSJTY s GF~G~NC.INNA:r:J, N'EWS~4<EC:0RD1, Thl~lrSday; Me rch 3; '1966-

A-nother View",,'

Ar~ The ICats Really So Grea~?" .. ' . '

Editors Note': Two weeks ago at will make all conference and All-the Tulsa game, several Ut: fans American. It would make theheld up a banner warning Ken- current Wildcats look that muchtucky 'Wildcat Coach Adolph Rupp better if the Castoff, "crip shotto watch -out for Cincinnati. The artist" would make it .~; .banner made a go-od column in Now lets get to the tough MVC.the Cincinnati 'Enquirer, and the- I noticed, that Bradley nosed outNR receiuetithe reply which iol- a rough Notre Dame team thelows from an irate Kentucky fan. other night in overtime. ThisWe print it, not because we agree alone is enough to convince mewith it, but because it presents a just how .tough the MVC is. Asview different from that of the you might know, our dearly be-average UC fan's. It is amazing loved Wildcats beat the toughhow the things he criticizes really Irish by over 40 points.are the factors in Cincy's success. Kentucky beat ene of yourWe Kentuckians sure did get a tougher conference teams(. St.

kick out of the column 'in Sun- Louis, by- ten. I guess this .isday's Enquirer stating that stu- about the only way we can seedent support rose to an all-time how tough the MVC is. I havepeak. That sure was a clever ban- _ been trying to find·a reasonner "look out, Adolph, here come why all. Cincy fans think theTay and Ray." I'm sure Mr. Rupp MVC is so tough. If it is be-wild get a chuckle out of it too, as cause they beat each other allhe was sent a clipping.' the time, it's a pretty sad rea-Let's face it, you UC "athletic' son. After all, the Mets and

supporters" were spoiled by Houston beat each other also.Oscar Robertson, .and it seems You certainly can't say thelike you'll never get over it. MVC is tough, tudging by theYoo' falr-~we'ather;a-ns~ve~-- -nationai-ranl<~in-g-s-.-----been second rate for years, and If someone could give me ayou'll never be first class. It - valid reason why the MVG is

/I seems like the only time you tough, I'd sure' be happy. Theget behind' your team is when calibre of players is pitiful. Ithey rally and finally get in think your league is made up of acontention for the league lead. bunch of club foots . . .

- Like the Clever article in the All we read about is the won-newspaper read your banner may /' derful production you get out ofhave been premature. We Ken- the center position. If the Bear-tucky fans hope that you do make cats and 'Wildcats should· meet,it to the: NCAA finals for two we are Willing' to let you play allreasons. First of all, we could three at once stacked on top ofmeet the Bearcats and secondly, each other. That would be aboutwe are all hoping that Don Rolfes ]9 feet, ten inches of double

I'tl III II . ItI ' IIC - 11. s· n -:- S amp/

It's "OutOf Sight"

Piz~als N,owAt·,Freo'chGri'll

,In FRENCH HALL

GIRLS WELCOME

dribblers, travelers, foulers,andhatchet men. And, there wouldbe about six left feet somewherein all that mess. -

Before you ~tart-tellin~Mr.Rupp to leekout, I would adviseyou to concentrate on Jim Hol-stein, who has made you look

, like a bunch of mules the pasttwo seasons.It must be tough to be rated

in the second :1~n nationally. Ithink you should be quite happyto be where. YO\l are ...

Sincerely,Gene GaddisWilliamstown, Kentucky'

Frosh SquadDrops Meet ~

by Bob RonckerWhile the varsity- was idle dur-

ing the week, the freshman trackand field team hac. an encounterwith" flie"frosnsqua(I"':OrMi:aii1ilnthe Armory-Fieldhouse.Only running' event's were eon-

tested. . Tile most not a b I eachievement was a 1:57 880 byChuck Roberts of UC. Thistime betters the previous Field-house best by' over three sec-onds.The half-mile was the only

Bearkitten .victory against theswift Miami runners, but UCcame in' 'a close second in theother events.

Lou Garcia suffered a slightmuscle pull in his leg duringthe high hurdles competitionthat cost him enough o'f a mar-gin to prevent his vietQry. Earl-Jer he competed rin and tookthird in the 6O-yard dash be-hind a Miami runner .end UC'sJoe Ni~kel •.Terry/Bailey gradually worked-

himself up among the pack ofPapooses to take the runner-upspot in the mile with a 4:38 time.Jean Ellis likewise finished sec-ond in the' two-mile run e-

In the medley relay Nickelled off with the sprint leg. Us.ing his speed and superiorknowledge o'f curve running inthe Fieldhouse to a good ad-vantage, he handed off the ba-ton with a go_od margin tospare.This lead' was held through

the 440 and 880 legs, but finallyduring the last quarter of themile section the Oxford man wentahead to, win.

SAEcWhips Delts 3S·~~rFreud House Tops-Ludlow

by Paul Moran action, Ritchie controlled theSigma Alpha Epsilon of' the game. He rebounded, brought

University League and the> the ball dewneeurt, and event-French House of Freud of the ually took the shot for the Sig

I All-Campus League won their re- Alphs 4' times in the last 2%spective intramural basketball minutes. His seven points in thechampionships. Last Saturday closing minutes stalled the finalevening, as preliminaries to the Delt drive.UC-Drake contest, Freud defeat- _ The Delts were -led in scoringed the Ludlow Lions 33-22in the by Charles Taylor with ninefirst game and SAE follo~ed with points. Kieth Patterson addeda 35-28 triumph? over Delta Tau' . eight.Delta. Individual trophies will be giv-

Ludlow's Lions .entered the e~ to the members of the win-game with an unspoiled 7-0 ree- p.l.ng Freud squad. Ed Jucker, 1Mord and. were the slight choice Dlrect9J:: presented a trophy Sat-of 'the Dormie bookies but it urday night to the men of Sigma.did not take the Freud House Alpha Epsilon.long to assert its dominance. All-CampusThe men. from French Hall with Freuda 6-1 tally. at the tip-off threw Lionsan aggressive zone defense at - Weston 3-0-6the Lions and confused them Blackburn 20-4from the opening minutes. Fincade~-4-10The 2 3 zone held -the Lions Thrun 3-0-6

to only 2 field goals and 9 points Kopich 3-1-7in the first half. Fine 'scoring Totals 14-5-33distribution with the 'stubborn de- Deddens 3-3-9fense enabled the House of Freud Patterson 2-0--4to grab a 16-9 advantage-at the Arne!t 2-2-6intermission. Myers 1-1-3~""""A#h(n;Jgh--the--se-c-9fld----haIi-~w-a,s--:--1Qt~ls ...§-6 ,_.22 ~':'_~~_""_r. __'~' _loo-sely played, it was' still bit- University ..terly-contested. The Freudian SAEmen steadily increased this seer- Miller L. 1-2-4ing margin until late in the Miller, S. 1-0-2game. The Lions despe-:ately Walker, D. 1-2-4tried to pull the contest out by Walker, B. 1-3-5excessive fouling, but Freud's Ritchie 9-2-20Linus Fincale unerringly can- Totals 13-9-35ned feur, charity tosses while DeltFreud was inferupting many Baginstose 1-0-2wild Ludlow passes. ..---- Erwine 1-2--4Fincale led the winners with Taylor 3-3-9

ten points. Bob Deddens was high Driver 0-1-1for the losers with nine points. Breyer 2-0--4

Any account of the second Pa tterson 3-2-8ga,me would closely resemble a Totals H>-8-'28biography of SAE's Phil Ritchie.In the SigAlph's 35-28 triumph,Pl1il, a high-school' running mateof Roland West when playing atWithrow High, poured in 20 ofthe 35 points.Ritchie not only dominated

SAE's offense, but also the Deltdefensive assignments. The Deltswere constantly switching defen-sive alignments in -order to findan effective way of stoppingRitchie.

In contrast to the previousgame,' the Fraternity contestwas a well-discplined and excit-ing one. In the first half neither

- team could mount more than athree point- spread. However,S-AE converted only 2 of 7 atthe foul line and only took a16-15 lead into the second stanza.Ritchie, a senior in Teacher's

College majoring in BusinessEducation, tallied 11 of the 16·in .the first 'half. III the openingminutes ,of the secorid-period ofplay, Phil seemed content'to let-.his teammates handle thescor-ing chores. However, with onlyLarry Miller -and Bill Walkersinking a field goal apiece, theDelts were still ' dangerouslyclose.

In the final three minutes of

Cincy GymnastsBow To C. Mich.The UC gymnastics team turn-

ed in a top performance in a veryclose defeat at the hands of Cen-tral Michigan, 93.05 to 90.45..The Bearcats competed with-

out Larry Murray, previously theteam's best _ all-around scorer,who was sidelined with a dis-located elbow. "-

Two fine individual perform-ances by Bobby Brown' andGeorge Anglemeyer of UC high-lighted the meet. Both coppedtwo first places; Anglemeyer onthe sideherse and the parallelbars, and Brown' on the ringsand in the floor excercises.Brown added a secend place onthe long horse to finish with21.15 points. ,Other UC gymnasts to place in

the scoring were Douglas Penn,who finished .third -on the sidehorse and fifth on the rings; JimMcNeil, who captured a third onthe trampoline, 'a third on therings and a fifth on the parallelbars; and Tom Jackson, whoplaced fifth on the horizontal barand fourth on the long horse.

P)A Rlf§? -'.' . who'd want tf} spend~ lL 0 next summer workzng there?

YOUCANl Through the 1966 SUMMER EM-'PLOYMENT GUIDE-which lists 50,000 summeropenings in the U. S. and 37 foreign countries: TheGUIDE offers openings of all kinds . . . at resorts,hotels, dude ranches, marinas, camps, beaches, etc. aswell as positions in most majo~ industries and thegovernment. These jobs are the cream; they offertop pay, travel, fun, or career' training.The 1966 SUMMER EMPLOYMENT GUIDE, thenation's 'largest selling, most complete guide to sum-mer employment, is crammed with additional \ useful

- information on items such as visa regulations, open-• -,-- t ings in Federal agencies, tips 'on preparation of

resumes, etc. . , B"The best jobs go fast, Order your copy of the SUMMER ._EMPMJYMENT GUIDE, and Pick Your Job, NOW!

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Page 11: Ballot For Beer Here - UC Libraries · Ballot For Beer Here\ I • I am in favor of making beer available to students at the chaperoned parties of recognizee:ampus groups (fraternities,

Thhrsday, March' 3/r",1966~~I-"'" r<~. -""""i

U~r\/Eks1T~'6F';ciNclNNATINEWS"'-R'ECORtr 11

Baseball Opener. Soon;r: , , "

Season's Prospects, Goodby Rich Jasephberg America ,outfielder Bill Wolff, _ while Rubinstein is slated to

The baseball season opener is the team appears to be strong pitch when he's n,ot playing atless than three weeks away for at most positions. f' .tVC's top notch nine. The team, Coach Sample and his staff of Irs. . .'under Head Coach Glenn Sample, Howie Newstate , and Joe Keefe Second and third base ar~ widehas been working out for over are highly pleased with the depth open. Last season's, second base-a month. of their pitching staff. Jerry man, Jerry Storm,' has beenAs of now the 'Cats do not have Couzins, Ron Schmitt, Scott Si- switched to the outfield so sec-

a basebail diamond to "Play on. monds and Butch Smoll, with. ' .The present field is in the process some help from Neil Rubinstein, ond IS ?-p for grabs. A~ third baseof being torn down, and a new form the nucleus of a pitching Don MIller, a?- ~xceptIonai gloveone will not be ready until next staff which appears to be the man, has the mSI~e t.rack for theseason. Thus, temporary use of strongest point of the team. ho~corner, but It IS far fromanother field will be necessary The i'nfield is set at three of ' being locked up. ,for this season. .the five positions. \At first base Last year's star Ishortstop, Pat

In past years UC has fielded Neil Rubinstein and Darryl AI- Maginn, a great base stealer,fine baseball teams, and this len will probably alternate. is cerfajn to be the shortstopseason should be no exception. When Allen's not playing first on opening day. Catcher JohnDespite the loss of former AIt- he will move to the outfield, Meyer, wif'h a year's experi-

ence behind him, wi! again dothe receiving.The outfield should be able to

provide the hitting power theteam will need to challenge forthe title. Besides Storm and Al-ien, switch-hitter Denny Rieglewill again he starting at one ofthe 'outfield positions, while PaulWeidner will also be attemptingte--bFea-k-..in-lQ...th€ -st-arJ;i.e.g ...•...liI!e.-up;;As of now, fhe strong pointsof the team are the pitching,'speed, and fine sophomoreswho wilf: provide ~the neededdepth. Also, it is hoped thatNeil Rubinstein, a' [unlor withgreat potential, will help pickup the slack left by the loss ofWolff. The coaches are look-ing for a backstop to help outMeyer, and are hoping that theteam hitting and fieldin.g, willbe up to par.The 'Cats are in the tougher

of the two divisions the MVC issplit up into. The Bearcats' mainconcern in! their fight for a divi-sion play-off berth is a strongSt. Louis nine, who were lastyear's champs.

UC Mermen Defeat Ohio;Romped By Tough -IndianaOver the last weekend' the ley relay teams won.

Bearcat swimmers whipped Ohio At Indiana, it was a different'---tiniversitY"fr3.:3B-~1lt-*the~~- ~~~Qi:Y,.,,,~~TJJ~,,.;-!1L.§.Fl,m~~!:.~:.,,,.~~i._

, ~ tionally nationally ranked, hum- ~day, then dropped their ~eason bled the DC squad and pushedrecord one notch Saturday m los- 'their record back to 7-3 for theing, to. national. power I?diana year.Um.ver.slty 73-21 m Bloomington, _Highlights for the BearcatIndiana. squad were the first in the 100-

Friday, Cincinnati took six yard freestyle for Rudy Boerio,firsts as they easily handled and seconds t.o' Tony Dilbe·rtin -the OU swimmers. Leading the the 50-yard freestyre, and Billpack was Jim Stacey, who Baker in the 200-yard freestyle.broke the University of Cineln- The Bearcats go to Louisvville

~nati school record in the 200- this weekend for' the MVC cham-yard Individual medley. He pionships, and are heavily fav-eclipsed a mark set by UC AII- ored to repeat as champions forAmerican Gary Heinrich. the eighth straight time. Follow-Other winners for the day in- ing their last home meet against

eluded Rudy Boerio in the 100- Loyola on, March 12, any Bear-yard freestyle, Jack Zakim in the cats that qualify wlll then move200-yard backstroke, and Lance on to the NCAA championshipsAltenau in the 200-yard butter- which are to be .held the follow-fly. Both the freestyle and med- ing weekend.

~"'.-'1"~ 't,' -) ':"CrPage',' EI'even ~

W.Unseld\ Sets ~R.ecord;Wake > Forest Edges Duke

by Claude Rost,

Bearcats belt Bulldogs, winMVC crown; but they neededhelp. Help came in the form ofthe Louisville Cardinals, who, be-hind the '27 points, 30 reboundperformance of big Westley Un-seld, upended second-place Wich-ita 81-66, at Louisville.Unseld, with his 30 rebounds,

upped his season total to 239.This broke a record set by UC'sOscar Robertson in the 1957-58season. Louisville, in/winning,pulled .to an' 8-6 league 'record,while loser Wichita dropped to7 and 5. ~Possible NCAA opponents,Kansas and Nebraska, each metand the Jayhawks prevailed110-73 to take the Big Eightlead by a half game, but if theCornhuskers should win therest of their games and tieKansas for league leadership,the two will play-off for the'right to go to f'he tourney. Inother Big Eight competition,i,ss_o\ld~knQcked off Coloradoby' 64-63. -- -'.'-c~~=~'''~'

In Atlantic Coast Conferenceaction, Bearcat opponent WakeForest disposed of highly regard-ed Duke 99-98 in overtime. TheDeacons, now stand 8-17 on theseason, While they tagged thethird -loss of the year on the BlueDevils.

Western Athletic Conferenceleader Utah clinched at least atie for' the league championshipwith a 97-85 victory over NewMexico. The Utes now have a7-2 league slate, and need butone more win to take the crownoutright.Miami's Redskins won the Mid-

American Conference champion-ship with a 79-72 victory oveE

Toledo, at Toledo. The Redskinswere led by pivot Jim Patterson,who tallied 20 points and grabbed10 rebounds, as they streaked totheir' 18th victory in 23 games.UCLA, second in the PacificAthletic Conference, defeatedStanford, 70-58, thus avengingan earlier loss. The Bruins will-probably not be able to 'defendtheir NCAA title, however, asthey are two games behind the_'front-rU'nning Oregon Statewif'h but three games to go.Crosstown rival Xavier dropped

before NCAA tournament-boundst. Joseph's (Pa.) 101-83 at thePalestra. For the Musketeers,Bryan Williams tallied 24 points,while big John Gorman, whojoined the' squad at mid-season,continued his surprising perform-ances with 18.The MVC teams, incidentally,

have compiled a fine recordagainst outside teams ..-With onlya few games still to be played.Valley teams have won 64games while losing only 27.~~~:~~ "':~'. ~~~'-~ '~~...,. - _ •.• ~"I'.~-'_._.- ...•....•.•....~-...,-

PING PQNG CHAMPIONSHIPOn Feb. 20, the UC table

tennis team placed second inthe United I States Intercollegi-ate Table Tennis Champion-ships at Columbus. The squ8'd

I'was runner up to Ohio StateUniversity in the team eventsrepresenting 16 colleges_Barry' Rost, -a, UC graduate

student in mathematics educa-tion, won the .'singles crown.In earning the top title, Rostwon over a field of 25 entrants .,and defeated Ralph Weiner ofthe University of Toledo. The 0-

UC squad alsoin.cluded MikeShe.rrick ancL,Bert Jacobs.

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Page 12: Ballot For Beer Here - UC Libraries · Ballot For Beer Here\ I • I am in favor of making beer available to students at the chaperoned parties of recognizee:ampus groups (fraternities,

Page Twelve UNIVERSITY OF CINCINN'ATI NEWS RECORD-'-

Thursday, March 3, 1966

Ringer Gallery ~..New Art Idea

Jerry Ringer

was large and the expenseswould be minimized.What' couldn't be donated was

begged, what couldn't be beggedwas borrowed. Every possibilitywas explored until. everythingw,as secured, The building wasP:Q,u~ght(it.is not ..yet financed com-

. pletely), . and the work began:Jerry; and some friends of his,remodeled the entire room. Theyuncoveredthe beauty of the orig-inal terrazo floor, lowered theceiling and -repaneled, A youngman, Mike Nesi, who was not aprofessional, did all of the car-penter work. On Feb. 22, Jerryofficially opened the Jerry Ring-er Gallery.

As I said before, it is net justany gallery. Not only is thisone of the few reaUy profes-sional looking galleries in thecity, but it does something noother Cincinnati gallery has

done. It displays the work ofany person whose art work isgood enoug.h to be shown.One example of someone who

really deserved to have his workexhibited, yet as "just a student"was denied this right, is StephenDavis. His two works of sculpture

\ which are presently displayed,"10 'and Jupiter,'" and "StandingNude," were both sold three timesover on the opening night. Anyperson is eligible to submit work.This can be done by going to thegallery and talking to Jerry Ring-'er, He in turn submits it to a juryfor his gallery and they decidewhat is to be displayed. Also

, there is a portfolio room for un-framed works..Jerry says that he likes to see"stro'ng" works. One of his pur-poses in the gallery'is to popu-laf'iz'e art' in Cincinnati, to pro-vide an incentive for those ar-tis:ts who could not exhibit inany gallery-to get art at sen-sible prices in the home-toget the liveliness which arteanbri'ng to everyone. "The worldof art -today is in eclipse withtradition. Art is no longer ofa'ny value only if it isbeauti~'ut"'-j'f1s'-no~w-a'un rhfng:""Artcl'''I'm glad." ,The paintings 'and sculpture

now displayedatthe Jerry Ringergallery .have been 'Submitted byboth students ..and teachers. Mostof the works are what Jerry calls"strong,"-vivid colors and starkrealism. They are .modern butnot "IN." There is no op or popart._ 'The gallery is' usually openfrom about noon to 9:00 p.m.Jerry Ringer can usually befound at the gaHery if someonedesires to submit work or to dis-'cuss buying one of the paintings

.\ or sculptures on display.

«i«; Nype In. Owlish Play.,Shubert Theatre-~~Dull"Fare

by Mike RitchieThe owlish Russell Nype and

.- the cattish Eartha Kitt 'are howl-ing away in a delightful, thoughnot too, well-constructed, play,The Owl and the Pussycat, nowplaying at the ShubertTheater.The owl is a pseudo intellec-

tual writer working in a book-store, and .the pussycat is thenext-door neighbor who was evict-ed from her residence due to thequestionable nature of her em-

15th Annual GRO'TTO SHOW Presents

Two-Hour ALL STAR Revuefeaturing

RECORDING STAR

(

QUEEN. OF THE

HOUSE)'

. ~r;'t IF " •• "-:1

. pateline}~ Cincy

OOLA KHAN GROTTO-presentsa two hour ALL STAR RE-VUE featuring Jody Miller(Queen of the' House) TaftTheater, March 9, '10, 11,.12.Show time 8:15.

PETER, PAUL, AND MARY-Will be at Music HaH in con-cert on March 4 at 8:30 p.m.Tickets to the March 4 con-cert are priced at $2.50, $3.50and $4.50.

WFIB--WFIB has moved to room229 of the Student ·Union.The new office will be mann-ed a total of 17 hours a dayby student newsmen who willcompile, edit and re-writenational news as well aslocal and campus news to

be delivered for its 30 news-casts daily.

SIGMA ALPHA IOTA-The 'Cin-cinnati Alumnae Chapter ofSigma Alpha Iota, nationalprofessional music fraternityfor women, is presenting Mr.David Mulfinger in their an-nual scholarship benefit con-cert. The concert will beFriday, March 11, 8:30 p.m.,in the College Conservatoryof Music-Concert Hall. $.2.00per person. Proceeds areused to provide scholarshipfor .members of' Eta-IotaChapter at CCM. "

HIGH NOON-High Noon will bepresented at the Great Hall,, Sunday, March 6.

This Ad Worth $.50.Just bring it with you

QU'EBEC GARDENSproudly presents

PlATES AND HIS SWI,NGINGDIX-IELAND BAt-{D

/ The offiical Royals BandMusic for dancing and Iistel1ing. Stag or couples welcome

.. Every Friday, 9:30 to 1:30 a.m.Admission $}.,OO/person ~ $.50 to students with this ad

"I dreamed 1 shot Marcello Mastroianniwith my double-barrelled bra!"

- URSULA ANDRESS

MARCEllO MASTROIANNI·" URSULA ANDRESS/.. '

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liOuil~_ .7~1-234J

Jody -Miller. TAFTTHEAT~R

March 9, 10, 11, 12Tickets Available At 'Union Desk

Half Price to Students, 75c

by Nancy. SansottaAt the corner- of Pavillion and

St. Gregory Streets in Mt. Adams \there used to be an old dry clean-ing store. The terrazo floor was. dirty, there were shelves all over, the room and from what I under-stand if looked like, a dirt' bottomgarage. It is- now. a beautiful artgallery-a very special art gal-lery owned and' operated by avery remarkable individual..Jerry Ringer' graduated from I

Purcell High School in 1962 andwas immediately offered artscholarships to various .colleges.He chose the Cincinnati ArtAcademy;' Evidently, the academywasn't adl that Jerry had hoped-he' left after half a year. Thenext years saw Jerry in the serv-ice, and then sent home for. analmost fatal' open heart surgeryoperation. During these years hewas constantly working with hisart. "Art is second to life," .hesaid. Jerry wanted a lot out oflife and art was a part of thatlife, a very big part to be sure,but not all of it.

Duri'ng these years Jerry ex-hibi:ted Ihis art whe,rever he

.;cQuld":"'in bars and in,gymnas-hjm'S. Fit" sejms' that in.Cincin-,nati there was no place that anunknown artist could exhibithis, work. There were many artgalleries i'n Cincinnati but nonewanted' the' work -of a youngman who had no gallery ex-hibit shows behind, him. It wasthen that the idea which hadbeen forming in his mind crys-talized. He would,begin his ownart gallery.He lined up -friends that could

and would help; friends that werenot especially .connected' with artbut who knew the mechanics ofprocuring and remodeling an olddry goods store. (Why did Jerry pick this Ioca- .

tion? The location was good. Itwas right in the heart of the mostculturally oriented-are'~ of Cin-"cinnati, Mt. Adams. The room• I

Ol,ym~ia~ ClubEvery Thursday,' Friday.

, and Saturday

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A Smashing New GroupWith An Original Sound

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ployment as reported to the au-thorities by owl.. She then de-scends upon him 'with' the wrathof words, and both hack away ateach other's delusions throughsometimes amusing, sometimesdisappointing, situations.

The play is '-marked by anunusual employment' of slide-projectic>ns on. a screen to' de-note the scene changes, addingto the effectiveness of it six-scene, riotous second act.Through quick repartees, thepussycat, Doris, can, tie her h,-tellectual peeping-tom aroundher finger; and it is merelythese word-plays and cappings-down which keep the play alivelong enough for both pussy-'cat and owl to fa II in, and' out,and in again, their. un.usuallove-relationship. But the thirdact, where Sherman,' the in-tellectual, is. contemplatingsuicide, becomes bogged downi'n meek-exestenfial verbage aseach character "finds himself."But Eartha Kitt makes the most

of her part, now exploding intolaughter, now into tears, but al-ways "into language whose fierynature evokes outbursts of laugh-ter from her audience. And Rus-sel Nype aiso -.does a very goodjob of portraying the intellectualwhose passions get the better' ofhis mind. But were it not forthe actors in the play, The Ow 1-ana the Pussycat" would be verydull theater.

"

••

rr·I/.··:·.'·:··.·::····:/··:·.·W":J.-1a¥O~1~.~·· ................•....~.~. <I." 7~t..J it,. ~~.•f(~~ :.:'SEAN CONNERY'THUNDERBALJ;I 7i"ies~

(I"") eu.e· ez;;,IT•••••• ~.: f')~ ·Downtown-VI·Ol0l ~

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Page 13: Ballot For Beer Here - UC Libraries · Ballot For Beer Here\ I • I am in favor of making beer available to students at the chaperoned parties of recognizee:ampus groups (fraternities,

Thursday, March 3, 1966. UNIVERSITY OF CINCINNATI 'NEWS RECORD

Pianist Appears In '"U,.S.~Page' Th irteen

Born in Paris in the 1930's,Bernard Ringeissen, from hisearliest childhood, s howe d astrong interest in music. At theage of 10, he began his pianostudies with George de Lausnayand, in 1951,only four years afterentering Lausnay's class at theConservatoire in Paris, youngRingeissen won a First Prize forbrilliancy. He then began to con-certize in Holland, Belgium,Luxemburg, Germany, Austriaand France, continuing his studies

Bernard Ringeissen, Pianist

with Mme. Marguerite Long andJacquesFevrier.

In April 1953, Mr. Ringeissen .decided to lighten his concertschedule in order. to prepa,refor several inter-national com-petitions, in which he, faredextremely well. In 1954 he wonthe Grand Prize in the GenevaInternational Competition and,the following year, car,ried offthe Grand ·Prize in the Marg-uerite Long-J acques ThibaudInternationa,1 Competition aswell as .ranking with the final-

··Studen,t' Wins Original Picassoists in the Frederic Chopin In- -

:~:::O:~s~:r:P;:i::p::r::~.In"Design. Illustration ContestRingeissen has toured Canada;Mexico and Brazil in recent years.In June 1962, he won the GrandPrize and received the Special-Villa Lobos Award for his in-terpretation of Brazillian musicin the International Competitionof Rio de Janeiro.He will be appearing in the I

United States for the first timein February - March 1966 in atour sponsored by Carnegie Hall-Jeunesses Musicales by ar-rangement with Jeunesses Mus-icales de France. "

by Larry Goodridge I

Six months ago I submitted anentry in a design-illustration con-test and promptly forgot aboutit. It was a shock to learn fivemonths later that I had won aunique second prize, an originallino-cut, hand-signed by PabloPicasso plus a trip to New Yorkto pick it up. I had since becomea candidate for a masters degree

in painting and the" thought of anoriginal Picasso seemed almostunreal.

The contest was sponsorednationally by the Eastern TinePaper Company, open to allcommercial artists and design-ers submitting work on theirstock. Their representativesfrom Brown and Bigelow Agen-,

"Oh, What A.Lovely War"Plays' At E,dgecliffe TheatreMMmmer Scenes,

In Theater 300 The Edgecliff Academy of FineArts in its tenth season of pro-duction must be considered to beone of the finest professional resi-dent theatres in America. Yearafter year they have turned outpresentations of the highest cali-bre, and have slowly given theCity of Ciricinnati another quality .mark of fame as a growing cul-tural center. .

Enough supe;lative adjectives"cannot be used to deserfbe thesociologica,1 satire 1I0h, WhatA Lovely War/' described byauthor Charles Chilton as lIamusic~1 entertain,ment"" Thisinterpreta,tion of the award win-ning musical comedy was skill-fully directed by John Going,Assistan,t Executive Producer ofthe EdgecliH Theatre.Written as a musical epitaph

to the people of England whofought, died, suffered, and en-dured the "War to end all Wars,"Chilton has cleverly woven in aplot of events which are all doneon factual background. Eachword sung spoken, or written ac-tually occurred, and the convey-ance of the story was portrayed

through a series of'New~ Flash-es,' and scene depicting life athome and on the battlefield duringthe years 1915-1918.- However the thing which real-ly makes an Ec;lgecHH produc-tion "great," in the true senseof the word, is the abilitywhich di,rectorsDavid Barrieand Goings have for gettingthe maximum from each oftheir performers for every shQw~They have asembled some ofthe _finest young talent in thecountry to help them pursue ~their goals.The choreography done by

Michael McGrath, who is usuallyfound also doing a lead part, isalways imaginative and alive ...The settings and lighting by JayDepenbrock are continually crea-tive; each production has provedhis real genius for innovativelighting. The costumes designedand built by Barbara Tyirin wouldrival those of any Broadway pro-duction in every' manner, and arerefreshingly original in design.The last show of this Winter

Season will be given March 16-April 2, when Edgecliff will do"Mother Courage."

cy presented the t h r e •awards at the Waldorf AstoriaHotel in the suite formerly oc-cupied .by Herbert Hoover(which is an interesting side-light as Mr. H~over detestedabstract art). .Mter the presentation, the two

other winners and myself weretaken to the 21 Club as guests ofthe Eastern Tine Paper Company.It was an enjoyable lunch arid I

- had only a short time to make theafternoon train.I dragged my Picasso which was

framed and quite large down toPennsylvania station expectingto be disembowled by art thievesat any moment. None appeared.The long ride home was a chanceto really study thework, a fourcolor print titled "ExpositionValla uris 1956." It has since beenpronounced a. linoleum cut, awoodcut, a' lithograph, a fake,sublime, and ridiculous by friendsof varying aesthetic bent. I my-self like it verr much.

\

by' Sally CampbellTheater 300-a special presenta-

tion of scenes from great "playsis being sponsored by the UCMummers Guild and the Speechand Theater Arts Department.The six scenes taken from suchplays as "Summer, and Smoke,""Mary of Scotland," "Arms andthe Man" "Mister Roberts " "TheLittle Foxes," "Cat-On' A HotTin Roof," and "The Glass Mena-gerie" are being performed bystudents from- the Acting Class ofProfessor Paul Rutledge. Thescenes will be performed on thestage of Wilson Auditorium andall students ate invited to attend.The program will start promptlyat 2 p.m. on Thursday afternoon,March 10:Among those participating in

the, program will be 'rom, Fu~~e,Vicky Borchers, Tom O'Neill, An-nie Walker, Gincy Hertz, PeggyVoss, Frances Tucker, GeorgeSemet Koski, David· McElwain,Boimie Laurie, Myron Hamilton,Ed Galgoczy, Joe De Francesco,Stanley' Carmichael and DanielSachs. Picasso Origin.'

MUMMEiRs· CiUlLO and" Speech and .Theater· Arts Dept.1

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Page 14: Ballot For Beer Here - UC Libraries · Ballot For Beer Here\ I • I am in favor of making beer available to students at the chaperoned parties of recognizee:ampus groups (fraternities,

Pcqe-Fourteen UNIVERsl!y OF CINCINNATI NEWS RECORD

Vatsity HonorcrvServes UC;Pro~otes' S~holarshipSports

by Barb Behrns

"Honor through fAthletics."These three words are the mottoof UC's Athletic honorary.' Thisorganization, known as the Men's"C" Club, is limited to those whohave earned a Varsity "C."In years past the "C" Club had

become quite 'inactive, but last ,year under the guiding hand ofJerry Momper and Coach Kelly,

it was again established' as oneof the important honoraries on

)

campus.This year's President, BobRoncker' and Vice-President,Denny Woodruff have gone outof their way to make the "C"Club an active campus serv-ice. The many activities theyhave / sponsored include thedance for the Student Body,held after the Louisville game.

~JOIN T,HE CROWD

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Accelerate your degree program asyou enjoy the many activities andfacilities on the 270-acre C.W. Postcampus: 'new residence halls, swim-ming, tennis, riding, bowling, the an-nual Long Island Festival of the Arts.

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LiberalArts and Sciences,Pre-Protessiona I,Pre-Engineering,

Business and Education

GRADUATE COURSE OFFERINGSIn the Graduate Schools of Long Island University:

Biological Sciences, Business,Administration, Chemistry, Education,

Management Engineering, English, ForeignLanguages, Guidance and Counseling,History, Library Science, Marine Science,Mathematics, Music Education,' Physics,Political Science, Sociology, Speech.

Apply now for TWO SUMMER SESSIONSJune 27 -July 29 and August 1- September2

Day and Evening ,Admission open to visiting students from accredited colleges •.

•For additional information, summer bulletin and

application, phone 516 MAyfair 6-1200 or mail coupOj),_ .. _ - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - _0_.- ,. ._Dean of Summer School, C.W. Post College, P.O.,Greenvale, L.I., N.Y. 11548Ple'ase send me Summer Sessions information bulletin. , Cpo Women's Residence Hall 0 Men's Residence Hallo Undergraduate 0 Graduate GD~y 0 Evening"

II .

III

I~III

•City .••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• State .•••••••••• '. • • • • • • • :

• If visiting student, from which college? : ....•.....•. ',' '., • • • • J---------------------------------------------

Name ••••••••••••.•••••••••••••••••.••••••••••••••••••••••••••, \

Address ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• '•••••••••••••

~

INDULGE,/ /

AT

\

THE ,NEB· BISH'

For the past two years theClub has 'sponsored a WinterSports Spectacular. With ,thehelp of the Graduate Membe,rsof the. "C" Club,this spectac-ular included a freshman bas-ketball ,game with Miami; aswim meet at Michigan; a Gym-nastics Meet with 'Louisville;and a Wrestling Meet with, Hanover. 'The "C" Club also participates

each year in the Sigma -SigmaCarnival by setting up their owndecorative and informative booth.They can also be counted on tolend a helping hand to any other /athletic events; scheduled on thecampus.In addition to these many serv- I

ices and activities, the "C" Clubalso gives two awards each year."The Jimmy Nippert MemorialTrophy" is awarded to an athleteoutstanding in character, scholar-ship and extra curricular activi--ties. The second is the "Men's'C' Club Scholarship Award" thatis given to the graduating athletewith the highest academic' accum-ulative average throughout col-lege.In the future the Club hopes to

work more closely with .DC'sSpirit Club and eventually es-tablish their own spirit sectionnext year. They also foresee thepossibility of more dances forthe Student Body and plan pic-nics and parties within the Club. '

Thursday, March 3, 1966

Commuter Questionnaire- "·1,'

The YMCA has developed aquestionnaire to determine thedegree of involvement of thecommuting' student with his uni-versity. The YMCA hopes thatthis questionnaire will give theman insight into the needs of thesestudents and having this infor-mation they wilt be able to geartheir social, academic and relig-ious programs for the comingyear to attract the ""Commutersand involve them in UC's cam-pus life.

It· is further designed to de-termine the need for a studentorganization that would drawpreviously uncommitted stud-ents into campus activities.The YMCA asks all commuting

students to fill out the followingquestionnaire and return or mailit to the University Branch ofthe YMCA, Calhoun Street, Cin-cinnati, 45221, before March 25.

I If you have any further sugges-tions please inclose them on anadditional 'sheet of paper.

Name, , , , Male Female .

Address, , , ,

"-Telephone Number ' , Age , College Co-Op

Year ' ' Distance From School Class Hours (Not Credit

Hours) . ~ ' Time spent at /School Other Than Class

Hours. " ,. Time spent At School Studying

Do You Eat Lunch On The Campus ,.. How Many Days A

Week , .. , Activities ,.: .,

Zip

•••••••••••.••••• 0 ••• 0 ••••••• 0 •• 0 •••• 0.0 ••• 0 •• e ••••••••••••••••••••

Do You Attend Lectures, Seminarsl Social Functions And Sports

Events OHered By The University?, ,. '., How Often?' , .... ,.,.-.,. ,-..

Do You Work? , , .... How Many Hours? '.' .... Do, You Drive? ,., ..\,

Do you Have VourOwn Car? ". v • Do You' Patronize N~ar CamipusEntertainment Spots? .. . How Often? .... , Would You Be In-terested In A Commuting Student Organization Other Than Fraterni-ties, Honorari'es' Etc., That Would:

(1) Build A Float On Homecoming, , , . , , . , , .(2) Meet Regularly At.A Permanent Place~ .,,; .. J •• , •••• , ••••••• ,.; ••

(3) OHer Recreation Facilitie's , , .(4) Provides Social Entertainment".,.,.,., ,., " "(5) Provides Acade,mic Facilities : -, ' _ , , . , , ..

How Much Time Could You Spend In Such An Organization?,.' .

C,ollege 'Sophomorism' Deeried;StudentsAvoidlnvolvem'ent

Michigan State NewsMichigan State University

After car e f u I research theMICHIGAN STATE NEWS col-'lected this guide on how to be-come a "sophomore" or a fol-lower of "sophomorism,' one ofthe biggest campus faiths:Complain consistently about the

cafeteria food, rising grill prices,patrolling housemothers, stan-dards chairmen, and liquor laws.Be sure to develop the properglib tone in discussing these is-sues; for instance: "Gad, thisjello looks like swamps cum "

At the same time be sure not

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to get involved in any organ-ized action to change anyth'ingyou've complained about ormake any constructive sugges-tions. Decry organizers as"rabble rousers" or "publicityseekers."Decide 'what's cool and what's

not. Then gather a group offriends and cut down people who'aren't by your definition "cool."In debate or argument, grant

the other side several points butinsist that everyone recognizeyour rights as well. Rememberthat putting the blame on whostarted the trouble is more im-portant than ending the argu-ment.If -you .favor the idealistic ap-

proach, demand immediate im-provements. Join a marc ping and'~iinging society. Administrativerestrict-ions and peace in Viet-Nam are good subjects. But watchout for compromises that mightundermine your c han c e s forachieving you goal.Decide (a) God is dead or (b)

you can't improve anything. Butbe ready with proof of either view

-I,

AUDITIONSWFIB 800 Radio will be hold-

ing auditions for: people in-terested in the broadcastingfield. This will be lion the air"work. Foran audition timecall the WBIF Newsroom at475-4340.

\

'{Q last through. an .all night, bull.session.

Adopt the theory of free love.Discuss with a member of the op-posite sex the psychological crip-plingcreated by society's restric-tions on sex. Convince her to joinyou in making a more honestsociety. Believe in' Hugh Hefneras a prophet of our times.

These a re the tenets of thefaith of sephemerlsm. They fos-ter a faith of non-commitment.Under them the IIsophomqre"whines about minor nuisancesbut-does not act to correct them.He often ignores important is- /sues, or he protests for worldreform without ad~ing. the'day-by-day com pro m i s e the "true reformer uses.The "sophomore" doe s not

know people, especially those whoare different. He knows only theshell of the cool and the non-cool.In sexual relations, he regards

both himself, and his partnermerely as objects and so createsa new' dishonesty.He argues that one unprovable

belief is as good as the next, buthe -lacks the agnostic's constantstudy of belief.His pseudo-philosophizing can'

keep him from commitment toany faith that demands action.And even if his world is bastard-ly, must he -contribute to the bas-tardliness?Sophomorism is a faith without

works, and both the faith and itsfollowers are dead.

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Page 15: Ballot For Beer Here - UC Libraries · Ballot For Beer Here\ I • I am in favor of making beer available to students at the chaperoned parties of recognizee:ampus groups (fraternities,

Th~rsday, ,March 3, 1966 UNIVERSITY OF CINCINNATI NEWS RECORD Pcqe Flfteen

Student .DrugAcI-d.ic~ion 'O'n-: :RlseEditor's Note: The following ar-ticle was written by Drs. MervinB. Freedman and-~Harvey Pouiel-son and appeared in the Jan. 31,1966 issue of the NATION. 'Within the last five years the

ingestion of various drugs hasbecome widespread on the Amer-ican campus. Physiologically ad-dictive drugs are still almost un~known on campus, 'but there arenow few colleges where marijuanaand the new psychedelic drugs,chiefly LSD, are not consumed.On even the most provincial ofcampuses a student who has.flipped as a result of taking LSDis likely to turn up at 'the coun-seling center, or a few studentsmay be expelled for smoking potin a dormitory. This is not to saythat the proportion of studentswho take drugs is high. Mostcollege students are conventionaland dutiful, and are unlikely tocontravene acceptable standardsof behavior in so unacceptable away.

But on campuses where cos-mopolitan students congregate-large city campuses 'or pres-

tigious, small liberal arts col-leges-the _ proportion of stu-dents who experiment with potor LSD may run as high as 10per cent. This is not a large'proportion, but the total num-bers are considerable. In a stu-dent body of 15,000, for ex- 'ample, two per cent is' 300 stu-dents-a figure not easily·· ig-nored._Perhaps the most serious charge

that can be made against smok-ing Marijuana is that' it is psy-chologically damaging. Since itis offically banned, its use re-inforces rebellious and anti-socialtendencies. Individuals who smokepot regularly-as opposed to thosewho experiment with it on a fewoccasions-c-ars likely to scoff atsuch a remark. Divorced as theyare from American culture andsociety, they are hardly frighten-ed by the prospect of further iso-lation. Indeed, they are likely towelcome it.

The consistent pot smokersare for the most part graduatestudents in the arts, philosophy,humanlties and, to some extent,

r

The Loser on Loser Play, as,the Dummy Reversal Play of lastweek's column, is a situation thatoccurs rather frequently. FbI' themost part it is a one-step playthat requires no advance prepara-tion, but. does require some. fore-.sight. -There are ten types 'of Loser

on Loser Plays listed in theA.C.B.L .. Encyclopedia of bridge,'each having a different purpose.In making your plan of play at asuit contract you should seewhere it might benefit you to dis-card a loser instead of ruffing ona certain trick. In this and mynext column r will present threecommon forms of 'the Loser onLoser Play.

The first Loser on Loser Playdeals with creating for yourselfa safe ruff in dummy by re-fusmg to ruff an enemy card.It appears to be spectacular onthe surface, but is actually un-believably slmple," The follow-ing hand illustrates- this play;in this situation none is vuner-able and West was the dealer:

NorthS 432H AJ652D53C A74

passed and West led the king ofdiamonds against South's fourspade contract.East overtook West's king with'

the ace and shot back the deuceof diamonds. West won and con-tinued a third higi, diamond. Itis at the point that the declarermust stop and consider the futureof the hand. He needs ten tricksand has only nine, six spades, aheart, and two, clubs. His tenthmust come from a ruff in dum-my.

At first glance he can getthis ruff in the diamond Suit byfuffing West's third round lead.However the bidding a~ theplay to tricks one and two(East's overtaking of West'sking and the subsequent returnof a small di~mond} tells himthat East is out of the suit andwill over--ruff dummy. Then theonly chance for a' tenth trick -would be to catch a doubletonking-queen of hearts in one ofthe defender's hands, a twopercent chance. Instead, hediscards a club (a loser any-way) on West!s high diamond!Now he must be able to obtain~ club ruff .in dummy for histenth trick. This play is easy,yet I would bet that not fiveper cent orall average bridge

East ,playe"s weuld make it.S 87 There is a transfer principle -,H K10874 involved here as the declarer isD A2 transferring one trick to another,C J532 a diamond for a club. Even if

South East were not known to be voidS AKQJ109 of diamonds, this play should beH 9 taken. In. a broad sense- it IS aD 1074 safety play made to insure a con-e K96 tract against all but the most. radical distribution _and safety

West opened the bidding with plays, as I pointed out severaltwo diamonds, a weak two bid columns ago, almost whenever itshowing a six card suit and from is possible to do so. Plays likesix to twelve points. North passed this then separate the good playerand East raised to three dia- from, the average player, and onmonds. South then backed in with- the college level,' the "thinking"three spades which West passed - player, from the "mechanical"and North 'raised to -four. All . player.

WestS65HQ3D KQJ986C Q108 -

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cults of LSD devotees who live inthe vicinity. These people are'turned on to their inner world,their internal experience. The ex-ternal world. is turned out. Theydo little of anything except ob-serve.' .They are great naturelovers. They will journey toplaces of unusual natural beauty,turn on with LSD, and look. They.work spasrnodieally, when fundsare needed, but otherwise areinactive. Indeed fantasy is sub-stituted for reality. If one haddreamed the idea for a greatnovel, the work of actually writ-ing it becomes a drag.

Much has been made of theperils of LSD, they are realenough. In large c-ities one could

. -doubtlessly track down hundredoubtlessly track down hun-dreds of cases of people whohave been made p s y c hot i c

the social sciences. The rebel-lion they express in many ways,pot smoking among them,stems from their disillusionwith American society andvalues. They oppose Americanintervention in Viet Nam; tneyare angered by the 10+ of Ne-groes and other disa >"mtagedgroups. And they are militant.. On any cosmopolitan campustoday or in any large city, a stu-dent can easily buy marijuanaor' a psychedelic drug. There aremany psychedelic drugs but LSD,the most powerful, (has- preempt-ed the -field. Connections,' some-times students" often ex-students,are easy to find. The going ratefor an LSD capsule is $5. And -formany users one capsule is goodfor two "trips." You dissolve it

\ ina glass of water and drink halfthe glass each time.Pot, smoking is likely to be a

relaxingvconvivial affair. On oc-.casion, in the course' of smokingmarijuana, one may undergo pro-found ...experiences but few potsmokers would claim that it in--itiated ('ne into life's mysteries.Devotees of LSD,' on the otherhand, have surrounded- the in-gestion 0.1 this substance with ahystique, with cults and rituals.Some students claim that LSDexperiences produce ins i g h t s.They have seen themselves with -a clear eye, stripped of the usualdefenses and artifices which or-dinarily hedge .perception. A bet-ter self, an ideal self, may beenvisioned. ' ...-, However not all ingestions of,LSD-result' in - revelatory trips.Sometimes nothing hap p e Ii s.Other times reaction may beIimited to a minor perceptualdistortion. The setting in whichLSD is taken influences theeffect. For some students anL~D "trip" is a profound' per-sonal experience; for othersit becomes a - -religion, 'a wayof life. \ Students for whomLSD has not become a way oflife probably have only experi-enced a few LSD trips. These stu-dents see clearly the.' falsity ofthe material values that domin· .

-c-, ate Western society; they haveexperienced true love; they havereconciled the conflicts whichplague Western man, and so on.And these experiences have spur-red them on to rebel against con-ventional American life and poli-cies. .When LSD becomes a religion

the student is. likely to leaveschool.. A_ number of large uni-versities now have groups or

through use of the drug. Eachs student health service psychi-atric clinic or emergency serviceof a, general hospital, wouldyield a number of such cases.The long range physiological re-

sults of such a powerful stressreaction as an LSD experienceare unknown. Evidence. seems tobe mounting that repeated inges-tions of LSD may have perman-ent or enduring physiological ef-fects.An affluent. and complex so-

ciety , can;' easily afford smallgroup's of people whose chiefcommitment is to their internalprocesses and the i r fantasyworlds, But what if there weremany such? It is ironic that themilitary establishments of. boththe US and Russia are experi-menting with LSD as a weapon.A population that is turned onwill make' no trouble.

March down to. yourbookstore todayfor this importantnew PENGUIN,MUST THE BOMB SP&EAD? Leonard Beoton. Will the nu-clear arms race spread beyond the five nation's now dead-locked in it'? What will happen if it does? The author, SeniorResearch Associate ofthe'lnstitute for Strategic Studies,offers his answers.,. examines the human, political, indus-trial and financial forces working for and against the pro-lif'eration of nuclear weapons., 95¢-' OTHER POPULAR NEW PENGUINS' ON CAMPUSBIRTH CONTROL IN THE MODERN WORLD. E}iz(J}Jf~t}1

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Page 16: Ballot For Beer Here - UC Libraries · Ballot For Beer Here\ I • I am in favor of making beer available to students at the chaperoned parties of recognizee:ampus groups (fraternities,

Page "Sixteen ; (-UNIVER~IJY~ OF CINC1N.NAT.LNEWS,· RECORD ·Thur:sday;Ma rch 3, 1966'·,; , .••• "~ L • '_

R~porter ,'DisCtusseS'.it4aza:rds ... ,

Of.Work 'On UC Publications"" ( . ~ ,

;:".

>-

by Jim -Blair

Writing for the NEWS RECORD,though involving physical risks,is more intellectually and .emo-tiona'lly hazadarous than moststudents realize. -As we have hadsevera~enquiri~s {rot£ personswishing to serve on our reper-torial staff, we offer the follow-

- ing episode-the first' and un-fortunately last great effort ofA. Shottlekotte Kurrnudgeon fear-less, crime busting, issue provok-ing, columnist. '

The whole unhappy situationarose when - Shottsie was. as-signed, late one October after-noon, to interview Dr. Raoul-Syntax concerning his recenttour of; Soviet Bloc countriesand his participation in certainunderground campus politicalactivities. Shottsie's supremelylogical mind was toned to razor -sharpness and :thethought ofthe due.l of two brilliant witstantalized him as he left theNR office that day. Ve.t thebest laid plans of m'ice and mengang aft agley, but Shottsie's-went fa,rther agley than usual.

, Actually they went farther to 'the south-southwest for by so~

mischance he had ,taken awrong turning and ended up inthe Profi Ie office where SimonOttewill, Junior deputy .assis-tant .u'nctef literary editor wasfinishing his article for thenext issue. "Tell me Dr. Syntax". Shottsie began. <, -

"The name's Simon" saidSimon'."You're no longer in Russia,

Dr. Syntax; there is no need tohide behind an alias. Freedomof Speech' is guaranteed by theConstitution and I can assureyou that I, as a representativeof the NEWS RECORD whosefreedom to print aId. views re-gardless of political , orientationis also guaranteed by, the Con-stitution as well as by the liberalUniversity Administration, shallnot twist your words or printfabrications. Now, would you tellme please, exactly in. what sort-of sneaky underhanded, politicalactivity you are presently en-gaged." -,

"I-don't think you understand.This is Profile, the Campus Liter-ary Mag,azine." \"I)(} YQU mean" that by posing

a worthwhile, genuine Campus

publication, ostensibly dedicatedto the advancement of studentexpression, you provide a frontfor' your nefarious plans of sub-version?" ,

"We ,do print essays. on anytopic-H they're well written;but ,we also, pri'ntpoetry, sh~rtstories, and plays. As far asbeing, a "front" organiation isconcerned, 'we rely almost en-tirely on stude'nt material and,although some of us on thestaff also send in some ma-terial, it is the students-fromevery -college-who keep thismagazi'ne going. In fact, if youwould like we are acceptingarticles for the, Profile, you,might mention that we are ac-cepting articles for the nextissue now and that. such articlesas students may be moved. tosubmit ma.y be sent to the Pro-fie office, Room 419,>StudentUnion Building.

. ~e winner of this week'sAvsra is Lynn .Katzman, a sen-ior in TC and a resident of Sid-dall Hall ....Her case is describedherewith.

TH;E PROBLEM: D~e to thenecessity of student teachingMiss Katzman brought a car t~Cincinnati for tran$portationpurposes. 'From 'Sept. 7 '(thestar-toof student teaching) to ap,proximately Sept. 20, she ex-perienced few p,roblems'in park-ing her car in front of the·dorm.With the start of the Fall

Quarter, however, it was incum-bent upon her to', find out therules. and regulations regardingparking. It was her thought thatgoing to school \from 9 a.m. to3:30 p.m, might entail someproblems, but the extent of theseproblems, always was ,sadly un-derestimated. I

An exhibit of 110 photo- ",:HE ACTION:, Miss Katzmangr~phs, many in color, taken first aske~ Mrs. Laurie Bruns,during five years of space h~ad reSidence counselor ofexploration by the NASA, will -c, ~Icldall, the nature of the park·be on display .in' the Union Ing rules. Mrs. Bruns replieel-main lobby through March 13. that she wasn't really sur. what______ ••••• ~ the .rules were, but directed

•••• ' •• 0:. 7•.. e •.••.•• ,. •••• ,••• ~ •••• 0 •..•••••..•••• : •••••• - 0 •••• :'. _.•• ' ••• '.' •.•••••••••••• _••••••••••••

If you're looking for a career of exciting growth and accomplishment,you're also looking for a company with the same qualities. Here at LTVAerospace Corporation,YQUngehgine~rs and the company are growing"in the fields of aircraft, missiles,space; surface vehicles and rangeservices. Assignments are diversified.vtoo. They Inctude such areas as:aerodynamics • avionic~, and Jnstrurnentatlon • .dynarnics • systemsdesign • propulsion • stress analysis· cornrnuntcations design -tech-nicaladministr~tion . : ..and others.

For complete information about a career with LTV~consult yourPlaceme~t Office, then schedule an appointmerrt-witf our representa-tive.' Or write College Relations Office, LTV Aerospace Corporation, P. O.B6x 5907; Dallas, Texas 75222. LTVAerospace Corporation is an equalopportunity employer.

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CAMPUS .'NTERVIEWS'Monday, March 7

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Miss Katzman to the Cashier's/ Office in the bellet rnar JOeywould know.So . . . to the Cashier's Office.

Our heroine was told that asticker would at no time be goodin the' Siddall area, but this wasnot at all a certainty. She wasdir.eCted,Jo Mr. Mileham's officeassistant to the senior .vice presi-dent to find out exactly what therules' were.

Speaking to Mr. Mileham's'secretary, Miss Katzman was( informed that the rules were ina state of flux., and it wasthought that after some sort ofvote by some sort of committee,they would be changed to allowparking of the ty •• desiredwith a decal.Repeated calls to that office

in the next week resulted in beingInformed that the rules had not"been changed. (What the ruleswere at that time, and exactly'what they were to be changed towas unknown.)

Miss Katzman. then went tothe Clifton Avenue guardhouieand!asked for information. Shewas handed a leaflet which fail-edto describe the situation at -hand. (When she pulled up tothe guardhouse to get the in-formatijon, she pulled forward-and got out',of 'he,r .ear to goover to th, guard.' She' waslood~y told, not askeel, to getbeck, in -her car, for'. this wasevidently against some r•.•le~)-After calling Mileham's office

to no avail. she finally threw inthe towel and parked for the restof the quarter on Calhoun Streetdue to the inability to find out atw.hat , times .» stickers .would bevalid. One time she was informedthat the- sticker would be '''validbetween Sp.m. and 8 a.m., at an- .other time-between 9' p.m .. land8~a.m .., and then another time she' -,was told that it was no good atall.

Hon()rary .Selects,Faculty; Students

Four UC faculty members andeight UC Evening College stu-dents have been initiated intoAlpha Sigma Lambda" nationalhonor ~society.

Those members of the facultywho were. honored were Dr.Herbert JeUeYi associate pro-fessor of business education;Wili.iam Kiley, professor ofbusines~ law; Dr. Daniel ~ch-leef, professor of mechanicalengineering; and James Vail,associate professor of classics.The honored students were

Ronald Beach, Robert Belanger,Barbara Sue Doll, .Thomas Lutz,Carol Ann McKenzie, MilfordMerrill, Richard Roell, and J0-

_ seph Williams. /To be eligible for initiation into

Alpha-Sigma Lambda an Even-ing. College .student must have

'<, maintained a 3.5 average for aminimum of 45 credit hours.

" , , NEWMANIi, . " ,',,'C'ATHOLI,C ', ". CEN,TER >1 "

.26a5~StratfordS,tudent Mass dailyMonday, Wednesday~F riday-12 noon,..Tu~sday, Thursday-:-12:20Sacrament ·ofPenancebefore all Masses.Friday, March 4 "SewerParty" 8:30 p.m. at ~ewmanHallFriday, March 11 "PanrcNight" (pre-exa m o.pen house)8:30 p.m. at Newman Hall

/

Page 17: Ballot For Beer Here - UC Libraries · Ballot For Beer Here\ I • I am in favor of making beer available to students at the chaperoned parties of recognizee:ampus groups (fraternities,

Thursday, March 3, 1966 -UNIVERSITY~ OF CINCINNATI NEWS RECORD, -

Spanish ClossGives Play;"Manana'de Sol" Enacted

MR. AND MRS. WARREN COFFEY pose In the costumes they willwear today in the production staged by the Modem Spanish Dramaclass in the Great Hall of the Student Union. He will play the class-ical guitar and also accompany, his wife when she does the flamenco..!IManaria de Sol/I a one act play is also being presented. Tickets maybe bought at the door immediately preceding the one a~ four p.m,productions.

".Role 'Of~'Ath'I'et':ics' Explored;Chi,ld:Recreation DiseussedDr. Doris Twitchell Allen, the

founder of the Children's Inter-national Summer Village pro-,gram, was 'the guest speaker atIast Saturday evening's banquetof the Athletic" and RecreationFederation of Ohio Women con-vention. "

Hosting the state-wide conven-tion was the UC Women's Ath·letic Association. Dr. Allen,UC adjunct professor of psy-chologYI discussed "The. Role

of RecreatiO'n Jin,Children's Vil-lages/IThe (purpose of the meeting /

was to allow women from. Ohiocolleges to participate in discus-sions concerning' their collegerecreation programs.A panel discussion of compe-

tition was held Friday evening.It featured Mrs. Nancy Vonder-heide Kleinman, world championarcher; Miss Carol Brestel, chair-man of Ohio Valley Tennis Asso-ciation; Dr. Phoebe Scott, nation-al vice-president of the AmericanAssociation for Health, PhysicalEducation, and' Recreation; andMiss Nancy Chapman, officiatingchairman of team sports for theDivision of Girls and Women'ssports.

ORATOR

""Any senior interested in au-ditioning for the position ofsenior dass orater, should con-tact either Steve Edmunson at581·6162 or Sue ~ishop at 961-3790. A committee of facultymembers will select the ora-tor on the basis of hi's per-formance and outline ot hisspeech. The auditions will beheld some time during thespring qua ,;-ter. '

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Page' Seventeen

,1966 Elections ),

Campaign .Rules, Poli<:iesSetEditor's Note: These are the cam-paign rules and policies for the1966 elections to be held todayand tomorrow, March 3-and 4-[or-section. 2 coops, ana the allcampus elections on April 4 and5.

r

I I. DefinitionsA. The campaign period shall:1. begin 8: 00 a.m., Monday,

Feb. 21, 1966, and end 8:00 a.m.,Tuesday, March 8, 1966, for theWinter Quarter Elections.

2. begin 8:00 a.m., Monday,March 28, 1966, and end 8:00a.m., Tuesday, April 12, 1966.B. The Campus shall be regard-

ed as all buildings and groundsowned and operated by the Uni-versity ,except the residencehalls.C. A Banner is any sign larger

than 3' x 5'.D. A Poster is any sign larger

than 8%" x il", but smaller than3' x 5'.E. A Handbill 'is any sign 8%"

x 11" or smaller. 'F. All Banners, Posters, and

Handbills must be self-contained.II. Placement of PublicityA. Campus1. All fixed partisan and in-

dividual candidate banners, post-ers, and handbills must be keptinside campus, buildings.

2. All banners, posters, andhandbills must be approved bythe office in charge of the build-, ing in which they are located .

B. Residence Halls (See ad-dendum 1). Available at Dean ofMen's Office.C. Fraternities and Sororities1. Fratern'ities and sororities

should .individually determineregulation" of 'Posters in theirhouses.D. Siddall Dining Room1. Only one poster per per-

son- may be placed in the SiddallDining Hall. (Refer' to SectionIII, Rule 2)E. Student Union (See adden-

dum 2) Available at the Dean ofMen's Office.

III. Publicity

A. Candidates1. Candidates' for office shall

limit themselves to the followingmaximum of posters on campus:Student Body' President: 5~20'"x 30", 9-15" x 20", with a totalof 14.

Presidents of Classes: 3-20" x :'30" 5-15" x 30" with a totalof 8. '

'Other Class Officers and Stu-dent Council: 3-20" x 30", 4-15" x 20" with a total 7.

Tribunals: 2-20" x 30", 3-15" X20", with a total of 5.2. The combining of two or

more candidates on a poster isallowed, but the number of pos-ters may not exceed the combinedmaximums.3. Each candidate is allowed a

maximum of five column-inchesof advertising per election foreach' office he is seeking. Two or"more candidates maycombirle,but the larger advertising, maynot' exceed the combined maxi-mums.

4. No more than $50.00 maybe spent for the office of StudentBody President and for Class .Qf-ficers.

5. No more than $25.00 maybe spent for the offices of Stu-dent Council and Tribunals.B. General1. Rallies may be held when

classes will not be disturbed.2.' Any littering, distracting,

or pur p 0 s e fully inconsideratenoises and acts are forbidden.

3,; Publicity may be display-ed anytime during, but not pre-ceding, the campaign period and.must be removed by 8: 00 a.m. onthe TUesday following each elec-tion.4. Campaign literature may be

'distributed on campus during thecampaign period. Campaign lit·erature may not be distributedwithin 30 feet of the poles onelection days.

5. Only tacks maybe used toplace banners, posters, and hand-bills on bulletin boards on cam-pus, in residence halls, and ill:Siddall Dining Hall.

6. Only masking tape may beused to place banners, posters,and handbills on objects otherthan bulletin boards, in residencehalls, and in, Siddall Dining Hall.IV. ViolationsA: Any Misuse of the balloting

procedure shall be cause for theoffender to be referred to theStudent Court for action by theelection board.B. Any violation of the rules

shall result in the disqualificationfrom election at the decision ofthe Election Board. Any disquali-fied candidate may within sevendays appeal this decision to, Stu-dent Court.V. Write-In BallotsA. Write-in ballots will not be

used for an. office when. there aretwo or more candidates for thatoffice.

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Page 18: Ballot For Beer Here - UC Libraries · Ballot For Beer Here\ I • I am in favor of making beer available to students at the chaperoned parties of recognizee:ampus groups (fraternities,

Page Eighteen UNIVERSITY OF CINCINNATI NEWS RECORD

.Placement Interv'iews Scheduled- r

For April Of Sp(ing' Q~arter•~. .

Whereas in the past the UCPlacement Service has -held in-terviews only in the first twoquarters of the ~chObl year, thisyear the Center has decided to

C also hold interviews for seniorsduring the spring quarter. Fol-lowing is a list of the companiesthat will appear on the UC camp-us and, the dates in April theywill be- interviewing seniors.

DDaycoCorporation -------_~:~~ 13

R

Rust Engineer ______-; 4

EEconomy Finance 20 S

Sarkes Tarzian ------------ :_~ 28Shillito'sState Farm Insurance Go. 7Sunbeam Plastics 6Systems Research Labs, Inc. 5

GGardner Division DiamondNational 25

HHPM-Division of KoehingCompany ----------------------- ~ 21

Hancock, John, Life. Iris. 8

TTechnology, Inc. 4Texo Corporation ----- 14

\

A DateAetna - Life Insurance Co.________8Admiral Corp.-Color Tube Div. 14

American Insurance Co .. : _..... 14American Red Cross __: c '-' 6Ames Company __--- 14Anaconda Wire & Cable ..': llArvin Industries, _Inc. :__=_, 8Avco Corp.-ElectronicsDivision 5

.IJewel Tea. Company 20

UUnited Biscuit Company 15United States GovernmentAgriculture, Department oL22Census Bureau --- \, 26Corps of Engineers----------------~-27Interior, Dept. of (Outdoo..rRec.) ::-.0. __ = 13

Naval Air DevelopmentCen ter ------------------ :. 18

Naval Air Station ~--- 28Public Roads, Bureau oL 12

-United States IndustrialChemicals --------------------- 20

United States Plywood 19

KKiewit, Peters, Sons' Co.. --.!!

LLever Brothers ---------- 11 .Libby, McNeil & Libby c__:15

/B -MBUrr~ughs-'YelcomEl.:.. Co. 19 Midwest Applied Science 7

II

CCommittee on Manpowerin Israel __~ _

Commonwealth of Kentucky 19Continental Aviationand Engr. ---------------------- .26

PPrentice-Hall, Inc. 6Procter & Gamble -----~------ :26

WWest Virginia Pulp & Paper !3Wilson Freight Forwarding 29

o (Office Ou tfiHers __----- .; 22

Have .ostronoutsmade pilots 91d:hot?

Sure, the boys who go

off the "pods" get the big, bold headlines. But if-you.

want to fly, the big oppottunities are still with the

aircraft that take off arid land on several thousandfeet of runway.

Wh'o needs pilots? TAC does. And MAC. And SAC.And ADC.

There's a real future in Air Force flying. In years to

come aircraft may fly higher, faster, and further than

we dare_ dream of. But they'll be flying, with men

who've had Air Force flight training at the controls.

Of course.the Air For_ce also has' plenty of jobs for

those who won't be flying. As one of the world's

largest and most advanced research arid develop-

ment organizations, we have a continuing need fofscientists and engineers.

Young college graduates in. these fields wil] find

that they'll have' the opportunity to do work that is

both interesting and important. The fact is, nowhere

will you have greater latitude -?~ responsibility right

from the start than on the Aerospace Team - theU.S. Air Force!

Interested? The place to find out ,more is at the

office of t~e Professor of Aerospace Studies, if

there is an Air Force ROTC unit on your campus.

Ask about the- new 2-year AFROTC program avail-able atmany colleges and

universities. If you prefer, mail the

coupon below.

-4il!~r-----------------~II Officer- Career Information, Dept. RCN 62, II Box A, Randolph Air Force Base, Texas 78148 II II Name II Please Print II Col Iege C1ass of 19__ I

: Address______________ :

I CitY State Zip__ IL ~ ~

UNITED STATES AIR FORC<E

Thursday, March 3, 1966

American Red Cross NowSeeking QuaUfied "Workers

YoU,ng Dems Select MarionFor Ohio Convention Site- )The Directors of The Ohio

Young Democrats have selectedMarion, Ohio as its site for itsstate convention April 1, 2, 3,1966. Marion's bidding was pre-sented to the state board in Day-ton by Thomas F. Guthery, can-didate for 8th Congressional Com-mitteeman for Marion.

The convention will featureta Iks by state Sen. FrazierReams, Jr. of Toledo and stateRep. Harry H. Mcilwain ofCincinnati, the t"'!o democratsfighting for the party's guberna-torial nomination. The meetingof the two democrats runningfor Governor is expected to beone of the few times they Willface each other before the May3 primary. Both are scheduled

- to address the- state conventionat a Saturday night dinner,April 2, in the Hotel HardingBallroom at 6 p.m,The three day convention, to

be held in Hotel Harding, is ex-pected to draw about 400 young,democrats from across Ohio., Frank B. Bennett, candidatefor 8th Congressional co~gress-

,":" The- present build-up of- ,.USmilitary strength offers an un •usual opportunity for local youngmen and women to join the staffof the American Red Cross toserve members of our armed for-ces here and overseas.

The 'Red Cross Is seeking 500qualified candidates to HII open-ings as assistant field' direc-tors, recreation aides for mili-tary hospitals, and recreation--aides for the Clubmobile pro-grams in the Far East.Interviews are being scheduled

now by the Cincinnati Area Chap-ter Red Cross, according to Hen-ry W. Hobson Jr., Chapter chair-man. He said, "persons interestedin such employment opportunitiesshould t~lephone 721-2665.'~

Candidates must be US citi-zens, over 21 years of age, agraduate of an accredifed four-year - college, in good mentaland phy.sical health and free totravel on a world-wide basis.Red Gross services at military

installations are operated by au-thorization of the Congress, theDepartment of Defense and thevarious branches of the militaryestablishment. The mission of theRed Cross with the armed forcesis -to support and supplement ac-tivities that promote the health,welfare, recreation and morale0* service personnel and' theirfamilies.

Assistant field directors aresta.tioned at world-wide US mili-

'-"siips"

Exc~lIent Foodand Beverages

THERE IS ABIG DI FFERENCE

SHIPLEY1S214 W. McMillan St.

721-9660

tary lnstaltatlens where theyhelp servicemen with counsel-ing, emergency communica-t ion s, financial assistance,transpo-rtation arrangement, andcoordinate Red Cross volunteerrecreation programs. Pref~r-ence .is given to those who have'completed their, military serv-ice.Single young women, over 21,

are needed as recreation aidesto serve members of our armedforces in military hospitals hereand overseas, and for duty in theFar East, where Red Cross Club-mobile programs are operated atthe request of the Department ofDefense. Under military super-vision, teams of young womenvisit various military field unitseach week,- offering interestingshow and entertaining programsthat bring a touch of home toservicemen.

Preference is given to appli-can~s who have had, recreationexperience, have demonstrat-ed group leadership panel relat-ed group leadership and relat-Benefits for these positions in-

clude modern salary schedules,uniform allowance, duty-connect-ed travel expense, maintenance.on overseas assignments, liberalannual and sick leave benefits, ,retirement program and groupinsurance coverage. These areentry positions with the Red Crossorganization leading to excellentopportunities for career - growth-in a national organization.

man from Marion will be toast-master for the event. All statecandidates are expected to at-tend.Information and tickets for the

dinner may be obtained by .writ-ing Thomas F. Guthery, GutheryPlace, .Larue, Ohio.

W,olverton MeritsPhys. Ed.Awa~dDr. Mary E. Wolverton of UC

received the annual meritoriousaward of the Ohio Health, Phys-ical Education and RecreationalAssociation (OHPERA) recentlyat the group's annual conventionin Columbus, Ohio.

Dr. Wolverton is co-ordinatorof the women's _ program ofhealth anel physical education atUC. She is incoming vice presi- -dent Of the physical educationdivision of the OH P ERA.Presenting the I award was- Dr.

Delbert Oberteuffer of Ohio State. University, 'former state directorof physical education. The awardis the highest honor given by thestate-wide group to a member ofits profession.

TOM BECKERfor President of the

Junior ClassAccum. 2.65, A&S Tribunal, -Inter-Fraternity Counci.I, YMCA Religi-ous Chairman, Student ReligiousCounCil, Freshman Basketball, Jun-ior Inter Fraternity Council, Fresh-man Cabinet, Spirit ClUb, Fresh-man and Sophomore ConferenceChairmanships, Beta Th~ta Pi, se-:cial Chairman. /

Page 19: Ballot For Beer Here - UC Libraries · Ballot For Beer Here\ I • I am in favor of making beer available to students at the chaperoned parties of recognizee:ampus groups (fraternities,

,fl" .

Thursday, March 3, 1.966r

UNIVERSITY OF CINCINNATI NEWS RECORD Page Nineteen

Co'nt. from, p.- 1UC -Band To .PresentAnniversary Concert Student COl:llJcil.' ..

who is active in a number of One Student Council \ memberrepresented with a performance organizations would be repre- mentioned that the present sug-of his Chorale.. which is based on sented a number of times. FC?r gested reorganization could bea medieval Bohemian chant. example a Greek woman living rather. limiting. "If nex~ y~ar's

• h d 't nd k' Council holds a ConstitutionalThe Concert will also i.nelude In t e orm lory a wor Ing C . t' . d formulat' . .. . onven Ion an ormu a es anthe Prelude and Rondo from Suite on a publlcahon would be rep- even better structure they will"for Band b~ ~urn~t .Tuthill, a I. resented six times-by Pan~ell, h~ve no power to instiiute it." Tofor mer Cmcmnab~n, Jugoslav the residence hall, publications this, Patton remarked that Coun-Polka by George LISt; and the bo,a,rd, AWS, her class, and cil could legally "add to and sub-popular march, Colonel Bogey, by tribunal. A commuter, in no tract from these guidelines."Kenneth A. Alford. . out-side activities, ~ou~ be The question, "Does this organ-Dr. R. Robert Hornyak IS the represented only three t1mes- ization exist on any other cam-

conductor of the uq Concert by" the commuter representa- puses?" was brought up. Mem-Band, a group composed of stu- tive, "'-his class, and tribu,!al. bers who had recently attendeddents from all the undergraduate To this point. Patton replied the Student Council Conventi~ncolleges of UC. that the new structure would, per- noted that this structure, didThe 46th Anniversary Concert haps not show equal representa- successfully exist on many large

is open to the public. There is no .tion. "But it would represent all campuses-including many "com-- admission ·charge. viewpoints." 'muter colleges" Uke DC. Recent-

The UC Con c e r t Band high-lights its 1966 concert season onSunday, March 6, with its 46thAnniversary Concert to be pre-sented in Wilson Memorial Hallat 3:00 p.m.The main feature of this year's

anniversary concert will be thepresentation of a number of workswhich characterize the many di-vergent paths of composition be-ing followed by today's compos-ers, in writing ror me modernconcert band.Guest artist for the 1966 con-

cert will be Mr. Joseph A. Cola-luca, Asst. Conductor and formerDirector of Bands at Capital Un-iyersity in Columbus, Ohio andEastern Kentucky State Teacher'sCollege. He will play the Rondo(Finale) from the Concert forTrumpet by Johann Hummel.The Dedication Overture by

Vittorio Giannini will feature theblended sonorities of the modernband. The Miniature Set for Bandby Donald H. White, will high-light the multi-colored qualify ofthe instruments of the '~oncertband.Vaclav Nelhybel, the Czech-

American composer who is mov-ing to the fore as an importantcontemporary composer, will be

STUDENT DIRECTQRYPISTRIBUTION

If you have not receivedyour Student Di,rectory yet,you will still be able to pickone up this week. The timesof distribution are: Thursdayfrom 11 to two p.m, and Fri-day from 11 to 1 p.m. Thiswill be the last distributionfor this quarter. Correctionsfor the Student Directory Sup-plement will still be accepted.If you have any changes fnaddress or phone number,please submit them to the ,Stu-dent Directory offi~e. 413-AStudent Union or the Directorymailbox by the Union desk be-fore March 11.

BEARCAT STUDENTS

FREELarge 16 oz. COKEWith this coupon

And ,purchase of AnyRed, Barn Sandwich

BIG BARNEY 39c

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CHEESEB~RGER 20c

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ly Denison University is consider- _ing a Student Government changemuch related to Patton's Plan.The present "Cabinet of Presi-

dents". has essentially the samemakeup as Patton calls' for in 'hisStudent Council. A suggestion wasmade that the present Cabinetbe given more powervhold fre-quent meetings. and serve in anadvisory capacity to the StudentBody President.One final objection to the pro-

posal rested with the make-up ofthe new cabinet itself. One mem-ber noted: "What if the people donot want to be on Council?" An-other mentioned that thepresi-dents of organizations have littletime for more meetings.

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We want to spread the word thatthere's room at General Electricfor talented people who wantto take on big challenges.We like to call these peopleGENIUSES. But 'what they'recalled isn't so important aswhere they're headed. And at theGeneral Electric Company,there's plenty of room forGENIUSES, no matter what

their particular 'field of interest.', If you want to be recognized foryour talents come to General ' _Electric, 'where the young menare important men.And be among the first on your \campus to own a genuineGENIUS button. It will serve asa reminder that G.E .... and":GENIUS ..'. and important'challenges ... all go together.

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Page 20: Ballot For Beer Here - UC Libraries · Ballot For Beer Here\ I • I am in favor of making beer available to students at the chaperoned parties of recognizee:ampus groups (fraternities,

Page .Twenry UNIVERSITY OF CiNCINNATi NEWS RECORD Thursday, March 3, 1966

Bustin', Out AI-I Over

UCFaculty Continues To GrowDr. Harry C. and Dr. Beth W.

Dillingham, -husband..:. and wife"have been appointed to the facul-ty' in the DC department of soci-ology and anthropology.Dr. Harry Dillingham is associ-

ate professor of sociology and Dr.Beth Dillingham is assistant pro-fessor of anthropology at UC.Graduate of the universities of

Texas and Michigan, Dr. HarryDillingham has taught at MillsapsCollege, Jackson, Miss:; and Mich-igan, Iowa State, Vanderbilt, andCentral-Mtchigan universities.Native of Ennis, Texas, he is a:

member of the American Socio-logical' Society, Population Assn.of America and American Societyfor the scientific Study of _Re-ligion. '

•..

Dr. Beth Dillingham holds three'degrees from the University ofMichigan: She has taught at the ,University of Mississippi, Vander-bilt, and Central Michigan.She has conducted ethnograph-

ic field research with the Okla-homa Kickapoo Indians and theSeminole Negroes in northernMexico. She is a member of theAmerican Anthropological Assn.and American 'Assn. for the Ad-vancement of Science.Former high school teacher in

Ft. Thomas, 'Bellevue, and Day-ton, Ky., Ronald E. Siry has beenappointed instructor in ,psychol-9gy in the UC's two-year Univer-sity College: ~Born "in Southgate, Ky., Siry

grew up in Campbell County. He

cuo! The Week~

GAY TALBOT is this week's smiling blond Girl of the Week.Besides her interests in "boys,lI swimming, tennis, bowling,and pool, Gay also finds time to be an educ,,!tion maier,

Vote In Co-op Elections

Attention SENIOR & GRADUATE -MEN Students-U.S. Citizens 'NEEDING NOMINAL FINANCIAL HELP TO COMPLETE THEIR EDU-CATION THIS ACADEMIC YEAR-AND THEN COMMENCE WORK-COSIGNERS REQUIRED. SEND TRANSCRIPT AND FULL DETAILS OFYOUR PLANS AND REQUIREME;NTS TO

STEVENS BROS. FOUNDATION, INC.61N12 ENDICOTT BJ,.DG.,ST. PAUL 1, MINN. A NON-PROFIT CORP.

. UNDERGRADS, CUP AND SAVE

attended the University of Ken-tucky's Northern Community Col-lege, Covington, and -holds Bache:lor of. Science and Master of Ed-ucation degrees from UC.Siry has taught English and

social studies in northern Ken--,-------------- _tucky high schools. He workedduring the summers' of 1960 and'1961 as a radio, announcer forWBKY in Lexington, Ky.He is certifiied as a guidance

, counselor in both Ohio and Ken-tucky and Intends to work on hisdoctorate iIi the counseling field.He is a member of 'the AmericanAssn. of University Professorsand National Educational Assn.

"AN AFTERNOON OF SONG"This Sun da y afternoon,

March 6, the Glee Clubs of thaUniversity of Cincinnati, Xa-vier University, Our Lady ofCincinnati College and MountSt.' Joseph Academy will givetheir a,nnual combined concert.The program, entitled "AnAfternoon of $ongll will bepresented in the new StudentUnion building on the Xaviercampus. Each .group will pre-sentseveral selections. Theculmination of -the afternoonwill be the combination of anthe representatives into onechorus whic~ will performNivla Nivaldi's IIGloria." JohnMichael' Ward,ldirector ,of theXavier Glee Club, will direct,the combined. chorus. The per-formance which will begin at 3p.rn., is free to the public.

FIN

AUDI:rIONSfor

MUMMERS GUILDSPRING MUSICALI'KlsS ME KATEII

will be held in Wilson AuditoriumMonday, March 7 and Wednesday, March 9

(No preparation necessary all material provided)7:00 p.rn. - All Students Welcome

LS.now_ at

• College- Outline Series

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DuBois

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Store Hours: Mon~ thru Sat. 'til 5 :30 p.m,

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Friday 'til 8 p.m,

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