r I I. Jill and Bill Ruckelshaus - University of...

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.. . . .. ... .. I . . ., . _ i .. . . L ...... . . ..... .. , . .. . . . . . . .~ .? * . .. . 'e' . .. . . Ib" ._ . r Jill and Bill Ruckelshaus . on campus William Ruckelshaus and Jill Ruckelshaus appeJred on. campus Wednesday, but, for. 'different msons. ' . ' nlr: Ruckelshaus, former Deputy Attorney " General of the United States, held a press . conference prior to an appearance before the Indiana Central student body in Ransburg ', Auditorium.' The former Deputy Attorney General was .. :. ' Acting FBI Director (April, 1979. until July, .' 1973) and was Administrator of '.the 'US. ' ' Environmental Protection Agency (1970-73. . Ruckelshaus ' 'resigned from the Deputy ' ' Attorney General's position in October, 1973, :..a for refusing to .fire Special' Prosecutor Archibald Cox. ' . His wife:Jill. presently working for &e White House. ioined five other orominent , . -, . . . . . Hoosier citiktk as a member df a study panel looking into a possible public affairs . . ' program a t Central tb p r e p 6 students fqs public service work..Other members of the .. pmel include Indianapolis Mayor, Richard C. Lugar; Administrative Assistant to Governor Bowen. William T. Ray; National Republican Committeeman, L. Keith Bulen; Chairman of .. .. the State Democratic Party. Gordon SI.. Aqrlo; .and' former Deputy hlayor and current VimPresident of Community Affairs . , a t Merchants National Bank, John \Vallo. ;.' Funded by Eli Ully Endowment. Inc., the study will be coordinated by hlr. Stephen hl. ' . Maple. anlndianapolis attorney andgraduate '. Indiana Central faculty assisting the study panel Include Air: ' Lynn .Youngblood, Assistant to President Sease and Director of . . , . ..ofIcc. ' ' Development: Dr. Robert Cramer, Academic . Dean: Dr. Leonard T. Grant, D a n of the Graduateand EveningDivisions; hIr. hfarvin . lienricks. Professor of Behavior Sciences: ~~~ ~~ Dr. G&ge L. Humbarger, hofesSOr of. Business Administration; Dr. James R:', Political Science. and nfr:' DouKlaS hf:. ' 'Riggs. Assistant Professor of History and . . ' Dorland, Assistad Professor .of Business .',I .. Administration. . . ...... I I . ..-. .. . . .. .. ,. ..... . . . . . ... . . . , . . . . . . . . . . ..... ', ~ ... I . . . . ,. . . . , .. .January 18, 1974 . . , . ... .. Indiana Cenlral'College;lndianapolit, . . . . . ... .. . . . . I. ~ . .Vol.'53 N0.'7 . , ' . .. .. .. ' Sease'r olfice WtEntrdry. lndiantpclo Mayor Riiard C. luiar is in (he backiroind. RJchelshUS held I press tonference and $Dohe la Ihe ICC sluCtnl body in mnrotrlion. Maror luiar, Dr. Crml, tnd Jill Rudtlrhaur. riihl. : ' Bill's wife, were on hand lor lhe tin1 rnnlin; 01 a sludy panel. twklnlinto ... I possible public ?Ihin profram rl. . .. I ;. . . .. . . . . . . . . . . ICC (see story) .' , .. . . . ... '. ~' ~ Pholor by iim Mclton . . . . . . . . .. ........ .. . . . , . .............. .... . . . . . ' > . . . '. . . .. ... . . . . . . . . . . . .. .. .. - .. . - . ~ ..? , . . . .... . . . . . .. . . : \.

Transcript of r I I. Jill and Bill Ruckelshaus - University of...

Page 1: r I I. Jill and Bill Ruckelshaus - University of Indianapolisarchives.uindy.edu/digitized_docs/reflector/1970s/1974...dabbing a little of it there until -ZAP! One day the president

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Jill and Bill Ruckelshaus . on campus

William Ruckelshaus and Jill Ruckelshaus appeJred on. campus Wednesday, but, for. 'different msons. ' . '

nlr: Ruckelshaus, former Deputy Attorney " General of the United States, held a press . conference prior to an appearance before the

Indiana Central student body in Ransburg ', Auditorium.'

The former Deputy Attorney General was .. : . ' Acting FBI Director (April, 1979. until July, .' 1973) and was Administrator of '.the 'US. ' ' Environmental Protection Agency (1970-73. . Ruckelshaus ' 'resigned from the Deputy

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' Attorney General's position in October, 1973, : . . a for refusing to .fire Special' Prosecutor

Archibald Cox. ' . His wife:Jill. presently working for &e

White House. ioined five other orominent

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. . . . .

Hoosier citiktk as a member df a study panel looking into a possible public affairs .

. ' program at Central tb p r e p 6 students fqs public service work..Other members of the

. . pmel include Indianapolis Mayor, Richard C. Lugar; Administrative Assistant to Governor Bowen. William T. Ray; National Republican Committeeman, L. Keith Bulen; Chairman of

.. .. the State Democratic Party. Gordon SI . . Aqrlo; .and' former Deputy hlayor and current VimPresident of Community Affairs . , a t Merchants National Bank, John \Vallo. ;.' Funded by Eli Ully Endowment. Inc., the study will be coordinated by hlr. Stephen hl. ' . Maple. anlndianapolis attorney andgraduate '.

Indiana Central faculty assisting the study panel Include Air: ' Lynn .Youngblood, Assistant to President Sease and Director of

. . , . . . o f I c c . ' '

Development: Dr. Robert Cramer, Academic . Dean: Dr. Leonard T. Grant, D a n of the Graduateand EveningDivisions; hIr. hfarvin . lienricks. Professor of Behavior Sciences: ~~~ ~~

Dr. G&ge L. Humbarger, h o f e s S O r of. Business Administration; Dr. James R:',

Political Science. and nfr:' DouKlaS hf:. ' 'Riggs. Assistant Professor of History and ..

. ' Dorland, Assistad Professor .of Business

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. . , . . . . , .. .January 18, 1974 . . ,

. . . . .. Indiana Cenlral'College;lndianapolit, . . . . . . . . . . . .

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. .Vol.'53 N0.'7 . , ' . . . . . . .

' Sease'r olfice WtEntrdry. lndiantpclo Mayor R i i a r d C. luiar is in (he backiroind. RJchelshUS held I press tonference and $Dohe la Ihe ICC sluCtnl body in mnrotrlion. Maror luiar, Dr. Crml, tnd Jill Rudtlrhaur. riihl.

: ' Bill's wife, were on hand lor lhe tin1 rnnlin; 01 a sludy panel. twklnlinto . . . I possible public ?Ihin profram r l . . .. I ;.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ICC (see story) .' , . .

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Page 2: r I I. Jill and Bill Ruckelshaus - University of Indianapolisarchives.uindy.edu/digitized_docs/reflector/1970s/1974...dabbing a little of it there until -ZAP! One day the president

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Editorials :: :::::~ :. ' I

-..CEC.,and :. ' , ' " , . : ""

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.. . . 'Ne~iI,.:DiamOid .' . ' . . . . . . rescues drowning'.-?

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. . . . . . . . Daddv alwavs said. "be efficient."

. . . . hlama always said, '"be &urteou."..

And both always said, be concerned." -'-Jonathan; L. Seagull, . I

-"lien the teachers always said it, and the p r e a k e r always &id it; and mandmother -bless her soul -always said it. Each had their own - I way Of saying i t and -well , - doggone it, you just couldn't help but know, ,. it.

% ' w e traipsr4 on'through. life dabbing a little of it here. and 1:: dabbing a little of it there until -ZAP! One day the president of our college stands up and announces a new program call CEC. And what do YOU think CEC stands for? Yep, you guessed it, -,COURTESY, EFFICIENCY, and CONCERN. He stood right up there and asked everybody, not just students, but facultyanda,dministration as,

: Well, at first we wondered what was so hlgh.falootin'-important. about making three simple words like courtesy, efficiency and concern into a campus-wide program. Then the more we thought abo

' ' more we figured that an abiiosphere of CEC wou1d.k as nice as breathing . . peppermint air. . . . . . . . . . ingaddition to'Diamond, this albumis as .

We aren't shaking our finger at you and telling you how to act; like , Blama and Papa and the'teachers and preachers and grandmother - . - bless her soul - used to do. All we ask i s for you to try it. Take a big hunk of CEC and spread it wherever you go and whatever you do. , . : '

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ByChrisCIutls ' : Neil Diamond's Jonathan Llvlngston

. . Seagull is perhaps the. finest work ever : conceived by this songviriter:,Not many movie soundtracks achieve a fame for

' ' themselves a s Ibis album has. T h e ' .. . . soundtrack even without the movie - and . preferably so. is rich in the way that made

the book by Richard Bach a meaningful part of every reader's life.. '

musicians and a vocal group of 25 male yoices

mmplete in sound as any symphony. It opens

trumpet solo so masterfully arranged that it . is not difficult to imagine the sea, the sky and

the flock which sets the backgmund for tbe story. If you l i d yourself soaring, don't be .

the essential theme of the book and the movie; the challenge to find that part within

as i page that aches for a i o ; d

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'=. ' . be even more friendly and remember CEC. . .

. . With fullorchestrationpmvided by over116 .

. ~ ' . . . with a combinhtion of string. woodwind and a ... .<

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R F K . .. I . .. .

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. . . . . . . . . . . -': Expand. . . . !Day,:in ,; .

4 . . . . . . . . ourselves which is perfection. . . , . . . ~. in. 'a zoo?. _ . . '.: :

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Be : .; . . .

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. . . . . . . . ' , TOMO, ohior- \mat aplace tome!? m e : , . which speaks on a theme , . .. . . . oncesmail,quietandfriendlymmmuni~~h~~ . that is timeless . , ,

. . . . . . . . . . . . On February 9, President Gene Sease announced a p&ram. in : sing , . ' .. , , , . . caught up with the fast changing America.. It . . .which selected students might spend a day with him as be conducts the . . I . : . is full of violence, drugs,.whores. gambling. that is silent ' . .~ !? and other typical sites in a big city. It even

project to make students more aware of the workings of his office, The. %as getting great concerts. Yes; Grand Funk , ' program will open doors that have previously been closed to students. ' : :: :. Railroad, the &%o, Jefferson Airplane. John

. empty of spirit and questioning t h e , . , We would like to propose that if this new project is as successful as Denver, and many. many more: The is anticipated. it be expanded to include other administrative offices. Alice Cooper. , I t might have been the. last. . , who are we to need

. k r n b e r 13th brought 7,W people paling . -%'and $3 to see Z Z Tops precede Alice . ;

like a zoo.or rowdy sports.spectators. W i t h .the f o r m on bper's concert was halted after two songs

~ armmpanied with violin, the sad seriousness

color. RAS , Eggs, firecrackers, pennies. 'flashcubes, . brushes, matches, and more were tossed on . . . .The stronger JoMthan has found his

firecracker prank. The band pleaded with a . portrayed by a f a s t - moving,'heavily .~ . rhythmical skyb,,.,,.

I left disappointed and O d Y

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.. as a song in sea& of a voice ' .

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-;' ..the :Chair' .program :. . . , . . . . .. . .

. . . . . . . . . . business of the college. We yould like, to commend the president on this

., . . . . Dear Fathershowus thebeaten J o ~ t h a n , '

, . : . . . was . meadnglesnes ,,f life,. . . . . . . * . . . .; weneed . : ' .._ , . The possibility also exists that professors, particularly department. : . . I. . too!

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. . we need '.' . . . , . while we Gait , . . , .:

. . chairmen, might wish to participate as well. This is an excellent ~ ~'

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chance for the college community to develop understanding on both sides of the fence.

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Cooper at the Toledo Sports Arena. It was .

because Of debris being uvom a t the stage.

., !. , , : . Again we give our commendation lo the presidentand his staff for. . . . . : .

this step f o y w d . We hope that the steps will continue. . . , of his -solved d m m s finds depth and ; . . . . . stage. hllchaelBruce. guitarist forthegroup,. . . and is decided in his self.value'is . .

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, I . ~. was injured by shattering glass L .. Guest editorial ' . ' '.

. . . . . . . . . . people(oquitsothemncertcouldgoonlbut ',; Jonathan ~ i v i n g t i o n Seago11 is an . . i . . . . violence persisted. Seven thousad people .erperience in itself viewed muiwlly. AS a arrests Yere' '.. movie soundt rack i t is somewhat t Use. of. ride board '; . . ' , .': '. ':, ' madefordrugs. overshadowed. by meaningless - often

m a t ' s the world coming to? Can't people. . ' ' . tedious - dialogue. ms album maa the '. evengotoaconcertwithouthavingtoactlike ' movie, with a little help from, t h e . ,

animals? R%en are people s ~ p o s e 10 . ~photography. I,, fact, with a good -set of mature?. . .' headpbonesanda lilUelmaginaUonyoucould do. Is this gonna happen in Indy? Let's hope . .

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+ .'. ,' aid,;.in .energy -crisis'; .'.;I : .., , ' . : .

. . . . . . " I I . . . . . . GuessToledoanshaveaiotofgro*guPto wveyourselfthecostorgoingtothetheatre. . . '

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inother: To many who own cars or live some distance away from ICC, ' ' ' . ' '

i t means transportation problems. hIany realize the high gas prices and ' ,

other conflicts. But what can we do about it? Not much. Organize car pools for commuters. U s e the Ride'Board : . '

in basement of Schwitzer Center by the Rec Room. If you're driving, . ' mark i t with a slip of paper. If you need a ride, mark it with a slip of. . , ,. paper. Check it now and then. Offer your services, d r i v e h t o cut down -. on expenses. Let's get together and help one another right now by doing ._ ..

The energy crisis seems to be affecting all'oi us in one way or. Terry Taylor. ' not!

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:. . suggestions.. ' . . ' . ' .c- . ~ .~

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. . . . . our part. . . . . TERRYTAYMR , ' . .

. . . . 4y ;d in ing hall.'. . . j . . . .-; ,.

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The Student 'Dining Hall committk has

,.,Share. -A .Ride , ' ' which students wish to make concerning

suggestion box. The committee will take up the suggestions ' .

or comments with the management. If

rrgarding speific'mealo. their mmments ' will have greater effect If marked with the date of the meal i n ~ ~ l v e d and deposited in the .

. .. . . . placed a suggestion box above the sUvemre . 4

............ ................................. ..... . . containers inside the left serving dwrs in the . , ..... ...... dining hall. Any suggestions or comments . . .

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I , - , . .. . . ' . 'REFLECTOR STAFF 1 9 i 3 ~ 4 '

. . . Rhonda Kirkharn Rick Swengel : : ?. Associate Editor ........................ ............. .... . . . .

. . . . . . . dining hall operation may be deposited In the 2.. Kenny Grager : : :.;..Page Two Editor Pete Noot 'Page Three Editor . Kathy.Dolan ............................. ~ ..... i .... Creative Writing Layout John Sarno ....................................................... Sports Director

. . Paul Ludwig ............................. ;.........................Sports Editor . . . Chris Curtis.' ................................. : ...... .......... Women's Sports ~

Carol Alexander ........................... ire Servlce, Features Editor .. : . . Steve Nontell, 1 :...;... Sports Layout Bev Butler i ....,... : ............................ : Secretary Susan Schleter, Pat Layden :.................Art Design. ; Paula Wagner, Becky Rennlrt :..: Reporters ' yourinformation. ' ',.

.................................. ~ Editor-in-Chief \ .

.................................................... . Because of the shoiiage of gasoline we hope that manyof you will want to form car 'pools to gel to and from Indiana Central. We

the west hallway of Esch Hall so that you . ' mi htpostyour"ShareARide"informaUon. ,

. . If you wish a ride to the campus or lf you . . . .. are willing to .transport mns to the suggestionbox.

...... ................. ' Your,student . campus, the board Is availab e for you to post .,.

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..' . are reserving a portion of a bulletin bard in students .have complaints or comments ' *

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. . . .. raw 18,1974 :.C I ".b I i city ' . ;; American..-:educafors~ :fac,ei:./ . . . +:,federal :Income .Tax

:in:. .the iniUative schools.. and produce on his '!:a own. -:~~~';~IwiIl I: evening be course :.offered designed lo aid . persons

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. .Alpha. Phi,:,omega\, '..I indifference . .

By Rlck Swengel '. . .

' ' Is Off and people already ,' ",'.Amerim teachers are &g into an . . This condition is apparent1 cyclic. ~ who prepare or.wish to Prepare their Om

and the Ihirty-five . who do not want to learn. These hinds of . . students to respond negatively to learning by the Center for Continuing Education at students have been.in evidence since the situations or negative student attitudes Indiana Cenlral College. 'The c r e d i t h e

are ' . . indifferent student populations s e a m to.be They definitely feed upon each other.' . @wing in proportion to 'the number of Television has caused the greatest change . ' Voland. a southside attorney associated Wlth . pupils. h h y educators agree that their . that education has ever seen. Educators are' the firm of Haggerty. Haggerty, and Kias.

in teaching Is uninterested expected to entertain. as , well as teach . . 'The course will deal with such IopicS as students. While many contend thatteievioion . itemireable deductions, exemptions. if &educational institution ' . has brought youth closer to reality, the real exclusions;and com utation of the tax based

. . . . . . . . . . be linked with the apathy of the general ,fact is that It has made reality intoa fantasy. . on a standard model.

' ' pride in his work. This is due in part to the . that their credibility Is removed: . ' Wednesday evenings from 7:M) t0 9:h) P.m. ase of the assembly line. A factory worker ' Rarely do people connect what they &on . beginning .January 16 and concluding does not identify himself vith the finished . television with their personal lives. They February 20, 1974. For registration and product very often. The goal is the paycheck. .... become entertained by reality rather than . . further information contact the Center for

, nfonetary gain has been lhe sole scale of mncerned about it and because of this accept Continuing Education a t 787-6301, ext. 2M). . '

affluence in our society since the inception of ' things that should not be acceptable. Students ,

the Republic. This has not, until the Great that are attuned to the television saciety erpect.the Same kind'of entertainment In

. . . . . . . . being one of his greatest prides. There are school that they view on the screen.

Americans hold long .range and very ' P ~ Y so little attention to the education of the . ne next administration at Indian Central ,' also, been appointed to assume the ' . Immediate gals. we are oblivious to any Young in the homes Of this m u t r y that it is. '

college of the coliegekvel aamintions E g e r and plan to get out into the world and

sibility of !nmediate goals- We satisfy . with an hense . lack of basic skills. Back :, will be nlarrh 15. Students may take tests in small wonder that children enter the

for which up to a total credit of tB . . earn money but few of us prepare ourselves when there was little else to do. many people . . hours maybe Either one or two tests for anything besides work. We know how to . . .'spent a great deal of t h e reading. Even the - Music.:,''. ' .. :::-;,: :. , ' . : .~ .do . l i t t l e more than work and watch 'adventofradiocultivatedtheimaginationof ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ o n * e n l a r e h Q t e a t a m s t o f

the listener. Today however, one's abilities to . . . . television. . I produce, the missing elements Is no longer ' m ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ f ~ ~ r ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ i ~ ~ ~ ~

won the AsperMusic Festival Scholarship ' japply to real Ros.emarie Diebson* ' . ' like any of their classes i s that they do not challenged. America lacks the creativity that . Director of Testing, in the Regislrar,splfice, Lbis assertion has once caused her to Contest held during Christmas-.vacation . . and they must be returned (with the test fee) brealr. This snnul competition .atbets _. , came a new. relevant. And even further .comes the :At no point in our development should we ' , , ' no later than music students, 'graduate. undergraduate, .. .question of the . . bme with wark or success, ... The tests 'are based on college level proces and pmfmfonals fmm all oyer State. . . should lie 'solely. in the of hehers; such a lends itself to . . . . performance in a subj& area, by a student Rosemade, a sopran~..ts a student of mf. . . More and we hear the damor of the . the sensibility that made us good. ne rinal whose 'work experience. self-study, or

student of.Prof. ,Scott, was Miss Deborah .' yethedemandstobetaught,Hewillnottake not is needed, then what isneededl., .. indicates that,he has b e information and . . . . . . . . . . . understanding usually required for a college

Tests available to Central stu'dents-'ak:

Hatfield. . Central professor ... ,~ . . . . ' . : '..': . . .' : .Nur$e.,capDihg: set .,.' . American :Government; American History, ,

American .Literature; Analysis and . with artist teachers at Aspen, ,Colorado.

education journal .. . . nurses will be cappedinceremonies, sunday, . Algebra; College. Algebra and Trig, Art gallery, . . . .:,. :. . .: : .., > . '. Jan. 19. at 3:M) in Ransburgaudibrium. Dr. Computers .and Data ' Process ing , Dr. NO- R. WiIIey, associate professor ~ d u c a t i o n a ~ ~sycho~ogy. English Liierature,

Robert J ames Foose, .outstanding of 'edUCaUon at Indiana Central ,cOllege, . and the Im(&irwiliperform. n e capping. General Chemistry. General. Psychology, watercolorist and printmaker,. will have Indianapolis. has . authored an article : . ..will be followed by a reception ln the d m g . Geology; History of American Education,

. . . .... Human Growth and Development. Introduction to Business hlanagement.

some of his works on exhibition rn the Leah 1 appearing in the recent issue of The Journal

Introductory.,Accounting. lntroductory of Speclal Educatlon. Dr. Willey's article,

College. January 14 thmugb January 31: . "Social Stereotypes for Normal, EduFble . ' . Business. Law." Introductory Calculus, hfr. Foose, a resident of..Lexinglon, ' Mentally Retarded, 'and .Orthopedically . 'Central senior.photo . . , ': , ' '

' Introductory. Economics, Introductory Kentuck has won' numerous first-place Handicapped.Children," deals with widely. awards painting and graphics, including sharedfmagesorviewsheldbyre~larciass situation.explained simply . . . . .'. ' . : , ,Marketing,. Introductory' sociology,

Microbiology. hloney and Banking, Statistics, top awards for the past two yean at the annual watercolor U.S.A. exhibition in ' enrolled in public school . . . . special education',' ' hfani central Seniors &'several' rubles Testsand Measurements. Trigonometry, and Springfield, hliuourl. and the Kentucky State classes. ' . ' poorer with nothing to show for the loss (as. . Western civiyiration. Fair. .He has participated in 22 oneman Dr. Willey has published in a n&ber of Yet), due to financial . . ' Mr. Pielemeier states that about2fJ)CLEP

, shows and. his work is lnduded.in m y professional journals and has been ' a .. by hb. William Toblase who was =die IC I Tests have been taken by students and public, private. and corporate collections In . contributing author to two tertbooks in the . . : senior Picture taking 161s Year. The m g Of . . that the successful passing rate 1 s ~ percent.

field of special education. '

pmprwed; in many cases. this country and abmad. Gallery hours a r e Monday through ' Dr. Willey is a,resident . . of Shelbyvllle; . ,

.-Senior. class sponsor, Jim B k e m e r ; , , ' . : . . - 'called it a regrettable situation and stressed '.I' The my black hideout in the west end that the difficulties were not the fault of the . basement of Wiimore Hall ts beginning to be

Saturday from lo:@ a.m. to 4:W p.m. There . . ~beeveninghournuntll9:M)p.m.January . . ' . 14-17. The exhibition is free of charge.:" . ; ' .

'. Jhuary represents our coldest mbhth a i . ' photograpber.Theco~tteewasprmnised. Don't pack your suitcases and head beaYeragetemperaturedmpsto99degrees. as a Part of the studio's sales pitch, that the . elsewhere on weekends...visit the Coffee The normal dally martmum is S7 and the . . pictures would b e . delivered before House. Why? Well. here is a list of aso ow:

January 55 - Faculty-Student Fun Night . . not uncommon. M p i t a t i ~ averages just : . The, initial. scent of trouble. drifted . . . (8:W to 1:~). . . public ' intere$t':topics, overs inches (waterequivalent),butin1w downwlndhlateNovember.Mr.Toblashepl . January 27 - Glen ,Weaver concert . . . . Indianapoherperiencedl2.7incheslNormal stalling in reference to the dellve date;, - '(hopeful); 3

February3-movie!:*Joy inthe Morning" Indiana Central ,'College has scheduled a. totak measured.15 inches during the month. consequently behind In. his, work, The' at 9:W .

. number of day and evening public interest Whds average l2 mpb from the northwest, . committeeasked Mr. Bnmnemertolookinto February 8 - card party. .. mmes to be offend beginning in January. but in .19M a west wind of 90 mph .was . the situation around the first of December. .March 2 - campus concert by ICC im4. The short tenn. informative classes registered for a brief period. ' On December lMh, a secretary et the office . . students. indudesuchtopics: "I'mOk-You'reOk," . . of Mr. .Tobias' studios . sa id . that .the. . ' March 3 -movie: "King Kong.; "Reading Improvement." "Write It Right," cloudy. and 20 cfoudy. with measurable . . photographer had gone banknrpt: ' ' . . .nIarcbi~-movie:"H~tBeeame~fJnct

-"The Federal Income Tax and You," . PrWiPitatiOn on 12 dap. but only 2 of these . . . At present, a ' downtown law- firm' Is . and Jill." "Higher ducati ion; 197~2~0." "How the . averageaninchormoreofsnowors1eet;One . handlingthebanbruptcycase, andeverythlng .: . firth 17 -st: pat's Dance.

'Writers See it. . .a Sequence to Germany: . day IIOrmally remrds a thunderstorm, and . . . . . possible Is being done to see that the seniors .. nIarth 21 -,Greaser Dance. Eas t & West," ':Twentieth Century: four days have heavy fog. The temperature I reeeive.'satisfaCtiOn. Before Christmas ~

-Thought." "Games Nations Play," "Portrait. nOmWUy Stays below freedng on 10 days and ; .. pacation; Mr. Tobias made a ledge to hIr. ' Charlotte.". . ,: . . . of the French," and -'.'Contemporary , .faus belowfreezfng (usuallyduringthehours I . Brunnemer to complete the pktures. He is . corrections." . . . . . . . . . of darheSS) on 27 days with two of these - ... WOrhing on the uncompleted photographs

Classes will meei on 'campus and-. r e d s t e ~ g k l o w z e r o ! ThlsJanuarystarted.- alone:with the.equipment he has left. I n . partidpants may park free in a ,lighted; 0111 with near record-breaking snow and cold . ' addition to Indiana' Central,. Mr. Tobias is protected lot. For information on these and in the Central Lowlands, followed hy thawing., . responsible for the photos'of hlanhall and. ya there! . . . . . other credit-free offerings, 'contact the and a warming trend during the thirdweek of Ben Davis high schwls' students. Inthe past,

Mr. Tobias has enjo ed a certain degree of Center for Continuing Education, . .the month here in Indiana. ' ' . Willlam R. '&mmel. prominence in Ind anapoiis. photography.

ext.260.:- ,.:

semester with The twenty-five little ds' invite you to join our gang. It is a grrat o p p o r i ~ t y to fun, help, and mdet~e rv ice . . .

Projects in progress as follows: a projea at the Julia

Blood Drivel and more! anything .'

Contact us by campus mail., . . :. . .

to come in the future' ' '. inwsingly severe problem. the students . Whether the methcds of teach ll g cause Federal Inwme Tax returns will be Offered

create bad teaching habits is not certain. . wurse assumes M prior accounting or tax knowledge. It will be'taught by Mr. $m ... beginning of education; However, the

ftz o ~ ~ & n ~ ~ ~ j ~ :fi; .: biggest difficulty

help a friend* Or a p u p with? can ': .

.: Alpha'$igma- . . Lambda . a ' . .

b m & Evening Division H~~~~ M e t y at haana central bllege has

a publidty cham. jmes E. simpson will se rve ' as historian and hfargaret ,L. . I few ciaftsmen left who dotheir jobbecause ' . While we mntinually lambast educators. ' . .

remainder of the school year. zed Day bas

responsibilities of the recently vacated treasurer's office. ' , ': .-.

population. The day is gonewhena man takes . Those things that are real are so dramatized ... Classes will meet on campus for six . . '

~ l ~ h ~ N ~ ' m p t e r , of the ~~b . . . . . . 1. . ,

. . .

.

its :

. . . . . appointiveoffieestoindudeanhistorianand. .. DepRSSlOn. existed'without a man's work. College-[eve[ 'exam,

.

Haventick as publidty chairman for the they enjoy doing it! ~ ' ' . . , wealnodenythemthetoolstoworkwith.We . ' to be administered ' ' ,

. . . . . . . ., . . . . . . . . . , ~

. . ._ . .

&Illor h*us!c Students claim that the'reawn they donot .

challenge, making material ' of Eumpe's scholarship. . , the : supremacy . ". . '

' Farrell hf. The first NMepuP, also a high student &&ring his adulthood ' question is, what we teach in the is ' P i b l Y s'JFior high SchOOl badtmund

. . . ,'. . ' class grade of "C" or above. . . '. . . . . . . . I . . . .

. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . '

. . . . , ' . > '. : :

. The Aspen ~cho la r~h l &yO ior 9 weeks of .' 1 ., , , ,. . study next summer, pus P room and board .

. .

. . . . . . . . ,. .

. ' . -

. ... .. . . I . . . Nidety-seven Indiana Central stud& ', hterpretation Of Literature, Biology. College ,writes article'in . _ . : ~- , . . . a . , . ', . . .

. Leonard Grant ~ i l be me reahred smker .

' hall '

,

- . . - . .

,. . Ransburg Art Gallery at. Indiana Central ' . , , .

. . . . . . . . ,

. . pupils in relation to handicapped children . .

. .

. . , . the pictures was about as far as the process . . . . . . .

. , ' ,

, . .

. . JANUARY ' - . , . . . . . . . . WEATHER FAX ' . . committee. in charge'of arrangtng for a . "the" place for campus life' on w d e n d s : .~ .. . . , . . .

" . ,

:. .. . . . . . . . . . . .... .;. . mlnl1~umis20,butbelowzeronadingsare Christmas. . . . . . : .:.

The Center for 'Continuing Education'of '. . snOwfall is 4.1 inches; however, in 1939 snow ' . saying that employees had quit, and% was . . . .

. . 1' There are usuall 6 clear dap..5 p a k y

April .7. -, movie: "Ilush,, Hush Sweet

The CoIfee House will be ope^ alter home Wednesday night ball games until lo:% p.m. open every ~ r iday , Saturday. and sunday night still. Be a part of the mifee HOUX. see

. . -

. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Where is..Myla Rose Cook? 1

'. '

.' ' v -EarthSdences- ..studios. ' . ,., . . Indianapolis. Indiana 46227. phone 7v4301, . . .

. . . . . . . , . , . I : .

. . . . . , .. . . . . . . . . . .

. . . . . . . . . . . . .

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Page 4: r I I. Jill and Bill Ruckelshaus - University of Indianapolisarchives.uindy.edu/digitized_docs/reflector/1970s/1974...dabbing a little of it there until -ZAP! One day the president

. . . . ~ .. . . . . . . . . .

.t . .

Charley talks about -,himsel *

. . : , . . . . . . . . .

. .. , . ....,., ~. ~ .... ' .___"

~

.. . . . . . . . . . .

#'Country made an impressio" inme . . Then, it seems like all of a sudden, I WS :

O u t Of the cotton fiektS.' It is a good W g to' . '

when I was five or six years old. We - my , . getting Pretty good and P M n g UP - not SO . . family and I - would pi& cotton week, . skinny anymore - and I said. 'Here's my way . . and on Satu&y nighb we'd gather around an old Philco radib and tune in the Grand Ole Opry. We lived in Sledge, Alississippi, about 7.75 miles from Nashville, and WShl boomed , "Back a t that time &e Negro American right intaSledge. 1 heard the music and got , b g u e was a sort of training ground for the . 'hunguponit.AsIgotolder.Isandalongwith, .. . ma)Ors.1playedfOrthehfemphisRedSoxfor,' . the radio. . , . many years, pitching and playing outfield. ' .

"hly mother okek my first guitar forme . The Black stars from the major league teams from Sears and Roebuck. I t was a Silvertone. would get a team together lo barnstorm Therewasno.peoutwherewe lived toshow aroundthecounlryplayingthebestplayersin : me how to tune it, so I sat by the radio and '.: the N e p American League. That 9 s fun; tuned it straight across, E chord, and barred ' we Covered all the south.. .TeMeSSee. Texas, ~'

every change 1 made. 1 played guitar like that .: Louisiana,. Florida; . In addition to the until I started to record. Jo \Valker of the. . hlemphis Red SOX; I played for the Country Music IIail of Fame in Nashville . Birmingham Black Barons; and when I was asked me recently if I still have that guitar. 1,. . in the Army, I playedballlor them too. Along

the tine, I had try-outs with the Los Angeles . ' . ' '. . . don't think I could find any of it. ' "1 was playing it,out in the yard one . Angels and the New York nlets. evening. and left it out on a wagon near the , "During the* tV*uts, I tried tk'hard, . . woodpile. That night, it rained and the guitar.^ . thro&ng loo hard,^ and the 'old arm kept . : ,' burst around the edges. 1 cried, but then 1 getting sorer and sorer. Explanations of why taped it all the way around the bottom the Ididn'tmake it inbaseballsoundlikea series. best I could. Naturally, that didn't help the.. ' of adverse cirmmstances.working against. tuning any; . .. me, hut a lot of times c i k t a n c e s play a . ?After that. I kept it up in the attic. Our vital part in whether or not one succeeds in . . . house had a tin roof. and you know how hot it certain fields. hly success in the music field . ., gets in the summer in the hlississippi Delta., . has been d u e , to. another s e r i e s of . One day. my mother came in '- she always circumstances, good ones ui ls time:. called my guitar my 'box'.- and she said,' "For instance, after I wastlropped by'the 'Charley. I think something may be wrung . Angels, I. joined the Pioneer.League up in with your box up in the attic.' "hen I climbed ' . hlontana. I worked a t . the '.Anaconda ti up and looked. 1 found the guitar had burst smelter in Helena: They would hire, ball. . from the heat. The strings had been tuned so .players. and regulate Uleir job so they could tight they had just pulled it double. I was just' . work and play ball. too. I was in hfontana

that guitar. That time I really cried.. . . "One night somebody brought a guitar to "I was always sort of a skinny kid, and the ballpzrk, and I gang over the public

. , when 1 was about twelve I started getting address system. It was a novelty song, Lorn0 interested in baseball. People used to say to . and Oscar's 'There's a Hole In the Bottom o me, 'You'll never make it in basebali, you're. the Sea.' It wasn't the Natiowl Anthem. as too skinny.' You know, when you are growing '. I've heard some people say: I got some

. up and people keep telling you these things, . publicity from this, .and then my landlady you start believing them. But you come to a ~ heard aboula place in Helena - The Blain ',

point in your life when you stop for a minute Tavern -.that was looking lor a singer. They ' ' 1 . . . : ~' and really think: Is this true or is it not? I were interested in me, so I rented a guitar decided that it wasn't true for me. I was . , and an amp. and went to work there. Ale and ; and. R id .%Vine .came to. Helena to do a skinny, but I had two arms,'two legs, two . ~13thombletwangy;ping-pingyguitarplayed concert. BY thistimelwasprettywellknoan . around, and when the executives would say, eyes; and maybe I wasn't the best, but I ' every Friday and Saturday night for twenty ' -.. 1 G d l Y . and the promoter put me on the show . a l l e sounds . .nbt dws he look wasn't the worst. SO 1 said to myself. 'I'll just bucks a night. For the next few years; I with them: I remember I sang 'Ileartaches . J ~ & would mw that on the table, go out and give it a whirl, and see if I make ' alternated between working a t the Smelter, ' by the Number.' Jim Webb played steel for nen they would say something like, ayouore it.' It was a challenge sort of thiing. playing ball, and performing at lwai clubs. me. Foley and Sovine talked to me a t length kidding; A t that me I didn't realize "1 concentrated on playing baseball to the . "Finally, one of those circumstances, that after.the show. They told me that I sounded . ~ ~ c k was going through for me. best of my ability, and I really got to love it. we spoke of, earlier came around. Red . . Foley ' . Pretty good, and that I should try Nashville. . !6Fina~ly, he -te to tell me that, J&

L Nashville, and went to Ced3mood Publishing ' asked me to doan to ~ ~ s h v i " ~ on my ' ~ . . ' Company, like Red had told me to do. Thal's , vacation to learn material and bk . . . ahere 1 met my manager, Jack D. Johnson. : to Clement recoag.. I got

.. ' , . . . ~, . . . . . . . . you funny now, but I was really ' there, we workedup the material, and I went .' Scared a t the time.. !Yebb Pierce was a t . to sing for Clement. aement - we call him .

. .. he's ready to record.' Then to me, 'Do you . A - . . * . "I said, 'Is that Webb Pierce?'. . think you can cut two sides in three hours?'.

: " 'Yes.' the secretary said. When I told them I could, they just looked at .Yes.' .. : : , . , , . .. . ' . I ' each other; it seems ,that a lot of new artist$ ' ' . ..

' get very nervous on their, first session: I] ,

., "I knocLed .On his door* wakd. in .and : didn't get nervous until after the session. But' complicated technical courses is being made e ; ~ ~ ~ o : e O s f . . S g , d ~ ~ ~ ~ h ~ ~ ~ m ~ ~ ~ ~ t ~ ' ' % ~ t % % ~ ~ & ! a s allowed Dr. . intmducedmyself.Isaid,'DoYouknowaguy , . Jadr still Winks they are some of,the best . notes developed by Dr. c. F. hIiranda, Acting . . . hliranda to create a text for his students a t a naw.T iny Stokes?' . ' . . ' . . . . . ' . sonm I've ever done.. I remember driving , Dean of the Univenity of home,. .and looking over at:my'wife and College of, ,. fraction of the cost of conventional textbooks..

. . . ,. Ire cites the cost factor a s ~ a n important ,"I 'kid. 'Do'yu remember.'a show you : %)ing. cut a rerod, I cut a iecord!,. . . Engineering. ' ' .

to Chet AUins, the vice-president of RCA in:. for his . system the cost of technical will, , , . class in Systems had no ' . . dmp considerably. fromapproximately$l5to , Nashville: Chet is a man, who will. do

everything he can for something he believes textboak* PIaeed them in a loose $a a book to a h t $5 to $j for 'Itextnotes.!'

Yes.' 1 said."that's the one. Well, this . . in. lie responsible for me on RCA leaf binder and struck out key words, phrases .. .,I , believe . that this is. a step toward

"On September 28.1965. I got a call from. the system forces students to come to class for information attaiwhle nowhere else and toa levelthatiswithinreachofallstudents," . You.' . i .

'

are gohe to be datathatissuretoshowupasatestquestion. he said.' ' ' . .' have found,,, Dr. hliranda ,,that ., . The development of."textnotes'! occurred on RCA ~ ~ r d ~ . * I s i d , *IsthatgoodlsThey . . a student is given a complete set of the . Oyer the last three years. In. planning the kid me a lot about that now.

: aehlany professor's notes a t the Of wngs have happened for,me ,. . ' .hliranda concluded that no specific book was . since that time. I like to sing music

s ~ ~ ~ ~ i , , " & ~ I , $ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ e ~ o ~ ~ ~ :, on the market that would serve his purpose. . . tapeof me singinga coupleofsongs,andthei . and;fortunately, people say they tibe to hear . . . He wanted a flexible product and decided ' sent me kck to Helena On the bus. About two . me. I hope that I get to go on singing the, . on the loose leaf binder format which allows .. days afte? I got hqme. I got a. mawement . .music h t l.love for a long .time+,, say." astudentis~ivennonotes~heeasi~~ ' easy, inexpensive changes in the class .contract 111 the mall. . becomes confused as he lries to write

s e n t e n ~ s ~ a t ~ l l m a k e s e n s e l a t e r o r d a w . . materialasnewtethnologiesordiscoveries ' "Ididatapeoforiginalmaterialandsentit . . Charlq'pride 1, ' , : . ~ . ~ to Jack. All during 1W he would play that . . . . tape for the'different recording companlq. ' . . . ,in.concert'Jan. 26 . . . . . . . ,

complicated graphs and charts. while ' e ~ ~ ~ & r m o r e , he &ntin";l impmvements ,in the "textnotes" through .Some of the record exehtives would'be ' ~

listening to the lecture," he said. . ~ . ., . . interested in my sound. But back,then Jae . 7:oO and Ib:oo p:m. :: . ' .,

'

. use your talentdoing somethingthat Youlove . 1 . to do.

. '

. , . . . . .

; '

. . ' .

. .

. ,

. . . .. ' .

' b- . * .

. ,

'.

'

. . a kid, and had picked a lot of cotton to pay for about ten years. ' . , . . . :. ','

. . . . . - .. . . ! ' .

. . . .. . ~ , . . . . . . . .

' . . . - ... .

' . hid u;is one picture ofme he always - :

. ..

"About months later I to Clement was interested in producing me. He .. . . . . . . . . I . . . . . . . . .,

. . ,. ..

. . .I. .. . . by:. "textno. fes $f ~;,. -; system, , . 'A,y.:.L::f':': Cedamcd then. I was waiting in the office 'bwboy' - looked up at J ~ & and uid,.'JJ,' ,

. I . when Webb walked in. . . . , . j . _.-: . ! . - ~~

. .. .. ~ . , : - ' ~ . .

. . . . .:

DETROIT. hlich. (1.P.) -Note taking in '.. taking, such as the reference.points for . , w i k basic katerial needed for effective note ' ' ( '.::.:Can I talk to him?'

. ,

.. . "

. ".'No.' Webb said.

breakthrough and expects that by Using L!liS . , Were SUPPSed to Play UP in hbntaM last " ~ ~~JackandCowboyde~d~topi(chmytape-: 'Dr: hliranda has' bken the notes . ~ . . . . . . , . . " 'Oh yes.' Webb u id . 'RedFoley f h & . . . ' ..; . fOf,tythat day.' ' ' . '

andexamp'es.Byleavingoutthesepassa~es~ ' ' reducing the price of all textbook materials disc'jockeyhaditallsetupiormetosingfor. I , . . .: .. I . . . .. . . . 1 . , ,

. "lie a i d , 'Web son, I do my o m &sing.' , . Jack ~ ~ h ~ ~ , ire said, . . i.. . '' 'No. no. 1 meant to audition'for-you.'., .

someone to. get me a guitar. and let'me "l*e said. 'Oh. oh.' ' Then Webb. told

audition for Jack Johnson. Johnson made a systems engineering course materials; Dr; .

' . .

. , . . . . . . :, . .

The'"textnote'' system provides students .. , . readions and . . . ,. . . .

. . . _ . . .

. . . I

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y .-

e'

."-

.

. a

c-

. a-

<.

Y e

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c -- .. ...

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Page 5: r I I. Jill and Bill Ruckelshaus - University of Indianapolisarchives.uindy.edu/digitized_docs/reflector/1970s/1974...dabbing a little of it there until -ZAP! One day the president

LJanuary

3 .

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. . . . 5 .

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. . . . . . . . - . . . , . - 0 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ' ne young -';alwaysbrandishingmind. . Grmentedthatbelovedmanineveryeffortto _: . -The~Ci!ytowhichtheyoungcouplechoseto .'The trio found himonly a few blocks fmm

burned like their torches. The shadowy light. be simply a .free, honest tradesman and ' move k s t e d a university and the last . the .designated meeting place. A very . : . rumorsofheruncle. Awildone, theunclehad ' ' confused uncle tried to comfort her in her

to their target, glistening like rubies against -\%en he met the fat boy, it was the same: longagodreamtawayhisfortune. They found mpments of unbearable agony. Finally, after . the Olivebmm b&gmund of his hand. In' ' feerig that told him that here was, one of ' himintheserviceofaloan-sharkshopower. a time, the stupified shop omer braved a the split-second interim between instinctive theirs. The fat one bullied .everybody The shopkeeper was a pompous.-trit& little . comment:."He talked too much of changing

including the teacher and the clubfoot, and . man who reveled in his Om achievements,. , ' things. We are all but a few little flies caught implored: **~bt'~ the use of fighting? They , no one tried stop him. It was as though . eSWiallY his uncanny knack for coming up . in lhe.web of many great'spiders. I tried to have won." men he kept on. . . . . with Petty little an(.cdOkS. which although .tell him to give up his dreams.":"But. old

., ne eyes that met the youngmm'saere as over the world and the fat boy belonged tothe . ' quite orkh?l always Smelt Of. old cliches. man." she said, too devastated to be angry:. hot and evil as bell i k l f and yet as cold and ' darkness. He was .no better. than tbe "YOUrunC~eisa~ildlit~eratthatgotcaught ':his .dreams were just as important and deehg as the murder the bore, the kind of tradesman's son! .. i , That fight did not : .. in the trap of his ow licentious living. . . unchangeable a part of him as your arm is a eyes that would delight in g e sight of a man , matter now; it was almost. forgotten and.

' Jobs were scarce in thiscity. and the young , . part of you. And no matter how fallible. how. beaten to his end byfieir omer's bare fists. . . . certainly hazy, but somewhere in that deep man's Idealistic talk hardly made him . crazy the dreams were, they live on when They provoked the young man to more than tangle of memories .was the beginning. popular. The couple's home was even less flesh is. rutted and bones ' become white

.. . selfdefense; it was as though within their .. .Oh,shewas beautiful, noonecoulddeny than mdest,.but they managed. It became ; against the earth.". : ; Joel'Catlin

hate and greed his life had knom. Drawing and a little c r a g - the. world is.fuI1 of thousand stories to tell, and, even though he

illuminated UVee torn knuckles as they sped provider. :. I . '

his mind, scrambling for a reason, ..

. . . : . there was a dark void of corruptlon hanging

. .

. . . .

. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

; glassy r r a h they stealthfully hid all the ' her that. But when you're young and strung.' . ~.bea~ablewlththevisilsoftheuncie.Hehada , . ' ' . . . ' : . . . . . . .. . .

. . . . .

.

. . . . . . . . . . ba& the knotted mass of fiigersand hand, he ' .beautiful girlsi far and away more important ' was.?ld and wrinkled, when the light was . ' '..

took this last chance to obliterate it all.' was thatshecouldshareh1sdreams.NotUwt right, his eyes shone a little too. , . ~ . . ,

At the instant the blow bem.springing . she always understood. but she tried, and she forth, it was halted by a shooting pain. A : forearm had stopped his blow from behind. : lIis other arm was then secured in a similar . . It was not so strange ht somwne'so' . ., . . manner. NOW the young man was "ble to. . beautiful, so independent as she would tali in; ~ :. : . ~ t ' s a l l qdteobscurrin theiomg man's . ' escape. The ensuing blows seemed fierce and love him. She was the type to take long . . m'nd

. unbdievable., but th!y stopped, .leaving ... walks to windycliffswih a crazy, handsome, .,: .at the time it seemed as the hand Of . .surrounded by sea of foam . . . . . . behind excruciatmg pam. The alley floor was hard and cold. but he could hardly feel that now. The Stillness of the body seemed to .. he talked of how he would change the world. . '..shad his views. They found. a group that . . . . with now?g but a !ear to give,it moisture.,

panorama. of his life, slowing only, to leave p u r recluse h i , & f i i '

mind quested for the .beginning of this . ~ . : . , . t i [ e~asroughfOrtheS~~gmUple .~e sbggle. He did not know who they were. He ' ' YOW man loved School. Philosophy and big had more feerigs than facts ha& then. Ife ' ' .words came naturally to him. They were the

run the economy and cage the p p l e of this : the times,'! there was no money. Their .' little country. He felt they were theones who . . unwiiingness. to mve up caused the slow ate a m y the person who had been his father . death of the tradesman and made l ife. by mting a m y his business and the ones who : unbearable in that Place for the pair.

. . . . . The young man's education finally paidolf . . . . . . . .... . .

. , . . . . . . , . had enough spunk to keep on trying. 'in a better job. hlore money meant night :

Great ivory tower ' '. upon a mossy hill i . ' ' . . ' . .

. . . . . . . . classes, and the uncle could come and live . ' . ' . ARISTOCRATS ' , ... . . ' 'with them. . . ; - . ... . . . . Your. . . . . . . .. ,

' . , . . >

. SO much as to be funny, but

' Of his professon (Out Of hundreds there)- . and strong young man. ~n fact, it had been .. : God was The was h t one . . and barren earth ' - . .: : . . . . . therethatshefirsthaddnhiseyesshineas and wilted daisies. '.

. . . . . . . . . . . . .

excite the mind. It began a flashing, fast ' Andshe toowaswrriedoff (foraninstant) to. ' ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ g , s ~ ~ ~ . ~ ~ ~ l : , ~ ~ , , P,asticpeople illuminate certaii wrtinnr of bimast. . . . . more land than a song loye for Sunday and brotherhood'are morning. ..

, You - - . ,

. . . . very m3ningfUl. exciting, and dangerous. . , . . . . .. .Tonight was to be the uncle's birthday build your little horne . ; . party. The young couple didn't know why he:. .. around our solid ground

..wanted $e shopkeeper there. hfaybe it was , and nowing out of spite. or maybe it was because, except : . . , and bloaming fields

. didn't know that'they set prices,.mbbed, wings upon which his h m S could fly; but . OwerwastheciosestLhingtoafriend~a~he 2 F M ~ ~ , to. a for the young couple themselves, the shop with every tiny creature

The young man was supposed t imee t his . . wife and the two older men as he came from class. Evidently, because he waas late he had . . ' .

. . . . .... .. come through several alleys.

. . . . - ' Aoheiacedbcl;Ul;dUgh'~boyhwd;.thai. - : . , . . ' . . . . . . . . , . . . . .

, .

. . . . . . murdered, or did whatever was necessary to. .. when father and son "refused to conform to .... had. . . . . . ,~ . . . Johnson . . . . ,. ..

. . . . . . ,., : , . . . .

. . . . . . . . I ~. . . . . .: . . .

. . . . . . .mat IS Love? Love has eyes but Cand0t:see. Lovehasmouth but hasno teeth.. . . . . . Love has tongue but has no taste. . - Love has head but has no brain. Love has hands as soft as feathers.'. .~ : '. Love has ears that filter news, ':,.

r Picking only.what is good. ' :. ' . - ' . * . I .

. ' Love has heart that beats with joy,

. . . . . .

. . I . .-.. . . . . . .

' ,

Beats.with hope and beats with L 0 V E Love is true and love is real.

.'

Love is alive and Is everywhere. . . . . . . . . . . ., . . . . . . . . : . . .. . .

. . . . . . . . . . . .

>

.; , - .

. . . .

. . . . .: . . . . . . . . ;, . . . . . . .

, . . : , . . . . . . . . .: ...

Nellie Koker . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . , . . . .

i , , . 1 :. . ,. . . .

. ~. - . . . . . . : ' Unullea .. . . . . . . . . . .

. . . . . . . , ,: . > l ,. ~1amonlyamoldypieceofclay . . . . . . . . ready to be shaped into a figure,of life: . . . . . . . . . .h!y mind is liLe the s~ . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . : . . . . . .

f lnwin~ toward new ideas . . . . hly feet are that of sandy

munh from walling into strange, new adventws .. . . .

.., ; . . . . . . . . .

. . - - - - ~ ~ ~

. . . , . . hly hands aryahosiseaweed- . .

a g i n g for another's touch ~ . . . . hlyeyesbringiorththesun-.-' . . . . . . ...

waiting for a smile of love: . ' . ' . .

bright and shiny and expectant '', ' . . ' . - ,- . . ,

. . . hly beart is that Of stone-

.. . . . . . But when the sun goes d o m

eathered together by seaweed . .' . , . . - .,

. . , and the tide goes out over.the stones ..... .. . . . ,. .

resting on lhe,tarnish&J sand.. . . . "ready to be shaped into a,figure of life.

I am s o 1 only a moldy piece of day ' . ' ' ' ' . . . . , . . . " , . .

. . . ,

. . . . . . . . . . . . .

. . . . . BevJohnson. '- .

.. , - . .. . . , , _- .. . .

. , . c . - .~ . . , . .

. .

. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . , . . . . . . .

a 8

Page 6: r I I. Jill and Bill Ruckelshaus - University of Indianapolisarchives.uindy.edu/digitized_docs/reflector/1970s/1974...dabbing a little of it there until -ZAP! One day the president

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, . . .

. . ., , . . . . . ,

. . :. .; .,! . .~ . . . .",,. .- . . ~ , , . . . .

~ e i pibfit,- slow .in ,c,ofing;' .. : ;'. . L . ' ' .

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, ' j - ; . , . . .. . . . . .

. . Hounds' , - are..'up. . . a i d ' . . . . :' ' .. " .

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By John Sarno SO whirs going.to happen'the rest of the N e a r l y two' months. a f t e r t h e . winter is horn only to jeanne ~h~~ or ~ ~ e m ~ m e n t Of the basketball season, the Clare Voyant or whomever. Central is &2 in '

potential Of Indiana central's Greyhounds , ' the conference but by no means out of it. . . remains about as mysterious as It was in the .neYy see ti^^ ~ ~ ~ v i l l ~ and , . .

preseason. by this time may already have wbupped ' '

UP of Some good games against good teams ' and bad gama against bad team, and vice ' -hey-Pooeyteamled by itsfreshmanguard, :. . . versa.. Recently they stuck with an

I outstanding Evansville bunch until the f i l l minutes. seeming always on the verge of a a l ly that would h s t them Over the hump! but never quite managing It.

Evansville? Well. several nights later Arad , Febmary.23. wrgess boys be busing .. .

division team. by a 103-79 count. .. .

'

: ' The 'Hounds are'6-6. afigure which Is &de , hpauw on wednesday.

Tomorrow night they'll face an underrated

~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ o ~ . y o u ~ ~ ~ a v e t o s a y ~ ; ~ ~ a v e

afford to lose more than one or two more' conference ballgames. You'd also have to say that come what may, the best game of the

dom fora return ma;& thatnigh;-and the' Greyhound they'll sit in on the m y here will be the ones they'll meet on the hardwood.

. . . .

'. . a'sbot a; the ICC they, really can't ~

~~ . .

What does it mean to almost.wblp . s e ? s o n ~ ~ ~ p r o ~ ~ ~ y ~ p ~ y ~ a ; o u r p ~ a c e o n . .'

' . . Not quilt quick rnough to shoal lor a Iireman's urry takrdom. Sbn Markls seeks a new way to hold Illinois State's Wrdller.Thr wrrsller lromthrland 01 Linrolnlriumphrd in IhiSlhc Inritalionrl consolation bout, bya4-

; . . ' .. hlcCutchan's hordes rambled Over Kentucky

Wesleyan. the nation's Number One college

A week later. 1.C.. pummeled a . fine

the brightest it had all year. Dave Wood returned to the lineup after an ankle injury and lent stability to the. backcourt '-

ways that go unmentioned In the box score. . . FOIT*K & c # r f f m t . ,

Darl Hall, Ike Jackson and Bob Wingerter. . . . looked like a formldable triad In the pIv01; . .. and the guard corps, with Rod Pawlib, Mike Van Emon, Jim Farmer and Wood appeared . . deep and capable. And, of course, there was

. Daryl Warren -doing the Ihhgs that make him one of the top two or three all-round players In the conference. . .

' ' Did it all go down the drain a t We. . , Fieldhouse? Nope, far from It. But after the . Bulldogs' -second half comeback what

' . ~ m a i n s to be seen Is whether it was superior. . Butler talent or ma be a slight lack,of depth . '

Swain bad an absolutely super first h& The 51" Anderson sophomore zoomed around Butler's Phil Cox Ume and again, drawing ; ' '

fouls as well as converting the baskets. ' . Warren was all over the place, Pawlik and

' , Wood were steady, and Hall was well on his . ' way to his best game since the 'Hounds' last

, win over Butler two years ago. -Matter of fact. this game had a very.'.

similarfirsthaUpattemtothatgamebackin : .. 1972.

t

straight bombs at the games's outset. J.D. , Layman gunning It out with Butler's Oscar mans, and Hall coming off the bench to . . :. . handle the Bulldogs' then Inerperiend ' . .~ Aprimeregulrementforanygoodwrestier By $eve Nontell. .- .'PurdueonJanuary5,sawtheHoundsposta . R%enA.C.WtrledtowlnaberthwithLhe ; ' ,

sophomore; Daryl hlason. ,. ' . ' '

Warren and Swain and It looked like history . all over again last Saturday night. But it only breed) appear to be lasted for twenty minutes. .Then the Ume

more acrommodating than . 2 counl l o set Stan lourth among 190 pounders. . I

. , . . ..-' . .

. . . . . . . . . . . . . . Bellarmine squad 7241, and the future looked . . , . . . .. : . . . !

contributing, beddes points, In nmemus '

' ~ -6" OLbCLOVSB8

' Clarence Swain was hitting inside and out; .. . - l C G TOPONOIk. . . ' .

.. .

, . ,.- . '

for 1.C. that spell e l our downfall.

, . ' :

. _ ,

Backthenitwash~ePbelpsswlshingflve power. through Seven meets::: . , .

'

.

. . .. - . .

. . . ,; , . . . . . . .

'

lth'place team total from among Iulaols .

second m g the heavies, good for the best

Brltlsh Oiymplc team of 1920, everyone

the Olympic cam- at Antwerp where be ' ' IC rfOmhulce. hlyers, RaboU'U, DullagbaIl. . the W m e k race and the 15M)-mek

Reinsert Hall and substitute h!.ssrs.'s . Is a most dekrmlnauon..And a': State. BaU State. Huntington, hhchester, . laughed at him. For be aas thirty-& pars '

some wreslllng (Ibose -. and EMNville. Rick Cardner wound Up old. However, be made the team and went to 7- . Of the fine read$' to use said dete-uon In

. . , machine disappeared and Gzorge Theofanis's ~ an&oUe gained ~hirds wbila mue an~ed. ~ p i ~ p . . . , . ;.

ch& and went on to .& It , 85-69.

. . . the ICc . A . . . running, codiden; kept central in with last Saturday's 41-8 conquest of . fourth. . . DePauw, Indiana Central stands at 4-3 dual- ne L Lvels t o ' ~ - ~ ' h - & to .. ,

meetwise. Victories have also been. do battie the has; m-, janW 3 , ' ? :_ ' registered over North park (1510). Aurora ' seesthemjoumeytoBlm~gtonfordaJhu . n m p ~ i n ~ t o r y w b o h a v e l a s t t h e i r U ~ L n

(37-15)* and ~vansville (m), M e losses ' . withSouthern Illinois and LU. You can catch of nlinois '. the Hwn& at home next on February 2 when . was crushed in 1899 by a bat welled by a

(n.U), .Northeast ~ u r l (25-18), and . Ohio's Wtiberfom pap a visit. Below are I . player and Jennfngs was beaten to death by Elmburst (22-18). Mark Dullagban 1s ' meet stab. we must caution that all

. . . unmched at 1 s and pmbably rates as the . stah only Wid. bard wk~; they fail to strongat Homer 80 far. Don't discredit . completely revea~ a wrestler. %t you can . the h P m d perfomnws af Bruce Jones, . do on r om - just come seem in action ': .. - hhrk Gray, Steve Harding, and Joe Myers, .. ' megc.

' . however. The fwhman who rates as the . . . mast 'pleasant surprise. is 177-lb. Marion

WoUe. unbeaten In duals at his class and a

welcome; hfike Flaherty of Whiteland bcks .. Elb4111 . ' - 1 0 1 I 1 ..

Sam While and Ora J&n@ &-e the d y ; .; . . . . the performance of their duties. WhI le 'aW .. *+

an angrg player tao years lak.

' GOT :ANI BONIS'TO Pic* w i n . . .. . . . ' 7MC@3UNOS,

.' have been deUvered to

: ' : < . . . 0 . '

. . . . .. . 8TAllSTl&

I 7 D U U Y W I ' .

T a m W D w ~ i m a ' . _ worthy perfoner in tournaments as well. . . bmc.~ .m - 1 1 0 I *

' . . Two new additions to the squad are most. . .; al,, . ~. . 7 0 0 s i 0

' ' .hottest Ihhg that Widliteland's Warriors could . . =;&' 1 1 s 1 : i

* 7 0 0 6 '

' t o o 9 0 . 0 1 O . O l

puton themat) flllsthatvacancyat118and ' ' . . . I I o o % '. . . C",, la ' I 1 0 u s

, -.la I t 0 l l l fills it well. Jeff Rabourn has been keeping his wrestling consistent as always. In many b r , in 1 1 0 l o

8 1 0 1 4 s - . ways,beranLswithDullaghanasanexdtlng . J-.Es h!uik.lsn. '. I O IYS mawto watch. Onlv Stan Markkand Rick

. . up Jones at 126, and,David Egbert (once the .. ' . Fdhun.ls

-.

.I )R I * * o u - ' .

_- ..'.' . . DON'T 78y IT...

. . . .

M m 1M . . i i i i i ~ r 4 1 0 1 8 s w-.Ix , a a 0 IO 0

wme. in i o 0 I O .I IPP ' ' 0 . 1 0 0 4

' 0 1 0 0 : ' . . Cardner have been imacked by ill fate, Stan

Kentucky Derby in 193). never won a race potential and Rick by mrrlng back and before. and never.won a race after that. -. knee problems.

Broker's np . the SUV~UOMI winner if the ' by a record which doesn't RnKt hts real . .

. . victory. . ' . . . . . . . .. . . ,'. . ..The . . India? Central Invitatio~l, won by , ' . . : . ,'', ' ~ ~ ~ I C - - . ~. ' . * ,

''GOOSE TRKKS~

* . . .~

. , . .. ,

. . .. . .

. . .. , . .

Page 7: r I I. Jill and Bill Ruckelshaus - University of Indianapolisarchives.uindy.edu/digitized_docs/reflector/1970s/1974...dabbing a little of it there until -ZAP! One day the president

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L;Janua.ry 18,'1974. .' , .I. - . , . . .

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:- -Reflector picks Irish c . to end UCLA win streak

By John Sarno The most important game of the college

ba&etball season for an Indiana mllegiate basketball team takes place in South Bend tomorrow and it could be a history-maker.

UCLA. possibly minus Bill Walton, will be' a t Noh Dame; and they've won 8 0 d d games straight since their last loss there in 1971. Back then Austin Carr slithered through the arms of Sidney Wicks, Curtis Rowe and John Vallely for %?-plus points and the Bruins of John Wooden tasted wbat has now became an unheard of defeat.

With lhat in mind and the fact lhat Big Willlam has a hurting'sacroiliac, the old prognosticator will now walk blindfolded out to the end of a creaky old limb and balance hlmself on one toe. The tollowlng wlll happen: Notre Dame will narrowly defeat UCLA tomorrow. In the return match next seek in California, UCLA will beat N o h Dame badly. In the NCAA finals Noh Dame will triumph over UCLA again, beeomlng the first Ieam ever to win the national championship in two major sports the same year, I think.

Why this madness? Not because UCLA doesn't hwe the best talent. I'm orettv sure ~~~. -. ~~ ~~~ ~ ~~~~~~ ~

key do. They held a super kerb Carol1113 Slate lejm a t bay even though Walton missed half of that e3me with foul troubles. How hlaryland &e within one point of beating them is hard to fathom. So why Notre Dame? Simple - fate. Good

guys over bad guys. But that's not even really true. It Is rumored that John Wooden has never said or done anything out of line, ever. Never scowled at wife Nell or bit Walton or Alcindor on the knee or anythhg.

But Bill Wallan. good as he Is. and he may be the most domhting white player ever, is another u se .

He says and does a lot of good things, like rejecting a million bucks to stay in schcd and refusing to accept all the credit for the team's success. But in some ways the guy ' comes off as beinrr a wee bit abrasive.

.

It's not good &y to curse at wur college president in r ront of a hundred fellow sludenls or be fined for disorderly conduct or mm lain very noticeably to refekes almost . all (Re time.

Walton also has very bad knees which

. almost seem certain to at least give out for a lilUe~hileoneofthese&).s. Nowhealsohas the back problem; and, all in all, seems sor1 of unlikely to go through a whole college career undefeated. These may seem to be minor factors but that's only one side of the

On the other side there's John Shumale. If ever there's a kid mho deserves to be the hero on the last page of the slorybook, it's Shumale.

Shumate grew up in a tough section of New York city with sir brothers and was kept in . line by the sturdy hmd of his father, a pastor by trade. I

IIe made i t from the streets of h h d u t t a n to Kotre Dame, and there very nearly died of a b l d infection his freshrmn year. He missed all that season and has played most of the past one-and-a-half years in pain as a , resull of various injuries.

man who still bubbles with cnthushsm at his gccd fortune to be playing the game he loves, and playing it well. ' '

So does it wind up matching Walton ao a sort of bad guy. against the irrepressible Shumale! No. there's more than lhat for N.D. There's Adrian Dantley. a freshnun forward who's stronger than \Yakon and about as strong as Shumale, which is mighly suong. This'll be the first time Walton h3s faced a tandem as physical as this one. The Burleson-Tbompson. hlc~filien-Elmore acts of N.C. Stale and Mawland arc tough. but not

' coin.

:

The deeply religious Shumate is'&e type of -.

'

- . UIi tough.

Gary Brokaw is a virtuoso magician in the backmurt, and mates Dwight Clay and Ray ' ' hlartin are both superquick and hard to

.. press. There's also swing-man Billy Patemo. Gary Novak and big Peter Crutty. How deep '' ' . is Kotre Dame? Last year Cruttv slarted and

' '

averaged close to double figuresin points and rebounds. This year he plays about five minutes a game.

Nevertheless, by tomorrow, all those Wilkes and Curtises and hleyereses for the ' Udans could have knocked Notre Dame all over the court. And they may do it again next week and again in the tournament. But 1 think .

. . . not.

Shumate. Tomorrow and again & March. It's ~

the year of the Irish.

. .Thistimelt~llgotothefates,and Johnny..

: , , . . , .. . . ..,.

. . ' . .

Sports.Calendar , : . :

Track season to begin . ,. at the end*of January

January 19 '

. wiippets Basketball at Goshen Wrestling a t Anderspn . ' .

, . h s k e b l l (Var.) wth rupui. 1 .'

U.S.G.F..Tackat LU. ' .

R'hivhiDWt basketball with Frankh '

(here) ,

January23 . ' ' '

' . ~ (h'dre) .. Varsity Basketball at Vaparaiso'.

January 24 . . wrestling at St. Joseph's

January 26 &'hippet baskebll a t Grace .. Varsity and J-V basketball at Wabash

'. n a c k for all mmers at LU. . . Janppry29 : . . .January 28 . . .

whippet basketball with Vincennes

Wrestling with Southern Illinois

(here) January 30 ' . ,

February 2 Whippetbasketball a t HunUn50n Wrestling with Wilberfom . . . (here)- . '

(here) Varsity basketball with RoseHulman

... February 4 7 : . . Whipkt basketball a t Butler , . Track all comers at LU.

. . . . . February6'. WrestlingatWabash. . . . Varsity and J-V basketball at ' . . . : 'Evansville

February 7 Whippet basketball at Earlham

' February9 Wowt basketball with Hanover ' .

(de-re, wrestling Mth Valparaiso and North

Vanity and J-V basketball with Central a t Valparalso

Valparalso (here)

. . . . . . . .

. .. . . ,. . . . ! . : . . .

0 VARIETY -SHOW Q

. . . amiI.6. a t IN. . I

*. Varsltyand J-VbasketballwithSt. Joseph's' . ~ e ~ p ' Us' find Myla Rose

, . . . . . . . .

r

(here) . . .

...

.

. .

. . . . . . . . . . . ': > .. . e _ . . . ..

Page 8: r I I. Jill and Bill Ruckelshaus - University of Indianapolisarchives.uindy.edu/digitized_docs/reflector/1970s/1974...dabbing a little of it there until -ZAP! One day the president

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.. . . .' , .;:.. Sally Baker rt : ..

... . . ~. .. closing ctrtmonits . . . . .

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. . . dars.

:. . (LtH and ri;ht pictures) Mxil~ilonts . . . .

. .

and BNce Gumbtl at optninlmirtr.

" BNCe Gumbtl ' ' . . . . . 8 . .

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