university of cincinnati newsrecord - uc...

12
University of Cincinnati NEWS"RECO"RD Published Tuesdays and Fridays during the Academic Year except as scheduled. VoL-55 Cincinna!i, Ohio, Tuesday, April 23, 1968 Greek Week Plods Ahead Despite S~veral' Setbacks- ~ um for the Convocation. Although none of the scheduled speakers could be present, the Greek fire continued to burn bright. There was some question whether the weather would, permit the Olym- pic games to be held the follow- ing morning, but by Saturday the skies had cleared, and the Olymp- ics went on as scheduled in front- of McMicken. The five events- the TUg of -War, Egg Throw, Torch Relay, Pyramid Relay, and Ball and .Stick '- featured teams of one fraternity and Quesorority . competing against one another. Following the Games the action shifted to the Burnet Woods Pa- villion for the annual Phi Kap Chug-Off and the auction of Greek Maiden lunches, With the proceeds from the sale of the meals going to the World Univer- sity Service. The men's chugging was, as usual, hotly contested, with Sig Ep nipping Lambda Chi. For- the first time ever the Chug- Off was opened for competition QY the Greek maidens. Theta .Phi swept to victory in an amazing' 11.4 seconds. The Greek Review Concert topped off the day's activities, al- though it did not escape the bad luck that played so large a part in" the- whole weekend. ",~th scheduled groups for -various rea- sons could 'not appear, but some last, minute scheduling' produced the "Four Freshmen." As an added attraction, UC's own Pam Myers sang along with this group. Greek Week is to continue on through,' the coming week On 'schedUle' for tonight are the Ex- change Dinners, with members of all fraternities and sororities traveling to other Greek houses to exchange talk, ideas - and food. -After the dinners Greeks will concene in 'Wilson for the Awards Convocation, to honor those who have significantly con- tributed to 'the .Greek system. Wednesday evening will see the Faculty Forum at 7:00 p.m., and on Friday night the Greek dance will be held in Music Hall, with the entertainment being, provided by the "McCoys." Greek Week, off to a shaky and near-disastrous start, got off the ground in fine style this past weekend. Opening the festivities was the Torchlight Parade Friday night. - As the parade ended, Greeks gathered in Nippert Stadi- 'D"rug . Cure Symptoms;' 'N~rcotic! Label Misleading by ,A~terPeertess The last in' a series of lectures , concerning drug abuse will be held today at 12:30 in the Great Hall. Mr. Otto Heinecke, Director of the Bureau of Drug Abuse Con- trol, Chicago field office, will speak on "Legal Implications of Drug Abuse." Last Tuesday, Dr. Helen Nowlis spoke on "Drug Abuse from the Point of View of a Social Psy- chologist."Dr. Nowlis stated that the problem of drug abuse is a difficult and complex one. The problem is a matter of definition, Dr. Nowlis defined a drug as "a substance, which by chemical nature affects structures or the function of the organism." Man has 'become more and more de- pendent upon drugs for-his every day existence. According to Dr. Nowlis, the /drug problem is "man learning to live intelligently in an increasingly chemical environment. " According to the strict defini- tion, a. narcotic is a drug which produces sleep, stupor, and pain' relief. Yet today, any drug which is considered by society to be socially unacceptable is labled a 'narcotic.' Although technically, 0.. 1t o c.> >- ~ .o:c 0:-: c;o 0 • .J :t: •..0 e, ,w 0'" '% N % 00 •... ~u..< _0 :z U).. z :;:) :> () o --'"2. U ;;t-- « '::) <..) ('1 opium and, its .derivatlves are- classified as narcotics, some states include barbiturates and amphetamines under this class- ification. \ Dr. Nowlis also 'said that mari- juana is the most widely used and least understood drug. She slated that we must find out what it is and how it works. Dr. Nowlis' main point was' that our current definition of drug abuse js wrong. Alf~drugs are dangerous to some people under certain circumstances. We must not believe that drugs can magi- cally cure diseases, they only cure symptoms. Thus drugs can- not solve the problems society faces; it can only cover them up. It is up to us therefore, to attack the problems of society so that people will not have to use these drug. No. 42 Bush#Gradison 'Push UC-:"Com~munify -Role by Mike Blackman "UC's role of education for the -community is virtually untouch- ed:' This was the view stated by Councilman Myron Bush at the YMCA faculty luncheon on Thursday, April 18. Mr. Bush and Councilman Willis D. /Gradison, Jr., spoke on "UC's Role In Ur- ban Crisis." . Councilman Bush was the first speaker. He spoke on what the. University can do without the use of additional funds. He op- ened by saying, "Our city, like others, is experiencing crisis." There is a decline in the rela- tions between people because "our traditions (values) have be- come woven into society." Coun- 'cIlman Bush said that he be- comes "alarmed" when he, hears business leaders who are, ignor- ant of the poor conditions of "the 'minority." They are the "educa- tors of future business leaders," and because they ate they should be the ones to set up programs for those Negroes who want to go into business. The students must be made aware of theac- tual problems. Bush suggested, that- there should be a freshman course given on prejudice; its organiza- tion and effects. This, would make the students more aware of the- pitfalls "not only to them- selves, but to the victims." The Law School could, assist in the making of a model eviction law that would protect the landlord and the tenant. Law students should be taught that "justice. is not seasonal, according to polio tics or the mood of the people." Business students could give guidance to Negroes who want to go into their own business, Bush stated, "All students should be made welcome at all school af- fairs using school facilities." The studentc should see city govern- ment in action by going to Coun- cil meetings. He then emphasized that : all this could be accomplished with- out money from the city, state, or Federal governments, and the amount that would be spent would be negligible. Councilman Bush ended by saying that what is taught to the students have more effect on them after they leave school. This will have the greatest effects on "future urban crises." "The world is not only expl»- sive, but will explode around our ears." This was the opening state- ment by Councilman Gradison. He spoke, on what can be done with more appropriations. He .said that increased budgets and new laws will play a biS',part of the shaping of our cities. (~radi- son did emphasize that the rindi- CCont'd on Page 3) ~ 'Greeks Play It' was a Greek Week that will be long remembered, both for its successes and its intertwining with fate. First, the one group that was scheduled to perform at last Saturday's concert, "Three's a 'Crowd" had to cancel' because they couldn't get a work visa for the U.S. They are from Canada. Two days later "The Union Gap" which' was the other group scheduled, to give the concert Saturday, cancelled because their drummer was injured in an accident. Last minute arrangements were made to get "The Four Freshmen." So far,the disaster was the worst ever to befall a UC concert. The Greek Week parade was not to be outdone in terms of misfortune. One marcher forgot to wear underwear under his tunic. This proved embarassing not only' to the women and children who lined the streets, but also to the TV cameraman when ,he raised his tunic in front of the camera. Governor Rhodes, Mayor Ruehlmann, and President Langsam all had obligations that kept them from participating in the parade. Mayor With - Fire: Ruehlmann did provide a "Greek Week" proc- lamation which sounded much like the recent curfew proclamation (all proclamations sound alike). While Dean Nester read the message to the Greeks assembled in Nippert Stadium one of the four Greek columns behind the podium crashed down, 'barely missing the Administra- tion representatives. - When the Negro candidate didn't make 'the Greek Goddess Court, the black sorority caused nervous laughter by singing, loudly, "Some- where A Place For Us: . ." When the hard- working and harrassed Greek Week Committee announced that the Saturday night concert had been changed there was laughter. On the lesshumorous, but equally disasterous side, a student fell, or was pushed, off the Bur- net Woods Pavillion Saturday. He had allegedly been exposing himself indecently from that perch. He wound up with 1m injured leg and a pinched nerve. The misfortune did not cease, and -even the Taft Institute was hit. The featured' speaker, former Governor Terry Sanford of North Caro- lina, was unable to attend the Saturday lecture because of personal reasons.

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Page 1: University of Cincinnati NEWSRECORD - UC Librariesdigital.libraries.uc.edu/collections/newsrecord/1968/1968_04_23.pdfUniversity of Cincinnati NEWS"RECO"RD Published Tuesdays and Fridays

University of Cincinnati

NEWS"RECO"RDPublished Tuesdays and Fridays during the Academic Year except as scheduled.

VoL-55 Cincinna!i, Ohio, Tuesday, April 23, 1968

Greek Week Plods AheadDespite S~veral' Setbacks-

~ um for the Convocation. Althoughnone of the scheduled speakerscould be present, the Greek firecontinued to burn bright. Therewas some question whether theweather would, permit the Olym-pic games to be held the follow-ing morning, but by Saturday theskies had cleared, and the Olymp-ics went on as scheduled in front-of McMicken. The five events-the TUg of -War, Egg Throw,Torch Relay, Pyramid Relay, andBall and .Stick '- featured teamsof one fraternity and Que sorority. competing against one another.

Following the Games the actionshifted to the Burnet Woods Pa-villion for the annual Phi KapChug-Off and the auction ofGreek Maiden lunches, With theproceeds from the sale of themeals going to the World Univer-sity Service. The men's chuggingwas, as usual, hotly contested,with Sig Ep nipping Lambda Chi.For- the first time ever the Chug-Off was opened for competition QYthe Greek maidens. Theta .Phiswept to victory in an amazing'11.4 seconds.The Greek Review Concert

topped off the day's activities, al-though it did not escape the badluck that played so large a partin" the- whole weekend. ",~thscheduled groups for -various rea-sons could 'not appear, but somelast, minute scheduling' producedthe "Four Freshmen." As anadded attraction, UC's own PamMyers sang along with this group.Greek Week is to continue on

through,' the coming week On'schedUle' for tonight are the Ex-change Dinners, with members ofall fraternities and sororitiestraveling to other Greek housesto exchange talk, ideas - andfood. -After the dinners Greekswill concene in 'Wilson for theAwards Convocation, to honorthose who have significantly con-tributed to 'the .Greek system.Wednesday evening will see theFaculty Forum at 7:00 p.m., andon Friday night the Greek dancewill be held in Music Hall, withthe entertainment being, providedby the "McCoys."

Greek Week, off to a shaky andnear-disastrous start, got off theground in fine style this pastweekend. Opening the festivitieswas the Torchlight Parade Fridaynight. - As the parade ended,Greeks gathered in Nippert Stadi-

'D"rug . Cure Symptoms;''N~rcotic! Label Misleading

by ,A~ter Peertess

The last in' a series of lectures, concerning drug abuse will beheld today at 12:30 in the GreatHall. Mr. Otto Heinecke, Directorof the Bureau of Drug Abuse Con-trol, Chicago field office, willspeak on "Legal Implications ofDrug Abuse."Last Tuesday, Dr. Helen Nowlis

spoke on "Drug Abuse from thePoint of View of a Social Psy-chologist."Dr. Nowlis stated thatthe problem of drug abuse is adifficult and complex one. Theproblem is a matter of definition,Dr. Nowlis defined a drug as "asubstance, which by chemicalnature affects structures or thefunction of the organism." Manhas 'become more and more de-pendent upon drugs for-his everyday existence. According to Dr.Nowlis, the /drug problem is"man learning to live intelligentlyin an increasingly chemicalenvironment. "According to the strict defini-

tion, a. narcotic is a drug whichproduces sleep, stupor, and pain'relief. Yet today, any drug whichis considered by society to besocially unacceptable is labled a'narcotic.' Although technically,

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opium and, its .derivatlves are-classified as narcotics, somestates include barbiturates andamphetamines under this class-ification. \Dr. Nowlis also 'said that mari-

juana is the most widely used andleast understood drug. She slatedthat we must find out what it isand how it works.Dr. Nowlis' main point was' thatour current definition of drug

abuse js wrong. Alf~drugs aredangerous to some people undercertain circumstances. We mustnot believe that drugs can magi-cally cure diseases, they onlycure symptoms. Thus drugs can-not solve the problems societyfaces; it can only cover them up.It is up to us therefore, to attackthe problems of society so thatpeople will not have to use thesedrug.

No. 42

Bush#Gradison 'PushUC-:"Com~munify -Role

by Mike Blackman

"UC's role of education for the-community is virtually untouch-ed:' This was the view stated byCouncilman Myron Bush at theYMCA f a c u l t y luncheon onThursday, April 18. Mr. Bush andCouncilman Willis D. /Gradison,Jr., spoke on "UC's Role In Ur-ban Crisis.". Councilman Bush was the firstspeaker. He spoke on what the.University can do without theuse of additional funds. He op-ened by saying, "Our city, likeothers, is experiencing crisis."There is a decline in the rela-tions between people because"our traditions (values) have be-come woven into society." Coun-

'cIlman Bush said that he be-comes "alarmed" when he, hearsbusiness leaders who are, ignor-ant of the poor conditions of "the'minority." They are the "educa-tors of future business leaders,"and because they ate they shouldbe the ones to set up programsfor those Negroes who want togo into business. The studentsmust be made aware of theac-tual problems.Bush suggested, that- there

should be a freshman coursegiven on prejudice; its organiza-tion and effects. This, wouldmake the students more awareof the- pitfalls "not only to them-selves, but to the victims." TheLaw School could, assist in themaking of a model eviction lawthat would protect the landlordand the tenant. Law studentsshould be taught that "justice. isnot seasonal, according to poliotics or the mood of the people."Business students could giveguidance to Negroes who want togo into their own business, Bushstated, "All students should bemade welcome at all school af-fairs using school facilities." Thestudentc should see city govern-ment in action by going to Coun-cil meetings.He then emphasized that : all

this could be accomplished with-out money from the city, state,or Federal governments, and theamount that would be spentwould be negligible. CouncilmanBush ended by saying that whatis taught to the students havemore effect on them after theyleave school. This will have thegreatest effects on "future urbancrises.""The world is not only expl»-

sive, but will explode around ourears." This was the opening state-ment by Councilman Gradison.He spoke, on what can be donewith more appropriations. He. said that increased budgets andnew laws will play a biS',part ofthe shaping of our cities. (~radi-son did emphasize that the rindi-

CCont'd on Page 3)

~

'Greeks PlayIt' was a Greek Week that will be long

remembered, both for its successes and itsintertwining with fate.First, the one group that was scheduled to

perform at last Saturday's concert, "Three's a'Crowd" had to cancel' because they couldn'tget a work visa for the U.S. They are fromCanada.Two days later "The Union Gap" which' was

the other group scheduled, to give the concertSaturday, cancelled because their drummerwas injured in an accident. Last minutearrangements were made to get "The FourFreshmen."So far,the disaster was the worst ever to

befall a UC concert. The Greek Week paradewas not to be outdone in terms of misfortune.One marcher forgot to wear underwear underhis tunic. This proved embarassing not only'to the women and children who lined thestreets, but also to the TV cameraman when, he raised his tunic in front of the camera .

Governor Rhodes, Mayor Ruehlmann, andPresident Langsam all had obligations that keptthem from participating in the parade. Mayor

With -Fire:Ruehlmann did provide a "Greek Week" proc-lamation which sounded much like the recentcurfew proclamation (all proclamations soundalike). While Dean Nester read the message tothe Greeks assembled in Nippert Stadium oneof the four Greek columns behind the podiumcrashed down, 'barely missing the Administra-tion representatives. -When the Negro candidate didn't make 'the

Greek Goddess Court, the black sorority causednervous laughter by singing, loudly, "Some-where A Place For Us: . ." When the hard-working and harrassed Greek Week Committeeannounced that the Saturday night concert hadbeen changed there was laughter.On the lesshumorous, but equally disasterous

side, a student fell, or was pushed, off the Bur-net Woods Pavillion Saturday. He had allegedlybeen exposing himself indecently from thatperch. He wound up with 1m injured leg and apinched nerve.The misfortune did not cease, and -even the

Taft Institute was hit. The featured' speaker,former Governor Terry Sanford of North Caro-lina, was unable to attend the Saturday lecturebecause of personal reasons.

Page 2: University of Cincinnati NEWSRECORD - UC Librariesdigital.libraries.uc.edu/collections/newsrecord/1968/1968_04_23.pdfUniversity of Cincinnati NEWS"RECO"RD Published Tuesdays and Fridays

Tuesday, April 23, 1968UNI-VERSITY OF CINCINNATI NEWS RECORDPage Two r Spring H~ Spru~ I

___ )I .~;!I~!IJiIJJIIII.'I~t~\'II'.1\1111t'lllllllg ..

Greek DanceFriday Night

'Hang~Oli. Sloopy'

Greek Week draws to a closeFriday with the annual dance atthe Topper Club. The dance,"Beyond- the Heavens," will befrom 9 p.m. until 1 a.m., thedance committee announced.The Greek Man, selected by the

sororities on the basis of contri-" butions to his fraternity, and win-ners ofthefraternity and sororityparticipation prizes will be an-nounced during the dance. 'Again this year, no one will be

admitted to the dance without atoga in \ order to preserve theGreek atmosphere. Music will beprovided by George Smith andhis 'orchestra with a special ap-pearance bythe McCoys.

THE McCOYS are slated for a spot appearance at the Greek WeekDance .Friday night in' the Topper Club.

/1

Direct .Linevarious sorts. The multiple choicetest, the only evaluation of mygrade during the eeurse, is unfair.It is not fairly evaluating thestudent's ability.

Hurt Pre-Med. Student, A&SA. "The Biology Department is

so critically understaffed at thepresent moment that we have nochoice but to fulfill our functionby the most economic. methods.Multiple choice testing has beenshown, in far too many cases, togive a good index of a student'sstatus in a subject that evenwhen' we do reach satisfactorystaff level, we would still usemultiple choice questions, butamplify this with essay and dis-cussion type projects.Also, this Department does

give discussion type examinationin the laboratory. The lowestgrades were recorded on thistype of examination during thelast quarter.There is absolutely no evi-

dence that "it (the multiplechoice test) is not fairly evaluat-ing the student's ability." On the

_ contrary, statistics show no sig-nificant difference in the testscores of students taking essay,discussion or multiple choice ex-amination."

by Brian Zakem.

Have a complaint or question?Write DIRECT, LINE, News Rec-ord Office, University Center, orcall 47'5-2748.Name, and collegeare requested but will be with-held if desired.Q."Why does the Biolog'y De-

partrnent r~ly on multiple choicetesting only? I,t seems. to me thatsome good students, includingmyself,' may be more adept 'intaking other types of' tests of

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Page 3: University of Cincinnati NEWSRECORD - UC Librariesdigital.libraries.uc.edu/collections/newsrecord/1968/1968_04_23.pdfUniversity of Cincinnati NEWS"RECO"RD Published Tuesdays and Fridays

Tuesday, April 23, 1968 UNIVERSITY OF CINCINNATI NEWS RECORD' Page Three

YE OlOE'Sanford Misses Talk Community Redevelopment(Con~d from Page 1)

~

by .Nate Gordon

The Robert A. Taft Institute 'ofGoverment concluded its 1968pro-gram on "T h e MetropolitanChallenge to Federalism" Satur-day at the University Center with-out the featured speaker, formerNorth Carolina governor TerrySanford, who was unable to makehis scheduled appearance for per-.sonal reasons. However the ses-sion took place and all threespeakers, including Willbur ILind-er who substituted for Sanford,emphasized the need for activecitizen participation in meetingthe urban crisis.Linder, survey and planning of-

ficer of Cincinnati's DevelopmentDepartment, spoke on interagencycooperation and citizen partici-pation "in the city's urban re-newal programs.. He noted theneed for a coalition betweenagencies and residents to deter-'mine the needs and undertakeprograms but "as citizens be-come .more experienced they,should be,'given more control.". ,Linde~'sMdthat,"we have mademistakes but' as' long as We don'tmake them t~ice, we have madeprogress." As an example, al-though the city's application forthe Model Cities program wasturned down the first time, thecity is trying again and Linder be-lives the second application isbetter prepared. The differencefrom the 'fir~t application is thatthe city is now trying to .get atthe root causes and .not just thesymptoms of the problem.As a side note" Linder said that

citizen participation in, the firstModel' City application was con-sidered a strong point,· by thefederal government. He added,that "heaven help the other cities'if our citizen participation wasgood."The other speakers were Daniel

T. Ransohoff, Community Serv-ice Director of ·Family Service,and .Bailey W. Turner, Presidentof the Avondale CommunityCouncil.Ransohoff, illustrating his talk

with color slides of Cincinnati'ssubstandard and indecent hous-ing, urged his audience to relateto stu den t s, to find outwhat is relevant and how they canrelate to the urban crisisStudents are bored with school

and get involved in these illegalactivites because they fail to seethe relevance between the' class-room and the world outside,Ransohoff said. He added thatstudents are penalized rather thanrewarded for initiative and useof imagination;Describing himself as a liber-

al Wall Streeter, Ransohoff

called for a metropolitan plan,-"one ball of wax" - so that dupli-cation of' programs could beavoided.Turner, a leader of the' black

community, said that the OpenHousing Law, recently enactedby the federal government wasmeaningless unless black peoplecould, get, loans, which they havebeen denied; to buy homes. Openhousing is a middle class issueand Our first concern is decenthousing, he added. Turner notedthat "people become concernedabout life when they own a homeand everyone should be giventhe opportunity."In answering a question about

school integration, Turner statedthat it is very valuable, especiallyat an early age but that inte-grated schools must be represent-tive of an integrated society.Describing integration as a oneway street that must be reversed,he commented that a neighbor-hbod,becomes just ,as integratedwhen a white person moves intoa black neighborhood as when ablack person moves into a whiteneighborhood:Discussing a proposal by Dr.

Eric Weise of the UC PoliticalScience Department that Cincin-nati should study the districtcouncil system, Turner said theadoption of the district systemwould be the "most beautifulthing this city could do." Hestated that it would developgreater citizen participation sincethe voters would have greatercontrol over their representatives.

vidual can do much based on his"particular knowledge, particularinterests. par tic u 1a r skills."Mayor Ruehlmann has alreadystarted a program to look intothe "functional areas" of' jobs,housing, etc., to see what "bottle-necks" there are that preventprograms from moving ahead asfast as they should.The Negro small businessman

is now being helped by a groupcalled, "The Determined YoungMen" (formerly the An g r yYoung Men). They have develop-ed projects based ori their par-ticular skills. Gradison the n~oved into the area of housing.The FHA is now giving 100%loans with low interest, but thosewho need them have to acquire asponsor. There have been fivework project organizations form-ed since October to help, for ex-ample, a church that could be asponsor, "even. if it means, justgoing . over one building or asmall complex."In the area of recreation, vol-

unteers should go into tbe im-mediate community tf! .tell thepeople that university facilitieswill .be available for their use.Gradison then switched to neigh-borhod projects. He said that inthe area of neighborhood im-provement, "UChas been quitedisappointing" citing that theUniversity didn't do much tohelp Corryville, which is "in your

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own backyard." UC is now help-ing in the Queensgate 2 Project,with the West End Task Force.Gradison then went to fair

housing. "There 'is no questionthat the state law is inadequateand needs strengthening." Thereare various local groups prepar-ing people for legal action on thelaw. The individuals should helpin their own neighborhood or-ganizations, or to establish themif necessary.Gradison commented on high

schools,' "If we have. a decliningeducational system in the highschools, and I'm afraid we do, ...(the UC faculty) should work asdepartmental volunteers to helpthe high schools." He then saidthat "more money is needed fora better City Hall." This year un-der Ruehlmann meetings began!before violence broke out. Thepublic knows that City Hall isworking for them.

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Page 4: University of Cincinnati NEWSRECORD - UC Librariesdigital.libraries.uc.edu/collections/newsrecord/1968/1968_04_23.pdfUniversity of Cincinnati NEWS"RECO"RD Published Tuesdays and Fridays

UNIVERSITY OF CINCINNATI NEWS RECORD

The Continuing·· ProblemTuesday, April 23, 1968

BEARCAT .FORUMWhile UC students gathered at the courthouse last Wednes-day to hear the trials of curfew violators, student leaders fromarea schoo1s were presentinq a list of requests to superintendentPaul Miller. Those present thought that Miller iqnored what thestudents had to say and dwelled. on "Iecturing" them. Communityleaders report that many of the students left frustrated ... and To the Editor:

'- I would like to respond to Mr.angry. . Terry Merrill's letter of April 12,

Some believe that the student requests were worth evaluat- . t d' th N - R- d'prm e m e ews ecor sjng and that the~r insights might lead to a lessening of tensions in Bearcat Forum. Mr. Merrill maythe schools. Miller, as he is wont to do, did not get the message feel very tired of hearing repeat-during the first round. ed expressions of the black peo-

It is feared by "experts" that racial conflict will next move ple's trials, and he may be sickinto the schools and that Cincinnati's' minor in-school racial bub- of watching riots on TV and ofpiing -may 'be symptomatic of a churning tempest below the hearing of the looting and burn-surface. -<, ing that angry blacks engage m,

J Anyone who cares to remember the Hughes affair will recall but a moment's reflection shouldthe NR position that such unrest should be placed directly at the have convinced him that in com-feet of the community - while the Enquirer claimed school up- paris on with over three' hundredrisings were the product of .e Communist 5th column. The differ- years 'of inequality, two-thirds ofence in analysis leads to differences in handling the problem. We, it spent in actual slavery-thatand the students who "control" (so far) the school environment, the blacks have experienced, hisfeel that extensive oppresive tectics will heighten tensions to. the fed-up-ness is a little premature.point where they are uncontrollable - by militants and non- . The violent reaction of oapor-militants. Interestingly enough, the students asked that armed tion Qf the .black population mpolice in school halls be replaced by unarmed authority symbols. protest against prejudice and

• • 0 .' mistreatment and m an attemptShow of force and oppresiveness seem to be the outstandmg to bring home vigorously to apa-

characteristics of the white establishment <just as they dominate thetic whites the seriousness ofthe Black Militants) and it looks as if the easy answer will win out . their intentions about changingagain ... unless Miller re-evaluates his position at a meeting with "their condition will undoubtedly

'\ parents and the same leaders today 0 _ I , increase if the white population• • 0 (does not quickly join their sym-

The students of SCC have watched this drama m action over pathies and direct their energies'the past few days. They are better aware of yet another element toward righting the long-standingof racial unrest and only it continues. While these relative few wrong they have done the black:'are beginning to develop understanding, young and old who seek a wrong of which the killing ofmaintenance of the status quo are questioning their motives and Martin Luther King is a shatter-childishly refusing to "find out for themselves." ing expression and symbol. At.an-

h " h I k hi h k h h other time in this country's Jus"If t ose, ert er Bac or W ite, w 0 ta e t e easy pat are t "LOb t D th' bII d I 0 Of h f h ff f h ory, 1 er y or earn ecamea owe to contro society: I t ey rustrate tee orts 0 t ose the battle-cry of a people whowho want to make democracy work, then we have no democracy felt driven to express their senseand this.society's destruction will be viewed historically as "Not of political injustice, and to doreally such a tragic loss." away with it by violent means.

Social injustice, a far more ser-ious and more insidious kind ofwrong, may well cause that cryto be raised again, in spite ofstate and federal troops preparedto quell suchan expression.Mr. Merrill suggests that the

recent violence this country hasexperienced will bring 'about leg-islation to alleviate some of theevils (although ,his letter would

Questions And: AnswersWell, it's that time of the year again; applications for next

year's campus housing are out, and students are as confused asever. Perhaps the residence hall merry-go-round of last fall hadsomething to do with the situation: perhaps. some students stillhave doubts about certain /'inequities" in room payments. TheDean of Women's office is looking into the possibility of apart-ments for senior and over-21 women. Some consider themselves"forfed" into living somewhere they don't want to. All this andmore., \

> There seem to be many questions regarding student housing,on campus, and there seem to be many proposals lying untouchedon many desks. Is it asking for too much to have these proposals.,-'-some may even be answers --- examined and given the promptand definitive attention ':they merit? We think not.

NI~"'SRECORDUniversity of Cincinnati

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.r> EDITORIAL, STATEMENT

rhe letters and columns appearing in the News Record represel'lt .solely the views of their writerS. All editorials reflect only, theviews of the editorial staff of )he paper and do not" representUniversity policy." . ,

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• • •

Mike Patton

Premature T~' Be "Fed-up"suggest that he does not consider,them as really evil) that theblacks now suffer, but unfor-tunately this does not seem terri-bly likely. But even if any num-ber of civil rights bill were be-fore the Congress and they in amood to pass them, the black-white antagonism and the SOCIalinjustice in this country wouldbe very little closer to solutionthan before. The Supreme Courtinjunction, of 1957 is an exampleof how litle real effect laws have

on personal prejudice. And it isprejudice, the attitudes of whitestoward blacks, that must beeliminated, along with such abus-es as unequal employment op-portunities and segregated pub-lic facilities, before this c()h~trycan begin to teel that it rightlycan claim the words of its con-stitution to have any real appli-cation and effective' expression inthe lives of its people.

Anne GodshalkGraduate, A&S

"Ignorance Breeds Prejudice"To The Editor: edly reveal the disgusting realityIn response to Terry M. Mer- to Mr. Merrill. The disgusting. ," h reality that I refer to. Mr. Mer-rill s r~cent letter to t e NR, I rill, is that the situation whichhave little to say except: Ignor- exists today is in every way at-ance breeds prejudice. Perhaps it tributable to the horrendous con-would do Mr. Merrill well to read ditions white societies of thewhat 11 high government offi- past have heaped upon the Ne-cials appointed to the President's gro. We, Mr. Merrill, America'sNational Commission on Civil white' society have taught theDIsorders had to say about the Negro everything they know.racial situation in the United George B. HatkoffStates. Then I suggest to Mr. A&S History 1968Merrill that he re-evaluate exact-ly what it is that he is sick andtired of.The President's commission

,along with\ numerous intellect-'uals, politicians, scholastics, andothers among this nation's mostenlightened individuals do notclaim that the recent riots or, in- 'deed, the entire "Negro situa-tion" is the fault of the Negro.Instead, they point their fingerat the society that we live in to-

, day. What I would suggest to Mr.'Merrill and others like him isthat they become a little bitmore aware of exactly whatthey're dealing witli before theyopen their mouths to tell ,us howsick they are of themselves.A good and hard look into the

ENTIRE situation will undoubt-

It Can Be DoneIn stating the case against my and her trade relations with

South Africa, it is not very diffi- other nations. The internal politicscult to prove that apartheid-is' an ot South Africa are explained andaffront to. all men believing in set against the realities of inter-freedom .and equality under the national relations. 'law. It may even be possible to -' Unlike most dissertations onarouse those few cmzens who are apartheid, the Conference papersinformed to take a stand for act- argue law, economics and politi-tion: "Such inhumanities and in- cal realities not just platitudes,justices must be brought to an ideals and emotional appeals.end! " Every Conference Resolution is

But, What Is To Be Done? backed-up with .fac~s~nd detailed. " plans. The baSIC findings of the

Proving the c,ase.against' South Conference were:Africa IS.much 'easier than estab- " .Iishing a solution to the problem. 1). that a. policy of. total eco-IIi 1964, an International Confer- ,no~Ic .sanctl0!1s against ~utherence was' held in. London "to ;\frlca IS feaslbl~ and practicalroot the whole issue- in' reality." }nd, can be effective.Thirty' countries 'sent official-dele: 2) "that the adverse effects of. gations to thetConference most a policy of collective sanctions onof which were led by Cabinet ',.w()rld . trade, finance, ,,.._and theMinisters and senior 'diplomats; economics of' Individual countriesUnofficial delegations comprising having a significant share in the"individual experts or .the repre- South African economy would besentatives of 'political parties and small and marginal. . . .

,sympathetic organizations came ~ 3) "that the widest possiblefrom fourteen other countries. publicity be given to the fact thatThe latter group included the such adverse. effects as the Im-major Western POWers. position or sanctions might haveBefore the' Conference, interna- on the British and American eco-

tional experts were commissioned nomics would be marginal, andto study specific questions that that arguments that vital econom-relate to the South African issue. ic interests are at stake are high-International lawyers tackled the ly exaggerated."legal aspects of the question. Com mon KnowledgeUnited.Na.tions experts and pol~t~- And so it's the old story of im-cal SCIentists attack~d t~e politi- posing sanctions. Nothing very ex-cal asp~cts of, the situation. And citing and to most people, nothingeconomists ex.plore~ and re- very believeable. For all that\sear~hed the f}nanCIal and eco-: most Americans know about sane-norms components. tions is that it is something thatThe resulting papers and the it is something that somebody

discussions of, the Conference fill tried to do to I t a I y abouta large 'volume. The reports are Ethiopia in the 1930s-and failed.literally crammed with statistics Beyond that, they know that it isand facts that investigate every failing just as badly against Rho-aspect of the South African econo- desia today.

:t"heatre Art?To The Editor:Mter reading Mike Weiner's

article on the Spring Arts Festi-val with his question of "Howmuch was art?", one might ask"How much of a theater editor isMike Weiner?". In his review ofthe festival he gave a complete-ly biased opinion of the per-formances by attending them withthe idea of wanting to be enter-tained. The performances existednot just to entertain but to in-volve the audience and 'causethem to think about what is beingshown to them, which is the basic,point of avant-grade art.

(Con-t'd on Page 5)

But the cases of Italy and Rho-sanctions talked about and out-lined by serious men of interna-tional affairs. In neither. of theabove cases were total -and uni-versal sanctions applied under in-ternational controls' and super-vision. Yet, these' conditions area very minimum if sanctions areto be undertaken "seriously. And 'under these conditions, interna-tional experts have shown' tha'lthe apartheid of the present SouthMrican government could be ef-fectively brought to an end.

A Question of WillThe question "ofimposing sanc-

tions against the racist govern-ment of South Mrica is not one ofeconomics or law. These aspects f

of the problem have been through-ly documented with appropriateproposals. Rather, it is a questionof political will. Are the nationsof the world, especially the West-ern nations, willing to bring anend to apartheid, or will they con-tinue to ignore the situation?To change US policy, it is likely

that the same kind of mobilizationof public opinion that we haveseen in regard to Vietnam will benecessary. Only then will peopleunderstand the meaning of theConference statement that . "theaim of economic sanctions is toremove economic support fromapartheid so that the people ofSouth Mrica can bring aboutchange,' with the minimum costin human suffering., and the pre-sent race war be prevented frominvolving the whole continent andbeyond."

Page 5: University of Cincinnati NEWSRECORD - UC Librariesdigital.libraries.uc.edu/collections/newsrecord/1968/1968_04_23.pdfUniversity of Cincinnati NEWS"RECO"RD Published Tuesdays and Fridays

Tuesday, Apri I 23, 1968

Letters ~ •.. (Con~dfrom Page 4)

In his reviews of the presenta-tions he shows us that he was,looking for the wrong thing. AtMr. Baille's films the .only thingthat aroused Mr. Weiner's atten-

- tion was "an abnormal interestfor the male body." Mr. Baille ex-posed the male body in only oneshort of less than two minutesout of a couple hours of films.He strove to find themes wherenone were intended. He tookCharlotte Moorman and NamJune Paik as a big joke. onlybecause he didn't understandwhat they were d 0 i ag andmade no attempt to by "escap-ing" during the performance. Hecan't see the Fugs as artists yetthey present their rock musicmuch in the same way other con-temporary artists do except theyare trying to break down theVictorian .pedestal that sex stillstands on.Hermann Nitsch did make a

marvelous attempt and was the,most successful artist in commun-icating with and involving theaudience. Mr. Weiner also makesa completely false and absurdunderstanding that Mr. Nitschuses human cadaver organs inEuropean presentations.After reading Mr. Weiner's

article one wonders how he cancompetently review an art he soobviously does not understand. Hedid not try to gain an understand-ing of what was being presentedand his review was a childish re-action against something a thea-ter editor of today should be fullyaware of. The' News Recordowes the student body a newand intelligent review of SpringArts Festival.

Stuart CohenDAA '72

To the Editor:When is the- News Record staff

going to get over then- sour.grapes about last week's studentelections? Glen Weissenbergerhas won, and political campaignshave ended. It is now as muchthe duty of the NR to help stu-dents unite and fight apathy be-hind their new leader as it wasthe right of the NR to endorse a ,candidate earlier.So far every account of the

election has hinted, at "tainted"results and malpractices. Whydoesn't the paper look into theseaccusations and substantiate ordeny them, .rather than scatter afew quotes and rumors from los-ing candidates across the frontpages?As much as this writer agrees,

with and applauds your crusadesand efforts on behalf of helpingBlack students and protesting therights of curfew violators, etc., Icannot help but deplore your un-fair handling of the election re-sults.Give the man a chance - attack

his policies and not his person.What difference where his plat-form was typed? Did Glen initiateor condone any alleged electionirregularities? What seems tocount is what his platform .saidand the fact that a majority ofvoters supported him.

Bob Plotkin - A&S '68--------------,FREE ,:

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UNIVERSITY OF CINCINNATI NEWS RECORD

51herry Levy

Johnson's -;SurpriseThose' who charge that our gov-

ernment is not really representa-tive should be reeling now, abouttwice as quickly as I.I am sitting and listening to

Mayor Daley and' Senator Mc-Carthy and newsmen and "theman on the street" expressingsurprise and astonishment atPresident Johnson's decision.Last June, on the first day of

the _six-day war, I commented toone of my teachers that 20thCentury American poetry is soincomprehensible because 20thCentury America is.A friend of mine who will al-

ways discuss anything could onlymumble incoherently when Icalled to ask him for a comment.. Mayor Richard Daley of Chica-go, a close personal friend of thePresident, praised the Presidentas an American citizen who "putthe unity of his country and thepassionate desire for peace aheadof personal feelings and politics."To me, Mr. Daley's statement,

and many like it, is an admissionthat the positions Mr. Johnsonhas taken, the policies he has fol-lowed, indeed might be deleter-ious to the national interest.'Political action, as has been

proved again and again in thepast two months, is no longer the.exclusive practice of a few spe-cific groups. While it is true that /'the voting record of U.S. citizensis shamefully low in comparisonto that of the rest of the freeworld, more and more people arebeing involved in the expressionof opinion, which in one senseis the essence of political activity.While hand-shaxtng and baby-

kissing still help, a political candi-date can appear on television andbe sure his opinions are heard by .millions. And while reportersused to be taught that theirstories should be aimed at anaverage man with a fourth-gradeeducation, the \ median is now a-bo~t eighth grade. 1You and I, steadily disregard-

ing charges of apathy and fear ofinvolvement, are writing con-gressmen, writing to newspapers, /signing petitions, participating inopen forums and exposing our-

selves to new petitions, participa-ting in open forums and exposingourselves to new ideas, sleepingin the Pentagon. and standingsilently in Arlington Cemetery.We have looked for hope in

. candidates. We have heard thateven President Johnson inter-preted the New Hampshire pri-mary as an anti-Johnson vote.So here we are, right in the

middle of a democratic govern-ment that no one can keep upwith. Even the NR deadline forcesme to believe that by' the timeyou read this, Nixon, Rockefeller,McCarthy, Kennedy, Percy, Lind-say, Reagan and Wallace willhave made statements and there -will be hundreds of new, opinionseveryone will want to clarify'.But if 'nothing else, we've

learned again they DO matter.

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, GT'E SEEKS SUPPORTGa":'m~ Th~ta Epsilon, UC's honorary for geopraphy majors,

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Page 6: University of Cincinnati NEWSRECORD - UC Librariesdigital.libraries.uc.edu/collections/newsrecord/1968/1968_04_23.pdfUniversity of Cincinnati NEWS"RECO"RD Published Tuesdays and Fridays

Page Six UNIVERSITY OF CINCINNATI NEWS RECORD Tuesday",~pri I 23, 1968

'(ats "Orop Pair To Mem'phis~State' 'Tigers,

II

by Claude RostSports Editor

Cincy's baseball Bearcats hadtheir season's record evenedwhen they dropped a" double-header to, invading MemphisState last Friday at HaubnerField. The 'Cats new stand 8-8after bowing 4-1 and 9-6 to thetough Tigers.In the first game, freshman ace

Bruce Raible had his victoryskein of five' games .snapped. Henow stands 5-1 on the year. Hegave up nine hits in the nineinnings which he worked, andstruck out nine, but the Bearcatscould come up with but one runon eleven hits to back up his per-formance.Cincinnati led only once in the

first game. The 'Cats lead infirst inning, and held it untilMemphis State took it for good inthe third inning with a three runexplosion. ,MSU never relinquish-ed the lead, and built it to 4-1 withanother run-in the fifth.Leading hitters for Coach Glenn

Sample's' Bearcats were secondbaseman Mike Pastura and short-stop John Cassis. Pastura went3-5, 'while, Cassis was 3-4.-' The second game was entirelydifferent from the first. In" thisone, Cincy took the lead early,and held it until late in the game,

when a Tiger rally finally decidedthe issue. 'The Bearcats started off that

game in fine fashion and streakedto a four run lead, with. two runsin the first inning, and two morein the third. Memphis State thencaught fire, scoring three runs inthe top of the fourth. Cincy tooka three run lead in the bottomhalf .of that inning, before theTigers put two big innings to-gether in the fifth and sixth tosweep the two games.In that second game, Sam Certo

was the leading Bearcat hitter.The Cincy first baseman went 3-3,while -Hudie Camp and .MikePastura each gathered two hitsin four trips, to the plate.The third game of the three

game set with Memphis State wascalled off because ofbad weather.The loss of these two ga mes

leaves UC with an 0-2 mark inthe Missouri Valley Conference,and the six games remaining onthe league schedule are all on theroad, with three each at Louis-ville and Bradley. Coach Glenn'Sample's squad must sweep thesegames if it hopes to repeat asMVC Champion.However, the 'Cats aren't dead

by any means. Last year theydropped their Valley .opener toMemphis State, but came onstrong to win their division.

s~ DefeDds In. ,Pi .Lam , OIII1Iey, Pi Lambda Phi Fraternity willhold its second annual softballtournament -on two successiveSunday afternoons, April 28 andMay 5. This 'year teams compet-ing for the dinner's' trophy willbe Pi Lam, Kappa Alpha Psi, Phi

< Delta Theta, and last year's de-fending champs; Sigma Alpha'Mu.The tourney vwill -be. held at

Woodward High School with thefirst game starting at 3- p.m. and

the second game starting at 4:30p.m. on April 28. The winners .ofthese games will compete forthe trophy at 3 p.m. on May 5 atWoodward. A trophy also will begiven to the most valuable playerof the tourney following thegame on May 5.The Sammies will play the

host I team, .Pi Lam, in the firstgame on ..April 28, while KappaAlpha Psi'meets' Phi Delta Thetain the nightcap.

BEARCATHURLERS dick Bouldin, Dave Shindoll ar, and Dave Dost, a trio of righthander., have donea good job for Coach Glen Sample thus far this sea son. ~~

Tracksters To Host Final Home Meet;Face Hanover At Myers Field Today

by Claude RostSports Editor

The University of Cincinnativarsity Track squad makes itslast home dual meet appearanceprior to the Missouri Valley Con-ference Championships when ittakes on the invading Hanoversquad today. The field events willbegin at 3:30, and the runningevents will start at 4:15.Coach .Gary Truce's squad,

which won-Its-other home meet,. will be aiming for two in a row,after making trips to several re-

Handicaps D'on't Phase Baseballersby Richie Katz,Ass't Sports Editor

. -The DC baseball squad, despite the many handi-caps it has faced this season, is proving' itself to bequite a worthy team. Before last weekend's com-petition against Memphis State which opened theMYC schedule, the' 'Cats had compiled an impres-sive slate of eight wins and six losses against veryformidable opponents.Their fine play so far can be further praised

when one 'considers the many adverse conditions, .which they have faced. Besides the us u a Irainout and spring cancellations, UC has faced andpartially mastered another big setback.With their new fieldm the preparation stage for

future use. the Bearcat diamondmen have been .un-able to practice at so great a length as CoachSample would like. As I learned last week, the teamhas not had a regular infield practice as yet 'thisseason ,and the prospects of having one in the nearfuture are not promising. The only chance CoachSample has to drill his infielders is during the pre-game practice and warm-up sessions before eachballgarne.Even despite this handicap the team has played

good ball and should improve immensely when itshome field is completed.However, another factor which harasses the team

since it hos no home field as yet; is arne n t a Ione which Coach Sample confesses- is a hard oneto overcome. A prime example of this problem oc-curred two weeks ago when the 'Cats traveled toOhio .State for a Friday double header. The OSUbaseball complex resembles the Red's CrosleyField' more than it resembles a college baseballfield. And when the UC players saw it for the firsttime there was a mental letdown. Thus they were'at a disadvantage before the game started./ As Coach Sample described OSU's stadium, he'mentioned that they have a 30 foot high-backstopbehind home plate, and concrete dugouts sunk intothe. ground along the first and third base lines. 'Thepresence of these dugouts, says the UC mentor, "isbetter for the coaches and the players." As moreand more is added to the UC field, dugouts, amongother pleasures, will be seen., Besides Ohio State, there are a few other schools

lay meets around the midwest inthe past few weeks.This past weekend, the Bear-

cats traveled to Columbus, Ohiofor the Ohio State Relays at OhioState- University. In that meet, -they placed in only one event,that a third in the Two .Mile re-lay. The Two Mile team ran atime of 7:45, well off its schoolrecord time of 7:38 .. The teamwas made up of Jean Ellis, Jim'Calloway, Byron Byrd, and ChuckRoberts. Ellis' time was 1:57.9,.while Calloway followed with a1:52.6. Byrd ran the third leg in2:00.8,. and Chuck Robertsanchored with a 1:53.4.'Cincy's tCornelius Lindsay, us-

Cincv Sai lars

usually a steady performer, had a,bad day, missing at 6-6 in thehigh jump, and failing to makethe finals in the 120 High Hurdles.Since most of the Bearcats were

entered, in relay events, severalmay have missed out on possibleindividual place due to this. Thewinning time in the 880, for' in-stance, was 1:53, within easy .reach of either Jim' Calloway orChuck Roberts.Coach Gary .Truce would like

to see another good crowd at thismeet., Anyone who wants to at-tend the meet had better get .tothe track early. to get a choicespot on the hill overlooking thetrack.

Battle Surfby Tim Shay

Two racing teams from the UCSailing Club finished sixth in aregatta sponsored by FloridaState University. The competitiontook place April 12 to 14 in 'St.Petersburg. This was the. SailingClub's first salt water competi-tion.UC represented the Midwest

Collegiate Sailing Association in

the regatta. Six southern andthree midwestern universitiescompeted.Next competition for- the VC

Club is the regional eliminationsat Indiana University April 27and 28. The top three finishersat this regatta go to Iowa '~tate .University May 11 and 12 to com-pete for the national champion-ship.

on the UCschedul~ that possess very fine fields. AtLouisville the Cats will find themselves playing inthe spacious Fairgrounds and at Bradley they willplay in a semi-pro facility. The rest of the MVCteams have only so-so fields and according to anunidentified source, are, . "nothing to write homeabout."Despite these handicaps faced by the UC nine,

Coach Sample has guided his crew safely so far. - •With the future promising a new field for the Bear- IF tboll '68 'cats, UC fans can expect to see fine baseball for a 00 a -long time. Looking at their results as of now, with . ~~ • '. . • "only their limited facilities, I can hardly imagine CIDey Heady To Wm. -<::ookwhat the results will be when they have adequate .,',facilities. Should be good.

* '" *The intramural office is embarking on a new

project this summer and with the support and back-ing of various school organizations it should be asuccess. 'The new project will be an organized summer

softball league. Participants in the 'league can beany UC student who is attending UC during thesummer or during the other three quarters of theyear. With the help of student assistant 14ike Tallis,the proposed league will consist of two separate lea-gues with hopefully twenty teams. Fraternities areencouraged to enter teams in this league if enoughof their members are in town over the summer..However, there will not be points awarded for theleague but only trophies to the winners. ""'"There will be no cost to the entering teams. That

is if the proper UC organizations give their backingto the project. This is a very worthwhile undertak-ing by 1M as it will provide students, both hereon campus during the summer and others' who arenot attending school during this quarter, with some-thing to do during those long summer 'weeks. Theleague will be played on Monday and Tuesdaynights and Saturday afternoons. This is the type ofleague that would bebeneficial to both the studentsplaying and the university. I hope, along with the.1M officials, that when the time comes, the properorganizations give their backing and lend supportto this new endeavor.

by Joel Koblentz

As spring practice continues,'the UC gridiron team is forminga new attitude. The influx of astrong freshmen team apparentlyis the much needed catalyst.Upon 'interviewing a few mem-

bers of this freshman team, Ifound a strong feeling 6f person-al pride-something that mayhave been lacking in the last sea-son. The third quarter freshmenare holding down many of the po-sitions on the first and secondteams. As one team membersaid: "We wan t two things: first,we want to rid ourselves of adefeatist attitude and second, wewant to build a winning tradition'at the University of Cincinnati."

This attitude is shared by vet-eran -team members as well, themost prominent of which is quar-terback Greg Cook, - a junior inDAA. Cook believes' that good at-titudes of both the experiencedplayers and the freshmen affecteach other. Entering his last yearof eligibility, Cook is looking for-ward to this new blood.Cook cautions, however, that

the freshmen may become over-anxious to play regularly. Theveteran quarterback's advice to

them is to have patience. Ex-perience is the greatest teacher.The veterans are a year older,

a year more experienced. Ex-,perience breeds confidence andconfidence' brings forth a win-ning attitude-c-the -first step tobuilding a strong football tradi-tion at this university.As for next season, the blond

quarterback believes that every-one on the squad will be moreacclimated to Coach Rice's sys-tem. Last season, Coach Ricewent to the lean and hungry lookon his players-similar to theway Bear Bryant of Alabamalikes his boys.It is hard for a big man of 240

pounds to lose 20 pounds and yetretain his strength and stamina,so important to a good 'secondhalf. It is believed that this sea-son the linemen' will not be re-quired to trim off an abundanceof excess weight. Last season, ontop of being beaten at the finalgun, our boys were physicallybeaten on the field. It is hopedthat this excess poundage will beinsurance against neither being:1 part of Bearcat Ball in the fallof 1908.

Page 7: University of Cincinnati NEWSRECORD - UC Librariesdigital.libraries.uc.edu/collections/newsrecord/1968/1968_04_23.pdfUniversity of Cincinnati NEWS"RECO"RD Published Tuesdays and Fridays

UNIVERSITY OF CJNiCINNATI NEWS RECORDTuesday, April 23, 1968 Page Seven

McCarthy Rally

PROFESSOR LARRY WOLF is shOwn here speaking at a McCarthyrally held Thursd'ay on 'the Union Bridge. He is a candid.te foralternate to the Democratic nat.ional convention pleclged to EugeneMcCarthy. NR Photo by Mel Norman

Municipal Strikes PresentMajor Problem -To Society

(Con~dfrcnn Page 12)

used with the same results. Bind-ing arbitration (wherein the par-ties must accept the panels de-cision) is a possibility, but munici-pal employers have been unwill-ing to accept this alternative, asillustrated by J 0 h n Lindsay.Evidently the danger here is thatthe' arbitrators might hand downa .settlement which exceeds -themunicipality's budget allocation.Indeed, this was precisely the out-come of the garbage plight inNew York. "-A fourth alternative is to hire

strike-breakers, a technique em-ployed with some success by theCity of Memphis to replace itsstriking garbagemen, But thiswill obviously not cure the ill'when the workers are skilled,such as teachers, nurses, or fire-men.A: fifth is to attempt to divide

occupations into critical and non-critical classifications, allowingonly the "non-critical" workersto strike. This possibility also failsif, for example, a maintenanceworkers' walk-out I a s t s sixmonths. Fqrther, it does nothing

to alleviate the problems of the"critical" laborers.

Combinations A PossibilityLiterally every known possibili-

ty has been tried and has failed,yet we simply cannot toleratestriking public employees. EvenGeorge Meany concurred, withthis principle at the recent AFL-CIO convention. What is neededmight be some combination, of afact~firldingboard, followed by anarbitration panel if necessary.Strikes should be firmly discour-aged by appropriate state lawswhich are realistically punitive innature and uniform in application.More importantly;' however, we

the public must begin to thinkcreatively about the problems ofpublic employment. First, there isa need for respectable statutoryprocedures in all states to dealwith the right to organize and tobargain collectively, which con-taina delineation of appropriatesubject matter for bargaining andthe means for resolving impasses.Beyond that, if we are going to

remove the only economic weaponthe worker possesses, we must bewilling to pay for the increasingservices we demand.

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,Wessel SpeakingAt Honor Society

BLOOD SOUGI"ITDonors are sought to give

A-blood for an open heart op-. eration. The surgery will beon May 1, 1968, and the bloodis required on April 30. Anyonewilling to donate please- con-tact John Schaedel, phone 271-1497 for further information.

ATTENTION AL_l- JUNIORS!

There will be a meetingThursday AprU 25 at 1:00 inthe University Center. TheJunior" Prom will be a maiortopic. Committee heads plealebe 'there and any [unier wish·ing to take part.

Dr. Robert H. Wessel, vice pro-vost for graduate studies at theUniversity of Cincinnati, will befeatured speaker at vthe May 3annual banquet and initiation ofUC's chapter of Sigma Xi, honorsociety in research.

') Winner of the society's annualaward for distinguished researchat DC will also be announced.. Dr. Wessel will discuss "Ex-panding Horizons of GraduateEducation." The banquet will beat 6 p.m. in the faculty diningroom, Tangeman University Cen-ter.. -,Admission \ tot h e lecture,

scheduled to begin at 7:30 p.m.,is free to the public. A chargewill be made for the dinner.Reservations for the event shouldbe made by April 26 with Dr.Andrew Butz, UC associate pro-fessor of zoology.

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Page 8: University of Cincinnati NEWSRECORD - UC Librariesdigital.libraries.uc.edu/collections/newsrecord/1968/1968_04_23.pdfUniversity of Cincinnati NEWS"RECO"RD Published Tuesdays and Fridays

Page Eight UNIVERSITY O·F CINCINNATI NEWS RECORD Tuesday, Apri I 23, 1968

~'SOCIAL ~g$ Editor: Barb Behrns\,"~ ~

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I"Highlighfs Frdm ',Hermes'lPHI KAPPA TAU

Bonnie Salmans-was chosen asPhi 'Kappa Tau's Dream Girl for1968at their annual Dream GirlFormal, held at too' Fort MitchellCountry Club.

Bonnie Salmans

Bonnie, a Chi Omega and Cin-cinnatian Beauty is a sophomorein Design, Architecture and Art.The pretty brown-eyed brunetteis from West Alexandria, Ohio,and her interests include art, an-tiques, go-cart racing; watersports and, of course, the PhiTaus.

Theta P,hi

The new officers of Theta PhiAlpha sorority were recently in-stalled at the March 26th meet-ing. The new officers are : JackieSandy, president; Mitzi Midden-

dorf, first vice-president; LindaDif'Iippo, second vice-presidentr.'Mary Jo Osberger, recordingsecretary; J u d y McDermott,treasurer; Peggy Bradley, rushchairman; Reggie Leurson, scho-larship; Kathy O'Donnell, socialchairman; JanWeil, Pan-Hellenicrepresentative: Linda Ludwig,chaplain; Mary' J-o Brueggeman;activities chairman; Sally Schroe-.der, marshall; Pat Burns, publici.ty historian; Paula Beyersdorfer,corresponding secretary; CindyBurns, steward.Our annual Spring Formal was

held on April 5 at the CountryClub, and we recently initiatedfour. new' members into the chap-ter. They are as follows: MaryRabe, Kathy O'Connell, MaryClaire Fath, and Ann Pernik.

..Educ. DiscussionS'et\For Apr. 29Education Tribunal will, hold

its annual Student-Faculty Dis-cussion on April 29, 1968 from7-9 p.m. in the Faculty Lounge.There will be a general discus-sion of the various changes in theprograms in the college and thenthe students and faculty will di-vide according to programs todiscuss .any particular ideas orquestions.This is -an excellent opportun-

ity for all students connectedwith the College of Education. toair their opinions and find outexactly what is going on in theircollege. All students and facultymembers are encouraged t 0come. There will be refreshmentsfor all after' the discussion.

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PINNED:

Alicia Baker;Louis Lilling.

Sandi Heim, Univ. Wisconsin;~Mike Richards, Phi Kap.Gerri Mattick;Don Rechtin.

Bunny Chandler;Skip Klosterman, Phi Delt.

Kathy Haley, Kappa, Ohio State;Jay Tribby, SAE. "

Cat h y Morgan, XO, Will i a mWoods College;

Steve McClary, SAE.Cindy Turner;John Miller, Lambda Chi.

ENGAGED:

/

Barb Behrns, Theta Phi;Steve Rechtsteiner, Univ. ofNotre Dame.

Linda Meyer, Theta Phi;John Sedgwick.

Donna Cordes, Theta Phi;John Richards, Sig Ep.

Nancy Von Nida, Chi 0;Tom Morgan, SAE.

Karen Dalton;Jerry Fraley.

Chris Haley, Ohio State;Doug Buyinger.

Jill Brooks;Ron Scott, Memphis.

MARRIED:Sandy Leicht, AO;Albert Lederle.

Nominations DueFor Cohen AwardPetitions for nominating the,

student who has done the mostto encourage interfaith and inter-group amity and understanding,are "now bei¥ ·~ccepted for theA I f red M:. Cohen InterfaithAward.Originally there was one an-

nual recipient, however, for thelast few years, the award hasbeen divided between two stu-dents. The award will be pre-sented at the University HonorsDay Convocation which this yearwill be held on May 19.At its annual meeting in Octo-

ber, 1944, the National HillelCotnmission authorized the estab-lishment of the above InterfaithAward to' be offered to the Uni- -versity of Cincinnati in honor of

I Alfred M. Cohen, for many yearsPresident of B'Nai B'Rith andone of the most distinguishedcitizens of the United States .

Page 9: University of Cincinnati NEWSRECORD - UC Librariesdigital.libraries.uc.edu/collections/newsrecord/1968/1968_04_23.pdfUniversity of Cincinnati NEWS"RECO"RD Published Tuesdays and Fridays

Tuesday, Apri I 23, 1968 UNIVERSITY Or CINCINNATI NEWSIRECORD Page Nine

Temple Views 'King's" -'Fu"n'eral,• J.... t.

Offers Account .OfAtlanta Tripby Diana Risse

Editor's note: T'his is the first oftwo articles which present the,impressions of Dean Temple, As-sistant Dean of Men, on his tripto the Atlanta funeral-of Dr. Kingand his views on America's racialcrisis •.Days and weeks have passed

since the April 4th assassinationof civil rights leader MartinLuther King Jr., but in the eyesof Dean Ron Temple, the impli-cations of Dr. King's death willhaunt the' American public foryears to come.Describing his reactions to the

murder in Memphis and his per-sonal experiences as the Univer-sity's official representative to theAtlanta funeral April 9, DeanTemple recently developed, forthe NR, his concept of Dr. King'srole in the United States and hisimpressions of his trip to Altaata,probed the country's racial pro-blems, and discussed the role ofyouth in solving urban crises.A c com pan i e d by Dwight

Tillery,' vice president of theUnited B 1a c k Assoication, toAltalnta, Dean Temple expressedcontinual amazement about thefuneral. "I kept asking myself,'how could one bullet fired fromone gun amass these thousandsof people . . . black and white,rich and ,poor . . . these thousandsof people worshipping, crying,eating together, in nearly totalharmony?"It was -fantastic to see Gover-

nor (George) Romney a few feetaway and then Robert Kennedya few feet in the other direction;

and Governor" (Nelson) Rocke-feller, Jackie Robinson, and Mrs.King all in one crowd."The atmosphere, he felt, was

one of genuine sincerity of feeling,"but" he continued "it was a'tr~~ient one. The 'question is,what will the" emotion be oneweek, two weeks, or one monthfrom now."Dean Temple was particularly

impressed with the cooperation ofthe Atlanta people and praisedthe student body of Emory Col-lege. "The students made a strongcommittment and their organi-zation and efficiency was reallygood. ."Atlanta had a problem but

rose to the occasion. It's really aunique Southern city . . . Onemight think it a Northern city andCincinnati in the South" ifachievements in improving racialstress were compared. "In fact,it has made much better progressin dealing with human relationsthan Cincinnati because 'it hasbeen able to recognize its pro-blems and find tangible solutions:It's shown that once a communitycommits' itself to change it canchange."One of Dean Temple's greatest

concerns is that "since 'Dr.\King'sdeath 'everyone talks of his 'non-violent' approach, but few talkof his program, his actual effortsto secure human rights for all.'Everyone remembers his goal ofelevating the -black man to firstclass citizenship but few talk ofhis accomplishments."No other leader had the type

of atmosphere Martin Luther

.King possessed ... By that Imean. his name was magic.Others. have jumped in later butthey are only followers·. . ."The thing now is not to try

to replace him. No one can. NoWleaders who stand for the samegoals should be encouraged tospeak out progressively, in theirown spheres of' influence, speakout for what he fought and diedfor-basic human rights."In continuing his eualuation the

Dean stressed, "Dr. King stoodabove the crowd. He offered lead-ership to black and white Ameri-cans because he wanted and equalcode of morality for all. I hopewhat he stood for hasn't diedwith the man."

(In an article Friday DeanTemple discusses the roots ofAmerica's racial problem andyouth/s Tole in bettering humanrelations on. and off-campus.)

"

)Barrel' DecoratingDay Rescheduled

\

The decoration of Race Streetwill have to. wait until f at leastnext Thursday. About eightybarrels lined the drive at thebase of the University Center,Friday, hundreds of students lis-tened to a jazz group, the weath-er was pleasant, but the paint todecorate the barrels which willdecorate Race Street did notshow up.Cash prizes will be awarded to

the winning barrel.

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Page 10: University of Cincinnati NEWSRECORD - UC Librariesdigital.libraries.uc.edu/collections/newsrecord/1968/1968_04_23.pdfUniversity of Cincinnati NEWS"RECO"RD Published Tuesdays and Fridays

Page -Ten UNIVERSITY OF CIN,CINNATI NEWS RECORD

~8$~"S '-' Editor: Michael WeinerS .~MUlDlllers Present "Collection"

ENTERT AI NM'ENT

This unusual evening of dramawill run for three nights, begin-ning this Thursday in Studio 101.Tickets may be reserved by call-ing the UC Student Union desk orpurchased at the door.

Tuesday, April 23, 1968-

Very Special ~Reyiew

City ,Fathers Conduct "A Visit"b D' k 'Snyder In a somew'hat unusual proce- it seemed as though "The actorsy zc dure the actual opening prologue were somewhat unpolished and

of the drama took place ten days not at all accustomed to perform-before the rest of the 'play. Of . ing before such a large and at--course, this not only. served to tentive audience."create a .mood of tension and ex- Once everything got going, how-citement in the actual rendering, ever the leading actor, Mr. J. G.but also tended to increase audi- Ritzier seemed to become moreence excitement and participation involv~d' and soon came up toas well. We must say that it was the heights of tragedy alreadya marvelous job done by the be- established in the prologue. Hehind-the-scenes men to keep the. played the part of the leadingentire cast together for such an mule and his Interpretation wasunbelievable long time. It ~as flawless. Only once or twice didrumored that all but the leading he deviate from his ruthless selfanimals were not sufficiently in an attempt to win the support'taken care of due to a blatant lack of the audience. The excellenceof resources and. planning, but of his performance was best seensomehow everyone looked ready in the emotional involvement into go by opening day; the audience invoked by the scriptAnd what an opening day! As which merited no such outpour-

the 'audience silently-paradedinto ing, and in the faces of the sup-the small room and was hurriedly porting animals, who walked a-seated they were greeted by the round with smug self-satisfiedactual' author of the drama him- grins.'self, Mr. J. J. Benediction-Smith. Structurally, the drama was ob-Mr. B. S. attempted to account viously based on the Shakespeare-for the bad lighting,' technical de- ian legend. The acts were veryficiencies, and somewhat garbled short, and there were many unde-dialogues which we were to see, fined scenes. The transition fromand left in a rage of glory before scene to' scene was almost asthe principal actors took the poorly done as were the scenesstage. .... themselves,but it ,Was.the .oyer-It" was noted" by some that 'the' .all theme 'which- created the in-

actors (when they finally came terest. The whole play appearedout-it seems that there was to be a take-off of Georgesome confusion as to who was - Orwell's "Animal Farm," but insupposed to play whom) seemed this interpretation even the mainit little hesitant at first. The per- animals were denied sufficient in-son beside me quipped at one telligence to handle the situations.point during the proceedings that When asked after the perform-

ance about the success of theplay, Mr. Hitzler commented:. "Did you happen to catch the'second act? It was written so thatthe lesser characters could cap-

a bed- ture the sympathy of the audiencebefore they escaped off-stage.

Last Wednesday morning sawthe opening of the annual summerco-mmand performance, " A Visitto the Zoo." This year's produc-tion boasted a cast of hundreds,but unexpectedly, the lions, tigers,apes and asses, along with thelesser animals, attracted the mostspirited comments.

This weekend DC students andfaculty .can look forward to astimulating evening of' moderntheatre. Studio 101 will feature anevening of one acts by the con-troversial and thought-provokingHarold· Painter. The bill will in-dude "The Dumbwaiter" and"The Collection.">"The Collection" deals with 'the

domestic problems of two London'families.' In their mod, CarnabyStreet apartment, a young dressdesigner and her husband makefutile attempts to save their two-year marriage after the wife'ssupposed infidelity. Meanwhileacross town, in an elegant Londontownhouse, Harry Kane and hisyoung protege, Bill, debate thepossible' effects of this infidelityon their homosexual romance.In the role of Stella, the young

wife, Linda Franklin creates herfirst dramatic character sincecoming to UC under the Rocke-feller Exchange Program withPlayhouse in the Park. Her majorinterest is in, scenic design butshe proves herself a capable ac-tress as well. Mike De Francisco,another Rockefeller' scholar, willtake the part of her husband,James. Mike is a graduate ofXavier University where he didwork in acting and directing.Featured in the part of Bill,

the young homosexual, is BobBerg, a senior majoring in Eng-lish. Bob had a part in the stu- . . . '.' .'. II . • • .• II

dent production of "A Sleep of by Shan Baum .ownplay, Sanctified Mind, f()r~ris?ne~s" last quarter but this ."Editors Note:.....,The following is presentation to the public May 9;IS hIS first -Jeatured role for the nd''d . t . "th H J 10, 11 in partial fulfillment ofM D· k V H a ca I 'In ervlew WI arry. >.ummers. IC _ onoene, ". , thesis requirements. A completeveteran UC actor-director, plays Roedersheltner, gradu.te student \', .'; . ", '.Harry Kane. in Theater who is directing his . hst of the .cast,·and characters-

may be'a·vailable at ,some'time'"in the future according to Mr.Roedersheimer.Question: I understand that yourplay, "Sanctified Mind" is ananalogy to the Kennedy assassina-tion. And yet you maintain that itis "absurd." Isn't this a little bitof a contradiction?Answer: How?Q: Must you answer a questionwith another questiontY ou're notJewish, are you?A: Not that I know of.Q: Certainly you've got to admitthat your McKinney and Linz,in "Sanctified Mind" are figuresfor Kennedy and Johnson ?A: I didn't say that Wait.Q: Ok, ok. What's McKinney"spurposes in "Sanctified Mind?"A: McKinney isn't in "SanctifiedMind."Q : McKinney is one of the char-acters in your play. And now yousay McKinney isn't in "SantifiedMind?"A: You can't approach it thatlogically.Q: Then what is he?A: He's directing "SanctifiedMind."Q: But I thought you were direct-ing your own play.A: I am. But McKinney, who'sin my pay, is directing "Sancti-fied Mind." Until the third act,that is.Q: Let's get a little more specific.Why does your character, Jamie;

- J

Mike De Francisco (left) and Bob Berg (right) in up coming Studio101 pr6duction of Pinter's "The C;:oUectionll

'Sanctified Mind' ,Viewed

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have all of her scenes inroom?A: Why not?· Q: I wanted to ask you one otherthing, 'concerning the plot ..,. .A: Does there always have-to bea plot?Q: That sounds' .like a line fromyour ·play.A: Thank you. I mean I'm sorry.Q: And that too.A: It's a habit I guess.Q: Charlotte Patton plays ... Sue?A: No, she plays Jamie who' playsSue. There are no actors-thatwas intentionally a' line from theplay. The others are Bob and Rickand Joel and Millie and Lolly andTom arid Ray and Chuck and. . .There may be more. 'Q:' Have you had many difficul-ties directing your own play?A': You've ignored my statement.I've had. many difficulties withdirecting "Sanctified Mind".' Butmost of them have had little ornothing to do with the fact thatit's my own play. In fact, most ofthem 'have been caused by' the· fact that I'm me and most peopledon't find that an easy thing totake. Of course, I'm glad Mc-Kinney's been around. He's beena great help when things get alittle out of hand.Q: Are you trying to tell me· something? l\1:c}{inney isn't ·sup-posed to be Bobbie Kennedy. ..A: The play doesn't have any-thing to do with politics. . .or not

- much anyway. McKinney couldjust as easily be Lee HarveyOswald or Martin Luther King orJulius Ceasar or Adolph Hitler.Q: Does that' imply a certain de-termination in...A: I'm sorry but I just can'tstay here any .longer .

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.major, is, directing and also star-ring in the show. This is his sec-ond lead. in a Newley musical.Two years ago he played to SROhouses at XU as "Cocky" in "TheRoar of the Greasepaint-TheSmell of the Crowd."Roseanne Weber,' who also

played in "Roar of the Grease-paint" plays the multiple -femaleparts of, EVle, Anya, Use, andGinnie.Carolann MaryanCl Charlene

Sprang have the parts of thetwin daughters and also performwith the seven-girt .chorus.Jackie Cleary, dance major,

has done the choreography, withRose Lampe and Resa Fergusonas the featured dancers. The or-chestra will be conducted' byMike Jacobs, CCMsophomore.The admission' is free and the

public is invited.

Children's Art-The annual" exhibit of chil-

dren'sart will' open at 2 p.m,Sunday, April 21; in the AlmsBuilding Gallery on the Univer-sity of Cincinnati .campus, It issponsored by' the UC chapter. ofthe, National Art Education As-, sociation.

More than 300 pieces willrepresent students of grades 1through 12 from some 30 schoolsof the Greater .Cincinnati area .Enlarged photos of the childrenat work in the classroom' will be

I displayed above the collectionwhich' includes paintings, prints,sculpture, crafts, jewelry andceramics.The public is invited to the

opening at which refreshmentswil be served. The show may beviewed until April 30, Mondaythrough Friday from 9 a.m, to5 p.m.

Page 11: University of Cincinnati NEWSRECORD - UC Librariesdigital.libraries.uc.edu/collections/newsrecord/1968/1968_04_23.pdfUniversity of Cincinnati NEWS"RECO"RD Published Tuesdays and Fridays

Tuesday, Apri I 23, 1968

CCM "Showcase'~.Opens This Week

UC Coli e g e-Conservatory ofMusic announces the first in itsnew recital series-CCM Show-case-to be held this Thursdayafternon, April 25, at 1:00 p.m.in Corbett Auditorium. A month-ly feature during the school year,the Showcase will feature stu-dents from all departments ofthe Conservatory. Admission isfree, 'and the public is invited.Participating in Thursday's in-

augural program will be: Mari-lyn Smith, piano pupil of JohnMeretta; Clyde Herndon, tenorvoice student of Hubert Kock-ritz; John Edward Niles, 'cellopupil of Jack Kirstein; JamesEastman, trombone student ofTony Chipurn; and Ritter Wer-ner, organ pupil of Wayne Fish-er. All are CCM graduate stu-dents, except for Mr. Eastmanwho is a freshman.Their respective selections in-

clude Mozart's "Ten Variationson an Air of Gluck;" Puccini's'Che gelida manina' ("La Bo-heme") and Handel's 'Sound an'Alarm' ("Judas Maccabaeus");Brahms' "F Major Sonata, Opus99" (first movement); Gaubert's"Morceau Symphonique"; andMe s s i a en's "Ascension Suite"(two movements).Assisting at the piano will be

Miriam Kockritz, Michael Gollo-bin, and Denise Troendle.

* * *Ronald Barron, senior trom-

bone student of Ernest N. Gloverat the University of Cincinnati'College-Conservatory of Music,has -received an appointment tothe trombone section of the Mon-treal Symphony Orchestra underthe direction of, Franz-Paul Deck-er, effective this fall. He won thepost in competition with 40 can-didates.At Cincinnati's Conservatory,

Barron .:is completing work to-ward the combined Bachelor ofMusic and Education degree. Heis first trombonist with theschool's Philharmonia Orchestra,Brass Choir, and Wind Ensemble.

I Beatles' -EyeView, ,of the

i(i,uru'.The Maharishi Mahesh Yogi"""",,:spiritual adviser to the Beatlesand Mia Farrow, architect ofTranscendental M e d i tation,leader of Jhe Spiritual Regen-eration Movement. A - franman who sits cross-leggedamong cushions high in hisown ashram-a Himalayan re-treat where believers practicemeditating and exist on boiledrice and vegetables. The Beat-les were there, and Mia, anda score of celebrated and not-so-celebrated believers fromaround the world. Why? Tofind out, Post writer LewisLayham talked to--the Guru'sfollowers in the U.S., thenwent to India. You can see theMaharishi, his retreat and hismessage as the Beatles seethem in the ,May 4 issue ofThe Saturday Evening Post.Get.your copy today. O~ news-stands now.

IItm-ON SALE NOW--------,,~j,~

UNIVERSITY ,OF CINCINNATI N,EWS RECORD Page Eleven

"Music Echo"

Taft Auditorium Hosts "The Mothers"

World's· shortest,"-

CPA< aptitudet'·.~-t··es .

The Mothers of Invention willappear in concert Friday, April26" at 7:30 and 10:00 at the TaftAuditorium. You might not know"the Mothers". Their concert willprobably not be very much likethe Union Gap or even Brasil '66;The Mothers do strange things.As . one ardent fan so percep-tively stated, "These Mothers iscrazy. You can tell by theirclothes. One guy wears beads and.they all smell bad." This com-ment was made before the hippiething started. That is to say, theMothers imitate no one.Musically, these Mothers are

not like Jimi Hendrix; nor arethey like the Fugs, Actua lly theyare not particularly revolution-ary in their lyrics or their sound.But they have a message which is. most easily seen ill their appear-ance-they are UGLY!If you were grossed out at the

Fugs concert, you won't hear asmany four-letter words from theMothers. Maybe a few of themlike 'kill' or 'hate.' But the Moth-ers at their very worst are fun-.ny, Even if you don't want tolisten to their attacks on Ameri-can moral hypocricy, racial in-justice, ugly radio, etc., they will

say things like "Wowie Zowie,Baby, you're so neat, I don't evencare if you shave your legs." I

The Mothers' are led by FrankZappa, a most intelligent and ar-ticulate (if sometimes a bit caus-tic) musician who received anextensive classical backgroundfrom teachers' such as Stockhau-sen and Stravinsky. Other Moth-ers are Roy Estrada, Bill Mundi,Bunk Garner, Jimmy Carl Black(the Indian of the group) RoyCollins, Don Preston and ArtTripp. Mr. Tripp, incidentally,was .f 0, r mer 1y a percussionistwith the Cincinnati SymphonyOrchestra. Mother Zappa is theugliest one in the group. We'lllet you guess from the picturewhich one he is. If you thinkhe's ugly in this picture, youshould see the-one with a full-length view of his navel. WowieZowie.The Mothers originated the

phrase 'freak out' and they canper haps be best understoodthrough their own definition of"FreakiilgOut": "On a personallevel, freaking out is a processwhereby an individual casts offoutmoded and restricting stan-dards of thinkking, dress,' and so-

o Problems stimulate me.o Problems upset me.

THE "MOTHER OF INVENTION'I win appear in Taft AuditoriumApril ,26:

cial etiquette in order to expressCREATIVELY his relationship tohis immediate environment andthe social structure as a whole.

and scary. But some people(even some straight ones) havebeen known to say THEY'REBEAUTIFUL. Tickets are now onsale at the information desk ofthe University Center.These "Mothers are very ugly

"",

If you wanS to earn a Iivi ng n a field that con-stantly offers new and excit ng perspectives-new problems to solve-consider the work of theCPA.

A CPA: has to grasp the essentials of manydifferent fields, and have t,~e independence toform objective opinions about them.

He's more in demand than ever before, bycorporations, non-profit agencies, governmentbodies at all levels.

- Why? Because the increasing complexityof business requires newconcepts of fact-gathering, problem-solving, and cornrnunicationof economic information.

The CPA, for example, is one of the leadersin planning new ways to use cornpurersysterns.

He might also be called upon to- weigh therelative merits of social programs in terms of

(

available resources, helping to shape an urbanrenewal program'.

So if problems intrigue you, and if you haveaptitude for concentrated, meticulous, creative /thinking, you might make a good CPA-7"in a pub-lic accounting firm, in industry, education orgovernment At some point, you might even de-cide to form a firm of your own.

Talk with your faculty advisor. He can 'tellyou about the courses that could lead toward aCPA certificate soon after graduation. Or youcan do.graduate work.

You can also learn about' the work of a CPA~ ,

in a bookletwe'll be glad to send you. Drop a-note or card to: Dept. A10, AICPA, 666 FifthAvenue, New York, New York 10019

,/

~

(

American Institute of Certified Public Accountants

Page 12: University of Cincinnati NEWSRECORD - UC Librariesdigital.libraries.uc.edu/collections/newsrecord/1968/1968_04_23.pdfUniversity of Cincinnati NEWS"RECO"RD Published Tuesdays and Fridays

"U~IVERSflTY OF CINCINNATI NEWS RECORD, '--.', ' , Tuesday-,April '23,'" 1968

'Pu·bli:c 'rust' Jo~s,'Pos,e .City .Strike Dil,e,mmaby Tom Watkins

Editor's Note:-Tom~ Watkins(BBA '65) is presently serving asan Instructor of Economics whilefinishing his 'work toward a PhDin Indus'trial Relations. As anundergraduate he served as Stu-dent Body Vice-President, andwas a member of ODK, BetaGa'mma Sigma, Metro, and Cin-cinnatus. In September he willassume a position as AssistantProfessor of Management: andLabot:' Relation at Wayne StateUn~versity in Detroit.First it was transit workers,

HORACE GOLDFARB,

SaysII'HELLO!II

'then teachers, then garbage col-lectors. New York City is but oneof dozens of our metropolitanareas beset by a phenomenonunique to the '60s: public em-ployee strikes. This year alone,teachers have walked out in Pitts-burg, Oakland, San Francisco,Cincinnati, Wellston, Missouri andthe entire state of Florida. Gar-bage collectors struck in Mem-phis, nurses in Ft. Thomas, fire-men and policemen in Struthers,Ohio. The chain is growing andis likely to continue. 'The strikes may take the form

of~resignations, or perhaps "pro-fessional days", but the impactis the same, -and with rare ex-ception, the strike weapon is pro-hibited to all public employes.The, causes of such unrest bear

examination. One problem is thefailure of the union membershipto communicate its demands to

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its leaders, as evidenced, by theNew York City garbage workers.They flatly srejected an offer towhich the union negotiators hadagreed. Another is the inability ofmunicipal employers to take seri-ous-ly union demands, or to copewith the special problems of pub-lic employee unionization. Thiswas part of the teachers' dilemmain Cincinnati. A third cause is thetraditionally lower wages re-ceived by municipal employeesrelative to privately-employedworkers and the increasing a-wareness that they need no long-er tolerate such discrepancy.

Problems Initially Legal/ These, however, are only thesurface problems. The real causeslie much deeper., Initially the-problem 'is legal: the public em-ployee in many states cannotunionize at all. (In some in-stances, such restrictive legisla-tion may cause strikes, if the"right to strike" becomes sym-bolic to public employees; 'inothers it may actually pr-eventstrikes. In either case it deniesthe civic worker a basic right towhich he, like the private em-ployee, is entitled. These laws areslowly disappearing). T In otherstates he may organize, but theemployer is, not legallyobligated

Do you ever wishyou lived closer- to campus'?

You can.(2 MINUTES AWAY)

Thee'LIFTON. COLONY APTS.L'owell at Morrison .• 54l-1766

to recognize the union, i.e. to bar-gain with it, or the state may nothave any statutory provisions fordetermining the appropriate unit.In the remainder the worker maybargain, but has no economicweapon to underscore his de-mands.Secondly, the public employee

when he can bargain, does .sowith an' employer ?who cannotreally control wage funds, sincethe purse strings are held by thepublic at large. Finally, munici-

. pal employment has always beenconsidered a "public-" trust",where didication to the job is

, held to be more significant thanwages, hours and conditions c ofemployment.We stand today at a point where

we must recognize the right ofthese workers to unionize. Fur-ther', we must understand thatthey will become militant if theirdemands are ignored. What, then,can be done?For many states, the first duty

is to allow .municipal employeesto organize, designate representa-tives and bargain collectively. Butthat will not solve the problem, aswe have. seen. The crucial pointcomes when the union and theemployer reaclian impass innegotiations. What then? Appar-

ently the answer is a strike, re-gardless of its legality.The anti-strike provisions of

Ohio's Ferguson Act were invokedduring the recent teacher strikeand were ignored. The same re-sult occurred with New York'sTaylor Act when it was used a-gainst the American Federation

I of Teachers in New York City. Inboth cases the leaders werejailed and/or fined, .and both said"it was worth it." When the gar-bage collectors struck the attitudewas similar. The examples could-continue, but the salient fact isthat few states have yet been ableto construct a legislative actwhich successfully solves theproblem.

Alternatives NecessaryIf we as citizens are unwilling

to accept strikes' by teachers,nurses, maintenance worker, fire-men and policemen, then weought to be giving some seriousthought to alternative methods ofprevention.Fact-finding- boards ..have been

employed with some success, butrecommendations .are Ioften - dis-regarded by one or both of thepa-rties without legal jneed forjustification. Mediators -have been

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