CETA slashes funding for UC p.rograms

Transcription

CETA slashes funding for UC p.rograms
Friday. February 2, 1979
UNIVERSITY OF CINCINNATl
Vol. LXIV No. 23
Scramble for money begins
CETA slashes funding for UC p.r ograms
By Lisa Steinker
NR Staff
Anticipation and the stench of
cigarette smoke filled room 211 at the
Cincinnati Convention Center at 10
a.m. Wednesday.
About 100 social service agency
directors and others sat patiently
waiting for Cincinnati Comprehensive Employment Training Act
(CETA) officials to start
proceedings. Representing over
2,000 Public Service Employees
(PSE) funded by CET A, the agency
heads heard disheartening, though
not altogether unexpected, news.
"There are 2,184 PSE's in the city
system," said Joe Person, director of
the Ohio Bureau of Employment
Services. "By midnight September
30, there'd better not be one (on the
payroll)."
UC was not left unscathed by
CET A funding cuts. Thirteen groups
will lose · 59 of their 69 PSE's
in March, while the rest will be gone
by Sept. 30.
On Oct. I, 1978, all CET A
programs in Cincinnati were cut $3
million from their budget. One ofthe
many reasons for this move was that
Congress wanted to re-direct CET A
funds to their original purpose of
hiring and training the "hard-core"
unemployed rather than employing
skilled persons who were unemployed because of U.S. economic
woes.
AS A result, "employment and
service levels must be reduced to
correspond with the construction of
those funds," Don Stovall, assistant
operations director for CETA, said
Wednesday.
"We put ·to priorities to affect
people. not programs. We're not in a
position to say what agencies are
more important," Stovall said.
Nevertheless, 750 of the 2,184
PSE's will be officially dismissed on
March 3, based on the system of last
hired, first fired. All PSE's in
Cincinnati should be gone Sept. 30,
Person said.
Stovall said at the end of February, the next list of dismissed
employes will be disclosed. He said
he would not disclose the subsequent
firing dates "because it does not
affect them now.
March layoffs will
spare no tutors
By Joe A wad
NR Staff
It came as no surprise to UC
officials, but the federal funds
sustaining the Tutorial Program were
completely withdrawn Wednesday.
leaving the service in danger of"total
anihilation."
The word from Comprehensive
Employment Training Act (CET A)
officials was that UC must dismiss all
27 tutors by March 3 I.
The announcement came nearly
two months after President Carter
approved a congressional bill
requiring CET A funding to be
drastically reduced nationwide.
NOW, according to CET A officials, UC must come up with
alternative ways of funding the
Tutorial Program if total collapse is to
be averted.
The Tutorial Program will lose
$29,499 in CET A money from
March through June said Mike
Enderly, director of student activities
and programming. Enderly said
CET A money for the program would
have amounted to $76,482 for the
academic year if the $29,499 would
have been added to $46,982 which
CET A already granted the tutorial
program last September to use to the
end of February.
The CET A money is used exclusively for the tutor's salaries. ·
"Our budget is as strapped as any
other area in the university," Enderly
said when asked if student affalfS
could produce money to maintain
the tutorial program.
Enderly said it was not likely that
the money for a long-term program
wouid come out of student affairs.
He said that if the money is
available it would have to "be pulled
from other areas."
JANET Greenwood, vice provost
for student affairs said the
for
student affairs is flexible enough to
operate the program on a daily basis.
"The hard money (for a long range
program) is hard to get particularly
in the middle of the year," Greenwood said.
But despite the cut, the Tutorial
Program is eligible to apply for CET A
money for next year, Enderly said
"We may be able to still benefit," he
said.
Although the Tutorial Program has
been seeking funds outside the
university since the beginning of the
school year, Enderly said no outside
money has been obtained. The
possibility that money can be
obtained through the UC Foundation (a primary fund raising group at
UC) is good, he said.
John Roberts, assistant director of
the tutorial program, said the
Tutorial Program had 839 requests
for aid during the fall quarter, far
more than any previous quarter. He
said 55 students were turned away
because of the program's "restrictions."
If the Tutorial Program is to
survive the money must come "from
another level of the university,"
Roberts said. "We're not talking
about just a couple thousand
dollars," he said.
ENDERLY said the Tutorial
Program has requested $30.500 from
student affairs to keep the program
running.
When asked if the Tutorial
Program would be given priority
consideration over other UC services
that have had their CET A funds
discontinued, Roberts said the other
programs would still have nonCET A monies to operate with, but
that the Tutorial Program is facing
"total anihilation" unless other
raised.
Rehabilitation Center
I
Student Affairs
I
27
Tutorial Program
University College
I
2
Radio Station WGUC
To supplement the CETA monies,
UC has already given the three
programs "$50-60,000 which is a very
rough estimate," sa1d Janet Greenwood, vice provost for student
affairs.
t
/','!rt;'
if",.,~;(!«
i,,
','/· .· .· .. ·.,. 1
GREENWOOD
He said about 100 PSE's a month
will be terminated through the end of
September.
A SMALL ray of hope came
through the public address system
when Stovall said "there may be an
extension period that would come
into effect before September 30 from
the Department of Labor, but
whether or not this will occur, I don't
know.
A few sarcastic laughs came from
the crdwd. "If I wasn't laughing, I'd
be crying," one man moaned.
UC's Tutorial Program, Handicapped Service and Cincinnati
Experience will lose a total of
$63,792 in cuts which were to be used
for the rest of the school year, said
Mike Enderly, director of student
ENDERLY
activities and programming in the
aftermath! of Wednesday's deci.sion.
He said, "$200,000 is what the CET A
contracts would have been worth on
a yearly basis."
According to Cyril Ratzkin, a Cincinnati CET A Public Relations official, the UC groups to be cut and the
number of employees that will be released from each group in March are:
Cincinnati Experience
5
Dept. of Art & Education
I
Dept. of Contract &
2
Compliance
2
Div. of Community Educ.
4
Dept. of Fine Arts
I
Inst. of Gov'tal Research
Medical Center- Gen'l Hosp.
II
Dept of Social Service
I
Metropolitan Services
If any funding is to be found
internally; "we have to reprioritize the
budget," said Greenwood. Part of
this decision would be taken up by
the General Fee Allocation Hoard,
she said.
She said she will present to the
Council of Deans a recommendation
that the tutoring service be brought
Handicapped program
suffers 'severe' blow
By Pat Maio
NR Staff
Two temporary transitional
positions designed to help manage
UC's Handicapped Services Program and the Rehabilitation Center
by the Comprehensive Employment
Training Act (CETA) will be phased
out as a result of CET A funds being
withdrawn from the city's Public
Service Employment (PSE) program.
The CET A cutbacks were announced Wednesday and will
terminate 69 persons employed at the
University by the end of September.
The Handicapped Services'
$I I ,760 from CETA will be but to
$3,878 on March 3. This money pays
the salary of a staff coun.selor. Her
position will be eliminated.
DOROTHY Hardy, program
director of Handicapped Student
Services, said the CET A cutback
would severely hurt the program.
The CET A staff woman helps
counsel about 30 handicapped
students that use the service.
Janet Greenwood, vice provost for
VOGELER
Student Affairs, said there are three
anywhere else on campus," Vogeler staff persons that help administer
Handicapped Services: Hardy, Mary
said.
He said Cincinnati Experience Ann Lederer, staff personnel in the
would try to obtain funds from other program, and Mary Campbell,
sources and that he would be making director of international services.
Greenwood said termination
a formal proposal to the UC student
affairs personnel for an increase in of Lederer would affect the
the $I 6,828 provided annually by handicapped program adversely.
Scott Myers, assistant professor of
uc.
MONEY IS being sought internal- rehabilitation counseling, said of 36
ly said Janet Greenwood, vice persons contracted through CET A
provost for student affairs, but she funding, only one staff counselor at
could not say on what basis any the Rehabilitation Center would lose
money if found would be allocated. her job March 3.
The Rehabilitation Center,
Her office would look to the
General Fund Committee, the UC located on Vine St., is a part of UC's
continued on pg. 2 College of Community Services.
Cincinnati Experience
must reduce staff
By Joe Perry
NR Staff
Most Cincinnati Experience
programs now must operate in a
"reduced fashion," according to
Mark Vogeler, program director,
because five federally-funded staff
positions must be phased out by
March 31, it was announced
Wednesday.
Total cuts for Cincinnati Experience from Comprehensive Employment Training Act (CETA) officials
amount to $30,415.
The money represents 27 percent
of the total funds CET A had
allocated to The Cincinnati Experience for this school year, and 18.5
percent of their total budget of
$161,000.
WHETHER the funding for the
remaining five CET A supported
positions - representing about
another $40,000- will be withdrawn
will not be known until late March,
said Mike Enderly, director of
student activities and programming.
"I think it's about time Congress
quits playing games with people's
lives," said Vogeler of the announced cutback. He is now analyzing a
budget which includes the loss of 10
of the 22 Cincinnati Experience staff
members.
The cutback really affects the
students "in the area of delivering
various academic, career, and
growth services that they cannot get
Virginia
~rnot/the N~wsRec?rd
Thirty handmade quilts hang suspended in UC's central library. Fred Calland,a producer for National Pub he Rad1o,
blended bursts of color with American tradition when he created the quilts. He's been making them for 40 years.
Handicapped and disadvantaged
persons receive counseling for
adjustment into society there.
THE 36 persons contracted with
CET A by the UC Rehabilitation
counseling program are mostly
handicapped persons paid collectively more than $150,000 annually, said
Myers.
·
Myers said the -36 employes
receiving the CET A funds are part of
a three-area project in the program.
The 36 CETA persons are placed in
vocational training centers as "hard
core" handicapped youth with minor
disabilities seeking employment by
learning job skills at the Rehabilitation Center, the Kursban Center, or
on-campus services monitored by the
Kursban Center, Myers said.
These 36 persons have physical or
social disabilities, Myers said.
Myers said there is a 25 per cent
success rate in placing these persons
in employment situations and a 13
percent success rate of enrolling them
in college. The remaining persons,
said Myers, are those still in the
process of developing job skills.
The Kursban program has a
contract with CET A officials where
it teaches job training skills to "move
the handicapped out into the public
sector," said Myers. The Kursban
Center, located on Reading Rd., uses
the Rehabilitation Center as a place
for teachingjob training situations to
handicapped persons.
The Kursban persons are paid, she
said, by CET A between $6-$9,200
and will not be affected by the CET A
cutbacks.
The Kursban project, Myers said,
provides persons a place as a public
service employe under CETA
guidelines. The contract between the
Kursban Center and CET A calls for
continued on pg. l
Woinen's athletics seeks Inoney
to achieve Division 1 status
regarding the number of sports, size
of facilities and attendance in order
NR Staff
Women's athletics officials have to qualify for Division I status, as the
decided to compete in a new Division NCAA football regulations require.
UC women must be able to comI category in all sports, according to
Jean Tuerck, assistant director of pete with nationally rated teams in
athletics. The final decision to com- order to keep pace with powerful
pete in Division I must be submitted Division 1 teams. "We'll have to into the American Intercollegiate crease the budget plan just to keep
Association for women (AlA W) by up," said Charlene O'Donnell, assistant director of Athletics.
March I.
Transportation to games across
"As soon as we decide we're
satisfied with the implications of it, the country as well as to regional
and we're not, one hundred percent," games will require more money ifUC
the athletic department may seek women can be competitive with other
Division I approval from the AlA W, Division 1 teams.
Women's athletics, during 1978said Bill Jenike, UC director of
79, was budgeted $207,083, accorathletics.
THE AlA W now divides its teams ding to the financial analysis office.
It's not known whether the women's
into large and small school divisions.
UC competes in the large division. new Division I status will cut into or
But just last month. the AlA W affect the men's budget. "We have
switched to a divisional classification not completed an analysis of that
scheme similiar to the one governing yet," said Jenike.
TO COMPLY with Title IX (effecmen's athletics.
The AlA W does not require tive July 21, 1975) of the Civil Rights
schools to meet various criteria Act of 1964, UC formulated a plan
By Kathleen Haddad
[ying high...
When asked if the three programs
would fold when the CET A monies
run dry, Greenwood said she felt
obligated to keep tutoring and
handicapped services "around in
some form."
She said confidently that "with the
nature of Cincinnati Experience, I'm
sure that will be running."
into the fold of academics instead of
being part of student affairs,
maintaining that this move might get
the Tutorial Program money faster
and I or easier.
Enderly said that to run the
programs at the same level of
efficiency without CET A funds will
cost "$7-8,000 more a week." He said
the UC pay scale is higher than the
CET A pay scale.
STOVALL said that in order for
the agencies which experience cuts to
have a chance to be funded by the
I980 CET A program, an "Accomplishment Report" on the agency by
the agency will have to be filled out
and returned to CET A soon.
Enderley said he is currently working
on a UC accomplishment report.
Early Wednesday afternoon,
· Greenwood said UC President
Henry Winkler and Provost John
McCall had been notified of the
CET A cuts, but that no response had
been received yet.
"In about two weeks" she said
decisions will be made concerning
how the programs will be run and if
UC will staff them.
butressing women's athletics. Title
IX prohibits discrimination in education on the basis of sex and is especially applicable to sports.
While the law does not specifically
state that a proportionately equal
amount of money must be spent on
women'~ athletics as on men's, it does
require equal opportunity to women
in areas such as facilities, coaching
and grants-in-aid. As with any law,
Title IX's interpretation is not a cutand-dry proposition.
The law did, nonetheless, require
UC's institutional plan to be implemented by July 21, 197 8. The plan
has not yet been fulfilled.
"Women's athletics would require
an annual budget "in excess of$350,000" in order to complete the Title IX
plan, said Tuerck.
"I would say it. ($350,000) would
(allow us) to compete in Division I,
but it would not allow us to compete
above" the bottom level of that division, said Tuerck.
continued on pg. 5
2
Friday, February, 2, 1979
Car show begins
this weekend
World champion pool player
Willie Mosconi, Judy Landers of
ABC's Vegas and Dick Clark
will be in town this weekend at
the Cincinnati Convention
Center for the 19th Annual
Cavalcade of Customs.
There will be over 200 street
rods, dragsters, antiques, trucks,
vans, motorcycles, and other
rare cars competing for $1,700 in
prize money.
One of this year's specialties is
the ''Peddle Powered Flintstone
Machine", which was fashioned
from wood by two brothers, ages
nine and 12. A rare 1963
Corvette Coupe with split
windows - only 10,000 were
made - will also be displayed.
Most of the cars in the show,
however, are cars made from
kits. The kits come mostly from
Executive officers of student media elected
MANAGEMENT-.DPPORTUNITY
Executive officers for the three U C
student media, WFIB radio station,
Clifton magazine and the NewsRecord, were elected Tuesday by
their respective staffs and the
Communications Board. The officers begin their terms spring quarter
and wll continue them through next
winter quarter.
casting. He also said he would ask
broadcasting professionals to
observe and evaluate WFIB.
Greiman, also a junior majoring in
broadcasting, said her main goal will
be to set up individual budgets for
'each department ..of WFI B so the
station could operate more efficiently.
David Moody and Debra Greiman
will serve as WFIB general manager
and business manager, respectively;
Tom Cosgrove will become Clifton
editor and Kathy Harris will become
its business manager; and Joe
Awad will serve as NewsRecord
editor. The NewsRecord business
manager position has not been filled.
A wad, a junior irt English, said he
will keep students accurately
informed of all the important
campus news at UC. A student newspaper, he said, must demonstrate the
same kind of integrity and responsible leadership that prevails on any
daily newspaper.
MOODY, a junior majoring in
broadcasting, said in his petition he
wants to increase the frequency and
signal of WFIB as well as establish a
closer affiliation between the radio
station and the Division of Broad-
THE NEW editor of Clifton
magazine, Tom Cosgrove, said he
will try to make Clifton more
accessible to the UC student
population. Cosgrove, an English
major, said he will publish a
magazine which is informative and
It seems a perfectly norm
Steve Shedroff/the NewsRecord
The Communications Board and the student media staffs elected their
executive officers for next quarter and next year. The new officers are (1. tor.):
David Moody, WFIB general manager, Joe A wad, NewsRecord editor and
Tom Cosgrove, Clifton editor. Missing are Debra Greiman, WFIB business
manager and Kathy Harris, Clifton business manager.
entertaining by investigating and
reporting campus events and
providing provocative, amusing
articles along with fiction and poetry.
Harris, a junior from the College of
Nursing and Health, said she hopes
to increase advertising revenue and
possibly lead the magazine, which
now sells for 75 cents per issue, to free
distribution.
.Senate looks at proposed coupon meal plan
Unparalleled opportunity exist$- for college students soon
to graduate to acquire experience a11d training in manage-.
ment. If you are in good health and seeking a challenging
career, mail your resume to:
LCDR Doug Harrington
200 N. High, Suite 609
Columbus, Ohio 43215
Ad paid for by U.S. Navy
Much activity at Wednesday's
Student Senate meeting centered on
the proposed coupon meal plan for
UC's dorms. Warren Blank, Sander
Hall resident counselor, and Jim
Connally, of Saga Food Service,
fielded questions about the plan.
Blank strongly emphasized that
THE DIFFERENT
COLLEGE RINGS
the coupon plan was contractually
obligated and originally initiated by
students. Last year the food service
monitoring committee suggested
that an alternative to the present
meal plan be investigated.
Blank said that some students
think that Saga is attempting to
"push something over on the
students." But Saga is merely trying
to fulfill what it had been contractually obligated to do, he said.
The proposed pay-as-you-go
system would be instituted late this
year if a dorm vote approves it.
Another item of debate concerned
how the results of coupon plan
voting will be interpreted.
"Should the people who are not
returning to the halls next year be
given the same vote as those who
are?" Blank asked.
ln other action, Michael Bigler,
student vice-president, said tution
and housing increases are likely next
year. Bigler also charged a Student
Senate committee that the student af-
~Men's
contemporary
rings
~
fairs office come up with a way to
maintain UC's tutoring program.
The program is to lose all of its 27
tutors as a result of spending cuts by
CETA.
The facilities and services committee reported that the issue of a 24hour study room in the library during
finals is still not settled . However,
there could be extended library hours
during finals of spring quarter,
senators said.
-Mark Westerheide
Sculpture
weeks and thus are not eligible for
unemployment payments, Vogeler
said.
Additional funds may become
available next October under a new
Public Employment Act and if they
should, Vogeler said he hoped to hire
more students on a part-time basis.
Even then he said, Cincinnati
Experience won't be able to hire the
professional persons needed to guide
its programs.
Rehab Center
continued from page 1
338 Ludlow Avenue (one block west of Clifton)
Delivery in the Clifton area- 281-0555
Lutheran Campus Ministry
Worship
Petite
. Sunday's 10:30 a.m.
University YMCA
(First Floor)
270 Calhoun
Come Celebrate
Campus Pastors: M.D. Pera, Karl Bachman
Say a lot about yourself
without saying a word.
This new, distinctive Art Carved collection gives you the
choice beyond the traditional. Select styles, stones and
options that make your ring distinctively yours. Each of
these different college rings says something different.
Choose the one that speaks for you.
Class: "Woody Allen as Theologian"
Wednesdays-6:30p.m.
Thursdays- 12:30 p.m.
Evening Prayer - Wednesdays - 7:45p.m.
Brown Bag Lunch & Discussion- Thursdays, 12:00 noon
Sunday Bible Classes - 9:30 a.m.
"slots" into which people could be
trained for job skills, Myers said.
The Rehabilitation Center has
different guidelines than the Kursban
Center in which it has contracted with
CETA.
The Center has a contract with
CET A for two positions, one of
which was filled . 1 he one filled is the
one being phased out.
Lederer was an interpreter for the
deaf persons, said Myers .
She could not determine now if the
Center would be affected by the lost
of the counselor.
in
Cassis, France
Language and Civilization
July 2-August 10
Deposit required. Ask about Master Charge or Visa.
date: Jan. 29- Feb. 2
DAVID
COPNEY
place:
song stylist & composer
blues-jazz singer
JAN 30- FEB 11
"Bee f" Band & Disco Friday & Saturday .
NI&HTlY· •·To·W·Th·S..·!:38
Fri ·511·9:3811111 12:00
FINAL DAY!
Reservations and
Information: 961-5720
The Department oflnterio
within DAA may lose its a
tion next year due to a seriou
in the quality of its materials
according to Norman
associate professor of interio
"The possible loss of accredi
quite an embarrassment si
was the first accredited i
design department in the
based on its quality, curricul
resources," Niemi said.
THE INTERIOR design
contains construction sam
catalogues pertinent to in
departments within the coli
samples include bricks, c
and manufactured wallpape
The Foundation for I
Design Education and R
(FIDER) could withhold ac
tion or grant it on a provisio
if the library isn't sufficiently
ed prior to review, Niemi sa
But Bertram Berenson
Dean, said the present con
the rna terials library would h
e(fect upon the depart
accreditation review in 1980
DAA students Frank P
and Pat Van Lokeren sent a
signed by several hundre
students to Berenson last Fri
met with him on Monday to
the future of the library.
meeting Berenson said he
favor of the proposal but sa
simply wasn't enough mon
budget now to adequately s
supply the ailing library.
When FIDER review
department in 1975, they st
in part that they wanted the
library updated and better o
to give students a more realis
ning experience, Niemi said.
Originally, the library was
Prof. Sonia Lee
Modern Languages Department
Trinity College
Hartford, C'I: 06106
-· ACTUARIAL
TRAINEES
WANTED!
See the ArtCarved Representative
DAAde
lose its
NR Staff
continued from page 1
administration and student govern- Cincinnati Experience programs.
merit for advice on funding priorities,
Three of the positions will be
Greenwood said.
eliminated on March 3 and the
Cincinnati Experience operates remaining two on March 17 and 31.
recycling programs, nutrition and The coordinators of the truancy
consumer information groups, and guidance and motor oil recyling
truancy guidance programs.
programs, the coordinator of the
UC students now earn college consumer education program and
credit through the truancy guidance two workers from recycling operaprogram, said Vogeler. He said this is tions will be let go.
the most important program, and
will continue to exist. He could not
SOME OF those losing their jobs
assert the same for all of the other haven't been in the program for 20
hall.
At two o'clock in the
700 students look tow
podium at a mild-manner
haired professor wearing a
After some introductory re
begins the afternoon's lect
"And there is one joke I w
you... A farmer is in bed wit
Suddenly he rolls over a
squeezes his wife's breas
passionately kissing her he
caressing her breasts, 'J
honey, if these could give
could get rid of our cow.
"HE KISSES her again,
her hand down between her
sticks his finger into her va
says, 'Just think honey, if t
lay eggs we could get ri
chickens.'
"His wife, now appearin
quite aroused, grabs her m
(penis) between two fingers
'Just think honey, if this c
get hard, we could get ri
hired hand."'
Raucous laughter fills
and class continues. The ti
course is Human Sexua
taught twice a week by
Allinsmith, professor ofps
Allinsmith teaches such
he says, because "counties
students believe certain myt
sexuality... They need to r
clear information as possi
conditions which are free fro
ty."
By Mike Williams
and Paulette Morga
Cincinnati Experience fund cut
Now you have a choice
Seahawk
By Bob Decker
NR Staff
California, and include only the
bare essentials. The hobbyist
must then put the car together
piece by piece, chrome the parts
he wants chromed, and add the
touches that make his car
unique.
The time involved is at least
thousands of hours, and they are
filled with the breaking nuckle
flesh, and the cursing at broken
bolts and peeling chrome that is
all part of the sport. It all
becomes worth it this weekend
as the people look at the relics in
astonishment and ask questions
to the owners, who are always
guarding their priorities that are
more than just investments.
Last year 55,000 people saw
the show and more are expected
this year.
-Alan Hoffman
t---...;.cl=···~~c
Nota
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Astor
friendshii
Friday F~
Great Ha
Friday, February, 2, 1979 3
elected
No taboos in sex class '
By Bob Decker
NR Staff
Ste>e Shedroff/the NewsRecord
media staffs elected their
The new officers are(!. tor.):
News Record editor and
Greiman, WFIB business
and Health, said she hopes
advertising revenue and
lead the magazine, which
for 75 cents per issue, to free
plan
come up with a way to
UC's tutoring program.
irnor"m is to lose all of its 27
a result of spending cuts by
and services committhat the issue of a 24room in the library during
not settled. However,
be extended library hours
finals of spring quarter,
said.
-Mark Westerheide
It seems a perfectly normal lecture
hall.
At two o'clock in the afternoon,
700 students look towards the
podium at a mild-mannered, grayhaired professor wearing a dark suit.
After some introductory remarks he
begins the afternoon's lecture:
"And there is one ioke I want to tell
you ... A farmer is in bed with his wife.
Suddenly he rolls over and firmly
squeezes his wife's breasts. Mter
passionately kissing her he says, still
caressing her breasts, 'Just think,
honey, if these could give milk we
could get rid of our cow.
"HE KISSES her again, and slides
her hand down between her legs and
sticks his finger into her vagina, and
says, 'Just think honey, if this could
lay eggs we could get rid of the
chickens.'
"His wife, now appearing to grow
quite aroused, grabs her man's limp
(penis) between two fingers and says
'Just think honey, if this could only
get hard, we could get rid of the
hired hand.'"
Raucous laughter fills the hall
and class continues. The title of the
course is Human Sexuality 110,
taught twice a week by Wesley
Allinsmith, professor of psychology.
Allinsmith teaches such a course,
he says, because "countless college
students believe certain myths about
sexuality ... They need to receive as
clear information as possible under
conditions which are free from anxiety.''
DAA depar~rnent may
lose its accreditation ·
By Mike Williams
and Paulette Morgan
NR Staff
from page 1
nd thus are not eligible for
ment payments, Vogeler
tiona! funds may become
next October under a new
oyment Act and if they
\fn.~olo>r said he hoped to hire
on a part-time basis.
then he said, Cincinnati
won't be able to hire the
persons needed to guide
ab Center
ued from page 1
o which people could be
or job skills, Myers said.
Rehabilitation Center has
guidelines than the Kursban
which it has contracted with
nter has a contract with
for two positions, one of
filled. The one filled is the
phased out.
was an interpreter for the
said Myers.
determine now if the
be affected by the lost
and Civilization
2-AugustlO
He reassures his students that "all
bodies are normal, all patterns of hair
distribution are normal and all
penises are qually effective in lovemaking, regardless of size."
On the first day of class this year,
as he has done for the past seven
years, Allinsmith distributed a
questionnaire to his students probing
their sexual habits.
Although he was reluctant to disclose all the results of the questionnaire for fear that, "the Cincinnati
Enquirer will print a scandalous
story about immorality at UC,"
Allinsmith did reveal some survey
results.
FORTY percent said they were
Roman Catholic, another 40 percent
said they were Protestant and 20 percent claimed membership in other
denominations.
A large majority ofthe students are
sexually active, the survey revealed.
Seventy-five percent said they
thought pre-marital sex was all right,
and of those now involved in sexual
relationships over 20 percent used the
pill as their primary safeguard
against pregnancy.
Of the class, 58 percent said
contraceptives are "morally very
desirable," while 25 percent thought
con t raccptives were "morally
somewhat desirable."
A majority favored abortion but
one third of the class favored abortion in only "special cases."
According to the questionnaire,
eight percent of the women in the
class have had abortions.
THE SURVEY also revealed that
The Department oflnterior Design
within DAA may lose its accreditation next year due to a serious decline
in the quality of its materials library,
according to Norman Niemi.
associate professor of interior design.
"The possible loss of accreditation is
quite an embarrassment since UC
was the first accredited interior
design department in the nation
based on its quality, curriculum, and
resources," Niemi said.
THE INTERIOR design library
contains construction samples and
catalogues pertinent to individual
departments within the college. The
samples include bricks, carpeting
and manufactured wallpaper.
The Foundation for Interior
Design Education and Research
(FIDER) could withhold accreditation or grant it on a provisional basis
if the library isn't sufficiently upgraded prior to review, Niemi said.
But Bertram Berenson, DAA
Dean, said the present condition of
the materials library would have little
effect upon the department's
accreqitation review in 1980.
DAA students Frank Putenney
and Pat Van Lokeren sent a petition
signed by several hundred DAA
students to Berenson last Friday and
met with him on Monday to discuss
the future of the library. At their
meeting Berenson said he was in
favor of the proposal but said there
simply wasn't enough money in the
budget now to adequately staff and
supply the ailing library.
When FIDER reviewed the
department in 1975, they stipulated
in part that they wanted the materials
library updated and better organized
to give students a more realistic learning experience, Niemi said.
Originally, the library was strictly
a part of the Interior Design
Department. When the Wolfson
addition to DAA was completed the
library was moved from within the
department to a central location in
the new complex . Since then the
library has given up space to new
studios and additional galleries.
"The move to Wolfson and the
absence of a staff has meant the
downfall of our library," Niemi said.
"At the present time we're unsure of
whether to return to our old location
within the intenordesign department
or whether to remain in our present
location.
"Regardles, something has to be
done before next year," he added.
75 percent of the class thought that
extramarital sex was wrong. Twentyfive percent of those responding,
however, said they have lived
together or are now living together
with a mate. Of that 25 percent, half
plan to marry.
Only a small minority of the class
reported that they had had homosexual experiences. A smaller percentage claimed to be practicing homosexuals.
Allinsmith refers back to the data
collected by this survey in most of his
lectures, and says the figures have not
fluctuated at all since he first started
taking the survey in 1972.
The class on Human Sexuality
consists of Allinsmith's lectures and
personal discussion groups which
meet at various locations throughout
the week. The purpose · of these
groups, says Allinsmith, is "to give
students a chance to talk about sex."
1
- The talks "transform the lives" of
his students as they gain confidence
in speaking frankly about sex, he
says.
When the NewsRecord visited
Allinsmith's class, the guest speaker
was Pauline Garblik, director of
counseling at the Planned Parenthood Association in Dayton. Her
subject: impotence. She was intraduced by Allinsmith:
"What's worse than a piano out of
tune? An organ that goes flat in the
middle of a piece (more laughter)...
and you see that I'm leading up to
introducing our speaker who will
reassure you that impotence can be
ned out."
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THE magaz1ne for lodoy's vital young women!
ATAUN
Prof. Sonia Lee
languages Department
A story of envy, hatred,
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4
Friday, February, 2, 1979
Research
OPINION.
Forei
NT
Save Tutorial Program
As early as two years ago, UC President Henry
Winkler told the university's faculty that the
"university must provide developmental
opportumtles for people who may not satisfy
conventional criteria when they enter (UC), but who
must meet all qualifications when they leave."
The Tutorial Program, funded entirely through
the Comprehensive Employment Training Act
(CETA) of 1974, had its CETA funds withdrawn
Wednesday, in accordance with the move toward
"austerity" in Washington, D.C.
But the Tutorial Program assists more students
now than it has in the past six years. As of the end of
the third week of classes this quarter, the program
has received almost 900requestsforservices this year.
With the recent CET A cutbacks, the Tutorial
Program will lose $29,499. All tutors will be
dismissed. As things stand now there will be no
program from early March until June.
With evidence showing that tutoring is strongly
connected to student retention, it seems natural that
the UC administration should feel a sense of
urgency to help keep the Tutorial Program alive.
With a relatively high attrition rate at UC a method
is needed to get funds to replace those withdrawn by
CET A. The Tutorial Program had a mere .68
percent attrition rate for students tutored 10 or
more hours last quarter.
We understand that money is hard to get a hold of
not only in the Division of Student Affairs, where
the Tutorial program is managed, but also from
other departments at UC. If UC administrators are
sympathetic, this is a good time to show they are
committed to preserving academics, and not only
concerned with running a business.
Obviously, with the CETA cutbacks limiting
student services elsewhere at the university, the
Handicapped Services, the Cincinnati Experience,
and the Rehabilitation Center, UC students will
bear the brunt of it all.
·
We realize that some programs affected by the
CET A cuts can still work on a skeletal staff and
budget, but the Tutorial Program -funded entirely
by CETA - can't and won't survive, without
administrative support.
In a month, the tutorial program will not be
available to students anymore, unless UC
administrators act now.
Certainly, promises "to provide developmental
opportunities," for all UC students must be kept.
·us: victim of Iran's politics·
Nicholas Von Hoffman
Those "Lesson from Iran" stories
are budding and if we take many of
them seriously we shall have learnt
little indeed.
The liberals seem to have learned
that it's a mistake to get too close to
des'pots like his peacocked majesty,
now a billionaire displaced person
somewhat in the style of Robert
Vesco. The reasoning behind this
conclusion is that when a Shah goes
down, the United States goes with
him, although how close is too close
to a dictator with a nasty secret police
department may be hard to define.
l
business, is that it has its ups and
downs. From time to time the natives
do get restless and occasionally the
nist government in the Caribbean but
the next guy who tries it gets
womped. (Never mind that there
underdogs boot the overdogs out.
Often, however, after a period of
time the overdogs march back in.
That was the Roman experience and
the British experience in many
places, including Iran, which tried to
wiggle free of British domination
when the currently deposed Shah's
father played tootsie-wootsie with
the Germans during World War II.
were very few Reds in the Dominican
Republic. Anybody we say is a Red is
a Red and gets womped.)
That got the country occupied by
Another way to look at it is what the Russians, who've been known to
we got a very good run for our money take some imperialist chomps out of
with the Shah and, while it is the place themselves and be the
assuredly inconvenient to be English. Shah Sr. got hustled off to
identified with him now, the close die in exile in South Africa, so it
connection has been serviceable and seems that both father and son will
profitable since the early 1950s.
perish on foreign soil, the one
because he resisted imperial dominaThe position of some liberals on tion, the other because he cooperated
the Shah's downfall is that we ought with it.
to have found a way to own the man
so he's sell us oil at bargain prices but
Conservatives and others who are
still not be publicly identified with less concerned over the fact of the
him. However, when you're in the American empire than over how well
empire business, it's unreasonable it's run, are critical of the CIA for
and unrealistic to think you can hide failing to predict the revolutionary
the fact from the rest of the world, upheaval in old Persia. Exactly what
particularly from those being the United States might have done if
empired over. Whatever human it had had foreknowledge - and
rights fantasies we may have anybody had taken the prediction of
entertained about our conduct, a revolution seriously - is puzzling.
Iranians, upon seeing our military
Our international system rests
installations, and vast commercial primarily on working through native
penetration, understood they have rulers. Sometimes, as with the
been a province in a quas;-imperial Dominican Republic in 1965, we do
system. The Iranians ought to know land the Marines and set up a puppet
when they're being sat on since government but the Dominican
they've been a province in some- military demonstration probably
body's empire going back to the time had more to do with the panic and
of Ghengis Khan.
concern caused by what Castro had
done a few years earlier in Cuba. It
What we ought to understand, if was a way of showing we might get
we want to stay in the empiring tricked into permitting one commu-
Predicting revolutionary eruptions is as reliable as predicting
volcanic eruptions. Conservatives,
too, had best keep in mind that life
can't be made statiscally changeless.
As William McMurren, president of
Morrison-Knudsen, the huge
American construction firm with a
lot of Iranian business, says,
"Political instability should never
surprise you. You never welcome it,
but in our line of business you have to
anticipate it."
For American businessmen that
means keeping the inventory low so
that the revolutionary government
has little to confiscate; it means not
owning real estate or anything else
you can't pack up and take home; it
means structuring deals in shaky
foreign places so that costs are
quickly recaptured.
The lessons of Iran aren't very
splendiferous and are notably
without moral content. The danger is
inventing lessons that don't apply.
Having failed to find a Bolshevik
under the woodpile in Iran, some
Americans are now saying we were
the victims of a rising, world wide
wave of Moslem fundamentalist
fanaticism. From the hammer and
sickle menance to the star and
crescent.
When you're in the empiring
business, it doesn't do to fall victim to
the jitters. The rule- the lesson even
- is stay calm arid don't get
squeamish.
King Features Syndicate, Inc.
Letters
...
Orchin .o ffers his version of grading
To the Editor:
As a faculty member who agonizes over the assignment of letter grades to students in a relatively large class,
I share your dissatisfaction with the present grading
system. I wonder, however, ifthe solution to our difficulty
is to now require twice as many decisions as to where to
make the cuts by assigning minus and plus grades. I would
like to make a proposal which may serve to stimulate discussion about the purpose of grades and which would obviate the necesssity of assigning letter grades at all.
·The prob'Iem that most instructors have is that a
students's average ends up as a number between 0-100, as
the News Record editorial (Jan. 26) points out, and this
number grade must be converted to a letter grade. But
what happens then? The registrar converts the letter grade
right back to a number grade called quality points. My
proposal is to convert the student's number average
directly to a quality point number. The basic formula for
doing this can be very simple:
student's # average - lowest # average
hi ghest # average - lowest # average
X
4.00 = Q.P.
Let's take a class in which the lowest average grade was
45 and the highest 90 and our student in question earned
an average of 79. His quality points would then be:
79 45
4 00 = 3.02
90-45 X •
The student whose number average was 75 would get:
75-45
"""'45
X 4.00 = 2.67
The insturctor would report the grades as 3.02and 2.67
which much more accurately reflects the difference in performance between the students than does the grade, say,
of B and C, if the cut point were 77. The instructor, of
course, would have the option of fine-tuning the formula
- he I she could artificially set the upper and lower grades
but the resulting quality points would always accurately
reflect the relative standing of the students.
In a large class (75 or more) it frequently is necessary to
cut between an A orB (or in a minus-plus system, between
an A- and B+) on the basis of a difference of one point in a
number average and that is manifestly arbitrary.
I am curious as to how instructors and students would
respond to this system. I personally would like this system
to be optional and would be willing to abide by a decision
of the class as to whether or not they preferred this
method over the conventional system.
Milton Orchin
Professor of Chemistry
A reply to a Harvard graduate
To the Editor:
professor values" important? If so, then I admire that
I was appalled by the 1977 Harvard graduate and his kind of efficiency of effort. Is it indeed the professor's job
dogmatic stand on the relative values of Harvard and UC to force the student to think? Moo, says the undereducations in the NewsRecord Jan. 26. Merely on the graduate. Why do all these thinking students prefer the
basis of his statement, it can be said that, regardless of exam shelf in the library above all others? I honestly don't
Harvard's possibilities for equipping raw undergraduates believe the answer has anything to do with education.
with amazing powers of thought and reflection, at least Grades, as we all know, are quite a separate matter.
one conspicuous failure has escaped unscathed.
Nancy Krug
Is thinking the degree to which the "student is able to
Graduate Student in the
train his mind to think within the parameters that the
College of Business Administration
Substantial amounts
poured into U.S.
versities last year from
if the trend continues,
millions are expected
next decade.
On the one hand, the
and contributions
governments provide
educators with a
compensating for the
brought on by declining
and the increasin
relationship between
U.S. government. Yet the
has also left the "'u'~"'"L'
nervous over the uu"'""'''"lol
research performed
funded projects.
As John Mullen of the
of State Colleges and
it: "Colleges like to have
of course. But they don't
strings -like race, sex,
attached. It depends
cumstances ."
Another Washington
who requested an<mvmit
"outside" funding is
then have a commitment
side country. It's like
land. It's more foreign
in our own country."
Worne
"It's a very, very
budget. It was made 2
does not have an inflati
built in. It also does
recruitment factor built
"WE WANT to bring
program up to where
program is," said Tuerc
anything less would not
women."
Doling out to women
tionately equal
athletic grants is a part
men's and women's
according to Jenike.
Tuerck said she is
current sharing of
men's athletics. Ed
cooperative, she said, un
basketball coach Gale
wanted first choice for
fieldhouse.
The Department
Education and Welfare
The change from high school to UC
To the Editor:
Converting from a high school senior to a college
freshman can be quite a challenge. You go from a top dog
in high school to feeling like a two year old that has to be
led around by the hand. One guy thought I was so dumb
that he thought he could send me to McDonald's to hear a
lecture on how to make a Big Mac. I found out what the
special sauce is made of.
Since I am seeing and meeting many people, a question
has been brought about in my mind. I have been wondering why most people attend college? You could be here to
achieve an educational goal. Furthermore, you may be
attending because everyone else is going to college, or you
might just like to waste money. I even heard that some
people attend college to find a mate and I couldn't believe
anyone would be doing such a thing. But, I met this guy
who has already proposed to seven different girls. He is
now working on number eight. Come on, I only did that
stuff in high school.
Also, I was talking to a friend the other day and we concluded that there are a lot of dogs running around the
campus. Personally I have seen eight german shepherds,
five mixture, and one lone poodle.
Next, the teachers differ a great deal from high school
teachers. Never in high school did a teacher give a two
hundred page reading assignment that was due the next
day. On top of that, you are supposed to outlinewhatyou
have read and make a complete set of notes because there
is going to be a test the next day.
Now, you might say that college is supposed to be
tough, but when you have six classes and each one assigns
a two hundred page reading assignment, things can get
tough. The teachers are understanding, though. If you
couldn't read last night's assignment that's OK because
you can read it tonight while you are finishing up the book
that is six hundred pages long.
In addition, I would like to talk about fraternities. But,
since no fraternities invited me to any rush parties, I don't
have very much to talk about. In fact, I am still very upset
with the situation and I don't think because I am Polish I
should be discriminated against. I thought all colleges had
Polish fraternities.
While attending the university, I have discovered many
places to eat. But none of these places compare to the old
high school cafeteria. Yes, there is a McDonald's, a La
Rosa's, and the good old Empress chili. There is also the
university cafeteria. Who doesn't mind paying $1.60
for a slice of roast beef between two slices of dry bread?
Arby's, eat your heart out. In high school, there was a feeling of warmth in the cafeteria, even though the food was
cold. The thing I do miss most is the deep toned voice of
one lady saying, "Hey Honey, what will you have today."
Finally, I want to say I enjoyed last quarter. I think I
did pretty well. It was the first time I received all I's. I
heard the I's stand for intelligence.
Robert Mart
College of Arts and Sciences
Cross-cultural counselors needed
To bring about more meaningful interaction and conTo the Editor:
The college years are the times of great stress for many tact between the "incoming" and "host" cultures, the imstudents, maybe doubly so for students from foreign portance of a cross-cultural counselor's role as a "sounlands. In addition to the usual pressures of college rendez- dingboard" must not be overlooked. An effective crossvous, the non-Ameiican students especially, having great cultural counselor must:
Jack in their understanding of the American Way of Life,
• Constantly try new methods and ideas in his counselcould be faced with a serious intercultural communica- ing approach.
Editorial St.ff
tion problem. And the strain that accommodates the un• Read deeply in cultural ethnology, and seek out ever
Ed Perlman ...•.........•.••...•.•.....•...........•.. Editor ·Robert Decker ..........•.•.. ... ... . ....•...... Features Editor
familiar thought patterns, feelings and behavior can make more cross-cultural experiences. If possible, he should
J.oe A wad ... ..... .................•.. . ...... Associate Editor Danny Watson ............ . ............ Assistant Features Editor
their college experience a most unpleasant one, too.
live abroad for a period of time.
Lisa Steinker ..................................... News Editor Bob Harbaum . . ....................... ....... ... Sports Editor
• Constantly try to understand in a legitimate way the
Chip Power ...................................... Copy Editor . Tom Cosgrove •..••.•..•..•..••..•.•...•.•...•.•... Arts Editor
Generally accepted as fact is the notion that any person
cultural
irregularities of thoughts, feelings and actions
Patrick Maio ............................. Editorial Page Editor Laurel D. Pauls ........................... Assistant Arts Editor
who undergoes a cross-cultural experience finds that his
Kathleen Haddad ............................ University Editor Steve Shedroff ............................. Photography Editor
which occur in a given group.
.
perfectly "natural behavior" and "values" are not "any
_Joe Perry ............ ... ...... . ..... Assistant University Editor Mark Bowen .•.•...•....•........ Assistant Photography Editor
more" natural in the new culture milieu. In the words of · • Tune hi~sel~ into both verbal and nonverbal patterns
Business Staff
the psychoanthropologist, Edward T. Hall, he ex- of commumcatlon and constantly question his own
·
periences "culture shock." Hence, his behavior and his message producing systems.
Scott Lipps .................................. Business Manager
Carrie Halpert ..............•.•.• Classified Advertising Manager
.•
Finally,
he
must
enjoy
working
with and learning
value
systems
are
challenged.
Jeff Pruzan . . ............. . ....... National Advertising Manager Tim Vance .•.•.....•................ Local Advertising Manager
The more he becomes involved in a host culture during With the students he counsels.
Zenon Klos ..•.•.•.•••.•...•••. Ass't Local Advertising Manager
his sojourn and does not remain an eternal tourist or spec-· . In an era of large scale of educational exchange, there
The NewsRecord is published semi-weekly, Tuesday and Friday, by
Editorial office - 201 Tangeman University Center, University of tator, the more is the visiting-student's value system sub- IS a great need for a counselor who can cushion and
the Communications Board under the advisorship of Whayne Dlllehay Cincinnati, Cincinnati, Ohio 45221. Phone - 475-2748. The Business
jected to re-evaluation. Such hypoconstruct of reality alleviate the ordeal of change, the pangs of growth which
during the regular academic year except during vacations and Office's phone number is 475-5901.
testing can, and of course, will be a rather painful learn- are almost an inevitable consequence of "studying
scheduled examination periods.
The NewsRecord Is a member of National Educational Advertising
ing experience, especially if the host c,ulture (i.e. the uni- abroad."
Service, Inc. Advertising deadlines are 1 p.m. Friday for the Tuesday
Editorials are the opinion of a majority of the editorial board and do Issue and I p.m. Wednesday for the Friday Issue. One subscription Is
versity community) does not understand the ordeal of
.
Joseph O'Wan
not necessarily express the opinion of the Universlty of Cincinnati.
SIS payable in advance, second class postage paid at Cincinnati, Ohio. · "culture shock," let alone the means of ajleviating it.
President of UC Handicapped Students
USED
'78 F
theNewsReoxd
Friday, February, 2, 1979 5
Research independence jeopardized, scholars say
Calendar
Foreign aid pours into U.S. campuses
grading
lity points would then be:
er average was 75 would get:
Substantial amounts of money
poured into U.S. colleges and universities last year from abroad and,
if the trend continues, even more
millions are expected through the
next decade.
On the one hand, the endowments
and contributions from foreign
governments provide American
educators with a handy means of
compensating for the cash shortages
brought on by declining enrollments
and the increasingly tense
relationship between colleges and the
U.S. government. Yet the foreign aid
has also left the educators frankly
nervous over the independence of the
research performed under foreignfunded projects.
As John Mullen of the Association
of State Colleges and Universities put
it: "Colleges like to have assistance,
of course. But they don't like to see
strings -like race, sex, or religionattached. It depends on the circumstances."
Another Washington observer,
who requested anonymity, thinks all
"outside" funding is bad. "Colleges
then have a commitment to an outside country. It's like them buying up
land. It's more foreign involvement
in our own country."
And John Phillips, head of the
National Association oflndependent
Colleges and Universities, willingly
sums up the problem of foreign aid,
by pointing out that "generally, funds
which assist can be very helpful. It's a
dilemma, because you ask 'What is
the price that is paidforthis help?' All
colleges and universities are trapped
in the inflation spiral, and if someone
offers finance, what can they do? The
whole thing raises a lot of questions."
No one's been able to figure out exactly how many schools have gotten
a·id from foreign countries, or how
much they've got~I_l·.
It is known, though, that Western
Michigan, American University,
Harvard, Columbia, and the universities of California-Berkeley,
Southern California, Washington,
and Hawaii have received grants
from just one country-South
Korea-over the six-year period ending in 1978.
South Korea has been one of the
most active contributors to
American education. It's estimated
that country has given about $2.5
million since 1972. Sometimes,
moreover, those contributions
represented more than just random
continued from page 1
port the grades as 3.02 and 2.67
ely reflects the difference in perdents than does the grade , say,
int were 77. The instructor, of
tion of fine-tuning the formula
y set the upper and lower grades
points would always accurately
ng of the students.
ore) it frequently is necessary to
in a minus-plus system, between
sofa difference of one point in a
is manifestly arbitrary.
instructors and students would
rsonally would like this system
be willing to abide by a decision
er or not they preferred this
ional system.
Milton Orchin
Professor of Chemistry
nt? If so, then I admire that
. Is it indeed the professor's job
think? Moo, says the underse thinking students prefer the
hove all others? I honestly don't
nything to do with education.
requite a separate matter.
~anc y Krug
Graduate Student in the
ge of Business Administration
hat college is supposed to be
six classes and each one assigns
ing assignment, things can get
nderstanding, though. If you
assignment that's OK because
le you are finishing up the book
long.
to talk about fraternities. But,
d me to any rush parties , I don't
out. In fact, I am still very upset
n't think because I am Polish I
ainst. I thought all colleges had
"WE WANT to bring the women's
program up to where the men's
program is," said Tuerck. "To do
anything less would not be fair to our
women."
Doling out to women a proportionately equal number of full
athletic grants is a part of making
men's and women's programs equal,
according to Jenike.
Tuerck said she is satisfied with the
current sharing of facilities with
men's athletics. Ed Badger is
cooperative, she said, unlike former
basketball coach Gale Catlett, who
wanted first choice for use of the
fieldhouse.
The Department of Health,
Education and Welfare is now
restructuring Title IX compliance
guidelines. A major part of the new
compliance method would require
schools to finance women's athletics
so that it is equal to men's programs
on a per capita basis.
"The implications of the new
guidelines do not require as many
dollars as our institutional plan does,"
said Jenike. So UC's current Title IX
plan would probably satisfy any new
HEW compliance guidelines, Jenike
said.
TUERCK IS looking at 1981 as a
target date for full implementation
of the university Title IX plan.
Tuerck said the women's athletics
program is an instrumental factor in
attracting students to UC, an important issue in the face of declining
enrollment. "The potential is there,
the women are there, the plan is
there, the number of coaches are not
there and the timeline is there,"
Tuerck said.
1978 TOYOTA COROLLA
academic organizations with cultural
or economic ties with China are
"swamped with work. Everybody delegations, businessmen - needs
help and advice."
Many feel the result will be more
students enrolling in Asian studies.
Since Chinese studies are typically
pursued through different political
science, history, and language de
departments , program administrators have a hard time gauging just how popular study of the
country has become .
Martin does know that "there's
been a greater interest in course
enrollment, but political science
courses have been expanding
anyway, so it's hard to tell if the expansion is due to interest in China, or
just 'to more interest in political
science in general."
Nevertheless enrollment in Col umbia's Chinese studies courses are "just
about doubled." The university also
has an adult continuing education
program aimed at providing
background to people who plan to
·
travel to the mainland.
Though recognition came too late
to greatly affect current enrollments,
the demand for people with a good
knowledge of China will persist, most
scholars feel, long enough to create a
healthy job market for scholars and
students alike .
(CPS)
m onday
Baptist Students
The Baptist Student Union
will have a bible study at 12:00 in
149 Mc Micken.
Contemporary Swedes
There will be a Panel on
Aspects of Contemporary
Swedish Society at 7:30 p.m. in
Annie Laws Parlor, Teachers
College.
Abortion Rights Committee
The Abortion Rights Committee, a group supportive of a
women's right to choose, will
tomorrow
meet at 7:30p.m. in·the United
Christian Ministries building on
January thru the past
Clifton
Avenue. All concerned
The Cincinnati Art Museum
supporters
are urged to attend.
will be conducting public tours
every WednesdaY,, Saturday and
Sunday at 2 p.m. The admission etc.
charge is $1 .00 for adults and 50¢
Psychology majors
for children . There is no
The Undergraduate Curricuadmission charge on Saturday. lum Committee is sponsoring its
Press tonference
first "Social Open House" for
There will be a press confer- undergraduate psychology
ence with Reverend John majors and potential majors on
Stanley_. Gra,uel at 7 p.m. at the Wednesday, Feb. 14 in the Annie
Hillel Jewish St\ldent Center in Laws Lounge, frotn 3-5 p.m.
Clifton.
Faculty members and other
Exodus 1947
students will be present to help
Therg will be a showing of the answer any questions you might
film classic "Tie Exodus" at 8 have . Refreshments served.
No smoking makes
classes· seem longer
"We've been co,nditioned (to
smoke) by society every since we were
young, by the Marlboro Man and
others," complains Dr. Alfred
W olokowitz, 'associate English
professor at Towson State University in Maryland. "And it is arbitrary
to suddenly take that right away."
The school's Academic Council, in
fact, took the right away last spring,
making Towson State one of at least
seven colleges and universities
around the country that have
'prohibited smoking in classrooms.
Wolokowitz, though,.was only one
of several .local .. .professors ·· The
Towerlight, the school's student
newspaper, found who continue to
smoke during their classes.
Another was political science
professor Dr. Eric Belgrad, who told
the paper he loses concentration if he
doesn't smoke during his two-and-ahalf hour seminars. Belgrad,
however, will only light up next to a
window during the classes.
"I don't think dropping a class on
those grounds is fair to the student,"
Belgrad counters. That's the reason
another faculty smoker, Dr. Dan
Jones, doesn't smoke during clas~.
Yet, ''l'm very glad to get out oi class
and light up." Jones adds that, since
the smoking ban was imposed,
dasses seem a li'ttle longer than they
(CPS)
used to be.
55295
1978 PONTIAC FIREBIRD
One Day
Used Car Sale
Saturday - February 3rd
•
'l
L
..
L,
~ r .·Pq
L
f
10:00 a.m. - 4:00 p.m.
•
Drawbridge Motor Inn & Covention Center ·
1-75 at Buttermilk Pike
Ft. Mitchell, Ky.
5 4995
Oldsmobile Cutlass Supremes • Ford LTO ll's • Ford Falrmonts
Buick Regals • Mercury Cougar XR7's
Ford Thunderbirds • Ford Granadas • Mercury Monarchs • Mercury Zephyrs
OTHER '78 FORD and GM MODELS TO BE OFFERED
t1
I
1 '
'78 Model Cars to be Offered to the Public
Sale to be held at
aningful interaction and cong" and "host" cultures, the imal counselor's role as a "sounverlooked. An effective cross-
USED
1
I ·u
'78 THUNDERBIRDS
~.i· p;q~
_: ~·· ·~
'·
:0~-
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'" '
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al' i •
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Most equipped with auto. trans., air. con d., tinted glass, pwr. str., pwr. brks., V-8 engines, AM radio, steel belted
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moldings, rally whls., remote control mirrors, roof drip moldings, windshield antennas, door edge guards power
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door locks, power seats, power trunks, cloth interiors, frt. & rear bumper guaras, automatic parking brake
release.
12,000 mile/12 month limited power train warranty (whichever comes first)
at no additional cost. Ask for full details.
All cars have received regular professional maintenance while in
'
the Hertz Rental Fleet.
thods and ideas in his counsel~I ethnology, and seek out ever
Joseph O'Wan
of UC Handicapped Students
British Manuscripts
Dr. Richard J. Bingle will
hold a lecture on "The Imperial
Paper Chase: British Manuscripts at the In dia Office
Library," at Jp.m. in 414 TUC.
Baptist students
The Baptist Student Union
will have a meeting at 7 p.m. in
Room 428 TU C.
Volleyball .'til midnight
Volleyball Night sponsored by
Newman Center will take place
from 8 p.m. until midnight in
Georgian Hall on Scioto St.
Admission is $1 .00 and includes
refreshments.
'.
Robert Mart
College of Arts and Sciences
verbal and nonverbal patterns
constantly question his own
s.
Y working with and learning
sets.
of educational exchange, there
nselor who can cushion and
ge, the pangs of growth which
e consequence of "studying
President Carter's diplomatic
recognition of the Peoples Republic
·of China may be a long-awaited
break for Asian studies students and
f acuity, who until very recently found
jobs in their chosen fields very difficult to get.
That's the cautiously-optimistic
assessment of several Asian scholars
around the country.
In the wake of the announcement
that the U.S. and China will establish
full formal relations with one
another, Asian studies , say the administrators, now promise to be a
good precursor to a job. Scholars
thus also predict increases in enrollment in the disciplines . All in all summarizes one China scholar at the University of Michigan, "It's the first ray
of sunshine, economic ties to China
are swamped with work."
"My impression," confirms C.
Martin Wilbur, professor emeritus at
Columbia's East Asia Institute, "is
that (recognition) is leading to a
revival in the number of teaching
positions in Chinese studies. A few
years ago, it was almost impossible to
get a job."
Majors in Asian studies,
moreover, can also anticipate an increase in the number of nonacademic jobs opening. Robin Martin, program officer at Columbia's
Institute, reports that most non-
p.m. in 401 TUC, sponsored by
Hi llel.
USED
versity, I have discovered many
hese places compare to the old
, there is a McDonald 's, a La
Empress chili. There is also the
o doesn't mind paying $1.60
tween two slices of dry bread?
In high school, there was a feeleria, even though the food was
most is the deep toned voice of
ney, what will you have today."
enjoyed last quarter. I think I
e first time I received all I's . I
elligence.
1ences. If possible, he should
f time.
erstand in a legitimate way the
houghts, feelings and actions
oup.
today
research institutes and academic conferences, and approaches to individual scholars" as favorite Seoul
techniques to color its image here. It
also used "covert as well as overt funding and offers of trips to Korea."
Some schools, again according to
the House report, took the money
out of a concern for the "relative
neglect" of Korean history and
culture in American curricula.
Schohtrs also argue that American
colleges have lQng ignored Mideast
history and culture, and thus
rationalize their acceptance of the
new flow of educaiton dollars from
Arab countries. Grants and endowments from the Mideast have increased ten-fold since 1973.
Recognition of China
opens opportunities
Women's athletics
"It's a very, very conservative
budget. It was made 2 years ago and
does not have an inflationary factor
built in. It also does not have a
recruitment factor built in."
altruism.
After 18 months of investigation,
the House Subcommittee on International Organizations reported that
Seoul sometimes resorted to
"harrassment and intimidation" of its
beneficiaries . "Despite attempts to
influence the use offunds for political
purposes" most schools, according to
the report, insisted that while the
money was welcome, influence over
its use was not.
In one case, the Korean CIA tried
to donate $300,000 to American University in Washington, D .C., though
the school rejected the offer. It was
the only known instance of KCIA involvement on American campuses.
The House report describes "use of
FINANCING AVAILABLE
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USED
'78 FAIRMONTS
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Cars are displayed in the convention hall for your comfort and convenien r" .
USED
'78 GRANADAS
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•
6
the NewsRecord
Friday, February, 2, 1979
'The Psychic:' how not to n1ake a horror film
By Norman Murdock II
NR Staff
They were laughing. Not the
jittery, nervous kind of laughing that
one expects at a horror movie, but
raucous laughter. And I must admit I
joined in heartily.
"The Psychic" starring Jennifer
O'Neill is a study in how to make a
motion picture accomplish the
opposite of its intended effect. It goes
beyond mere failure as a form of
entertainment and approaches,
instead, lofty heights as an audio-
visual aid in the instruction of future
makers of this type of movie genre.
A plot summary of only one word
would do this flick justice: trite. The
film is set 'in Italy. Jennifer O'Neill
olays the newly-wed wife of
Francesco Ducci, a wealthy,
sophisticated man whose former
wives and lovers are rumored to have
met with violent deaths. As Virginia
Ducci, O'Neill demonstrates yet
another ability (besides picking a
questionable spouse): she can see
into the future.
KINKO'S
COPIES
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Available to Practice:
Immigration and
Naturalization Law
4C
No Minimum
• Typing Service
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• Film Processing
(48 hr. service)
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• Business Cards
• Passport Photos ($6.99)
.
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221-5981
The remainder of the movie
revolves around her premonitions
which are blurred and which she tries
to bring into focus. This recurring
vision of Virginia's seems to be the
committing of a murder in one of her
husband's old residences in the
country. But alas, our chic heroine
can find almost no one who will take
her clairvoyance as seriously as she
does. Least of all the guffawing
audience!
·
So, with the doubtful assistance of
one of her former proteges, a
_d ashing, Peugeot-driving psychia-
8-8 Daily
10-6 Sat.
Member of
Association of Immigration and
Nationality Lawyers
11104 Sycmre St. (513) 621-1111
Cincilllati lllrio 45202
I
trist-turned-investigator, Virginia
seeks out the answers to her psychic
phenomenon.
,
Brand on Chase, director-producer
of "The Psychic," then leads the
audience through a series of Italian
Gothic scenes of the worst possible
taste. There are bodies walled up
behind mortar and plaster, limping
killers, bloody mannequins, unlikely
clues of all kinds imaginable, and
positively the most horrendous
soundtrack ever laid to vinyl,
hopefully soon to rest.
All of this corned y-meant-to-besuspense results in the most likely
ending. What else? Like the
commercials on TV and the ads in the
paper already tell you, "She looked
into the future and saw her own
murder." And I don't even have to
tell you who the killer is, do I?
It is truly unfortunate thatJennifer
O'Neill can't really see into the future
because she could have killed this
half-assed attempt at film making
long before it murdered itself
onscreen.
*********************************************************··~
:
SPRING QUARTER
Judaic Studies Courses
15·016-301. MODERN ISRAEL. An analysis of social, cultural,
economic and political components of the State of Israel. Due
attention will be paid to the contemporary political scene and its
wide implications. 3 ug.cr. Tuesday, 9:00 A.M.-11 :00 A.M. A.
Mekel
15-016-325. SPECIAL TOPICS: JEWISH MYSTICISM: Survey of
major themes and historical development of the Jewish mystical
tradition. Themes include mystical conceptions of: God, man,
Torah and the universe; prayer, repentance and the
commandments; sex, "strange acts," and death, the relationship
between mysticism, philosophy, and Jewish law. Emphasis on
readings from the Zohar and othe mystic literature, all in
English. 3 ug. cr. M W F 1:00-1:50 P.M. M. Shmidman
15-075-329. HISTORY OF THE JEWS IN THE MODERN AGE.
Topics include: Emancipation of the Jews, Napoleon and the
Jews, rise of Reform Judaism, life of Eastern European Jewry,
emergence of American Jewish life, anti-semitism, Holocaust..
and State of Israel. 3 ug. cr. T -H, 2:00-3:20 B. Kraut
f
:
15-016·341. JEWISH BIBLICAL COMMENTARIES: Study of the
Bible as interpreted by 'Jewish commentators through the ages.
Various methods of commentary - philosophical, mystical,
philological, and pietistic - will be explored and contrasted.
Among the commentators to be studied (in English) are: Rashi,
Ibn Ezra, Rashbam, Kimhi, Nahamanides and Abrabanel.
Attention also will be paid to relevant examples of Christian
biblical exegesis. 3 ug.cr. M W F, 10:00-10:50. M. Shmldman
15-016-379. THE JEWISH-CHRISTIAN ENCOUNTER. An
overview of Jewish-Christian relations through history, with
attention given to polemics, debates, positive and negative
encounter, and contemporary relations and inter-religious
concerns. 3 ug. cr. T-H 11:00-12:15 B. Kraut
15-016-593. INDIVIDUAL WORK JUDAICA. Variable credit.
Topic to be arranged with B. Kraut or M. Shmidman.
All Hebrew courses continue:
15-016-103-001 - T-H- 11-12:15
15-016-103-002- MWF- 9-9:50
15-016-203-002- MWF- 11-11:50
15-016-333- TBA
TODAY
MONDAY
The UC Film Society presents
"Turning Point" at 7 p.m., 9:30
p.m. and midnight in TUC Great
Hall. Admission is $1.00. For
ticket information call475-4553.
CCM presents the Baroque
Ensemble at 8:30p.m. in Corbett
Auditorium.
SATURDAY
ALL WEEK
"Potophoetry" runs through
Feb. 25th at the Carnegie Arts
Center on 1028 Scott Street in
Covington.
Clermont College presents an
exhibition of the work of Bill
Hutson and David Clark
through Feb. 16th during the
regular college hours. Admission is free.
CCM Concert Orchestra
performs music by Mozart,
Prokofiev and Sibelius at 8:30
p.m. in Corbett Auditorium.
The UC Film Society presents
"Idi Amin Dada" at 7 p.m. and
8:45 p:m. in TUC Great Hall.
CSO presents orchestra music
Admission is $1.00. For further
by Webern, Dvorak, Schoeninformation call 475-4553.
berg and Mozart on Friday and
Saturday at 8:30 p.m. in the
SUNDAY
Music Hall. For more informaOpus V gives their first CCM tion call 621-1919.
performance at 4:00 p.m. in
Corbett Auditorium.
CCM presents the Complete
Bach Organ Series with David
The Arts Consortium, 1515
Mulbury at the keyboard at 8:30 linn Street, is holding classes in
p.m. in Corbett Auditorium.
acting and improvisation for
Cincinnati Wind Ensemble children and adults. Registraperforms at 8:30p.m. in Corbett tion runs through Feb. 9th. For
Auditorium.
more information call 381-0645.
Jakki Miller and D
Bit Player," one of two
weekend. The other play
Both were directed by
was unable to review
snowstorm. Reaction
performance was
staging the plays in a
again!
CDT troupe is formidable
when the material's right
By Tom Cosgrove
N R Arts Editor
NB: All Jewish history courses helpulflll social science requirements.
All Jewish philosophy and thought help fulfill humanities requirements.
All Hebrew courses fulfill the language requirement.
Arts Calendar
«
«****•****************************************************«
The Contemporary Dance Theater, under the direction of Jefferson
James, has established itself as a
formidable presence in the Cincinnati cultural scene. The troupe
performs with discipline and skill,
and COT is developing a loyal and
enthusiastic audience. It is Jefferson
James' (a transplanted New Yorker)
dream come true - she has established a contemporary dance troupe
in Cincinnati. Now, if they can only
be more consistent with their choice
of material!
COT performed in the TUC
Gallery last Tuesday and Wednesday
and the intimate atmosphere of the
Gallery lent itself well to the
performance. Some in the audience
complained of having to strain to see
the dancers when they were in
THE MOST CONTROVERSIAL
FILM OF THE YEAR ABOUT
THE DICTATOR OF UGANDA!
"MESMERIZING. THE GEJIEIW.
PROVIDES A COMPW AND
BIIEATiflli(JtiG REVELATION
Of HIMSB.F. AN INTIMACY
PROBABLY UNPARALLED IN
THE ARCHIVES OF ALM."
-Charlo• Ch•mpllnrlOI Angeles Tlmts
reclining positions, but that's the sort
of kink that can be worked out in
future Gallery performances hopefully, there will be more. Fie on
Wilson Auditorium! What marred
an otherwise stunning performance
were the two opening dances: Rudy
Perez's "New Annual"(it was panned
by most reviewers when COT last
performed it so why did they do it
again?) and Cathy Paine's "Truck
Farming in Suburban Maryland."
"New Annual" is a potpourri of
ballet spoofs, aimless gymnastics and
huddling, with an interlude of bubble
blowing, cap gun shooting and
sundry other forms of noise-making
thrown in for good measure. "New
Annual" is described as a "choreography collage ... images drawn from
city life." The analogy is appropriate
and "New Annual" has a certain,
catchy ambience. However, whatever elusive "spark" ignites a work
and turns it into art, that spark is
missing in "New Annual."
"Truck Farming in Suburban
Maryland" has proven that combining contemporary dance and
bluegrass music is a risky enterprise.
Rachel Lampert's "Home" and
Gladys Bailin's "Newspapers"
showed COT at its best and proved
that, experimentation and improvisation notwithstanding, contemporary dance is as beholden to solid,
creative choreography as traditional
dance is. "Home," in particular,
succeeded in many of the areas where
"New Annual" failed. It is an
irreverent work, incorporating the
music of Haydn, snatches of
bluegrass (it worked here) and a
delightfully absurd baseball game.
Like "New Annual." the work is a
mix of incongruent elements. Unlike
"New Annual," the work was
thoroughtly satisfying as performed
by COT. The final word in attempting to analyze why two of the works
in COT's latest repertory worked and
why two didn't is "0 elusive muse,
how fickily thou chooses to illuminate some creative efforts and detour
around others." (Cosgrove).
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
Hours:
$1
I
ti
Bri_
Il __________
I
I
I
TYPING SERVICE School
specialty, work guaranteed,
531-4089
APPLICATIONS FOR
This year's METRO SHOW
Saturday, April 21 and we
acts. If you and a group of
care to be ·•on stage" we would
you. However, competition for
promises to be tough so we
you to get your applications
start practicing now.
show will be held on F
Applications should be
February 23 to Ta1ngEmum
Desk. Any questions call
or Pete.Manilukas
"Nitrous Oxide (laughing gas)
tal. Write: Josephine Ave, P.O.
Dallas, Texas 75221
Seniors. Before you han
The Graduate magazine.
the alumni association. D
college office dunng
Priority Registration January
7 1979
"Extra .Brilliance."
"Astonishing Virtuosity .•• APhenomenon!"
"Such consummate Artistry Is ARare
"Roused His Audience To Thunderous
Amazing Virtuosity Simply Unbelievable!"
·New York Times
-Het Parool, Amsterdam
-Aftonbladet, Stockholm
-New Daily, london
-Frankfurt Allgemeine
MEMORIAL HALL - Dayton, Ohio
TONIGHT
8:00 pm
$7.50 - $6.50 - $5.50
Only Area Performance MON2X60
..
Tickets Available at Tangeman Box Office
VOLLEYBALL NIGHT
NEWMAN CENTER tonight in
Hall on Scioto St. Admissior
Refreshments included.
Happy Birthday
Debbie, you arE
longer a kid. L
yo__u always, Jeff
Friday, February, 2, 1979 7
TV docuntentary unlocks Orwellian schente
ndar
NR Staff
Television news in the United
States is noted for both exceptional
exposes and exploitation of newsworthy drama. These are usually
sensitive and risky issues, as a
thorough expose feature such as CBS
News' ''60 Minutes" may draw
attention to previously secret affairs.
Also, the vifual media is efficient in
coverin~ 1dramatic crimes and
international issues, especially where
the emotional current of outrage is
strong, as in terrorist attacks on
citizens.
y
presents the Baroque
at 8:30p.m. in Corbett
runs through
Carnegie Arts
Scott Street in
College presents an
of the work of Bill
and David Clark
b. 16th during the
ege hours. Admis-
A common denominator for U.S.
Government agencies is the need for
national security, and a good deal of
bureaucratic and budgeting problems in the system are due to the
attempt to evaluate information in
the light of the concept "national
security." The apparent main issue is
in hiding potentially newsworthy
information from any who could use
orchestra music
Dvorak, SchoenMozart on Friday and
at 8:30 p.m. in the
II. For more informa1-1919.
···············~
ONE STOP
Consortium, 15 15
, is holding classes in
improvisation for
adults. Registranrrmon Feb. 9th. For
tion call 381-0645.
rmidable
's right
itions, but that's the sort
can be worked out in
llery performances there will be more. Fie on
torium! What marred
stunning performance
opening dances: Rudy
Annual"(it was panned
when CDT last
it so why did they do it
Cathy Paine's "Truck
Suburban Maryland."
nnual" is a potpourri of
, aimless gymnastics and
with an interlude of bubble
cap gun shooting and
forms of noise-making
for good measure. "New
described as a "choreo··· images drawn from
analogy is appropriate
Annual" has a certain,
However, what"spark" ignites a work
it into art, that spark is
"New Annual."
Farming in Suburban
" has proven that combinemporary dance and
music is a risky enterprise.
Lampert's "Home" and
ail in's "Newspapers"
at its best and proved
entation and improviithstanding, contem poris as beholden to solid,
oreography as traditional
"Home," in particular,
in many of the areas where
nual" failed. It is an
work, incorporating the
f Haydn, snatches of
(it worked here) and a
absurd baseball game.
Annual," the work is a
~o,nvlrnt•nt elements. Unlike
nual," the work was
y satisfying as performed
final word in attemptwhy two of the works
st repertory worked and
idn't is "0 elusive muse,
thou chooses to illumiefforts and detour
"(Cosgrove).
Tangeman Box Office
historically and politically. Dealing
with LSD and psychoactive drug
research and human experimentation,
defense scheming and secret
There are problems when the
media finds the wrong information, ptojects by public persons, and
or material which the intelligence brainwashing and breakdown
agencies would consider sensitive or tactics, the program treaded ground
confidential. The print media has which none would have dared cover
.been especially notorious in uncover- had the ground not been broken first
ing the underlying activity of tlfe by the media pioneers and investigapolitical system, in such historical tors.
exposes as the Pentagon Papers and
One of the latest investigators in
All The President's Men. There are the media scene is John Marks,
very obvious reasons why those in consultant for the ABC News
authority at the time would consider Closeup of mind control, and author
that stories like these are damaging of the related book, "The Manchurito national security.
an Candidate." Marks' search has
Last Tuesday evening, ABC News taken over three years, and involves a
presented a detailed program titled 30 ·year period of history.
"Mind Control and the CIA." This
news feature is the type of programThe program, "Mind Control and
ming reserved for late night viewing, the CIA" presented the story of the
as it dealt with issues which put the search for an ultimate weapon - the
idea of national security in a radical ability to effectively control another
new perspective.
human being's mind and will. The
"Mind Control and the CIA" was a production used interviews of those
significant program, socially, c~ose to the experimenters, who
Jakki Miller and Dana Gilbert performed in "The White Whore and The
Bit Player," one of two one-act plays presented by the Arts Consortium last
weekend. The other play,"Rats,"featured Tim Lewis and Barry Cummings.
Both were directed by Dexter Roger Dixon. Regretfully, the NewsRecord
was unable to review the performances due to the Saturday evening
snowstorm. Reaction from several theater-goers who saw the Friday evening
performance was favorable and the Arts Consortium is to be commended for
staging the plays in a city not noted for ultra-contemporary theater. Do it
again!
PR.~·-..,~-
Such an investigation makes excellent visual programming, and though
there are are criticisms I have concerning the television production, I
feel that it was valuable and timely.
SINGLE, WIDOWED, DIVORCED
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STEREO CLEARANCE HOUSE
HAS LOWEST STEREO
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2213 Clifton Ave.
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IG(e
attested to the details of experimentation with unwitting citizens, as well
as interviews with persons who were
given LSD without their knowledge
and watched by the "scientists"·
involved.
The CIA was concerned with
getting the jump on the world market
in psychoactive chemicals, as they
foresaw the value of using such in
brainwashing or "depatterning,"
programs. As the men involved
worked outside of the law, they held
no qualms about using Americans as
guinea pigs, as long as they were
powerless to seek revenge against the
CIA if they ever found out. The
subjects used were of the fringes of
society - drug addicts and prostitutes -those whose ,civil rights the
CIA did not mind trampling upon.
such against the collective selfinterest of the United States.
By Peter Jones
RESTAURANT
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Thurs. 9-8
S1.-00 off
till March 15
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·CI ASSIHEDS
Announcemeu1ts
Announcements
Congratulations to Joe Awad, the new
NewsRecord editor. Good luck this year
and next year.
DONT FORGET, FEBRUARY 9, IS THE
LAST DAY TO GET THOSE VALENTINES
DAY CLASSIFIEDS IN!!!!!!!
Adorable puppies free to caring person
Half New Foundland. Call Linda 475-2983
or 961-7936.
I love you Dups. Lovingly, M. Straker.
LOST: SEIKO watch, on or near campus
Sat. 27th. please Call 221-7581 .
CALL SUPREME TYPING NOW SPECIAL DISCOUNTS FOR 100-PAGE
PLUS ORDERS. 681-1355.
Rubber Malone, to the only groundhog
worth knowing. Happy Birthday, Jannie
Pierso.
Wanna Spend your Spring break at 20% OFF SALE on all vintage clothing and
Daytona Beach Florida? Campus radio nostalgic wearing apparel at Down Town
WFIB brings you FLORIDA: Air fare and 119 C!lihoun
hotel accomodat1ons lor 2, plus free LP's,
posters, movie passes, and much more! WEDNESDAY NIGHT FEVER.Israeli folkdancing every Wednesday night at 8:00 in
Tune in WFIB 800 AM!!
Annie Laws Auditorium. Instructor and
PARTYI PARTYI PARTY! Campus radio
open dancing. Miriam Rosenbum, instrucWFIB"s big FLORIDA party is Saturday tor. Sponsored by Hillel.
nite March 3 m Siddall Cafe - Beer,
refreshments. lots of prizes and the DONT FORGET TO GET THOSE VALENFLORIDA TRIP DRAWING AT MID- TINES DAY CLASSIFIED ADS IN BY
NIGHT! Party with WFIB March 3 (starts FEBRUARY 9 at 1:00
FOR WEDDINGS: Guitar graduate from
8:30p.m.)
TYPING SERVICE School papers a CCM with female vocalist available for
spec1alty, work guaranteed, reasonable. weddings and receptions. Evenings call
661-1192 or 221-5632.
531-4089
Typing
done - all kinds - expert APPLICATIONS FOR METRO SHOW:
This year's METRO SHOW will be held on Northern Hills area .. 85 page. 931-2354.
Saturday, April 21 and we are looking for Read the daily NEW YORK TIMES Special
acts. If you and a group of friends would college rate 25¢ at Main bookstore,
care to be "on stage" we would love to see Medical bookstore, TUG ticket office.
you. However, competition for stage time Israel needs you this Summer. Kibbuts
promises to be tough so we encourage and much more. Israel Programs 761you to get your applications in early and 7500.
start practicing now. Auditions lor the
show will be held on Friday, April 6. MEN! WOMEN I JOBS- CRUISE SHIPSI
Applications should be returned by FREIGHTERS! No experience. High pay!
February 23 to Tangeman Information See Europe, Hawaii, Australia, So.
Desk. Any questions call John lame (221- America. Winter. Summer! Send $2.75 to
SEAWORLD Box 61035 Sact., CA 95825.
1363) or Pete-Manilukas (475-4085)
COLLEGE
STUDENTS! INTERESTED in
"Nitrous Oxide (laughing gas) Tank Rental Write: Josephine Ave, P 0. Box 1022, joining an INVESTMENT TEAM? Call5599917. 9-11 p.m.
Dallas. Texas 75221
LOST:
Wedding ring, engraved, Deborah
Sen1ors. Before you hang it up, pick it up.
The Graduate magazine. Free for you from 28-12-77. Call 381-8243 evenings.
the alumni association. Distnbuted at your Sunday NEW YORK TIMES Delivered on
college office during Spring Quarter Sunday 861-9191.
Priority Registration January 29-February FEBRUARY 9, 1:00 is the deadline for
7, 1979
Valentines day Classifieds.
Need help in Spanish? Will tutor. Call 731- IMPROVE YOUR GRADES! Send $1.00for
2755 ask for Cami or Abdon.
356-page mail order catalog of Collegiate
Gwtar lessons available in popular styles Research. 10,250 topics listed. Box 25097by local professional. Call Bob at 871- B, Los Angeles, Calif. 90025 (213) 4778226
2734.
Oupensky- Gurdjieff Center now accep- I would like someone to write to
regardless of race, color, or creed. My adting students Call 871-2734.
VOLLEYBALL NIGHT sponsored by dress is Gary L. Wooley, #148-002, Box
NEWMAN CENTER tonight in Georgia! 511, C.C.F., Columbus, OH 43216.
$1. MODERN DANCE CLASSES, JAZZ,
Hall on Scioto St. Admission BALLET, TAP, ADULTS- ALL L'EVELS.
Refreshments included.
CONTEMPORARY DANCE THEATEA, 31
E. ST. ON METRO. 721-1919.
Happy Birthday
Debbie, you are no
longer a kid. Love
yo_u always, Jeff.
JAMES J. MAPES, ESP PERFORMANCE,
ENTERTAINER OF THE YEAR APPEARS
AT WILSON AUD. 7:30 P.M. MONDAY
FEB.19. TICKETS$.50attheU.C. TICKET
OFFICE.
Announcements
For Rent - Spring Quarter, spacious, air
conditioned two bedroom apartment
located within walking distance of
campus. Includes indoor and outdoor
swimming pools, balcony, full kitchen ,
heat , and much, much more. $245/month
241-5002 evenings. Ask for Bob
To the pledes and my assistant of Sigma
Delta Tau, You've done a great job all
quarter with the planning and replanning
lor the big event this Saturday. "Formal"!
couldn't have done it without you, Thanks
lor hanging in there! Love your Pledge
trainer
ALL NIGHT PARTY- TONIGHT AT THE
LIGHT VINE & CALHOUN.
Having trouble deciding on a major? Not
happy in your field? Want someone to talk
to? Need University information? Come to
the Educational Advising- 105 Beecher
475-3244.
JAMES J. MAPES APPEARS AGAIN FOR
A SELF HYPNOTIC SEMINAR AT THE
UNIVERSITY DINING ROOM 7:30 P.M.
TUESDAY FEB. 20. TICKETS $10.00 AT
U.C. TICKET OFFICE.
WHERE DO I GO FROM HERE? Confused
over your educational objectives? The
Educational Advising Center is here to
help you- Call 475-3244 or stop in 105
Beecher
Miscellaneous
Excellent typist available. Reliable, Fast,
Efficient, on brand new IBM Mag Card II.
Drop off convenient to campus. Call Beth
at 961-6809 after 6:00.
Typing done 475-3920.
Miscellaneous
Miscellaneous
OVERSEAS JOB- Summer/full time. Europe. S America, Australia, Asia, etc. All
fields, $500-$1200monthly expenses paid,
sightseeing. Free inform. - Write: International Job Center, Box 4490-CO,
Berkeley. CA 94704.
Supreme typing - Quality work reasonable rates - Guranteed - Call now
- 681-1355.
DIAMONDS ARE A GIRLS' BEST VALENTINE! Ring, 1 carat plus, appraised $2,750
- $1,295. Pendant on chain, 1 carat plus,
appraised $3,500 - $1,595. Write for appointment. P.O. Box 8131, Cincinnati,
45208.
DON'T FORGET TO GET THOSE VALENTINES DAY CLASSIFIED ADS IN BY FEB.
9, at 1:00!!!
DAZED? CONFUSED? We can help!
Come to the Educational Advising Center,
105 Beecher or call for an appointment
475-3244.
SUNDAY NIGHT IS FREE LADIES NIGHT
AT THE LIGHT, ONE HOT DISCO.
Passengers needed for trip to FLORIDA in
a Winabago, cost for transportation and
living is $185.00. If interested please call
Bet.h at 961-6809, after 6:00.
DON'T MISS JAMES J. MAPES, HYPNOTIST, POWER OF THE MIND. FEB. 19,
AT WILSON AUD FEB. 20ATTHEU.D.R.
ALL PERFORMANCES AT 7:30P.M.
Campus radio WFIB free Classified/ride
board- Broadcast your FREE announcement by calling us at 475-3601/475-4684
or stopping by at 203 TUC - another service from your friends atWFI B 800 AM/1 00
FM!
Spend the Winter with YOUR Campus
radio station WFIB 800 (request line- 4754684)
GIVE YOUR SWEETIE A THRILL ON A
VALENT IN E'S DAY! Broadcast your FREE
Valentines Day announcement on Campus radio WFIB/800 AM call 4753601/475-4684 or stop in at 203 TUC let us
know by Feb. 13!
ForRent
\\anted
BROOKWOOD APARTMENTS: Modern
Efficiencies, Furnished and Unfurnished
in Westwood. 3 miles from UC. Heat, Air,
Pool, laundry. Short Term Leases
Available. 481-1900.
Two-family house on Highland Ave. For
information. call 861-6186.
WANTED: Any Genesis Albums
posters. Call Bonnie 475-3920.
or
STEEL WHSE, help needed part time in
Roselawn area approx. 10 hrs. per wk. Set
your own hours. Call 731-6795.
For Rent - Spring Quarter, spacious, air
conditioned two bedroom apartment
located within walking distance of campus. Includes indoor and outdoor swimming pools, balcony, lull kitchen, heat,
and much, much more. $245/month. 2415002 evenings. Ask for Bob.
Would like to hear from students of U.C.
please write Smith Choi Bot 493
Montgomery WV 25136.
Wanted Camp Counselors, Interviewing,
2nd floor T.U.C. Wed. Feb.14, 11:0G-1:00.
Golden Bar Restaurant at Jack Nicklaus
Golf Center is now taking applications for
full time Summer employment:
Waitresses, Waiters, Bartenders (must be
21 ), Buspeople, housekeepers, cooks,
dishwashers, kitchen help, salad maker,
Hostesses - Host Experience preferred
but not necessary. Top wages plus tips,
good working conditions. Apply Monday'
or Tuesday, January 15-16, Restaurant,
3565 Kings Mill Road, Mason, OH 45040.
No phone calls please.
Room for rent $70 a month plus utilities 30
second walk to U.C.Ask for Paul221-7664.
Room for rent $100 a month 5 min walk to
U.C. ask for Kathy 421-0147.
Quiet, nicely furnished sleeping room in
Clifton area. Good neighborhood with
view. Call 281-9839.
ForSale
1967 VW Camper GREAT COND. $900.00
681-7586. •
Vintage clothing 1940's Call LORA 6817586.
JVC AM-FM Portable cassette recorder:
Peak indicator. 2 and 4 way speakers:
Good condition $150.00- 475-5927.
BINOCULAR MICROSCOPE: 4x, 10x,
40x, and 1OOx -il objective lenses, 10x
widefield ocular lenses, mobile stage and
condenser, built in illuminator, slide
manipulator. $550 or good offer. Bob
Good 475-2643 or 961-6505 nights.
NIKKO 7075 receiver 55 watts per channel,
like new still under warranty. Norman 9611451.
Down jackets - nylon shell $35.00 all
sizes. Navy or royal blue. 5-10 p.m. 6312336, 491-8476.
TAKAMINE F-340-S GUITAR WITH
CASE, ONLY $150. CALL DAN, 752-3705.
Bottle type pop machine holds 7 ounce
bottles, $200, Scott 281-0881.
-
any kind. 80¢ page. Call
Need help in Spanish? Will tutor. Call7312755. Ask for Cami or Abdon.
Does your club, donn room, Frat, or other
campus organization need a customer-imprinted T-shirt or jersey? 579-0400 days;
531-4196 eves.
I am a prisoner, without friends or loved
ones, so I seek friendship and correspondence with concerned people, that
are willing to help me through this time of
loneliness and need. I open my heart and
arms, to you. "the public"' for help. I would
appreciate anyone wanting to write me.
Lonne Ecols, P.O. Box 45699- 138000,
Lucasville. OH 45699.
JOBS ON SHIPS! American, Foreign. No
experience required. Excellent pay.
Worldwide travel. Summer job or career.
Send $3.00 for information. SAFAX, Dept.
K-2, Box 2049, Port Angeles, Washington,
98632.
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AD:
----------·------------- - - - - - - - - - - -------------------------- - - - - - - - - -
- - - - - - - --------------- -
/J
~~,~~--------------------------------------------------H t<'riday, February, 2, 1979
OSU demolishes UC women
By Greg Starddard
top scorers are 5-7 Kim Jordan, and
5-11 Franne Washington, who were
With a tough man-to-man defense averaging close to 30 points per
the Ohio State Buckeyes trounced contest. That's a remarkable statistic
the Lady Bearcats 85-38 Tuesday in even through UC held Jordan to 10
Columbus. UC was led by center points, and Washington to 23 points.
Peggy Foley's seven points, seven OSU, the number one team in the
rebounds and floor-leader Anita state, currently has a player in
Witcher's six points.
Jordan up for the Wade Trophy. In
This was definitely the poorest women's basketball the Wade
performance of the year for the ladies Trophy is a prestigious award,
as OSU capitalized on 30 Bearcat equivalent to the Heisman Trophy in
turnovers. Coach Julicne Simpson football, given to the top woman
commented, "We lost our confidence basketball player in the nation.
OSU's fast break completely cut
and just went out of our offense. Plus
the fact that we shot an unbelievable off the Bcarcats as they never led the
16 percent from the field, we can't whole game and could get no closer
win games with those statistics. We than I0 points.
"We're still trying to find ourselves
played with them the first five
individually and as a team. My girls
minutes and then we got lost."
Inability to put the ball in the hole worry too much while they are still
caused the lady cagers their third trying to adjust to me as a new
. straight defeat. OS U kept the coach," says Simpson .
Perhaps losing the game wasn't the
momentum on its side by putting
pressure on UC's guards, by not only disappointment as Simpson
states, "The biggest disappointment
letting them get the good shot off.
The game plan for the Lady was with five minutes left we were
Bearcats was to hold OSU's top down 36 points so we decided to stall
scorers below their average. OS U's because their fast break was killing
N R Sports Writer
Steve Shedroff/the NewsRecord
Webster (left) and Eveslage take a break between dives during Wednesday's practice.
Divers Della and Jill
are queens of the hill
By Chuck Zeisler
N R Sports Writer
Last year there was one,
Now there are two.I know who they are.
How 'bout you?
Who are they? Sophomore Jill
Webster and freshman Della
Eveslage, two of the best women
divers in Cincinnati, in Ohio, in the
United States-possibly in the world.
Imagine that. two of the best, right
here in Cincinnati.
There weren't always two. Last
year. Jill, as a freshman from Columbus Westerville North, outdove the
majority of her competition, eventually finishing fourteenth in the
AlA W Nationals. Bingo, AllAmerican status for Jill. She is still
doing well this season as a
sophomore, but she's performing ina
duet rather than as a soloist. Who's
her partner? Freshman DeJla
Eveslage from Cincinnati Ursuline
Academy.
Actually. the only real competition
these women have had this serson is
between themselves. Other than
teammate Virginia "Peanut"
Franer's two victories against Miami,
it appears as though upstart Eveslage
has had the upper hand so far.
When asked, Jill commented, "I
haven't had a good season so far but
I'm not really frustrated." One must
understand that "not really good" for
Jill Webster might be great for
someone else.
Why the slow start for Jill? Explained Coach Charlie Casuto, "She
lost ten pounds over the summer .and
was real weak. The cafeteria food
here doesn't help either. She also had
a different coach at home with a
different style."
What did Jill think about her
coaching conflict? "It was really confusing."
Casuto added; "Never again will
.Jill go home for the summer."
Della placed sixteenth on the three
meter board in the AAU nationals
last summer. She's had no other
coach but Casuto since she started
diving three years ago. "Charlie is the
reason I came to school here," said
Eveslage.
Jill's feelings were similar. "I like
him a lot, he's fantastic, the reason I
came to UC."
"There's healthy competition
bet ween the gir Is," said Cas uto. The
girls seem to agree.
"We dove AAU together during
the summer. She used to beat me and
l used to beat her. We help each other
out when Charlie isn't around," explained Eveslage.
Webster added, "It's good for me
I'm sure, to have her there-when I'm
doing well it puts pressure on herwhen she's doing well it puts pressure
on me."
How does coach Casuto compare
and contrast his two gems? "Della is
definitely the most powerful girl in
U.S. Diving; however, she lacks
finesse. She does a reverse one and
one half with one and one half twists
off the one meter board. No other girl ·
in the U.S. competes with that dive.
"Jill is more of a finesse diver, with
1®5
BEECHER
EDUCATIONAL
ADVISING
L~='NTER
Need help in choosing a major?
Undecided about your college career?
Hassles? Ques!Jons?
Not sure about your plans
for Spring Quarter?
Stop by the Educational Advising Center
105 Beecher Hall
475-3244
better than average power, and way
better than average finesse."
Both women have qualified for the
women's state meet and the AIA W
nationals. Said Casuto, "Both are
capable talent wise and practice wise
of placing in the top four in the nation, but I'm not sure about experience."
When asked how he got them
ready for a meet like the nationals,
Casuto replied, "I don't really get
them ready. They have so much
talent and are so easy to work with. I
try to make practices so consistent
that when they have a bad day,
nobody knows it but me."
While Della's power and higher
degrees of difficulty give her an edge
in dual meet competition, Casuto
thinks, "Jill's finesse will help her in
the nationals." He added, "for either
girl to win they will have to beat established divers by fifteen to beat'em
by one. The judges let the established
diver get away with more."
What does the future look like for
these two exceptional women? The
top eight finishers in the nationals
qualify for the 1980 Olympic trials.
Casuto referred back to the e<eperience factor with Della and Jill,
stating that, "1984 would probably
be more feasible, I'll have to wait and
see.,,
Diving of the caliber that Jill and
Della exhibit takes many hours of
FINER FOODS BY
practice. However, they are not at the
pool twenty-four hours a day. What
do two water-logged divers do for
fun?
Della smiled, "I've seen a few good
looking guys at UC."
Jill laughed, "I like Campus
Rendevous, but I don't do anything
without diving in mind. If I have
practice the next day, I don't want to
have a hangover."
The next time Jill, Della, and the
rest of the UC women swimmers will
be in action is Friday, February ninth
at 7:00 p.m. against Kentucky at
home.
TA~T 1110
The Lady Bearcats face a rough
Louisville team in Louisville, Ky.
Saturday night at 5:20 preceding the
men's game. By the way Louisville
ladies' team features Darryl Griffith's
cousin who is also a superb leaper.
VW REPAIR
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us Ironically enough, the OS U
coach put her first string back in and
they pressed! That really surprised
me and I really couldn't understand
why she did that. As a coach I
certainly didn't like it. On the other
hand I felt for the kids because it had
to touch them."
JUMBO
CHOCOLATE
KISSES,
~~~;~~~
FOR VALENTINE'S
DAY
DICK COLEMAN
REAR ENTRANC!_::- 329 LUDLOW AVENuE, ClNTI, OHIO 45220.
College-Conservatory
of .Music
presents
Puccini's
Five Performances, two matinees
Feb.22, 23,24, 25
U.C. Students, $3
Faculty & Staff, $3.75
Italo Tajo, stage director
Gerhard Samuel, conductor
Tickets at Tangeman CenterTicket
Office, 475-4553
COLLEGE STUDENTS
$100-$250 A WEEK
Part Time and Flexible Hours
If you are bright, aggressive and
·would enjoy working with .the
public, then an excellent money
making opportunity awaits you with
this national merchandising company. No experience necessary, but
must have a dependable car.
Ask about our guaranteed salary.
Dennis
772-1260
Save up to $20 or more on men's
traditional Siladium® rings and
selected women's 10K gold rings.
SEE THE ART CARVED REPRESENTATIVE
•savings vary slightly from style to style.
You get your cho1ce of the free opt1ons shown above. and save money
Take advantage of th1s great sale on h1ghest quality college nngs See
them now Order yours today.
DEPOSIT REQUIRED . ASK ABOUT MASTER CHARGE OR VISA
DATE
Jan. 29Feb. 2
FINAL DAY!