Dabney residents fight fee increase AAUP questions Priorities ...

10
Vol. LXIV no. 37 Dabney residents fight fee increase By Andy Telli N R News Manager A recommendation to eliminate the fee differential of $15 per quarter for Dabney and Memorial Halls was removed from a budget proposal for the Residence Hall Services office, after Dabney Hall residents protested the recommendation to Richard L. More, associate vice provost for residence hall services. The proposed budget was sub- mitted to Moore by the Policy Ad- visory Committee. Laura Mann, chairman of the committee, said the recommendation was made to generate additional revenue. The committee recommended residents of Dabney and Memorial Halls be charged an additional $15 per quarter, which would make their fees equal to those of other dormitory residents. Jack Neu, executive president of the Dabney executive council, said the committee finalized its dis- cussions of the budget Wednesday night. day afternoon, and toured and com- pared the facilities of Daniels, Dabney, Calhoun and Siddall Halls. Matin Royeen, the resident counselor for Dabney Hall, was chosen to chair the committee. He said the committee's job was to com- pare what the physical aspects of the different buildings offered to the students. The committee decided "The facilities of Dabney Hall are inferior to that of other halls," as stated in a lett..::r the committee sent to Moore informing him of its decision. Michele Williams, a senior in the college of Design, Art and Architec- ture and a member of the arbritration committee, said each dorm offers a different lifestyle and Dabney offers the minimal. She added that the fees should be lowered to offer the stu- dent a choice of lifestyles. The vote was unanimous although one member, Pat Hensler, housekeeper 1 manager for Sander, Daniels and Dabney Halls, was un- able to complete the tour and did not vote. Tom Remick/the NewsRecord This unusual abstract face is part of the sculpture in front of CCM. The face gets a little help, and some hair-like characteristics, from a blrd's nest behind its eyes and chin. Tuesday, April 12, 1977 AAUP questions tenure rejections By Terry Kramer NR Editor The UC chapter of the American Association of Univeristy Professors (AAUP) voted last Tuesday to es- tablish an ad hoc committee to in- vetigate whether the university has established an informal tenure quota and the procedures used by Vice Provost John McCall in accepting or rejecting recommendations for facul- ty promotion and tenure. The resolution to establish the committee stated that McCall has "rejected a high number of recommendations for promotion and tenure on individuals who have met the approval and standards of their respective departments and colleges." The ad hoc committee has been charged to inquire whether uniform academic standards were applied in consideration of promotions or tenures; if an abuse of discretionary authority occurred; and if financial factors played a significant role in the vice provost's decisions. The AAUP resolution also stated that the rejections have led to non- reappointment of faculty members. A faculty member has seven years to either become tenured or promoted. If after seven years the individual receives neither tenure nor promotion he is not remstated With the umvers!- ty, according to the AAUP contract with the university. "The contention is that promotion and tenure rejections averaged in some colleges as high as 60 per cent and as low as 30 per cent. The overall was 50 per cent," said George Hart- man, faculty representative to the UC Board of Directors. Hartman also said tenure rejections have been "very high." "A lot of people have come to them (the AAUP) with complaints" on their recommendations being re- jected, said Hartman. If an informal tenure quota has been established within the universi- ty, it would be in violation of the con- -continued on page 3 Duke Conrad, resident advisor in Dabney, said floor meetings in Dabney were held following the com- mittee meeting. He added, at that time it was decided to picket the housing offices in 100 Sander Hall at 9 a.m., Thursday. The letter also said, "Since Dabney Hall is one of the oldest buildings, the facilities of the hall are much more vulnerable in comparision to other halls. Incidents of this nature already have happened, such as the fourth floor flood which was caus-::d by a breakage in the pipes." Priorities Day: a forum for concerns Neu said Dabney residents were protesting the increase because they objected to paying the same fees and receiving less services and facilities. Conrad added, "If we're going to pay the we should get the same things." "Until our facilities are the same, we don't want to pay," Neu said. Dabney makes $69,000 profit per year, Neu said, and David Berting, a junior in the college of Education and Home Economics and a resident of Dabney, said, "Why should we subsidize their (the other dorms) loss?" Moore said Dabney makes a large profit because the building is paid for. After meeting with several residents of Dabney Thursday mor- ning, Moore suggested an arbitration committee tour the facilities of Dabney and other dorms to deter- mine if the facilities are unequal, ac- cording to Neu. Neu explained the agreement was for Dabney to choose two members of the committee, for the housing of- fice to choose two, and for both par- ties to mutually agree on a fifth member to chair the committee. Moore said the decision of the committee would be a binding one and their decision would be final. The committee met at 2:30 Thurs- A chart comparing the facilities of the dorms was constructed by the committee and sent to Moore with its recommendation. The comparison included lounges, laundries, storage space and other facilities. After receiving the committee's decision, Moore said he would abide by it and withdraw the recommenda- tion from the budget proposal. But he added the Policy Advisory Com- mittee could send a separate recommendation to Robert Carroll, acting vice provost for student af- fairs, if it so chose. Mann said she thought the Policy Advisory committee would probably take such action. She added a meeting would be scheduled for this week and a formal decision would be made then. Carroll said he had not received a separate recommendation from the Policy Advisory Committee, yet. He added, if he receives a separate recommendation he would include both the arbitration committee's decision and the recommendation of the Policy Advisory Committee in the budget report and pass thern on to the vice presidents. Moore said if the recommendation -continued on page 2 By Chip Power and Lisa Steinker NR staff writers Partly as a response to the recent Board decision to rescue the deficit- plagued football program, and because there was a strong interest for representatives from campus groups to express their concerns regarding what the main priorities of the university should be, the Graduate Student Association (GSA) rallied support from Students and Adedemic departments and organized the first "Priorities Day" for UC. Last Thursday's activities included a peaceful protest against the propos- ed library cutbacks and a forum in the TUC Faculty Lounge that after- noon, a wide ranging discussion of the priorities of UC. Participants in- vited to the forum by the GSA spoke' of UC's strained budget; some were angry with budgetary decisions while others busied themselves proposing specific needs for their particular group. The mid-morning demonstration consisted of about thirty vocal par- ticipants who, with their signs, gathered in front of the U E: 'main library. After a march around the library, the group of protesters proceeded up Calhoun St. before reaching their ultimate destination- the administration building. Tom Remick/the NewsRecord Whoever said, "Vanity, thy name is woman," obviously had never seen these male sunbathers on Calhoun Hall's roof, trying to get SunGod bronze tans. But who can blame them? Maybe the best philosophy is, "Gather the Sunrays while ye may." The protesters reached their zenith they chanted, "No cutbacks, no cutbacks ..." Two security officers watched intently as the group soon dispersed after speaking their mind. The Faculty Lounge was com- pletely filled at the afternoon forum. In his introduction of the featured speakers at the afternoon workshop, GSA Chairperson Jim Stratman said he wanted all student groups and academic departments to have a chance to voice their concerns relating to future cutbacks looming on UC's fiscal horizon. "We asked everyone from academic departments, to student groups who were, if not this year then next year, faced with possible cut- backs," he said. He continued, "Football is just the tip of the iceberg. Therefore, we decided to invite as broad a spectrum of people from the University as we could to have them speak on the specific priorities they have for their programs; what they need to make their programs better." Other speakers at the forum in- cluded UC President Warren Bennis, and Executive Vice-President Henry Winkler. Mel Posey, president of United Black Association, urged the protesters to work with the Universi- ty to uncover new sources of revenue, instead of showing their dissatisfac- tion by gathering, marching, and shouting angrily. "Another approach for that same group, (the activists) would be to take it's energy and begin to work in a 'clearing-house' kind of way to map out a strategy to approach the different kinds of problems. If the University says it doesn't have any money, and so on, all right, maybe one of the things the people who started the group can do is to help the administration see new avenues for getting money to carry out our objec- tives," said Posey. Mary Campbell, speaking for In- ternational Services, reminded the audience, "This is a reappraisal of which direction we're going in and let's not lose sight that we're working for the Students." She also said members of the un- iversity community should start thinking about other areas of the world and not just Cincinnati. · Dr. Attila Kilinc from the geology department stressed that all priorities must have a "sound basis" before they are established. He stated that "priorities that are not founded on the goals of the units of the university and of the institution are bound to fail." He also he had "always operated on the belief that in any academic institution, all priorities and decisions must be based on sound academic considerations, and then checked against the budgetary considerations, but never the other way around. Unfortunately, I cannot say that this has been seen in the operation of the university in recent years." Kilinc said he was concerned about the physical facilities in the Old Tech building, which are now "in a shameful situation." He explained that with environmental problems becoming more complex and deman- ding everyday, the only way to "get ahead of the game" is to provide better education, develop research, and slowly investigate our natural resources. Using Old Tech's this cannot be done, he said. Richard Engleman, a member of University Senate, called upon the UC administration to put in effect a "consistent and publicly stated basis 'for budgeting and other forms for resource allocations." Before Henry Winkler finished the workshop with his presentation, Gordon Skinner, Faculty Senate member, and Hal Schnell, of Library Services, spoke to the group. Schnell, echoing his concern for the educational development of students, said, "Our priority is to try to develop lifelong learning and research habits among un- -continued on page 3 Board prioritizes UC ·repaylllents By Joe Levy N R contributing editor The city of Cincinnati's final tax payment to UC will replenish several of the reserves used to operate the un- iversity during the current academic year. At last Tuesday's meeting, UC's Board of Directors approved a resolution outlining repayment priorities. UC's board agreed to repay these obligations: • $1,000,000 borrowed from the College of Medicine • $1,000,000 borrowed from the Reserve for Contingencies. $563,000 borrowed from the Reserve for Contingencies. Tax income which will repay these loans derives from the two · mill property tax levy expiring in July when UC becomes a state school. Lawrence Hawkins, UC vice presi- dent for administrations and operations said that UC will receive this final payment early next year. Because this tax income depends on property values in the city which fluctuate, Hawkins admitted that the 2.5 million figure could go up or down. "Chances are it won't be off by many dollars," he said. Stanley Troup, director of the Medical Center, said the $1,000,000 loan did not affect the quality of education at the Medical School at the present time. However, Troup said that the depletion of reserves reduces budgetary flexibility. "It reduces your ability in the future to do anything," he said. "Seventy per cent of the medical school's income comes from outside the university. What if these funds would dry up?" This year the Medical Center has used approximately $950,000 in reserves (in addition to the $1 million loan) without a repayment agree- ment, 1roup said. According to UC financial officials, the approximate $950,000 was used to ::over budget reductions at the Medical College. "The (Medical) College has loaned the university almost $2 million for working capital," Troup explained. "I don't want to sound like we're terribly self-sacrificing. Everybody is taking a beating. I'd rather say that we gave up approximately $1,000,- 000 in addition to others." Troup said the total for university reserves taken from individual colleges and by repayment agreements is approximately $1.8 to $1.9 million. Hawkins said that while these reserves cannot be replenished, "the best we can hope for is that we can cover the expenses paid for by these reserve funds with state funds." Reserves for Working Capital and Reserves for Contingencies are special budgets beyond the control of individual colleges; they are university-wide. Hawkins explained that the Reserves for Working Capital is used "to regulate cash flow, paying for salaries and other expenditures dur- ing those periods when tuition money or tax money is anticipated but not available." Reserves for Contingencies cover unplanned expenses, such as major repairs and state budget cuts. Hawkins explained that recently a half-million dollars was added to this fund which had been "very low over the past two or three years." He said the tax levy would result in a failure to fully repay this loan.

Transcript of Dabney residents fight fee increase AAUP questions Priorities ...

Vol. LXIV no. 37

Dabney residents

fight fee increase By Andy Telli

N R News Manager A recommendation to eliminate

the fee differential of $15 per quarter for Dabney and Memorial Halls was removed from a budget proposal for the Residence Hall Services office, after Dabney Hall residents protested the recommendation to Richard L. More, associate vice provost for residence hall services.

The proposed budget was sub­mitted to Moore by the Policy Ad­visory Committee. Laura Mann, chairman of the committee, said the recommendation was made to generate additional revenue.

The committee recommended residents of Dabney and Memorial Halls be charged an additional $15 per quarter, which would make their fees equal to those of other dormitory residents.

Jack Neu, executive president of the Dabney executive council, said the committee finalized its dis­cussions of the budget Wednesday night.

day afternoon, and toured and com­pared the facilities of Daniels, Dabney, Calhoun and Siddall Halls.

Matin Royeen, the resident counselor for Dabney Hall, was chosen to chair the committee. He said the committee's job was to com­pare what the physical aspects of the different buildings offered to the students.

The committee decided "The facilities of Dabney Hall are inferior to that of other halls," as stated in a lett..::r the committee sent to Moore informing him of its decision.

Michele Williams, a senior in the college of Design, Art and Architec­ture and a member of the arbritration committee, said each dorm offers a different lifestyle and Dabney offers the minimal. She added that the fees should be lowered to offer the stu­dent a choice of lifestyles.

The vote was unanimous although one member, Pat Hensler, housekeeper 1 manager for Sander, Daniels and Dabney Halls, was un­able to complete the tour and did not vote.

Tom Remick/the NewsRecord

This unusual abstract face is part of the sculpture in front of CCM. The face gets a little help, and some hair-like characteristics, from a blrd's nest behind its eyes and chin.

Tuesday, April 12, 1977

AAUP questions

tenure rejections By Terry Kramer

NR Editor The UC chapter of the American

Association of Univeristy Professors (AAUP) voted last Tuesday to es­tablish an ad hoc committee to in­vetigate whether the university has established an informal tenure quota and the procedures used by Vice Provost John McCall in accepting or rejecting recommendations for facul­ty promotion and tenure.

The resolution to establish the committee stated that McCall has "rejected a high number of recommendations for promotion and tenure on individuals who have met the approval and standards of their respective departments and colleges."

The ad hoc committee has been charged to inquire whether uniform academic standards were applied in consideration of promotions or tenures; if an abuse of discretionary authority occurred; and if financial factors played a significant role in the vice provost's decisions.

The AAUP resolution also stated that the rejections have led to non­reappointment of faculty members. A faculty member has seven years to either become tenured or promoted. If after seven years the individual receives neither tenure nor promotion he is not remstated With the umvers!­ty, according to the AAUP contract with the university.

"The contention is that promotion and tenure rejections averaged in some colleges as high as 60 per cent and as low as 30 per cent. The overall was 50 per cent," said George Hart­man, faculty representative to the UC Board of Directors. Hartman also said tenure rejections have been "very high."

"A lot of people have come to them (the AAUP) with complaints" on their recommendations being re­jected, said Hartman.

If an informal tenure quota has been established within the universi­ty, it would be in violation of the con-

-continued on page 3

Duke Conrad, resident advisor in Dabney, said floor meetings in Dabney were held following the com­mittee meeting. He added, at that time it was decided to picket the housing offices in 100 Sander Hall at 9 a.m., Thursday.

The letter also said, "Since Dabney Hall is one of the oldest buildings, the facilities of the hall are much more vulnerable in comparision to other halls. Incidents of this nature already have happened, such as the fourth floor flood which was caus-::d by a breakage in the pipes."

Priorities Day: a forum for concerns Neu said Dabney residents were

protesting the increase because they objected to paying the same fees and receiving less services and facilities. Conrad added, "If we're going to pay the s~me, we should get the same things."

"Until our facilities are the same, we don't want to pay," Neu said.

Dabney makes $69,000 profit per year, Neu said, and David Berting, a junior in the college of Education and Home Economics and a resident of Dabney, said, "Why should we subsidize their (the other dorms) loss?"

Moore said Dabney makes a large profit because the building is paid for.

After meeting with several residents of Dabney Thursday mor­ning, Moore suggested an arbitration committee tour the facilities of Dabney and other dorms to deter­mine if the facilities are unequal, ac­cording to Neu.

Neu explained the agreement was for Dabney to choose two members of the committee, for the housing of­fice to choose two, and for both par­ties to mutually agree on a fifth member to chair the committee.

Moore said the decision of the committee would be a binding one and their decision would be final.

The committee met at 2:30 Thurs-

A chart comparing the facilities of the dorms was constructed by the committee and sent to Moore with its recommendation. The comparison included lounges, laundries, storage space and other facilities.

After receiving the committee's decision, Moore said he would abide by it and withdraw the recommenda­tion from the budget proposal. But he added the Policy Advisory Com­mittee could send a separate recommendation to Robert Carroll, acting vice provost for student af­fairs, if it so chose.

Mann said she thought the Policy Advisory committee would probably take such action. She added a meeting would be scheduled for this week and a formal decision would be made then.

Carroll said he had not received a separate recommendation from the Policy Advisory Committee, yet. He added, if he receives a separate recommendation he would include both the arbitration committee's decision and the recommendation of the Policy Advisory Committee in the budget report and pass thern on to the vice presidents.

Moore said if the recommendation

-continued on page 2

By Chip Power and Lisa Steinker

NR staff writers Partly as a response to the recent

Board decision to rescue the deficit­plagued football program, and because there was a strong interest for representatives from campus groups to express their concerns regarding what the main priorities of the university should be, the Graduate Student Association (GSA) rallied support from Students and Adedemic departments and organized the first "Priorities Day" for UC.

Last Thursday's activities included a peaceful protest against the propos­ed library cutbacks and a forum in the TUC Faculty Lounge that after­noon, a wide ranging discussion of the priorities of UC. Participants in­vited to the forum by the GSA spoke' of UC's strained budget; some were angry with budgetary decisions while others busied themselves proposing specific needs for their particular group.

The mid-morning demonstration consisted of about thirty vocal par­ticipants who, with their signs, gathered in front of the U E: 'main library. After a march around the library, the group of protesters proceeded up Calhoun St. before reaching their ultimate destination­the administration building.

Tom Remick/the NewsRecord

Whoever said, "Vanity, thy name is woman," obviously had never seen these male sunbathers on Calhoun Hall's roof, trying to get SunGod bronze tans. But who can blame them? Maybe the best philosophy is, "Gather the Sunrays while ye may."

The protesters reached their zenith a~ they chanted, "No cutbacks, no cutbacks ... " Two security officers watched intently as the group soon dispersed after speaking their mind.

The Faculty Lounge was com­pletely filled at the afternoon forum. In his introduction of the featured speakers at the afternoon workshop, GSA Chairperson Jim Stratman said he wanted all student groups and academic departments to have a chance to voice their concerns relating to future cutbacks looming on UC's fiscal horizon.

"We asked everyone from academic departments, to student groups who were, if not this year then next year, faced with possible cut­backs," he said.

He continued, "Football is just the tip of the iceberg. Therefore, we decided to invite as broad a spectrum of people from the University as we could to have them speak on the specific priorities they have for their programs; what they need to make their programs better."

Other speakers at the forum in­cluded UC President Warren Bennis, and Executive Vice-President Henry Winkler.

Mel Posey, president of United Black Association, urged the protesters to work with the Universi­ty to uncover new sources of revenue, instead of showing their dissatisfac-

tion by gathering, marching, and shouting angrily.

"Another approach for that same group, (the activists) would be to take it's energy and begin to work in a 'clearing-house' kind of way to map out a strategy to approach the different kinds of problems. If the University says it doesn't have any money, and so on, all right, maybe one of the things the people who started the group can do is to help the administration see new avenues for getting money to carry out our objec­tives," said Posey.

Mary Campbell, speaking for In­ternational Services, reminded the audience, "This is a reappraisal of which direction we're going in and let's not lose sight that we're working for the Students."

She also said members of the un­iversity community should start thinking about other areas of the world and not just Cincinnati. ·

Dr. Attila Kilinc from the geology department stressed that all priorities must have a "sound basis" before they are established. He stated that "priorities that are not founded on the goals of the units of the university and of the institution are bound to fail."

He also s~id he had "always operated on the belief that in any academic institution, all priorities and decisions must be based on

sound academic considerations, and then checked against the budgetary considerations, but never the other way around. Unfortunately, I cannot say that this has been seen in the operation of the university in recent years."

Kilinc said he was concerned about the physical facilities in the Old Tech building, which are now "in a shameful situation." He explained that with environmental problems becoming more complex and deman­ding everyday, the only way to "get ahead of the game" is to provide better education, develop research, and slowly investigate our natural resources. Using Old Tech's faciliti~s. this cannot be done, he said.

Richard Engleman, a member of University Senate, called upon the UC administration to put in effect a "consistent and publicly stated basis 'for budgeting and other forms for resource allocations."

Before Henry Winkler finished the workshop with his presentation, Gordon Skinner, Faculty Senate member, and Hal Schnell, of Library Services, spoke to the group.

Schnell, echoing his concern for the educational development of students, said, "Our priority is to try to develop lifelong learning and research habits among un-

-continued on page 3

Board prioritizes UC ·repaylllents By Joe Levy

N R contributing editor The city of Cincinnati's final tax

payment to UC will replenish several of the reserves used to operate the un­iversity during the current academic year. At last Tuesday's meeting, UC's Board of Directors approved a resolution outlining repayment priorities.

UC's board agreed to repay these obligations:

• $1,000,000 borrowed from the College of Medicine

• $1,000,000 borrowed from the Reserve for Contingencies.

• $563,000 borrowed from the Reserve for Contingencies.

Tax income which will repay these loans derives from the two · mill property tax levy expiring in July when UC becomes a state school. Lawrence Hawkins, UC vice presi­dent for administrations and operations said that UC will receive this final payment early next year.

Because this tax income depends on property values in the city which fluctuate, Hawkins admitted that the 2.5 million figure could go up or

down. "Chances are it won't be off by many dollars," he said.

Stanley Troup, director of the Medical Center, said the $1,000,000 loan did not affect the quality of education at the Medical School at the present time. However, Troup said that the depletion of reserves reduces budgetary flexibility. "It reduces your ability in the future to do anything," he said. "Seventy per cent of the medical school's income comes from outside the university. What if these funds would dry up?"

This year the Medical Center has used approximately $950,000 in reserves (in addition to the $1 million loan) without a repayment agree­ment, 1roup said. According to UC financial officials, the approximate $950,000 was used to ::over budget reductions at the Medical College.

"The (Medical) College has loaned the university almost $2 million for working capital," Troup explained. "I don't want to sound like we're terribly self-sacrificing. Everybody is taking a beating. I'd rather say that we gave up approximately $1,000,-000 in addition to others."

Troup said the total for university reserves taken from individual colleges and by repayment agreements is approximately $1.8 to $1.9 million. Hawkins said that while these reserves cannot be replenished, "the best we can hope for is that we can cover the expenses paid for by these reserve funds with state funds."

Reserves for Working Capital and Reserves for Contingencies are special budgets beyond the control of individual colleges; they are university-wide.

Hawkins explained that the Reserves for Working Capital is used "to regulate cash flow, paying for salaries and other expenditures dur­ing those periods when tuition money or tax money is anticipated but not available."

Reserves for Contingencies cover unplanned expenses, such as major repairs and state budget cuts. Hawkins explained that recently a half-million dollars was added to this fund which had been "very low over the past two or three years." He said the tax levy would result in a failure to fully repay this loan.

2 Tuesday, April12, 1977

Student forum. By Valerie Brown

N R News Editor

The UC Board of Directors voted last Tuesday to continue the inter­collegiate football program at UC. Although this decision is probably final, students will have a chance to vote on the football question Apr. 19 and 20 during Student Government elections.

The NR asked several UC students their opinions of the football program and how they -plan to vote on the football referendum.

"I definitely say 'no'. I think for as much as they spend on football, they should spend on the Arts . The vote is a joke because the students still have no say, which is typical of the Univer­sity bureaucracy," said Sally Schwartz, CCM Junior.

Forest Atkins, English Freshman said, "I don't go to any of the games or anything .. . But if it's between school or football, I'd go with foot­ball."

"I like it (football) . I think students will vote for the referendum. I'm go­ing to encourage people to vote for it," commented Carl DeWalt, a Junior in Criminal Just ice.

I didn't read that much about it, but I agree with the (Board's) deci­sion. Yes, I would votefor it (referen­dum)", said Missy Frimming, a Medical Technologist Freshman.

Marsha Henderson, a sophomore in Special Ed., said, "I don't know that much about it. Of course I think it's unfair because we could use the money for so many other things. I don't k,now why it is that their (Ad­ministration) priorities aren't the same as students (priorities) .. .I don't like the way they use the money."

"I don't think they should continue football. I'm going to vote against it," offered Steve Skurow, first year chiropractic student.

'I aon't care that much about it. I'm for football but I don't go to the games. I don't think they should do away with football," opined Karen Compton, A&S Freshman.

Sophomore Antonio Mathews said, "It's all right because I'm for football. I know some of the dudes on the foot­ball team and I'd like to see it con­tinued."

"I think it's really good. We usually go to most of the home games," declared Kathy Zellner, Nursing freshman.

Employment Opportunities

Seniors or Juniors with math, physics or technical background ... Lt. Greg Mead will be conducting intervie-..s for officer positions in the U.S. Navy on April 14 and 15 in the Career Dynamics Center. Positions available in the areas of nuclear and propulsion engineering, aviation and personnel manag-ement.

/

Rt!gi$&tr,tion t(,ation is being held <for: a! I students intere t~ ~~~rning the art of~arat~r~-Kwon-Do. ·

'Regist:fa1ipn &- Classes held at:": - - l

Sc;b idlapp Gym on Tuesday & ursi:t ) (-~ </ from 7 to 9:00P.M. '

Classes are directed & taught by Mr. Willi

Publi~ Demonstration CH:tsses will be he'd~ April 12th, 14th, $Od j9UJ t Schmldlapp I Qj.p.Jrom 1- 9:oo"R M: ;n go$ 1\l.Qh ·~ . A!I Interested are"w~tcome to attend. .

For Further Info Call 281-5982 c ..

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"It's a good decision. I guess I'll vote for it," said Michelle Bongey, Accounting freshman.

"I think it's an ok decision. I think their academic programs are pretty poor anyway and you have to do something to keep the interests of

( AR I. Oe\\ ALT

FOREST ATKINS

students. If you cut everything out, there's

not going to be anything to attract students except the academics. I real­ly don't know yet about voting for the referendum," said Mark Geddes Engineering Sophomore. '

• MARSHA HENDERSON

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Life in Today's World? How Can it Be Applied to Daily Affairs?

FREE LECTURE WITH ANSWERS Tuesday, April19, 1977 8:00p.m. 2333 Robs (Off McMillan in Clifton Heights)

FOR INFORMATION CALL .... 591-1611

Rosicrucian Order, A.M.O.R.C. An Educational philosophical fraternity '

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Bargain~ng tal~s.· coritiJ?.~e. as· teams ·discuss. proposal

By Terry Kramer NR Editor

Presently the administrative and faculty bargaining teams are discuss­ing th~. terms of the proposal pre81ent~ by the UC chapter of the American Association of University Professors (AAUP), according to Herbert Shapiro, chairman of the AAUP.

.. There are joint attempts to clarify" those various proposals which the AAUP submitted, said Shapiro.

The AAUP two weeks ago sub­mitted their 1977-79 contract proposal to the administration, re­questing a 12-16 per cent increase in salary per year.

In addition, the faculty requested that major medical insurance, term life insurance and dental insurance programs now available "be provid­ed at university -expense."

Shapiro told the NewsRecord last week that a joint cost-study group would investigate the costs which would be incurred upon the univer­sity if this proposal were accepted.

However, the comrriittee has hot been "charged directly with domg anything yet," said. Shapiro.

In response · to the . faculty's proposal, the administration will "present some proposals to the facul­ty," said Henry Winkler, executive vice-president and spokesman for the administrative bargaining team. However, Winkler said the ad­ministration will not present a "full­fledge plan."

Shapiro said after the terms of the proposal are discussed and clarified, "I'd think the appropriate thing in order is a response by the administra­tion." Shapiro added that the faculty "will expect a response soon."

Although both bargaining teams have been open for questions, Winkler said in the future, negotiations would not be discussed publicly. "It's not in the best interests for either side to do bargaining in public," he said. However, "agreed upon statements" will be released to· the public.

Shapiro also said, "If there is any news, it will be released." ·

Dorms -continued from page ~ to eliminate the differentials was withdrawn, the income it would have generated would be made up by the residents in the other dorms.

John Evaris, acting assistant vice provost for residence hall services, said there are approximately 350 residents in Dabney. The receptionist at Memorial,. Dolores Bamhorst, said there are approximately 175 residents in that dorm. .

approximately $23,625 wquid ·have to be made up by the 3,474 residents in all the residence halls including . Dabney and Memc;>rial. This ,w¢ilfd · mean an additional $6.80 per year for each resident. · · · · . -:

Mann· said the 'Poli~y Advisoiy· Committee, throug!l'cut~ in residence hall programming budget and· other sources of additional ·i!lcome; h.ad pared ·the original proposal ftom a

The proposed extra $45 per year for these 525 residents ·means

4.5 per cent increase .in residence hal1 . . fees to a 3.1 per cen~ i~crea.se. .. . . . . .

. . . ·. ·.; ..

Win: $10(J. in speech. coti.ies:i.:·· . · · · By De~ Paisley · · · S~niofs · · ~ish.ing · ·to · partici~ate . ' · ·

"The Ttiu'mph of Mediocrity" is should pick up· an_ applica~ion, frorit · · ·this year's topic for the Jones the Communication Arts offic-e, 63T Oratorical Contest April 9. A Pharmacy. An outlirie, .of the .·'

All ·graduating seniors are eligible speech must be turned in by April t2 to . participate in this contest, with and a preliminary contestt held April pnzes awarded to the first, second 15, will determine the fi.na1is'ts; : and . third place winners respectively "The establishment of this contest · ($1~, $75, and $SO). 'Contestants will grew out of a general interest in -be JUdged o~ the basis of speech con- oratory ·elocution," · said Lucille tent and delivery. . Pederson .

GIVE A DAMNI GIVE YOUR TIMEI

WORK THE POLLSI Pollworkers are needed for the

STUDENT GOVERNMENT ELECTIONS April 19th & 20th

Pick up Applications at the

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graduates to experience Israel in a comprehensive one-year study/work programme. You spend your first 5 months in Arad, a dynamic new town together with other graduat~s from all over the world. There you wiU study Hebrew, Judaica and l$raeb society, combined with tours and a kibbutz period. For the following 7 months or more, you can either i.vork in your profession, volunteer in a kibbutz or development t~wn, I re-train professionally or continue · studying. The World Union of

. Jewish Students Institute in Arad could be the beginning of your love affair with Israel.

lerael Altvah Center, 515 Park Avenue, New York, New York 10022, (212) 752-0600

---------------------~------------For Information, please send to the above add ress. W-80 ~me ______________________ _y~-----

Md~------------------------~---City ------_::;tate ______ z lp __ _

University --------- ----- __;_"-7.= (USD) 1

CaJ, Today

The University of Cine College Republica11 Clut sponsor a debate betweer didates for the office of st body president at 1 p.m. in Hall in TUC. The debate of charge and open t students and faculty .

* * * Registration for s

quarter Residential Lee one credit hour courses v held at 4:30p.m. outsideS Hall cafeteria- I. The cour elude: "Roots" taught b) Posey, "Crime and Emo taught by Jose Arcaya, "M nization in the Third with Wasif Abboushi, Roles" by Valerie William Todd and Administration" taught Friedman and !llinistrators Warren J . Klyn, Lawrence John Hattendorf as speakers. Courses are the Residence Halls.

Tomorrow The New Cincinnati

Club will honor Sam annual Roast, p.m. at the University Calhoun St. There will be ceremonies, a lecture o and free refreshments. sion is $1 and all chess invited to attend. For format ion, call 232-3204.

* * * Mr. Henry Segal,

"American Israelite," ·,at the next meeting of

versity of Cincinnati Council on Jewish Segal's talk, entitled "It Every Thursday," will development of the Jewish press with emphasis on Ci "American Israelite."

The meeting will take 8 p .. m. at the ty Center; Woodside University Avenue on campus of the University cinnati. The meeting is op~!J to the public.

•• * "

Associate Professor ,_, will present "Four China," highlights and sl

Thousands of Topics Send for your up-to·date, 1 page, mali order catalog_ E $1 .00 to cover postage handling.

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LOS ANGELES, CALIF. (213) 477·8474

Our research papers are sold research purposes only_

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16:00, Monday applications ar

3' coritiriue: ,.· prqp(>s.al ~.· ver the comniittee has not "charged directly with domg .ng yet," said. Shapiro. . ·

response · to .the . faculty's sal, the administration will nt some proposals to the facul­~id Henry Winkler, executive resident and spok:s~an for the ~istrative bargammg team. ~er, Winkler said the ad­tration will not present a .. full-plan." piro said after the terms of the sal are discussed and clarified, hink the appropriate thing in · s a response by the administra­Shapiro added that the faculty •xpect a response soon." ~ough both bargaining teams 1. been open for questions, rler said in the future, btions would not bt discussed fly. "It's not in the best interests ~her side to do bargaining in •," he said. However, "agreed tatements" will be released to blic. piro also said, "If there is any it will be released." : .· .

ed from page ~ , ximately $23,625 would _: have made up by the 3,474 residents .. the residence haUs inchiding .

ty and Mem<;>r.ial. Thrs w9Ufd ·. · ·

an additional $6.80 per yeaT fci.r ·. · esident. · - . ·. nn· said the· Policy Advisory· . ittee, through· cuts in residence

rogramming budget ~n.d · othtr s of additiomil ·income,- had ·the original proposal 'ftoni -a: r cent increasdn residence.hal1

a ll per cen~ i~c~a.se.. . . . . . . . . . . . _.: · . .

·ch .. 9qi;tt~$·(: ·. .. ior's. ' wishil)g 'to . particq;~te . ' . . .

d pick up·. an.appl.i<:;i~iqn; ftoqt : . ommunication Arts office, 637'· , · . , . : .. ·· · armacy. An outline- .of. the .· .

h must be turned in by A'prill2 · : :. : · preliminary.conteslt h.el~ .April . · ill determine the finalists; · : ·. .· e establishment of this contest " out of a general interest · in

, ry ·elocution," said tuCilie son.

MNI.

TIMEt OLLSI

T ELECTIONS

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enue, ') 752-0600

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Calendar Today

The University of Cincinnati College Republica11 Club · will sponsor a debate between can­didates for the office of student body president at 1 p.m. in Great Hall in TUC. The debate is free of charge and open to all students and faculty.

* * * Registration for Spring

quarter Residential Learning one credit hour courses will be held at 4:30p.m. outside Sander Hall cafeteria- I. The courses in­clude: "Roots" taught by Mel Posey, "Crime and Emotions" taught by Jose Arcaya, "Moder­nization in the Third World" with Wasif Abboushi, "Sex Roles" by Valerie Kaiser and William Todd and "University Administration" taught by Dick Friedman and featuring ad­ministrators Warren Bennis, M. J. Klyn, Lawrence Hawkins and John Hattendorf as guest speakers. Courses are offered in the Residence Halls.

Tomorrow The New Cincinnati Chess

Club will honor Sam Wills at its annual Roast, beginning at 8 p.m. at the University Y, 270 Calhoun St. There will be awards ceremonies, a lecture on chess and free refreshments. Admis­sion is $1 and all chessplayers are invited to attend . For more in­formation , call 232-3204.

* * * Mr. Henry Segal, editor of the

"American Israelite," will speak · at the next meeting of the Uni­'versity of Cincinnati Faculty Council on Jewish Affairs. Mr. Segal's talk, entitled "It Happens Every Thursday," will cover the development of the American­Jewish press with special emphasis on Cincinnati's "American Israelite."

The meeting will take place at 8 p.m. at the Seasongood Facul­ty Cente r', Woodside Place and University Avenue on the main campus of the University of Cin­cinnati. The meeting is free and ope1). to the public.

* * * -Associate Professor Lea Sachs will' present "Four Days in China," highlights and slides of

Send for your up-to-date , 160-page. matl order catalog. Enclose $1 .00 to cove r postage and handl ing.

RESEARCH ASSISTANCE. INC. 11322 IDAHO AVE ., H 206

LOS ANGELES . CALIF . 90025 (213) 4 77-84 74

Our research papers are sold for research purposes only .

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her rec,ent visit to the People's Republic of China. The presen­tation is scheduled at noon in room 351 on the Raymond Walters campus.

Friday Alpha Kappa Psi (business

fraternity) will sponsor a "TGIF" smoker in the Faculty Lounge in TUC from 10 a .m. to 3 p.m.

* * ·* The Death Club will meet in its

usual place at 7 p.m. B.Y.O.B. please.

••• A square dance will be held at

the Georgian Hall on Scioto St., from 8 p.m. to midnight. Admis­sion is $2 ($1 with Newman card). Beer, soft drinks and snacks are included with admis­sion.

Miscellaneous

The Catholic Vocation Office and Newman Center will spon­sor Christian Service Week, April 11-15.

Wednesday, from 9-11 p.m., "Possibilities for Service in the Church" and "Prayer and Deici­sion re: Life Choice" will be the topics of discussion in Calhoun and Daniels Halls.

There will be a "Coffeehouse" guitar, readings and poetry at the Newman Center Tuesday and Wednesday, 9-11 p.m.

* •• It was incorrectly reported

that John J . Steffen, Assistant Professor of Psychology, would give a speech entitled "Managing Anxiety" on April 12. The cor­rect date is Aprill8, at 7:30p.m. in Alumni Lounge, French Hall. There is a $2 fee .

.• • * It was incorrectly reported

that "Threshhold," an educational film about the genetic disease hemophilia and its treatment, would be shown April 4-8. The correct dates are April 11-15 in the Rhine Lounge, TUC.

•• * The UC Mountaineering Club

is offering a 2-day basic rockclimbing class to beheld on April 16 & 17; for further infor­mation contact Hal at 475-4966 or Bruce at 475-3763.

GREEN HOUSES

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WANTED for September, 1977: good quality Arts & Sciences and other Univer­sity of Cincinnati sophomores or early juniors as transfer students to the Division of Broadcasting, College Conservatory of Music. It is suggested that a 3.0 average be the mm.1mum of . a student applying, ,although consideration will be given to 'everyone who applies. For further informa­ttion, see Mrs. Hale, Division of Broad­lcasting, Room 130 Emery Hall, 9:00 to l6:00, Monday through Friday. Early applications are suggested.

Tuesday,, April 12, 1977 3

AAUP investigation -continued from page 1 tract between the AAUP and the Ad­ministration. The contract states: "There shall be no tenure quotas in any college or department or academic unit or in the University as a whole."

One faculty member said that the possibility of an informal tenure quota is "more than rumor. There are indications from the administrators," he said.

McCall, however, said there is no informal tenure quota. "I don't know anyone in the administration who would try to work one out in some underhand way."

10cCall said "It is hard for me to comment on it (t.,resoluciton). I'd

Priorities Day

really want to be careful about what I said." He said he would have to review what the past numbers for tenure and promotion rejections have been and determine whether this year's figures are high or low.

There are no comparative figures for other years yet available, said Hartman. In addition he cited reasons why the rejections may have been high, such as the market situa­tion and a high number of recommendations, which can lead to a higher number of rejections.

"I have no evidence of any of it (a tenure quota) and have heard nothing about it," said Gordon Skinner, faculty senate chairman. He added that all universities are

-continued from page.l dergraduate students." administrators have the responsibili­

ty for being the mediator among the various priority demands."

He concluded with the comment, "If we do not believe that1 ~.he academic programs at this univel!tt.

probably getting tougher on tenure decisions, which he said may be happening here. But "that is specula­tion," he added.

The AA UP is also concerned that McCall did not consult the provostial advisory Committee on Promotion and Tenure before his rejections.

In the past the provost has used this committee wtere therehas been some wuestion, said Hartman.

McCall said, "I did not consult with them this year. I was busy with my own work in recommendations." l\1.cCall said there "are questions in my mind to the appropriateness of a governance committee coming in on this level to recommend tenure."

McCall said he wanted to unders­tand the functions of this committee (the Committee on Promotion and Tenure) before consulting with its members.

Herbert Shapiro, chairman of the AAUP, said McCall was contacted concerning the resolution before the meeting. Shapiro said that McCall thought an inquiry would "clear the area." McCall said i abuses have oc­curred they should be rectified, ac­cording to Shapiro.

The AAUP is proceeding to ap­point members to the ad hoc com­mittee, said Shapiro, adding that the committee will "collect as much data as possible."

Believe it or not. • •

The NewsRecord still has positions open for new writers. Our new staff is eager to meet energetic and hard working news, arts and sports writers. Don't be nervous, don't be shy. If

you want to write, we want to meet you. Come to our beautiful new offices located in room 20 1 TUC. Or call us at 2748 and ask for Chip, Annette, or Glenn. Call us soon!

I

Skinner did not explain what the university should do in order to provide a clear idea as to where funds should be spent. He said, however, "We're not going to be able to do everything - but what we do, we ought to do well, or get out of the darn business."

sity are of the first order of priorities, ':========:::================~ then we wouldn't be a university... . That's what we're all about. We're not about administrators, and we're

Abortion • Counseling • Vasectomy • Diagnostics After listening to the speakers,

Henry Winkler spoke on how he was concerned about bow one turns those priorities into realities.

not about fancy buildings." Womenfor QWomen

of Cincinnati.! nc.

He explained that there are not many reserves left, and the amount that is going to be available for UC programs will be limited.

He observed that one problem is each speaker had his own priority at the top of the priorities list, and "the

He added, "We're not primarily about intercollegiate athletics; we're about academic programs first and foremost," adding that "We have to keep that clearly in mind as we think about priorities in the future."

After Winkler's speech, Jim Strat­man urged that Priorities Day be in­

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GET SOME ACTION! Student Government

ELECTION FORUM Thursday April 14th

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Why too much regulation may rule you out How would you like to be forced to get permission from J79 separate Government agencies before you could work'! That's what Armco has to do. We think you could hear a similar story from nearly any large company in America-if the regulatory paperwork leaves them any time to tal~ to you. Excessive regulation threaten's. your chance of getting a job.

Most of us agree that the goals regulation seeks are important. Clean air and water. Job safety. Equal rights at work. The problem is the way Government people now write and apply specific rules to reach those goals. Too often, the rules don't really do any good. They just tie companies up in knots as they try to comply.

Federal regulations now take up a twelve·foot shelf of textbook size volumes printed in small type. 13.589 more pages were written last year alone. And Washington is more than matched by a growing army of state and local regulators.

Nobody really knows how much money regulation costs. Some say it's up to S40 billion a year. Companies paying that bill can't use that money for jobs. A new job, on the average. now costs a company $42,168 in capital investment. (Armco's own cost is S55,600.) At $42,168 per job, regulation last year ate up the money which

could have created 9~.000 new jobs. No sensible American wants to·

dismantle all Government regulation. But we think the system has gone berserk and the cost is out of control.

Free-Armco's plain talk on how to get a job We've got a free booklet to help you get a job. Use it to set yourself apart, above the crowd. We answer 50 key questions you'll need to k,now. Like why you should bone up on companies you like. What to do after the first interview. Hints to make you a more aggressive, attractive job candidate. All prepared for Armco by a consult­ing firm specializing in business recruiting, with help from the place­ment staff of a leading university.

Send for your free copy of How to Get a Job. Write Armco Steel Corporation. Educational Relations Dept., General Offices, U-3. Middle­town, Ohio 45043. Our supply is limited, so write now.

' • ARMCO· v

Plain Talk About REGULATION Besides our J79 permits, Armco at last count had to file periodic reports with 1.245 federal, state and local agencies. What happens to Armco and other companies isn't that important. But what happens to a company's jobs is. Here's a small example: The Government requires companies to give employees reports on their benefit plans. Fair enough. But the timing this year, plus the complexities of Armco's plans, didn't let us print a report in our company magazine. In· stead. we had to mail them- 200,(XX) in all-to each employee individually. This didn't add one dime to Armco people's benefits. But it's cost us Sl25,000 so far. That's two jobs we couldn't create, right there. Next time anybody calls for a new regulation. you might ask for some sensible analysis of the costs and benefits-including how many jobs might be lost. One of those jobs could be yours.

Armco wants 'l2Y! plain talk on regulation and jobs Does our message make sense'! We'd like to know what vou think. Your personal experien~es . Facts you've found to prove or disprove our point. Drop us a line. We'll send you a more detailed report on regulation and jobs. Our offer of How to Get a Job. above. tells you how to write us. Let us hear from you. We've all got a stake in more American jobs.

4 Tuesday, April 12, 1977

OPINION&. COMMENT

Unjustified increases Last week, after careful analysis of next year's

proposed budget for Residence Hall Services, the Policy Advisory Committee of the residence halls recommended a $94 increase in annual rates for residents of Dabney and Memorial Halls - $45 more than residents in the other dorms. Indeed, it is the sort of proposal that impels a Dabney or Memorial resident to go into the cellar and "kick the slats out of the coal bin."

The morning following the Policy Advisory Com­mittee's decision, angered and deeply concerned residents of Dabney picketed the housing office in 100 Sander Hall. The protest was born of the anger they felt at the possibility of paying the same prices as residents of the other dorms, for inferior facilities.

Richard Moore and the Dabney residents agreed to bring the matter before an arbitration committee to decide if indeed the facilities in Dabney are in­ferior to those offered in the other dorms. After tour­ing four dorms - Daniels, Dabney, Calhoun and Siddall- the arbitration committee concluded that the facilities of Dabney are, in fact, inferior to those of other halls on campus.

Michele Williams, a member of the arbitration committee, said each dorm on campus offers a different lifestyle, and therefore, the fee schedule should reflect this, in order to provide the student with a choice. The committee agreed and in a letter to Moore advising him of their decision, said, "Bas­ed on this, Dabney residents should not be charged the additional $15 per quarter."

The Policy Advisory Committee calls the propos­ed increase fair and just. Although the NewsRecord yields to no one in its belief in the right of the Residence Hall Services to increase dormitory rates in order to balance the budget, it is astounding to !:tear a sm~ll minority of the 3,474 dormitory residents on UC's campus must pony up a bulk of the

fat increase. The· arguments for the proposed increase go

something like this: the facilities of the different dorms are roughly equal and therefore, the $45 an­nual differential .for Dabney and Memorial Hall residents should be eliminated. In so doing, a source of additional income is provided for the residence hall budget.

In the letter to Moore, the arbitration committee said, "(we) strongly suggest that you and the members of the budget committee should tour the halls and witness these (differences in facilities) in person. There are some which could not be explain­ed on paper adequately and accurately unless you had been there." The NewsRecord will "explain on paper adequately and accurately" the overwhelming evidence that points like an arrow at the inferiority of Dabney's facilities.

Consider this: in Daniels Hall, which houses not even twice as many students as Dabney, there are five times as many floor lounges per floor; in Dabney the number of kitchenettes per floor is zero, whereas every ~esidence hall on campus has one per floor; in fact, Dabney is the only dormitory on campus which is without trunk rooms, storage rooms, bike storage and sun decks; it is the oldest of all the male dor­mitories on campus, and unless one prefers wading in floods resulting from breakages of old rusty pipes, then there is no cause to be indignant about the elimination of the $45 annual differential.

There is nothing even superficially appealing about this proposed legal mugging of Dabney and Memorial Hall residents. Therefore, it is hoped and strongly urged, that the vice presidents follow the recommendation of the arbttration committee and retain the fee differential which reflects the facility differential in Dabney and Memorial Halls.

Voice your opinion Last week the Board of Directors unanimously

voted to continue the UC football program, on the premises that over the next three years the football program's General Fee subsidy would be reduced to $350,000 annually.

The board's vote on such a controversial issue seemed to arrive on the agenda at a very rapid pace. Without waiting for the student referendum, UC President Warren Bennis said he could not delay the recommendation on football any longer, adding that both Henry Winkler, executive vice president, and Lawrence Hawkins, senior vice president for ad­ministrations and operations, agreed.

In pushing the recommendation so quickly through the lower echelons of decision-makers and right into the laps of the board members, the ad­ministration clearly disregarded whatever UC students may have supported. In addition, the board also demonstrated its irresponsibility to the students by ignoring any attempts to solicit student opinion.

Although many university-wide groups had either vocally supported the football program or requested the abolition of it: nothing had been done to gauge student opinion until student government proposed a referendum on the football program be placed on the ballot in student body elections.

Yet the board could not wait one month for its decision . Perhaps the board accepted Bennis' state­ment that "you don't make decisions on the basis of plebiscites."

It seems the administration and board" voted so quickly on the football issue in order to suppress any

further opposition. So many groups had voted for the football program's abolishment that one more defeat would have placed the administration and the board in a challenging situation - too challenging for them to vote as calmly as they did.

Yet it is the student's responsibility to express an opinion, however feeble or useless it may seem. Students have a right to determine where their general fee monies go and they should voice their opinions, instead of lazily sitting back in a catatonic position.

As students we have one more opportunity to voice our opinions, whatever they might be. Next Tuesday and Wednesday the football referendum will appear on the ballot.

The first question will ask "Should the inter­collegiate football program be continued at UC?

The second question asks what amount of General Fee subsidy should be allocated to the program if we do vote to continue it. The choices are two dollars per quarter per student (or $105,000 per year) or seven dollars per quarter per student (or $400,000 per year).

Bennis has said that if the referendum has inter­pretable results the board would certainly have to take them into account. Perhaps if students would vote, the university could then acknowledge that continuing the football program was in accordance with the students' wishes or against them.

Either way, at least with some type of consensus the administration will realize that students do have their own minds and will not be manipulated by decisions handed down from above.

Editorial Staff

Terry Kramer .... . .... . .... . .. . . .... . ............... . Editor Bob Harbaum . . . ... •. .. ........... . .. ... . . Ass't Sporta Editor Sandor W. Sternberg .. ..... . .. .. . ..... ...... . Associat~ Editor Glenn Miller .. . . -.... ... . .... ...... . .. .... .. . .. ... Arts Editor Valerie Brown . . . . . ..... .. . . . . . . ...... .. ..... . ... News Editor Kate Brown . .... . .... . ....... . . . • . . ......... Ass't Arts Editor Ed,ard A. Perlman . . . .. . . , . .. .• , ................ Copy Editor Michael Williams . . .... ....... .... . . ..... . ... Ass't Arts Editor Andy Telli . . .. ... ........ . . . .. . . .. . . . .. .. ... . News Manacer Gabrielle Fox . ... . . ... . . ...... . ... . .. . .. . . ...... Book Editor Chip l'nwer . . . ....... .. ................. . .. Univ~rsity Editor Tom Remick .. . ..... . . ..• . . . .. ........ . . . Photography Editor Li\a S teinker .......... . ..... , .. . ..... , , Ass't University Editor Tim Sa mad . .. ... . . . . ..... . ......... Ass't Photography Editor Annette Lhrick . . .. ... ....... . .......... . ....... Sports Editor

Business Staff J ohn Ehmann ... . . ..... , ..... .. .... . ....... Business Mana&er Jim Win~egrad .... . . . ... . .......... L.ocal Advertislnl Mana1er Jeff l.ipp' _ .......... ...... . .. . . . National Advertisin& Mana&er Beth Wr~ght .. .. . .....•.. . . .. . .. Classified Advertisin1 Manacer

The NewsRecord is published semi-weekl:f . Tuesday and Friday, by the Communications Board under the advisorship of Douglas Nygren during the regular acad,emic year except during vacations and scheduled examination periods.

Edj torials are the opinion ofa majority of the editorial board and do not necessarily express the opinion of the University of Cincinnati.

Editorial Office-426B Phannacy, University of Cincinnati, Cincin·

Scott Lipps .... . ... . .... . .. . .. Ass't Loeal Advertising Manaeer

nati, Ohio 45221. Phone. 475-2748. Business Office-426A Phannacy, University of Cincinnati, tincin-

nati, Ohio 45221. Phone. 475-5901. ·

The NewsRecord is a member of National Educational Advertising Service, Inc. Advertisin1 deadlines are 1 p.m. Friday for the Tuesday issue and I p .m. Wednesday for the Friday issue. One subscription is 515 payable in advance, second class postage paid at Cincinnati, Ohio.

OK .. LET~ CHOOSE VP P<>SITIONS ,,. I'LL PLAY FIRST BASE .. .. YOU BE MY AGENT .... . YOU HANDLE MY ENDORSEMENTS,.,

A sickness in our midst

One student groaned "Nazism returns to UC," but for most people, no comment was necessary Saturday as they read a green and red slur pai­nted on the bridge in front of TUC: "Hitler should've gassed you, Perls­tein."'

The slur was aimed at former New­s Record Editor Harold Perlstein, who during Fall and Winter quarters had taken strong stands on numerous issues, probably the strongest on UC's faltering football program.

To a campus which has undergone budget cut after budget cut, Perlstein pointed out that football was drain­ing nearly $500,000 a year from the University to cover its deficits.

For his efforts his car and home were repeatedly vandalized and he himself was the subject of numerous threatening phone calls.

He withstood the pressure, pressure which most professional

Letters. To the Editor:

I ~- Paul Wells •·in the early autumn of 1971, while I was a student at the University of Cincinnati.

At that time I was heavily involved in campus activities, and I en­countered Mr. Wells at least once every week during the 1971-72 academic year in my capacity as President of the Student Activities Board and member of the Board of Budgets of Student Organizations.

I had also been a University Senator, the Student Government Attorney General, and for three years a member of the University Judicial Council, I left UC in June, 1972. lam currently a full-time student at Columbia University in the City of New York.

Paul Wells impressed me as an out­standing member of that community. In working with him !learned that he is rigorously honest and speaks the truth whether it is convenient or not. He demands the same of anyone who works with him.

Mr. Wells is also outstandingly in­telligent. He understands problems and conflicting interests and points of view very rapidly. He appeared to me to have a commanding knowledge of his job, and I know from experience that he is a thorough and efficient worker.

Paul Wells' combined talents make him one of the most competent peo­ple I have ever had the pleasure to meet, at UC or anywhere else.

While I was at UC, and in the years since then, I have often gone to Paul with both my problems and my joys. We talk them out, generally over lunch, sometimes behind the closed door of his office if the topic is un­usually personal, or complex.

He has always treated me with respect. He demands honesty and good-will, and gives the same.

Leonard P. Stewart, III New York City

Goodwill To the Editor

Reading the NR's April 5 article,

Douglas Nygren

newsmen never have to face, and he continued to serve the university.

Friends tell me I should not be writing about what has happened. It is better left unreported, they say. I wonder, though: Should the UC academic community be spared knowledge of the shameful behavior Perlstein has had to endure with only his staff for support?

Tire slashings, death threats, bee bee shots, racial slurs have no place anywhere, least of all at a university, and a university at which they occur ought to be aware of the sickness in its midst and reflect on its malaise.

Has the University lost sight of its goal of education and research and has football taken on its own logic? What is so important about football that a person's life is threatened? It is more than college pranks to threaten someone's life, it's against the law.

What is wrong with the university that it permits open debate to be sur­rounded by repeated attacks against

its newspaper editor? What does it take for the university to protect free speech? In the past months I have heard a lot of voices defending foot­ball, but not one from the ad­ministration in support of Harold Perlstein. What is more important, football or free speech?

No matter on what side of an issue a person stands, he has the right to voice his opinion without being harrassed and threatened. And final­ly, there is anti-semitism. Debate over football is permissible, but anti­semitic attacks cannot be tolerated. Will official university silence con­done this attack, too?

It is to Harold Perlstein's credit that he pursued the football issue with fairness and professionalism while under pressure no one ought to have to face, and in doing so, he gave the university a better paper than it probably deserved. Thank you, Harold, thank you.

Nygren is adviser to student publications.

•• "W"aiting

"Art Gallery relocation rejected", I couldn't help but snicker though I

. really wanted to scream. I will agree with AI Messer, presi­

dent of Center Board, that to spend "$50,000 on a half-hearted Art Galiery" is absurd, whether or not the university is in poor financial shape, but there are two points made in the article which are also absurd .

Messer stated, "I feel it's wiser to remain with the old Art Gallery until the university can become more fiscally sound." In actuality, there is NO Art Gallery on the UC campus.

The TUC Gallery is a misnomer; it is a dining hall or a meeting room, rarely does it have time to be open to the public to show any art which may just happen to get some spaghetti sauce, gravy or whatever smeared on it.

And when will the University become FISCALLY SOUND'm

Another reason cited by the article was "no consideration had been given to the effect on TUC programs that would be forced to move to the fourth floor meeting area."

First of all, at least they would have an area to which they may go, the Art Gallery wasn't so lucky. Also, due to the lack of an Art Gallery, there is an entire college, DAA, which now has a deficient program.

Several flights of steps don't seem to be too much of a hardship for anyone to walk in order to attend a function which they want - or am I wrong?

There have been promises about the gallery. In spring '76, it was said there would be a new TUC Gallery in fall '76, then it was winter, spring .. .summer? Where is fiscally sound on the calendar? I can't seem to locate it.

Hudson, DAA graduate student

Luxury To the Editor:

Professor James Thorpe, in his re­cent letter concerning football,

suggested that faculty and others who have called for the abolition of football at UC, are hypocritical and not objective. His logic is that those groups have not also called for the abolition of "many unprofitable academic programs."

What Professor Thorpe fails to realize is that academic programs, profitable or not, are concerned with the university's raison d'etre -education.

Big time college football, on the other hand, has nothing to do with education- it is entertainment. If it pays for itself, fine, but if it costs ex­cessive amounts with little or no sup­port from fans or students, it must be questioned.

While the rest of us, including Professor Thorpe, have borne $4,-000,000 in budgetary cuts in the past two years, the football program has been able to ignore with impunity those budgetary cuts endorsed by President Bennis four years ago, and the program has even been able to in­crease its spending year after year.

Nevertheless, UC's administra­tion is going to continue the enter­tainment at the same time it allows buildings to deteriorate, academic programs to be cut or eliminated, class size to increase, tuitions to go up, the number of faculty to be cut, the course offerings in Summer School and Evening College to- be reduced and requires our Library to reduce its periodical holdings and its acquisitions.

We need to decide if we can afford the luxury of an expensive football program in the face of such serious damage to our academic missions of teaching and research, and we need to know the difference between education and entertainment.

Sincerely, Lowell Leake, Jr.

Professor of Mathematical Education

Pr

Richard Berkemeier junior from Piqua Ohio, living, off campus in an Since a freshman, involved following activities:

• Home-Coming, Comnnitt•~ • Honors Committee '

• Student Orientation • Sigma Chi Fraternity • Inter-Fraternity

delegate • Search Committee for

Career Dynamics

• Treasurer of Sigma Chi ty

• Under-Secretary of fairs

• Member of UC tennis

• founder of Coalition forst in support of UC football

• Dean's list- College of A Sciences

• My sole purpose for office of Student-body Presi desire to utilize the kno talent gained from my here at UC, to further .... ,,au",!

quality of academic academic curriculum.

-Richard

I am a full-time undergrad Uunior status) in the College of and Sciences department of p science. In the three years that I been a student I have gained a ing "nuts and bolts" StUdent, faculty, and aU1H1UIIIiLI

And1 Washington (KFS) - The y ,

Reverend U.N. Ambassador And1 Young might serve himself and country better by noting that diplomacy~ unlike holy orders, th are times when the good, the mo and the right are best served by sh ting up. Thus as the second-high ranking foreign affairs official you not wait until two days before · visit of Prime Minister Jan Callaghan to say, "No one has a confidence in the British."

In fact, the American ambassac to the U.N. doesn't say such thi1 two days after the PM has left to because Her Majesty's Goernme no matter what its faults , is nomin ly, at least, our closest ally.

I!, There is a difference betwe honesty and a gratuitous, arrog< and insulting candor. Andy Y oun!

b:. a goodhearted man; no one in 1 !1!1 'Civil rights movement was m<

respected for his personal virtue. E ' the behavior suitable to a civil rigl

.1 I leader or a Georgia congressman 1 reckless and dangerous coming c

of the mouth of one so highly plac in the Administration .

, BASE, .. . 3ENT .... . MY NTS ...

midst

newspaper editor? What does it for the university to protect free

In the past months I have rd a lot of voices defending foot-

but not one from the ad­in support of Harold

What is more important, or free speech?

matter on what side of an issue a stands, he has the right to

his opinion without being illliil~~·•u and threatened. And final­

there is anti-semitism. Debate football is permissible, but anti­

attacks cannot be tolerated. official university silence con­this attack, too?

is to Harold Perlstein's credit he pursued the football issue fairness and professionalism under pressure no one ought to

to face, and in doing so, he gave university a better paper than it

deserved. Thank you, , thank you.

Nygren is adviser to student

that faculty and others have called for the abolition of

ball at UC, are hypocritical and objective. His logic is that those

have not also called for the of "many unprofitable

J;a<Jcim~.; programs."

Professor Thorpe fails to is that academic programs,

or not, are concerned with university's raison d'etre -

While the rest of us, including f rofessor Thorpe, have borne $4,­

in budgetary cuts in the past years, the football program has

able to ignore with impunity budgetary cuts endorsed by

Pr~·ci-lAnt Bennis four years ago, and program has even been able to in­

its spending year after year.

Nevertheless, UC's administra­is going to continue the enter­

~<wrimem at the same time it allows to deteriorate, academic to be cut or eliminated,

size to increase, tuitions to go the number of faculty to be cut, course offerings in Summer

and Evening College to be ''"11'""'•n and requires our Library _to

i~s periodical holdings and 1ts

We need to decide if we can afford luxury of an expensive football

in the face of such serious "'"u"!~c to our academic missions of

and research, and we peed know the difference between

""''"~"' and entertainment. Sincerely,

Lowell Leake, Jr. Professor of Mathematical

Education

· Tuesday, April12, 1977 5

Presidential candidates' information

RICHARD BERKEMEIER

Richard Berkemeier - pre-med junior from Piqua Ohio, presently living, off campus in an apartment. Since a freshman, involved in the following activities:

• Home-Coming, Committee • Honors Committee

• Student Orientation leader • Sigma Chi Fraternity

• Inter-Fraternity Council delegate

• Search Committee for director f o Career Dynamics

• Treasurer of Sigma Chi Fraterni­ty

• Under-Secretary of Internal Af­fairs

• Member of UC tennis team

• founder of Coalition for students in support of UC football

• Dean's list - College of Arts and Sciences

• My sole purpose for seeking the office of Student-body President, is a desire to utilize the knowledge and talent gained from my experiences here at UC, to further enhance the quality of academic and non­academic curriculum.

-Richard Berkemeier

STEVE HALL

Steve Hall is a junior in the 4-A program of the College of Arts and Sciences majoring in political science and Secondary Social Studies Education in conjunction with the College of Education and Home Economics.

Steve viewes this not only as goodj preperation for two of his key in­terests, teaching and public ad­ministration, but also for fhe duties of Student Body President.

Steve has been a life long member of the Cincinnati community believ­ing firmly in the value of the universi­ty to this city. He believes that his im­portant attributes of leadership and his abilities to reform Student Government are most important in the comming years as UC moves towards full state status.

In addition he believes that he can take into account the history and tradition of the university in making decissions for the future which will have long range implacations and not simply short run effects.

Steve has served the university as a member of the Political Science Stu­dent Association and as publicity chairman this past year. In addition

Steve was appointed to the Elections Board through unamious approval by Student Government. However he resigned in February to enable himself to run for the office of Stu­dent Body President.

-Steve Hall

JULIE ANN HERMES

I am in roy sophomore year here at UC majoring in Early Childhood Education. Since I have been here I have been active in several campus based organizations, all of which are part of important struggles going on a ll across the country on campuses and in the community alike.

I am a member of the National Student Coalition Against Racism. NSCAR was responsible for bringing 18 year old Khotso Seatlholo to speak on campus about the racist aparthied system in Southern Africa . Khotso has been one of the central leaders of the freedom struggle there.

I am also an activist in the UC Women's Center which among other things is an informational and resource center for women. Last month we sponsored the first annual Southern Ohio Women's Rights

Conference which was very successful. As feminists we are in­terested in furthering the struggle against women's oppression.

The Young Socialist Alliance, of which I am a member, is an organiza­tion active on many campuses. We participate in many struggles against racism, sexism and cutbacks in education.

Our goal is a socialist society, democratically controlled by the ma­jority of people. We know that a knew society is not only possible, but absolutely necessary.

-Julia Ann Hermes

WILLIE HOERSTING

My involvement with the universi­ty began at the end of my freshman year after being elected to the U niver­sity College Tribunal. Soon thereafter I became acting president and Student Senator. Results: We organized and ran the U-College summer orientation and publicized a twenty page orientation booklet, both which still exist. We created and implemented a Student Needs Sur-vey which resulted in higher quality

classrooms for U-College students.

In the spring of 1975, I was elected Holdover Senator, which I have held for two years. I have submitted seventeen pieces of legislation con­cerning the following issues: Es­tablishment of Senate Budget and Priorities Committee, Direct election of Senators, Group Legal Services, defacing of University Property, allowing beer to be sold on campus, support of the National Student Conference Against Racism, student rights in various administrative deci­sion making procedures, including fee hikes, Priorities Day, and more.

This year I have worked with the co-op students and tribunals to avert the proposed $25 co-op fee sur­charge.

In three years I have had important experience in university goverance. I feel that the university has potential for improvement and I would like to be able to involve as many students as possible in working towards better­ing the university community.

-Willie Hoersting

ADOLF OLIVAS

Adolf Olivas, candidate for Stu­dent Body President, is a junior rna-

joring in Political Science and enrolled in the McMicken Honors Program.

He has been involved in campus government since early in his freshman year when he served as Residence Hall Association (RHA) representative for Dabney Hall. That year he also served as chairman of the RHA Referendum Elections Com­mittee and a member of the Mc­Micken Honors Council.

Adolf was elected RHA Executive President in May of his freshmen year and held the position for seven quarters. During his sophomore year, Olivas was a member ofthe Stu- · dent and University Affairs Advisory Committee, Education Advisory Committee, Student Bod y President's Cabinet, and Vice Presi­dent of the Administrative Manage­ment Society.

In both his sophomore and junior years, he was a member of Residence Hall Policy Advisory Committee and an Alumni Association Senator.

Also his junior year, Adolf has served as Speaker of the Student Senate. He is a member of Delta Tau Kappa, national honor society, and Omicron Delta Kappa, nationa l leadership society.

-Adolf Olivas

Editor's note: The information on this page was submitted by the candidates seeking the offices of Student Body President and Vice President.

Carter Randolph, candidate for Student Body President, did not submit to the NewsRecord the requested material and therefore will not be represented here.

All material submitted by the candidates appears as it was written by them. No corrections have been made in any of the content.

Background on ·the VP candidates

/·I ~t ill. GREGG GUNN

I am a full-time undergraduate (junior status) in the College of Arts and Sciences department of political science. In the three years that I have been a student I have gained a work­ing "nuts and bolts" knowledge of student, faculty, and administrative

actiVIties and functions within the scope of the University - as well as some limited exper-ience with Ohio's state legislature, through my par­ticipation in many student activities . I have been a member of the follow­ing organizations:

Work-study program; information desk and concession stand executive cabinet member; student government office director of communications; student government office; UC swim­ming (diving) team; Political Science student organization; Student speakers bureau; Intramural foot­ball, basketball, softball, and com­mittees:

Business and administrative facili­ty services;

UC delegate, National and Midwest Model United Nations;

Ad hoc UC book exchange; Ad hoc UC Senate fact-finding

committee on football; Ad hoc Student Buying Power

Card; which have proved to rein­force, in many cases, the academic

ideas with which 1 have been lear­ning, and provide a "touch of prac­ticallity" that is non-existent in most academic areas: and also introduce new learning opportunities and problems which has proven to strengthen the education I came to UC to receive.

It is this peculiar combination which makes involvement worthwhile.

-Greg Gunn

I am a 25 year old Freshman in Electrical Engineering Technology at OCAS, and a member of the UC Young Socialist Alliance.

Our qualifications are our program, strategy for carrying it out, and experience in the movements for social change at UC and other cam­puses.

Student involvement in Student government is at low ebb, as evidenc­ed by half of the senate offices without candidates seeking them,

and others with one candidate unop­posed.

Student government must become an organizing center for defense of our rights if it is to be seen as something to be involved in. We are campaigning on a platform of action to implement affirmative action programs, stop the cutbacks in programs and services, and against tuition and fee hikes.

We seek to involve students in the mass actions needed to attain these goals. Students organized in a move­ment linked to our allies in this struggle can win.

I stand for the extending of the ac­tion by a group of Dabney Hall residents against dorm fee hikes, and Student Government getting into the job of organizing these defensive ac­tions on a much larger scale, as in the anti-Vietnam war, civil rights, and women's liberation movements.

Turning the university into an ac-

tively involved community defending quality education is the only practical response to the attacks on education. That is our perspective, and reason for running.

-Dean Athans

John McDaniel has been a Cincin­nati resident all his life and he is a graduate of Anderson High School. He is currently in the College of Arts and Sciences and is majoring in ac­counting.

Last year John was elected to the University Senate as a senator at large to represent the entire student body. )Vhile serving as a University senator he is also a member of the University Senate Executive Com­mittee and the Academic Affairs Committee.

John also was a member of the Arts and Sciences Tribunal until he transfered colleges in the fall of this year. He has been a student advisor

JOHN McDANIEL

for the past two years and plans to be one next year.

John lives at the Beta Theta Pi fraternity house where he has been an officer.

-John McDaniel

Andrew Young should hold his tongue Washington (KFS) - The Very Young has his gourd stuffed with

Reverend U.N. Ambassador Andrew peanuts or he has been on too many Young might serve himself and his high-level trips making too many country better by noting that in high-level speeches lately. Only diplomacy, unlike holy orders, there stupidity or vertigo can explain being are times when the good, the moral quoted on the front page of The and the right are best served by shut- Washington Post vis-a-vis South ting up. Thus as the second-highest Africa thus: "I see no situation in ranking foreign affairs official you do which we would have to come in on not wait until two days before the the side of the South visit of Prime Minister James Africans ... You'd have civil war at Callaghan to say, "No one has any home. Maybe I ought not to say that, confidence in the British." but I really believe it. An armed

In fact, the American ambassador forces (sic) that is 30 per cent black to the U.N. doesn't say such things isn't going to fight on the side of the two days after the PM has left town South Africans. This President has because Her Majesty's Goernment, too much understanding of white no matter what its faults, is nominal· racism ever to align himself with it." ly, at least, our closest ally. No great harm is done, one hopes,

II There is a difference between if such words issue out of the or-honesty and a gratuitous, arrogant dained yap of a Georgia con­

l and insulting candor. Andy Young is gressman, as Young used to be; but to b· ,. a good hearted man; no one in the have an official of his current impor­n:>, ICivil rights movement was more tance speculating out loud like that is

respected for his personal virtue. But inflammatory. ~he behavior suitable to a civil rights It's bad enough for the radio and

·' leader or a Georgia congressman is television newsreaders repeatedly to f • ·reckless and dangerous coming out make reference to the possiblity of

of the mouth of one so highly placed "ra:ce war" in South Africa without in the Administration. · our U.N. ambassador stamping the

interpretation with official authority and then speculating it could lead to mutiny in the Armed Services and civil war at home .

Crazy talk. Moreover Young couldn't have thought of a better way to lose popular support for the Ad­ministration's South African policy than to define the struggle there as a race war. Americans of all races can sympathize with the fight of an op­pressed people for freedom , but ob­viously a 90 per cent white nation isn't going to intervene on the non­white side of a race war.

Andy Young is no racist. He may, however, be an ordained minister suffering from brain fever, unable to Understand the import of his own language. While he's been bopping about America and Africa tooting his baz.oo about freedom, he is also sounding like an old-time boomer for the penetration of American business: "If we don't take an interest in human rights in southern Africa, we can't count on Nigeria to supply oil."

This wouldn't be the first time the dollar sign got tacked up on the cross,

but one has the feeling that in Young's case it hasn't occurred to him that his intervention in other nations' homelife can lead to nefarious exploitation.

Indeed, much seems not to have occurred to our U.N. ambassador or else he would not have said about the Administration's human rights sallies, "There will be initiatives in­volving South Korea and the Philip­pines. There have been several messages sent already ... There isn't anybody safe."

There isn't anybody safe! Ap­parently it isn'tjust some old fogies in the Pentagon who haven't learned anything from the Vietnamese ex­perience. It's also true of some young fogies like Andy Young from the Peace Movement. What makes him think he and his president will be any more successful at playing universal law giver than Robert McNamara and his president were?

One shudders to quote Barry Goldwater approvingly, but he is dead right when he says, "I can un­derstand President Carter's desire to see universal human rights, but I

think he's been taking a very imprac­tical course. We shouldn't try to in­terfere in the domestic problems of other countries."

But, but, says the Georgia peanut clergy in unison, but this time we're doing it only for good, pure, holy, altruistic reasons. We don't want anything for ourselves, for America. We're only doing it for freedom's sake. They should re-read John Kennedy's and Lyndon Johnson's old speeches on how America seeks no territory nor trade concessions nor naval bases. The problem with religious people is that they think they're the only people who've had disinterested motives.

The most that we as a country can do is refrain from supporting tyran­ny. We supported the tyrannies of Angola, Rhodesia, South Africa and many other unhappy places for many years. We provided arms and credits to dictators and other trash which enable them to keep their power. We shouldn't do these things, but that doesn't mean we now have a moral obligation to overthrow these governments.

No such obligation exists. No one has a moral obligation to do things which are plainly beyond his or her power. That is the case with setting up the reign of liberty around the globe. For, though liberty is an ab­solute with us in our own society, when we use force, military or economic, to plant it elsewhere, we will be resisted and we will fail.

Andy Young can learn from Georgi Arbatov, a froggy old com­mie who is the Kremlin's top Americanologist: "If we established close ties with the American Indians who fought at Wounded Knee, with whom we sympathize deeply, wouldn't this be regarded as in­terference in your internal affairs? There's a border line which has to be judged by the political wisdom of any statesman - :where expression of support for certain ideas ends and overt interference begins."

Learn from the old commie, Andy, or you and your fellow Christians are going to get a Jot of people killed.

Copyright, 1977, by King Features Syndicate

. .......

6 Tuesday, April12, 1977

The Ebony Voice Bookstores offer best prices possible Compiled by Cheryl Saff~ld

WHAT'S HAPPENING? Artist David C Driskell will give an illustrated lecture at 8 p.m. on Thursday, April 14, in Zimmer Auditorium. ,His talk opens the five­week "Amistad II" display of Afro-American art in the Tangeman Center Art Gallery. There is no admission charge.

• • •

. A symposium on Black Mental Health will be held on April 14 in the Faculty Lounge of Tangeman University Center. The program is sponosred by the Minority Groups Counseling Center, and will start at 9:30 a.m. For ad­ditional information contact Walter S. Handy Jr. at 475-5753.

• • •

Saturday, Aprill6, UC's Black American Law Student Association will sponsor a Legal Education Workshop to educate citizens about legal services available to them. The workshop slated from 3-5 p.m. will be held at the West End Community Council located at 916 Poplar Ave. For more information phone 475-3346.

• • •

The musical group Weather Report will be featured at 7 p.m. and 10 p.m. on Wednesday, April 27 in UC's Emery Auditorium. Tickets are $6 and can be purchased at all Ticketron outlets.

By Shelley Blau Unloading unwanted textbooks or

finding discounted used volumes can be a difficult chore. Local bookstores have varying policies determining the amount they are willing to pay for used books and their selling price.

The policies of Du Bois, Lance's and the UC Bookstore are basically the same. Each store pays 50 per cent of the current new book cost provid­ed the book will be used the following quarter, and that the store is not overstocked. The books are resold for 75 per cent of the retail. ·

Lance's prepares a selective list of texts it will buy back, according to employee Chris Akers. He explained that Lance's does not necessarily purchase books even if they are to be used in the next quarter.

A sign posted at the UC Bookstore lists "reasons affecting buy back value on books. Included in the list are a new edition having been published, an instructor not having turned in a book list, and a book be­ing in too poor a conditon to be resold.

the half-price period. "Our aim is to give back the best possible price," he said.

D u Bois pays half-price throughout the quarter for books that will definitely be used for the up­coming quarter, according to Thelma Troutner, DuBois book department manager .

She added that the store gives back about one-third of the price of books :.Which may be used in a subsequent quarter.

Du Bois pays the bluebook price on books that won't be used again. All three stores will buy any book listed in the bluebook at that price. Those books are then sold to the wholesaler at the bluebook price.

Beacom explained that new books are sold at the suggested retail price, 20 per cent over cost. Prices on new books are controlled by the publisher, Beacom added.

He also said even though used books are marked up 25 per cent over the bookstore cost, the significant profit is on new book sales.

"There are additional costs in­volved in the processing of a used

It is generally the book binding book from the seller's hand to the which is in need of repairs, said Don shelf, as well as additional risks," Beacom, manager of the text and Beacom said. These costs absorb the trade book department at the UC extra 5 per cent, he added. Bookstore. Akers said he agrees there is a

UC and Lance's pay half-price for greater risk with used books because • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • .If. .If. • .If. books at the end of each quarter. unlike new books, they cannot be It Jt After this time, both stores pay the returned to the publisher. It Get Involved! It bluebook price listed in the He said Lance's does make a sub-It * wholesaler's price list. stantial profit on used books because ! Student Program Board ! If a student sells a book after the of the selectiveness of their ,. ,. designated time for a half-price re- purchases. ,.. Needs You ,. fund, explained Rick Odenbeck, Troutner said at DuBois there is ,. Petitions for President, Treasurer, Secretary ,. night supervisor at the. uc "probably a little bit more profit" ! Available in 340 TUC and TUC Information : '"B_o_ok_s_to_r_e_, _h_e_is_a_d_v_is_e_d_t_o_w_a_it_f_o_r_b_e_c_a_us_e_t_h_er_e_i_s_n_o_r_re-ig_h_t_c_h_ar_g_e_.

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In addition to receiving used books from UC students, Troutner said Du Bois gets books from other colleges and wholesalers.

Lance's and the UC Bookstore also order from these sources, but go to the publisher for re-orders because no time is wasted checking to see if copies are available, Beacom and Akers explained.

A student benefits most when reselling a used book. The seller receives half the new book cost (provided the transaction takes place within the designated times for such sales), as opposed to half of the seller's purchasing price. In other words, a student pays 25 per cent of the new book cost after resale.

Used textbooks can also be bought and sold through the Student Government Book Exchange. Charlie Foster, secretary of internal affairs in Student Government, said the Book Exchange is designed "to allow the students to buy and sell the books at a price that makes them some money." By calling 475-2665, a student can register or request a book from the exchange, Foster added.

Foster said information about a particular book is given to a person requesting that book. The buyer and seller work out their own terms of sale. Foster also said that Student Government "handles no money or books themselves." After the book is sold the seller notifies the Book Ex­change to remove the book's listing in the "available" file.

The Book Exchange began winter quarter and has proven to be a worthwhile project, Foster said. He added that the candidates for next

year's government plan to continue the referal service.

Steve Miles, manager of Duttenhofer's Book Treasures, 178 W. McMillan St. said he pays 25 per cent of the jacket price of paperbacks provided they are in good co?diti~n . Hardback prices are determmed m­dividually, he said.

Duttenhofer's does not deal in text books "to a large degree," assistant manager Susan Wills said . Duttenhofer's will pruchase texts if they can be of interest and understan­dable to a laymen, Wills continued .

It is no coincidence that Duttenhofer's is located close to cam­pus, said Miles. "Students should be avid readers and there's always a market for used books."

There is an additiona!S per cent off on books if the buyer is also selling books, Miles said. In order to avoid having only the client's old books available to him, Miles said he tries to buy books at estate sales but he does not use the wholesale services that the other stores use.

Sheryl Ingram, owner of Back Pages, 2615 Vine Street, said she pays 20 per cent of the cover price on stan­dard size paperbacks in ash, and 30 per cent of the cover price in trade. On non-standard paperbacks 30 per cent of the cover price is paid in cash or 40 per cent in trade.

The used book buying policy at Acres Bookstore, 633 Main Street, according to employee Orville Smith, is based on the individual book tak­ing into consideration the condition and saleability. We do not buy text books or book club editions, Smith said.

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-------------------------------1 I

: U.C. OKINAWAN KARATE CLUB 1

I Spring Qtr.

CLASS REGISTRATION Beginning Apr. 8

On Mon. & Fri. Evening, in Annie Laws Auditorium,

Teachers College.

6 p.m.-9 p.m.

Classes will be held in Annie Laws Auditorium Every Mon. & Fri. Evening

1 Beginner Class: 6:15-7:15 Advanced Class: 7:30-9:00

I I I I I I I I

Instructor Mike Ritter Ni Dan 11 Years in Karate

All Students, faculty and staff are welcomed to join.

- Qualified Black Belt Instruction· - Member of the Okinawan Karate National Association - Self Defense Training

For More Info Call 662-5485 or 481-0912

"the ultimate aim of karate lies not in victory or defeat) but in the perfection of the

I

character of its participants. n

I I II I II I I I I I I

~-----------------------------~

Pitchers By Annette Uhrick

N R Sports Editor In winning last year's Miami

vitational Tournament, the baseball team relied heavily on outstanding pitching. This year, team again received excellent per: mances on the mound but mana to win ,only one game in the toun However, over the weekend, it

Brady Baldwin, catcher for blast from Baldwin's bat fell a

Capsizin ~

By Marilynn Hlabse N R Sportswriter

There I was, standing in the of a river, in neck-deep water, next to an overturned which was wedged against a recall hearing someone yell gear!" but at that moment l was worried about my life.

I had never expected like this, i.e. capsizing, to when I signed up for this spring trip sponsored by the UC taineering Club.

But here we wereMonday, day out on the Buffalo River flipped. You could hardly bla though,since there had been a the week before and we had jams to climb through, under, and around. We just didn't make it around this one. If the preview of coming att didn't want to stick around main event.

As it turned out, the first were the worst. The other our twosome capsized the We also had trouble with canoes (bubble gum does and frost at night. Oh boy! out! Nothing like walking sleeping bag covered with

ssible

no coincidence that is located close to cam­

said Miles. "Students should be readers and there's always a

for used books." is an additional5 per cent off

if the buyer is also selling Miles said. In order to avoid only the client's old books

to him, Miles said he tries to books at estate sales but he does

the wholesale services that the stores use.

I Ingram, owner of Back 2615 Vine Street, said she pays cent of the cover price on stan­

size paperbacks in ash, and 30 cent of the cover price in trade. non-standard paperbacks 30 per of the cover price is paid in cash

per cent in trade. used book buying policy at Bookstore, 633 Main Street,

to employee Orville Smith, on the individual book tak­

into consideration the condition saleability. We do not buy tell.t

or book club editions, Smith

BARRETTES, NOS

AGE CLOTHING Hours: Mon.-Thurs. Noon - 6 p.m. Fri.-Sat. Noon - 10 p.m.

IDS s

albums are

the 2nd Ave. Big. · ijou Theaters are)

r prices?!? n"""''"'"' Shopping Vi:lage

-------------

Auditorium Every Mon. ng

Ritter in Karate

ite National Association

5485 or 481-0912

te lies not in victory ·fection of the ~ nts."

·-------------'

Tuesday, April 12, 1977 7

Pitchers sparkle for UC baseball team Bombs Away

By Bob Harbaum ·

By Annette Uhrick N R Sports Editor

In winning last year's Miami In­vitational Tournament, the UC baseball team relied heavily on its outstanding pitchin& This year, the team again received excellent perfor­man~es on the mound but managed to wm ,only one game in t.he tourney. However, over the weekend, it all

came together as the Bearcats copped a doubleheader from Xavier.

In last week's tournament, the Cats lost their first game, 2-1, to Wright State. According to UC coach Glenn Sample, "It was a beautiful ball game. We did everything but win it."

Bob O'Brien, a freshman, pitched well for the Bearcats in the loss. Although UC out-hit the Raiders, 8-

7, the latter prevailed. The Bearcats bounced back in the

second game of the tourney, defeating Xavier, 7-3, with Phil Thompson on the mound for the Cats. Sample was very satisfied with his team's performance in this game.

For UC, Brady Baldwin hit one long fly ball that caught the top of the fence and fell back onto the field, giv-

Tom Remick/thc NewsRecord Brady Baldwin, catcher for the Bearcats, boomed a triple in UC's second game at the Miami Invitational. The

blast from Baldwin's bat fell a few inches short of being a homerun.

ing him a triple. For the final game of the tourna­

ment, the Cats lost again to Wright State, this time by the score of 3-1. Despite the loss, Sample commented, "We had excellent pitching."

Miami won the tourney, as ex­pected, by pummeling Xavier and Wright State in the preliminaries and by overcoming Xavier again in the finals.

Since both Cincinnati and Xavier were eliminated from the Miami Tournament by Saturday, the two teams played a doubleheader that had been scheduled the week before but had been cancelled because of poor weather conditions.

In the first game, Tim Mersch and Rich Haas delivered fine throwing performances as the Cats defeated the Musketeers, 7-3. Haas, the reliever, pitched the last three innings and received credit for the win.

UC kept on the pressure in the se­cond game, winning again, 2-1.

Sample employed the services of two pitchers for the first time this season. John Gant, a freshman, went five innings and was replaced by Mark Roush. Sample was enthusiastic about the win, saying, "We pitched a super baseball game."

The Cats have now won four of their last six games, and as a team are batting .320. The pitching staff, as a whole, ha~ an earned run average of about two, according to Sample.

The Bearcats will be in action again this afternoon at 3:30, here at UC, when they host Wright State. The next home game will be a doubleheader against Ohio Universi­ty at I p.m. on Friday.

My day at Riverfront Stadium started like most days of importance start. Late. I got up late, got dressed late, and left to pick up my photographer who was also running late, late.

We windingly trekked through downtown Cincinnati, and I listened to my photographer, who like most photographers has a calm head and a keen eye, when he told me to turn here. Here was Newport.

By the time we reached the stadium and parked the car, we were a full twenty minutes late (that's as opposed to a partial twenty minutes late). As we rushed toward Gate.l3, I got out an apple and began chomping on it. I rebuffed the photographer for the querying look on his face by ex­plaining that it was my trademark.

When we got to the gate, I was giveri more than one handful of pamphlets and tickets and the like, trying to say thank you with my trademark clenched between my teeth, all the time shooting trademark juice all over my nice shirt. I swished the fruit through the first trashcan I saw.

We took the press elevator down below the stadium, and walked into an interview room, where Bill Brown, television sportscaster, along with a Dayton sportswriter whose name hopped out of my head and ran away, were answering questions.

We sat in the very back of the room and listened to the same questions about journalism and broadcasting be answered over and over again. After about twenty minutes of this rigamarole, my photographer bopped me on the shoulder artd, looking over his shoulder, announced, "There He is!"

In the split-second before I turned, I searched my recollection for some universal "He" that we had recently talked about. Finding none, I partially (not fully) expected to see that God himself had appeared against the back wall.

Instead I saw, peering in through a small window in the door, a pair of wire-rimmed glasses and a space in the middle of a mouthful of teeth. Then God walked in and he was bald. And I saw that the owner of the wire-rims and the spaced teeth and the bald head wasn't God at all. It was Joe Garagiola, who in my experience has shown to be a better con­versationalist than the other He anyway.

He walked in, along with Tony Kubek, and both of them stood quietly against the back wall. More and more people started to notice the two celebrities, so finally Bill Brown had no choice but to introduce them. After about three seconds of no response, Garagiola headed for the door, saying, "I guess they don't like us." This brought an immediate ovation.

Garagiola began to speak. He spoke about ethics in broadcast jour-nalism, and he had the audience spellbound. But he soon remembered that this was not his show, and turned it back to the guys up front, say­ing, "We don't want to upst11ge them." Brooks Lawrence of the Reds' ad- . ministrative staff, said, "When did you stop?"

Capsizing, being cold: 'Oh boy! Cainpin' out!' With the star of the show gone, Brown and that other (WHAT THE

HECK IS HIS NAME?!) guy were suddenly left very uneasy. They were saved when Woodie Fryman and George Foster came in.

Fryman was asked what he thought of retirement. "What do I think of retirement?" he answered, "I think it's very near." Foster was asked to comment on Reds' strict hair policy. He said that

By Marilynn Hlabse NR Sportswriter

There I was, standing in the middle of a river, in neck-deep rushing water, next to an overturned canoe which was wedged against a tree. I recall hearing someone yell "Grab the gear!" but at that moment I was more worried about my life.

I had never expected something like this, i.e. capsizing, to happen when I signed up for this spring break trip sponsored by the UC Moun­taineering Club.

But here we were Monday, the first day out on the Buffalo River and we flipped. You could hardly blame us, though ,since there had been a flood the week before and we had many log jams to climb through, under, over and around. We just didn't quite make it around this one . If this was the preview of coming attractions, I didn't want to stick around for the main event.

As it turned out, the first few days were the worst. The other canoe in our twosome capsized the next day. We also had trouble with holes in canoes (bubble gum does wonders) and frost at night. Oh boy! Campin' out! Nothing like walking up to a sleeping bag covered with ice and

clothes and shoes which had been wet the night before and now were frozen stiff. Of course, there was the other extreme in which someone's shoes got too warm; in fact, half of one was reduced to ashes. Oh boy! Campin' out!

break, and I owe it all to the Moun­taineering Club.

From Thursday on, the trip was smooth sailing (or canoeing if you prefer). We really got it together (paddling, that is): had great weather, no more capsizing, and no more log jams. It was a great way to spend a

This is a group of people that meets regularly and enjoys all types of out­door activities, especially canoeing, hiking, spelunking, and rockclim­bing. For all those interested, there will be an Open House meeting -featuring a slide show on the club's four main facets - on Wednesday, April 13, at 7:00 in Room 301-B, Swift Hall.

They are also offering a class in

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basic rockclimbing to be held on Aprill6 & 17. The class on the 16th wil! consist of a session on campus, while the 17th features a trip to Clif­ton Gorge to try out the newly ac­quired skills. The class is limited to 15 people, and there is a $10 registration · fee. For further information, contact Hal at 475-4966 or Bruce at 475-3763.

they had never come right out and told him to get his sideburns cut, but they had hinted at it several times.

• •

"They would say things like, 'Maybe your sideburns are weighing you down,"' he explained.

The reason there are no photos accompanying this story is that my photographer doesn't know how to develop pictures. But it really doesn't matter; he didn't get any shots of the man, anyway.

"I was marveling at the way he was chewing his gum," my photographer explained.

Don't laugh. It was pretty marvelous.

TAKE A CHANCE

ON ••• . A Free Puppy - Given Away inC

CHRISTIAN SERVICE WEEK Sponsored by: CATHOLIC VOCATION OFFICE

and NEWMAN CENTER

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Monday:

Tuesday:

Wednesday·

SCHEDULE OF ACTIVITIES UillJ MONDAY/TUESDAY/WEDNESDAY 10:00-4:00 p.m.

Representatives available from -Religious Communities, Volunteer Services

' MONDAY/TUESDAY/WEDNESDAY 9:00-II:OOp.m. Discussion followed with Liturgy

MEMORIAL "Love as a Celibate"

SIDDALL "Prayer & Decision re: Life Choice"

CALHOUN "Possibilities for Service in the Church"

DABNEY "Possibilities for Service in the Church"

SANDER "Love as a Celibate"

DANIELS "Prayer & Decision re: Life Choice"

INio:WMAN CENTER! MONDAY/TUESDAY/WEDNESDAY 9:00 -ll:OO p.m. "Coffeehouse" guitar - readings - poetry

I SQUARE DANCE! FRIDAY, APRIL 15, 8:00- midnight Georgian Hall "* • highlight: Raffle of free puppy

..

!sPECIAL FOLLOW-UP LITURGY & DISCUSSION!- TUESDAY, APRIL 26 8:30 p.m. - Newman Center

COUNSELING AVAILABLE at Newman Center: 4:00-5:30- Mon{Tues{Wed r-----------------------------------------------------1 CHRISTIAN SERVICE WEEK- chance on a free puppy I I NAME PHONE---------; I l ADDRESS ZIP --------4

I I Puppy will be given away at Square Dance on April 15. (need not be present to win)

I 1 FILL OUT & DROP IN BOX IN TUC LOBBY ON APRIL II, 12, 13. GOOD LUCK! I I --------------------------------------------------------

8 Tuesday, April12, 1977

\ ~Feeling strong now,

running har:d now'

Photos by Torn

L--~~~~~~~-~.;R~' ernick \ , r

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Tossed Salad with Lettuce, Carrots, Radishes, and Red Cabbage

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Beets, Potato Salad, Garbanzo Beans, 3 Bean Salad, Red Onions, Cucumbers, Celery, Black and Green Olives.

No.ted art author . : . . .

David C. Driskelt, a wide! recognized art historian, artist an authority on Afro-American art, wi give an illustrated talk on Thursda Aprill4, at 8 p.m. in the University ( Cincinnati's Zimmer Auditorium.

Driskell is Amistad Il's directc and catalog author. He serves on th Museum Advisory Panel of t National Endowment for the Art: NEA and the United Church Boar for Homeland Ministries (UCBH!v. are co-sponsoring the 20-state tour c Amistad lfduring 1975-77.

Feeling D_ownwind from the a

We flew · o~r kites I,n· .a sfl.b·wstorm· of pe

And ·cio.ud s:cent light

., '·

. . . . · .

Bromhet .. . ,. ' .... '• . . . . . " " - . ,• . . .

· . -. : . ~Y. Glenn ~fit~et: .. . · · ·. NS . Enieriilinment ·EdiJor· Da":id-. Br_ombci:g, a tr~ditionil

moder!t .Ameritan· s_cmgster .of g0( time · and ·. consequence; broug applauding; dancing au(liences t_heii 'fe~ j~. two· s.hows Saturday Bogatts :Cafe. . · ·. · . ·; · · · · 8r~qib~rg,_· :wlio: phiys. f.ou~~r.ac bllies, co.untry, and.i:o.ck.'n roll, · s·al tile. gani'tii' .Of tliese ·~tyles: in-.a'unrq voi'ce · ·blending. ·the iniluenet · · bylan~f and Jerty)eff Walker, ·Wi who'm· he has worked. · · · ED .·

Bromberg's unp,retetttio~s. ; sta . prll~n:c'C was "ref!ecJed by hi'S crack'a Jack sidemen, who· ta:pp Bromberg's slio1,1lder occasrona for impromptu . solos, and nlis eyebrows and grins when fellow ba members' solos would hot up.

Most ·songs were short and· tot point, solos were 'Well planned a not self-indulgen:t. Between tunes t audience· would shout demands: ~ "Sharon . Play Shaaaronri Bromberg drawled somewhat conically, "Y'all gonna have to ta your time; cause I ain't in any hu to do nothin'. No use to shout th~ song titles, 'cause I'm gonna do wha want anyway." ·

What Bromberg wanted was wt the audience wanted anyway.

The traditional "Tennessee Wal

Announcements Find out where your candidate is at q didates running for office of Presid~

· and Vice President will be speaking at lobby Qt Dabney Hall, Wednesday April 7 p.m: ALL WELCOME. See ad · this issue on Ch~istian Sert W.eek! .. : . · . '· . · .. 8(ing' your IOrich watch ROAD RtJNf'! and buy a beer April 15. Sponsored CENTER BOARD "

Clf\:CINNATUS:· Spring Quarter se ;tions. -!3et yourself ready and PETITi FREE .CARTOONS. Beer '25¢, Great

. rue. 11 ~2 .p .. ni .; April ·15. Sponsored CENTER BOARD. · SUNDAY NEW YORK TIMES - delivE on Sunday .. 861-9191 Typing .::... 60e per page 861-91~1 PICK UP STUDENT ORIENTATION L DER APPLICATION NOW in 105 Bee< or TUC Information Desk. SENIORS!!! 'PetitiO!'!$ fOf comm~ncen oratorl\vartable'at'TUC rntormation D Must be submitted by April 22nd TYPING IN MY HOME - IBM Reasonable - Westwood - 662-836 If Carter can run the countr;', He can the Campus. Vote Ap'ril 19 & 20. EUROPE '77 - STUDENT /TEAC CHARTER FLIGHTS. GLOBAL TRA 521 FIFTH AVE., NYC 10017 To a Good Home - 7 month old cl kitten, had all shots. free. Student discounts now available. on c~ rentals. Contact the Outdoor Recre~ Center lor further information. 475-5

Interested in the following one credit courses? "Roots" . taught by Mel Pd "Crimes and EmotiOns" taught by Jose cay a. "Modernization in the Third W with Wasil Abboushi. "Sex Roles' Valerie Kaiser and William Todd. "Un sity Administration: UC as an exam( taught by Dick Friedman and feat rl Administrators Bennis, Klyn, Ha\Nldn Hattendorf a&guestspeakers:COUJse sponsored bY Residential Learning offeree! in the restdence hallS. REGI TODAY. 4:30p.m .. Sander 1 Cafete

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No-ted· art ·auth9nty·:

. · DriSkell tO lecture on. ·· .. Afro-American Art

David C. Driskell, a widely recognized art historian, artist and authority on Afro-American art, will give an illustrated talk on Thursday, Aprill4, at 8 p.m. in the University of Cincinnati's Zimmer Auditorium.

Driskell is Amistad Il's director and catalog author. He serves on the Museum Advisory Panel of the National Endowment for the Arts. NEA and the United Church Board for Homeland Ministries (UCBHM) are co-sponsoring the 20-state tour of Arnistaij Il'during 1975-77.

.Feeling

They are among 500 educational institutions that were fortned in the South, after 1846, under the auspices of the American Missionary Associa­tion - now part of the UCBHM -primarily to serve the nation's newly freed slaves.

Driskell's topic: "The Amistad Saga, A New Perspective in American Culture."

This free public lecture will of­ficially inaugu-rate a five-week UC display of "Amistad II," a traveling

now D_ownwind from the apple trees

We flew · o~r kites

In· _a-s~o·w~tor~- of · petals

And cloud scent light

By G. Miller

exhibit of Afro-American art dating from 1790 to 1975, to be shown in UC's Tangeman Center Art Gallery, Aprilll- May 13.

Subtitled "A Bicentennial celebra­tion for all, inspired by the struggle of a few," the exhibit includes nearly I 00 original paintings, collage, sculp­ture, prints and drawings by U.S. black, artists - along with facsimile documents and information panels from the black experience in America.

The exhibit's title, "Amistad II," sterns from a related key event in American history.

In 1839, Africans kidnapped from their homeland were herded aboard "La Amistad" (Friendship), a Spanish slave ship anchored off Cuba. Led by Cinque, son of an African chieftain, the "cargo" mutinied and tried to s_ail back to Africa, but they were tricked by the Spanish crew and captured by U.S. officials. ·

The case of Cinque and his group, jailed and tried in Connecticut for privacy and murder, finally reached the U.S. Supreme Court where

Tuesday, April 12, 1977 9

David Driskell will lecture on "The Amistad Saga, A New Perspective in American Culture." This free public lec­ture will officially inaugurate a five-week UC display of Afro-American art dating from 1790 to 1975, to be shown in UC's Tangeman Center Art Gallery, April 11-May 13.

former U.S. President John Quincy Adams successfully defended them. In 1842 Cinque's plea, "Give us free, give us free," was granted.

Amistad ll's "cargo" - reflecting the Afro-American heritage and 185

years of U.S. history - may be view­ed by the public, free of charge, star­ting April 1 I. Gallery hours fo r the exhibit are 10 a .m.- 6 p.m., Monday through Friday, and I - 6 p.m. Sun­day.

On Thursday, April 14, the day of Driskell's talk, the viewing hours will be expanded from 10 a.m. to 10 p.m. For an in depth appreciation of the lecture, everyone is urged to see the exhibit beforehand if possible.

Brornb~rg: singing· goOdtiJlles and consequence ·: .· ,• .. : . . . . . . . . . . .· . . . . . , . . . . . .· . . .

Program Board plans

· . · ·. ::. ·_ 'BY. GJe~~ ~iller: . _. sounded· fresh· and high in feeling; . · ·. NB Enier(ilinment ·'FiiiJor- afterwards Brornbcri warmly Da~id- ·Bromberg, -- a tr~ditional- reprimanded the audience for nottip­

moder~ _Aineritan· s_ongster of good ping the waitresses. tim~ - and ·. consequence; brought · applau~ing; danc~g . autliences to · · .. T~e- ·band . al~o . _teamed up on _ theii 'fc~ i~- Jwo· s_hows Saturday a( .v!ol~~ and ~al'l~~hn~ ~or .sotne_.fine Bogatts :Cafe.- · · . . ·:. · __ . : Ptd5mg of I~sh' Jtg !llelodtes wtth a _ - · J;J"roqiberg,' :who . play~ tou~~r.<><;k·,- .. ~luegt~s.~ flav<.>r: . ·. ~ .- . . : . :. -· .· · blue~· cq~ntry, ap'd.to.c.k:n r'(!ll,' s·ang · ... . -. S~m~t~me~ B~qmbetg _s. lyqcs _e~--- . the. gam'ui' of tliese styles in~· unfque . . pr~Sed tha~ trontc and huntorou~ un- . voice·' ·blending the influenet of .·. detstatement of the -blues. . ·

· by land and Jerry Jeff Walker, -with · Accompanying himself with an · -who·ltl· he has worked. · abalone-inlaid Martin acoustic,

ED. ·· . . Bromberg played a solo blues suite of Bromberg's unP:retetttiou·s ·. stage .··. "Turn Your L;lmp Down Low",

. ~re~_~ce was refl~c~ed by his'c~ack'er-: _ "Stlltesbo,r~ Blu7s" and "Going Up jack sidemen, ·who tapped Country, m wh1ch he sang: Bromberg's slio'\llder occasronally "Done more for you than God in for impromptu solos, and raised · heaven ever done. . . .

. eyebrows and grins when fellow band · · and "She had the mind to ask me if members' solos would hot up. a· m_atchbox would fit my clothes.

Most songs were short and to the' I think she _wan!e'! m_e to go." point, solos were well planned and An old jug band rhythm opened a not self-indulgent. Between tuaes the Btomberg talker: "You can leave an audience would shout demands: for old ·deck of cards to be my "Sharon. Play Shaaaronn!" tombstone." Bromberg drawled somewhat Ia- The set vaned between tunky conicalty, "Y'all gonna have to take shuffles, jug band, New Orleans, your time; cause I ain't in any hurry rock'n'roll, country two-beats and to do nothin'. No use to shout those doUble time country tunes barreling song titles, 'cause I'm gonna do What I like freight trains. want anyway." . But the real change was in seeing a

What Bromberg wanted was what group both have and give a good the audience wanted anyway. · time, just playing good music and

The traditional"Tennessee Waltz" playing it well.

Announcements Announcements Find out where your candidate is at. can- Party Friday, April 15 at TUC Gameroom. didl\tes running for office of President, Noon to 4. Reduced rates on games. 15¢

· and ViCe President will be speaking at the Beer. lobbyi;>fDabneyHaii,WednesdayApril13, Is CARTER RANDOLF RELATED? Vote 1 p,m: ALL WELCOME_. April19 & 20.

See ad - this issue on Ch~istian Service EUROPE - fle!libly and inexpensively. W,eek! .. : .. . . . . _ . . Gall Eutopean Flights toll-free 1-800-282-B(ing. your IOrich watch RbAD RUNNER 0724 . .and buy a beer April 15. Sponsored by Judy Gregg Dance Co. instruction, CENTER BOARD · modern dance/classical ballet. All levels. Clf'.:CINNATUS:· Spring Quarter selec~ YWCA, 9th & Walnut, 241-8346 or 381-:tioos. ·~at yourself ready and PETITION! 3008 FREE .CARTOONS. Beer .25¢, Great Hall Attention Everyone: Last call for Student

· TUC, ·1 h;! .p.-m.; April .15_ Sponsored by Advisors. Pick up petitions at the Info Desk

CENTER BOARD. . . or 105 Beecher. There is also a Mandatory Meeting April 19, at 1 p.m. in 127 Me­

SUNDAY NEW YORK TIMES- delivered Micken. Election of officers and a general on Sunday.'861·9191 m.eeting will take place.

Typing .::.. 60¢ per page 861-91,91 /Mandatory Meeting for Stlldent Advisors PICK LiP STUDENT ORIENTATION LEA- wiil take place on Aprll19 in 121 McMicken DER APPLICATION NOW in 105 Beecher at 1 p.m. Officers willl)eel&¢t&d. So hurry or TUC Information Desk. up and pick up petitions at the Info. Desk

or 105 Beecher. SENIORS !II 'Petitiol'l' for comm_encement · ~.:.;;.;.'-::"--'-='~~---:--:------ora·tor ~varlal:lle' at TUC rntormatlon Desk. F'REE.TUITION for 1 or 2 years at any one Must be submitted by April 22nd .. of 140 Universities, Technical Schools and

Yeshivas in Israel. Fully accredited TYPING IN MY HOME - IBM -Reasonable - Westwood - 662-8362 programs If carter can run the country, He can run FREE TUITION for 1 or 2 years at any one the Campus. Vote April 19 & 20. of 140 Universities, Technical Schools and

Yeshivas in Israel. Fully accredited EUROPE '77 - STUDENT/TEACHER programs for Junior Year and Graduate CHARTER FLIGHTS. GLOBAL TRAVEL, study. Enrollment- minimum two years 521 FIFTH AVE., NYC 10017 in advance, benefits from 1979-1989. To a Good Home - 7 month old calico Please contact: The Gift of Education kitten. had all shots, free. Department Cl Suite 710, 10 Rockefeller Student discounts now available on canoe Plaza, New York, New York 10020. 212-rentais. Contact the Outdoor Recreation 541-7568 Center for further information. 475-5809 D ne free CLOCKWORK ORANGE

POSTER AT Movie Madness. 2820 Vine lntereste(:l in the following one credit hour St., to the first person who can correctly courses? "Roots·· taught by Mel Posey. identify the names of both A-bombs in Dr. "Crimes and Emotions" taught by Jose Ar- STRANGELOVE. caya. "Modernization in the Third World" Greek Gods eat aml;lrosla. Try some at with Wasif Abboushi. "Sex Roles" by DIONYSUS- 121 Calhoun Valerie Kaiser and William Todd. "Univer­sity Administration: UC as an exampl.e", taught by Dick Friedman and featunng AdminiStrators !:lennis; Klyn. Hawldns.and Hattendorf aa g ueat speakers. COllfseure sponsored l;ly Residential Learning and offered in the residence hall$. REGISTER TODAY, 4:30p.m .• Sander 1 Cafeteria.

Miscellaneous TYPING SERVICE. School papers a specialty. Guaranteed, reasonable. (Clip and save). 531·4089

..

Mark Hanslip/the NewsRecord

By Valerie Geyer N R staff writer

UC students should expect to hear · more about Program Board activities in the future, according to Bill Fee, advisor to the board and Coor• dinator of Cultural Activities.

"Students have always been aware of activities sponsored by Program Board member groups such as the Film Society and the Concert Com­mittee, but I don't think people realize the importance of the board itself as the financial budgeting body .

"More students should become ac­tively , involved in determining the · distribution of funds so they can know how their money is being spent," Fee suggested.

Fee also proposed the develop­ment of a volunteer corps of students to supply the manpower needed for cultural functions.

Dave Bromberg sings at Bogart's: "He say he won't take no more/But he won't take no Jess/ Just give me a little bourbon ... "

"These people would be asked to work backstage or usher for stage productions, help in clean-up operations, and just lend their assistance wherever needed."

Fee said these changes should be effective fall quarter of next year.

OASSIFIEDS Miscellaneous

Mandatory·Meeting for Studeht Advisors will take place on April19 in 127 McMicken at 1 p.m. Officers will be elected. So hurry up and pick up petitions at the Info. Desk or 105 Beecher.

Found: puppy ·saturday nite on Jefferson. Call 54_1-2273.

"Europe at European Prices" Low cost flights to Europe, Mid East, Africa, and the Far East. Call Europe/International Ltd. Toll Free. 1-800-223-7676-

LOST - two CHICKEN LEGS last seen galloping past TUG ... the wrong way. Reward - two necks and one thigh

SENIORS!!! Petitions for Commencement Orator Available at TUC lnformatiol'l Desk, Must Be Submitted By April 22.

Low cost printing, collating, and binding of Theses, Dissertations, Publishable papers & booklets. Your choice of ink and paper colors. 10 copies per page mini­mum. MASTER COPY SERVICE, 3325 Harrison Ave. Phone 661~1818

CINCINNATUS POINTS available. Help guide the World of Affairs Pay Tour on April 29. Call 3427

HONDA ACCORD and CAR SPECIALIST SEE "Mack" (Randy McMahan) at Super­ior Chev. Honda 541-3300. Two minutes from School.

"EUROPE/WORLDWIDE academic dis­counts year round, S.A.T.A. 4228 First, Tucker, Ga. 30084 (800) 241-9082

Attention Everyone: Last call for Student Advisors. Pick up petitions at the Info Desk or 105 Beecher. There is also a Mandatory Meeting April 19 at 1 p.m. in 127 Mc­Micken. Election of officers and a general meeting will take place.

"Grass seed for sale. Happily grow your own potted pet grass. $5.00 oz. P.O. Box 2722; Carbondale. Illinois 62901

Need a Baroque Sound for your wedding, party or reception? Call Serenade-flute, oboe, bassoon. 221-4765, 961-4307, 381-1167

Wanted --- - - ------- -OVERSEAS JOBS-summer/yearround. Europe, S. America, Australia, Asia, etc. All fields, $500-$1200 monthly. Expenses paid, sightseeing. Free information -Write: International Job Center, Dept. CO Box 4490 Berkeley, CA 94704

POETRY WANTED for Anthology. lnclude stamped envelope. Contemporary Literature Press, Box 26462, San Fran­cisco. California 94941

Tutors wanted at St. George/Newman Center! if you are free on Wed. or Thurs. evenings from 7-9 & can tutor this quarter, contact Sr. Ruth at 751-6400. Begins April 20 & 21.

Bright. attractive. experienced people needed to work in exciting concert club at­mosphere. Must be 21. Needed: Bartenders, cocktail waitresses, food waitresses. door persons, cooks, and kitchen ,help. Call 281-8401 after 5 p.m. or fill in an application at 2621 Vine St., Un­iversity Village.

Wanted: Softball players, Thursday nights Start May· Call· 661-1828

~ OWanted 0 Miscellaneous 0 Announcements 0 For Sale 0 For Rent

RATES .10 a word .50 minimum

CHECK ENCLOSED $ .....

Mail to: NewsRecord 230 Union Bl~l University of ncinnati Gndnnati, Ohio

~ 45ZZ1

For Sale 1971 Volkswagen Superbug; Sunroof, Radio . Good condition. 931-3579 after 4 p.m.

For Sale ELECTRIC GUITAR. National Less Paul with hard shell case. 125 watt amp. $200. 475-4267

AKAI Cassette deck, Model 325, three 1972 Honda SL 350, Runs good, New heads. doiby Cost $475. Sell $250 321- Battery, Helmet and Shop Manual includ-3947 ed. $650. 242-6394 FLUTE: Armstrong, excellent cond ition . $100 or exchange with Acoustic Guitar. 421-0812 Young. "SONY" Pocket Cassette-recorder, BF-40. Only $80. 241-4191 DEHUMIDIFIER - Like New, jnexpen­sive. 421-37 43

ATTENTION MUSIC MAJORS. ATTEN­TION MUSIC MAJORS. For Sale, Antique ~-volume set of musical encyclopedias Titles: Cyclopedia of Music and Musicians, edited by John Denison Champlin Jr., Critical Editor, William F. Apthorp. This set, published by Scribners in 1888 is number 468 in a limited edition of 550. They are an excellent source of reference and are in excellent condition. The set totals approximately 2000 pages and contains about 1000 illustrations. Further details can be obtained by calling 421-3296 Weeknights after 10 p m

--~------~----------------1973 Duster, 225, 3 spd. floor shift, A-1, Greg, 831-8495

For Rent BROOKWOOD APARTMENTS, 1st class efficiency apartments, 7-minute drive to U.C. Excellent neighborhood. Pool and laundry. $125. Furnished Efficiency $140. 2227 Westwood Northern Blvd. 661-5736

Three room, furnished apartment, walking distance. Available, 28 March 1977. $175, 2227 Westwood Northern Blvd. 661-5736 or 661-6493

Furnished Room. share rest of apartment with family. Included in rent is telephone, washer. dryer, bathroom and kitchen privileges. Private entrance, two blocks from UC. NON SMOKERS ONLY! Available April 17 579-1321 after 5

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' ..

10 Tuesday, April12, 1977

Arts Calendar Today

Concert - The LaSalle Quartet, ensemble-in-residence at CCM. Corbett Auditorium. 8:30 p.m. Free for students with ID, $1.50 for faculty, $3 general admission. Available at the TUC ticket office or at the door.

Lecture - DAA's Lectures on Architecture Series hosts David Handlin, University Lecturer in Architecture, Cambridge Un­iversity. England. 662 Wolfson, 8 p.m.

Concert / Discussion - UC Folk Arts Society presents Greg J owaisas, banjo player and singer. Faculty Lounge, TUC. 7 p.m.

TV - PBS Movie Theater," Miracle in Milan," by Vittorio de Sica. WCET-TV, channel48 . 9:30p.m.

Tomorrow Concert - CCM Woodwind

Ensemble, Corbett Auditorium, 8:30p.m.

Thursday There will be a film showing

and a talk with James Broughton, a San Franciscan avante-garde artist , Thursday at 8 p.m .. at 662 Wolfson. The films to be shown are: "Erogeny."

"Wind owmobile and Together" and "Testament."

Friday Film - UC Film Arts Society

screens "Swept Away'' by Lina Wertmuller with Giancarlo Giannini and Mariangela Melata . 7 and 9:30 p.m. "The Betty Boop Scandals," A Max Fleischer Studio Retrospective, 1928-34. Midnight. Great Hall. $1 per film, tickets available in the TU C ticket office.

Concert Cincinnati Symphony Orchestra with guest conductor Eduardo Mata will perform pieces by Mahler and Falla. Music Hall. 11 a.m . Call 381-2660 or 621-1919 for ticket information.

Saturday Concert - CCM show­

chorus, the University Singers. Corbett Auditorium. 7 and 9:30 p.m. Tickets available from Community Ticket office (241-1038) or TUC ticket office (475-4553).

Con cert Cincinnati Symphony Orchestra with guest conductor Eduardo Mata will perform pieces by Mahler and Falla. Music Hall. 11 a.m . Call 381-2660 or 621-1919 for ticket information.

DATE:

All Week Crafts - The Craft Guild of

Greater Cincinnati presents the lOth Annual Craft Show. Arts Consortium, 1515 Linn St. April 2 through April 29, 1-6 p.m., Monday through Thursday, 10 a .m. - 4 p.m. Friday and Satur­day.

Arts - Wood sculptures by Bob Longhurst and acrylic pain­tings by Less Barker. Lobby of the Environmental Protection Agency Research Center. 26 W.

. St. Clair St. April4 to April15. 8 a .m. - 4:40 p.m.

Theatre - The University of Cincinnati Showboat Majestic presents Arthur Miller's "A View from the Bridge." April 7 to April 23. Thursday and Friday, 8:30 p.m. Saturday, 7 and 10 p.m. $3 .25 - Thursday, $3.75 -Friday and Saturday.

Art - "Amistad II," Afro­American exhibit of originals from U.S. black artists, 1790-1975. TUC Art Gallery. April II -May 13. 10 a.m. - 6 p.m. Mon­day through Friday, 1-6 p.m. Sunday.

Theater - "Heartbreak House," George Bernard Shaw. Cincinnati Playhouse, 962 Ada ms Circle. Through April24. For ticket information and showtimes call 421-3888.

MON._, TUES., THURS.

Grad Art blooms this spring By Hudson

N R staff '"riter The 1976-77 year at UC has been

one of neglect for the visual arts . Without a gallery space to exhibit student, faculty and invitational shows, one seriously begins to wonder what goes on within the DAA College.

Contracted by the Fine Arts Department as part of the Master of Fine Arts Program, is an exhibition of work by each of the M.F.A. Can­didates. These shows, traditionally held on campus, are not only impor­tant to the artists, but they also serve to give the entire University and Cin­cinnati public a look-see at what is happening in the art world of people in the Fine Arts.

- -=-- -

Exhibits also serve an important social function for artists. Usually working alone, opening receptions are times for merriment, serious dis­cussions, viewing and learning.

The lack of on-campus gallery space has caused this year's fifteen M.F.A. Thesis Exhibits to be scattered among a variety of spaces: Carl Solway Gallery, 314 W. 4th St., Cincinnati, Carnegie Arts Center, 1028 Scott St., Covington, Ky, and in the sometime Tangeman University Center Gallery, fourth floor TUC. An opening reception to which the public is invit~d , will occur on each Friday evening, 7-9, beginning April 15 thru till June 3, at the Solway

--

TIME: 11-3

Gallery. In addition, on the Friday of May 6, 7-10 pm, th·ere will be an opening reception at the Carnegie Arts Center and on the Fridays of May 13 and 20, a reception will be held at the TUC Gallery for the ex­hibits held there.

Perhaps one of the most in­teresting aspects of the thesis exhibits is that while appreciating the in­herent value of the art, one can gain an understanding of the artist's thought process. Experiencing all fif­teen exhibits creates a wonderment at the diversity of individuality which exists in this program. All art deals with primarily the same "problems", but the individual's expression of the perception and solving of the problem is its life .

Three exhibits will occur during the month of April , all in the Carl Solway Gallery , open 10-5:30 Tuesday-Saturday.

In the paintings and drawings of Laurel Robinson, April 12-16, one becomes aware of rapidly traveling through a world , through stratified space . There are layers below the ground, surface with hints of vegeta­tion and monuments, and air full of activity. The vigorously applied im­ages, marks and symbols fly, lie still, hover; the space becomes am­biguous, jumbled, and there is a sense of the impending future and a mystery or question of darkness .

Gary Gaff ney's meticulously

rendered drawings, April19-23, have a quiet stillness about them. Their systems become musical rhythms soothing the viewer with faint sound which demands attention with the visual. Several works, utilizing sky and a "grid" of rope, play games with the eye and mind - now I hold you - now I don't . They have a quality of being more than they first appear.

The exaltation of the everyday situation comes when one begins to investigate and appreciate the mul­tiplicities which are constantly oc­curing in every instance or glance. The light, color, arrangement of space, objects, figures, the psy­chology , every thing enhances everything else and speaks. It is in this realm that Russell H. Everett paints. His work, exhibited April26-30, fervently captures the exigency of the moment and gives the fleeting im­age its rightly owned strength .

These first three exhibits present a diversity which is found in all the ex­hibits to follow. Allowing the in­dividual artists their individuality is some difficult thing nurtured by trust, love and skillful teaching on the part of the Graduate Fine Arts Department, headed by Robert Knipschild . It is in allowing this in­dividuality to flow that this art, ar­tists and department gains its strength. Without it, there's really no place to go, and one should always be going someplace - even while stan­ding still.

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LOCATION: BRIDGE