Staff member robbed and abducted

Transcription

Staff member robbed and abducted
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This week
Iwantmy'UofI:..
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inside
A r t s and
benefitsall
Evenwllh theomces
dosed and students
away. l h e campus
willbe full ofactlvlty
B y Daryl Lee Ewlck
News Editor
What do Miss America
andJeanneIVhlte have in
common?
Both Leanza Comett,
Mlss America 1993,and
Thanksglvlng
Wxkend.
See Page 5
Airwaves
taclrlesa~
toughissue
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?Jon
Last week. White and
Cornett brought their
*<
For Comett. the &ht against AIDS
became personal alterlosinga friend to thisdisease
at-the age of 17.
Anger was an emotion
that Comett became intimatewlthunUIsheleamed
to channel her energies
Into helping educate.
'I took my pain and
turnedlt intomotlvatlon."
s a d Comett.
White and her f d y
entered the spotlyht of
public scruUny In 1984
WhenRyanwvas~
with AIDS.
---
?hegoalofawnrld
premler play is to
educateaboutAIDS.
.
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See Page 11
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Weird,
weirder &.
weirdest Al
visits Indy
Performance Sun.
day reviewed.
See Page :1
Anewera
begins
Curlouser
&
CurloW.HOWelse
to desaibe what &
to become of t h e
1992-93 men's
basketball team?
See page 1E
Index
Opinion
Page 2
NeWS
Page 4
Features
Page 1 1
sports
Page 14
Cartoons
Page 8
Horoscopes
Page 9
PointsofUght
Page 2
CreativeWriting Page 7
RcturePage
Page 10
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November li3.1992
17
Volume 73. Issue 11
on
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Music'vibeowill
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B y Debble ,Snyder :
StaEWriter . . .
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"'
' ,
:.Studentsat U of I will have the
"chanceto appear inanhlIvvideo.
CulturkTribe. arapgroup.wifflbe
:shooUng a ' h e video d u m n
co&
on \Vednesday.n@t.
'.'TheHIstoryofBlackhIusicconcirtwlllstart at 8:oOinRansburg
Auditorium. CultureMbe'svldeo
\hllappearonMIVandBEfsome&e inthebeginning ofnext year.
All, Students are .enmnged to
,attend t0,be.apart ofthevideo.
~'"IlIecon&rtwlllbedIvidedinto
threesectlons.cwering spiritual
arul go~peL@Z a'nd b l ~ ~ : ~ d
Icontemporarymugc. :
. :. .Ticketswill be available in the
Omce ofstudent D a d o p m d and
Retention. ?he tickets are free to
students. This concert will count
for convocation .credit.
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Staff member robbed and abducted
Jean Jacket with a tear in the rlght
sleeve and blue ]e& pants tucked into
police when any s u s p ~ o u spersons
are seen on campus.'
Monday morning. at appmvimately wNteh!ghtoptennlssho. Thesecond
People oncampusat anyUmeneedto
8:lO. a stalT member at U of I was suspect is of thIn build. had dlrty 0x1- be aware of their surroundings and
abducted and robbed.
gemalls. and a crackedvoice.
watch out for suspicious people.
AccordQ to the police report, the
The victim immediately called camThe campus pollce are on patrol 24
victlm pulled her car into the parking pus police and reported the incldent. h o u s a day and may be mched by
lotjustwest ofRuthLUyCenter. Two
Campus Safety and Pollce Dlrector, dlallng788-3386 or 788-3333 on
men appmched her and asked If she Keith Smith. and an Indlanapok Po- weekends or alter 4:30 D.m.
was a student. The viclctim replted no, llce Department Evidence T&cian
,
andoneofthemensudddynhlgabbedher reported immedlatdy to the
by the neck and hair and forced her into last Scene of the crime. The
the back seat of her ca~.
They then Evidence T a c l a n treated
drove her car off campus.
the victlm's automobile for
Hints to reduce campus crime
?he men dumped her purse into the prints and the scene was infmnt seat and demanded money. She wsttgated. "he Indfanapolls
'IheJan/Feb. 1987tssueofCLRCLEK
eqhlnedthat she had no money. When Police Department is presqoztne offers~
J suggestions
o on
~
the man who was drMng d l s c o v d enUyinvestyaUngthecrime.
how b J g N crime on campus '
that the car was low on gas. he became
Kelth Smithstated that this
A Never leave your keys laying in
angyandpdedintotheparkhglotof Is not a cause for students to
plain sight.
BU&s Supermarket at 3001 South becometotallywary ofwalkMeridianStreet.
lngaround campus. This Is
A Park in well-lighted areas and
The men tookthevictim'stanleather not a definite pattern. Thfs is
wallet.containlryanL.S.Ayrescharge the flrst campusrobberylhis
leave your car locked.
card and other identincation papers. year. Thelast reportedmband got out of the car. ?hey dawnded bery was November 13 of
A Avold walking alone at night.
that she stay In the back seat and last year, and the last one
warned her to not tell the police.
before that was InJanuary of
A Carry the least amount of cash
Thevlctimhasdescribedthemenas either 1989 or 1990.' he
two white males. both around twenty stated. However. he advises
possible.
yearsofage."hefirst suspect lsaround students and faculty to %e
5'9Wth a thin build, dirty straw- aware of any persons that
A Don't prop open doors meant
berry- blonde hair. a moustache, and a . may approach than, and to
to be locked.
faircomplexion He waswearlng a blue be sure to contact campus
By Crystal D. Weddle
Staffwriter
Staying Safe
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7
Points of Light
D o you feel this is a
safe campus?
Crime and Punishment
By l i m T i e r
Columnist
I once heard someone say, m e
road to Hell is often paved wlth
goodintent1ons:Thisis absolutely
true. Consider the naively saccharineideallsmofthemanyattempts
atWlrelormintheUnitedStates.
In theory. the principles underly-
ingmanyofthereformefrortsseem
nn msrvniter
Freshmnn
Psychology
Yes. I think It is safe
because there is crime
everywhere and we don't
have too much here.'
Kim Phllbln
Senior
Psychology
"Yes. I stlll think this Is a safe
campus. There is goiry to be
crime in any large city. We do
need to be aware that we aren't
sheltered just because we are a
small campus.'
reasonable and sincere; however,
in practice. they have often made
matters worse. Prison rdorm is a
prime example.
'RehabUtaUon" has been the
battle cry of prison reform advocates during the last twenty years.
This Rehabllftatlon Theory states.
'Criminals are partly or entfrely
victims of social circumstances
beyond their control and that societyowesthemcomprehenshretreatment in the form of rehabllitatlon'
(Dye 252). Thus, prison reforms
the criminal and the individual
becomes a productive participant
insoclety.
+
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c
rI agree with this. in principle. It
would begreat Ilcveryone contributed to the common good. Howmer. the implication that society.
n t h e r than the criminal. should
be held accountable for a crime is
presumptuous. It's also contrary
to the JusticeTheory. whlch states
the individual is "responslble for
his guflty acts compelling h!m to
pay a debt to society' (Dye 251).
But. we're talking about rehabllltation. not justice, I guess.
So, hasrehabllltatlonbeeneffecWe?
Not even a llttle bit. Appmrimately 500.000 inmates are sewI
Rkk leg^
Sophomore
Accountfng
'I really believe thls campus I s
safe. But crime has been on
the rise around here. I think
that II campus police spent less
time giving out the& petty
,
parklly ilckets we wouldn't
have to w o w so much about
crlmes.'
Tod Buttennore
Sophomore
Philosophy/Rellgion
"It'sprobably safer here than at
IUPUI. there seems to be more
opportunity [for crime] there.'
(Dye 2521. Nso. on a n avenge,
'three-quarters ofpersons paroled
from prison will be rwrested for
seriouscrimes'@ye255). Finally.
of the two mllllonpeople onpmbationforfe1onies:nearly two-thlrds
of probationers will be arrested
andone-halfwlll be convicted fora
serlous crime while on probation'
[Dye 254). Essentially. we neither
maketheprisonersbetternorkeep
them off the streets.
So It goes.
Let's jump t o the bottom line.
How much does it cost to keep an
Inmate incarcerated for a year in
our top-notch program. Get thfx
$25.000.That'stwenty-TtveTHOUSAND dollars (Dye 255). $25.000.
We could send the prisoner to an
Ivy League university for that
amount.
Okay. here's my suggestion. It's
sortofpro~ressive,butlt]ust~ht
work. I propose that we construct
a 1 u . w ~penal colony on a deserted island L q the- Caribbean.
.- -- . It
rouId be-stnxctnredaftemrondo-d
mlnium c o m u n l t y . The annual
$25,000 would be allotted to each
Inmate. who would use It to pay
h i s h e r l i v q expenses on the island. Here's my basic brcakdown
monthly expenditures per inmate:
$25.000/12 months
$2083 per month
$550
Rent (One bedroom apartment. furnished. all
electric, central air)
~
-
-
$150- UUllUes
$25 -Cable
$250 -Food
$50 Phone Bill
$150
Clothes (Inmates
irysentencesinstateandfederal need to look sharp. too. It UTIprisons throughout the U.S. Of proves self-stem.)
$50 -Household goods
these. 90 percent had a crimlnal
$475
Car Payment
record prior to committing the act
that resultedintheircurrentterm
Scc 'Prison' Next Page
Edltorfal Board:
"he Student/Re~twisa weekly publication produced by the students of
CMcket Steele
the Unlversltyof Indlanapolls for the students.faculty, staff and adminiski- Edltor
Managlng
Edltor
s3r3B3stln
Uon of the university.
Buslness
Manager
KenJa Kendrick
Letters to the Edltor and Advertlsements run in this publlcation are not
sports Edltor
J.D. Hamllton
the opinlon of the publication nor the unfversity. Articles, advertisements
Feature Edllor
Tracy Deardm
and Letters to the Edltor can be sent to:
News Edltor
D q lWck
The Student/Reflector
Oplnion Edltor
Jeff Narmore
1400 East Ennnn Ave.
Co-Photo Edltors
Jlm hfumw
Indtanapolls. IN 48227
Crystal Weddle
Adviser: Tenl Lynn Johnson
For more fnfomtion on policies or adverllsements call 788-3269.
CartWdSt:
Jennl CLykson
-
-
Columnlsb:
TLm Flllcr
Chuck Porter
staff Writers:
Perry Mann
Debble Snyder
Aaron Rhehart
Erik schwarz
Chuck Johnson
ContributIng Writers
Jenny Fleckcr
ErlckTrueblocd
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Page 3
November 17. 1992
I stllldon't Ilke to talkabout my&
encounterwith tobacco. I was fishing
with'the bigguys."whomIlookedup
to. Andy, who was 16 but looked old
andwise toatwebeyearold. tookthe
Ild offof a can of Skoal tobacco. Andy
Informedme that this wascalled'dlpping.' and I should try it. I did.
.
I got a b g pinch. just llke hhn. put
it in my mouth and. .. 7Vait.' Andy
said. 'Don't swallow It Too late! I
spent the next hour and a hall floatQ belly-up in the llsh pond praying
I would die before I threw up again.
hly worst and last experience happened sometimebetween the Mondale
and DukaWs years; I was behind the
..."
hghschoolgqm.duringadance.with
some guys who all wore black leather
jackets and Ratt concert t-shirts. I
thought they were cool back then,
and theyhadallowedme tocomewlth
them to'hang out.'Aguynamed Rlck
w h o was 14. but already shaved and
:had an earring. lit a cigarette and
'handed another to me. T r y it. man,"
ihe said. 'If you wanna get the babes,
yoube got to smoke."
Maybe he had a poInt. Clgarettes
(hadto be better than chewing toi bacco. and besldes. It looked Wefun.
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Letter t o the Editor
She told me to get lost.
In the past fewyears. Itelearned of
all the things smoking can lead to:
emphysema, low bhth welght. smelly
clothes, yellow teeth. wrinkled skin,
bloodshot eyes, and cancer. cancer.
cancer. Even your car is worth less
whenyou trade It in. I consider myself
lucky. The only thing I still wonder
about iswhy.with all ofthesereasons
not to smoke. do people continue to
smoke, and even worse. start smokIry or using tobacco?
I do, sadly. understand that there
arernanywhowishtoquKbutslmply
cannot.
Maybe t h e Great American
Smokeout. sponsored by the American Cancer Society can help, at least
in the short run. The American Cancer Societyfeels that many who prove
to themselvesthattheycanquitsmokQ for 24 hours or more can quit
forever. Last year, over 35% (17.7
mlllion) of all smokers participated.
The event will begin Thursday. and
smokers are encouraged to quit "cold
turkey" for one to three days (5.8
mlllion made it more than 24 hours
last year).
There's something for non-smokers
, ~to do
~ ono Thursday.
l ~ ~too. ~Non-
smokersareencoungedtoadopttheir
favorite smokers or tobaccousers and
keep them onthe strdght and narrow
for the full 24 hours.
An event at City hIarket Thursday.
from 11a.m. to2p.m..willprovidean
opportunity for smokers to cash in
their cigarettes by shooting them
through a basketball hoop, In exchange for free turkey sandwiches
fromSubway(1hsurprised they didn't
think ofplaying hockey with contahers of smokeless tobacco)l Besides
this event, theAmerican Cancer Soclety suggests hiashtnys. drlnklng liquids (no coffee or alcohol). takingdeepbreaths. andusingthebuddy
system to kick the habit.
If nothlng else works, think of the
money you'll be saving. not to mention the lung capadty. If you're a
pack-a-day smoker and you quit cold
turkey, that'salmost ane~tra$14per
week you'd have to treat yourselfto a
movie. new books, tapes. or clothes.
Youcouldevenhelpyourselftoa dally
double cheeseburger and large order
of french fries in Streets'Comer but
thenagaln. there's that problemwith
cholesterol...
...
-Jeff %more
Opinionzditm
'
Prison, From Page 2
You're afrald someone Is going to ages seven and eight. Of course, at
tell five and slxyear olds it's OK to be that age children do not understand
[$15.OOOluxury sedan@100hcomg a p Well, for centuries people have what's happening. Yet from the time pounded annualty,for four years).
been telllng their children just the we are babies on we are constantly
.' .
$250 - Insurance
opposite that all homosexuals are being shamed about our bodies. So
.
$1983-T0tal"
.
the same illthy. disgusting moral what ifchildren are taught the &uth
That leaves $133 for mlscelladegenerates.At best, gays are branded about their sexuality at an earlier neous expenses. One could invest
'mentally Ill." We live In a rnurder- age? By that time, many have already thls amount in a Christmas Club,
OL&
homophobic societywheremany been forced to deal with things like or, for'lnmates with longer senpeople feel justfled using verbal and death!
tences.'a retirement Savings plan.
physical abuse against ourgaybrothPersonally, I believe that in a more
This idea has a lot ofunexplored
ers and sisters simply because they ideal society, chfldren would learn potential. It'sperfect. Thlnkabout
about human sexuality oufsfde the
are dllferent. It's sick. 8
the possibilities for private sector
hlany people will gladly pay money school system. But Inthis day and retall and service industries.clso.
to see movies with all kinds of vio- age it doesn't seem to be working. by creating a pleasant prlson atlence. I can't begin to count all the Let's be practical.
mosphere. the number of parole
slasher movles showing people getIn 1974, theTrustees ofthe Ameri- appllcations"wou1d be. reduced.
tIng slaughtered right and left. No canPsychiatricAssociationruledthat which would keep our streets safe
dlty.
problem. However, let hvo women or 'homosexuality shall no longer be from possible repeat olfenders.
You referred to liberals (ActuaUg it two men so much as share a kiss llsted as a mental disorder In the However, politicians have not yet
'was the "PC'people.There's a dfJier- onscreen. and all the so-called mor- Association's ofllcial nomenclature of
seriously considered thls altema1ence. Ed1 as those \vho want to ex- alists" are up In arms.What does this mental disorders listed as 'sexual tive.
1 p3nd the moral grey area until there say about our socletp Would we re- deviation.'" (The Church and the HoWriteorcall your legislators and
lis no dlfference between right and ally rather watch two human belngs mosevud by John J. McNelll) And mention this -Give A Crook A
ttvmng: Generally all they are saying kill one another than make love?
recently various studies on sexual Condo" plan. It might possibly be
'Is 'live and let live." It's a big world.
No wonder you were so 'grossed orientation have been performed.
the onlytrue 'comprehensive treatrhere's room for everybody!
out" as a child when you learned the Thus, we noy know for a fact that
ment- for our.unfortumtevictims
As for the gay Q h t s movement
truth about what you referred u s homosexuality can be studied at the of circumstince. We should rebiological level. Your little parent member t o b e d i s t i cinour hopes
111 they ask is that gay people be 'normal sex." Many adults c&ot
reated asequal andworthymembers even cany on a simple serious dis- theoryis becomiry somewhat archaic. for success, though. After all. "the
If society. They are s e e m adequate cussion about S ~ Kwtthout bursting hIr. Narmore.
best laid plans' of m1c.e and men
Hopefullyoursocletywfflsoongrow gang aft a'gley' ( o R q go awry).
I d rlghts and protection from ais- into laughter. That's a damn shame.
rtmlnation underthelaw.They aren't &ah. what kind of statement is th15 up and come together to fight all
Dye. Thomas. PolftIcs in States
prejudice. includixy homophobia.
iurtlng anyone. and as long as this about our culture?
and-'ComrnunUks, .New Jersey:
ict remains true. their sexuallty is
A lot of people can recall their first
-Anthony J. Srnfthhart Frentice. .Hall.1991. .,
. .
sexual feelings beginnlry as early as
helr own bush&. Period.
.
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JeN Narmore.
When I read your article. "Guess
who might be sneaking into your
chtldk bedroom?" Wol. 73, Issue 10,
Nov. 3. 1992). I was utterly appalled.
But when I read your response in the
I Nov. 10.1992 Issue.Iwasthoroughly
disgusted as well.
Whether or not books such as
IBrmda Has Two Mommfesbelong In
lourgrade schools Is beside the point.
'Your article was offeniive to many
I because you are obvlously anti-gay
and your aiircle k & j u s t a good oldfashioned iound of gay,b a s h e .
The truth Is. In my opinlon, that
IbeQ'gay &just anot!!er kind of Iwe
-a natural varlation InhumansewI
packagesandbrands-itwasaform
of self-expression. maturity. and rebellion. With a Marlboro in my hand
IcouldtumlapslUteRickMears. play
tennis with guys who don't speak
English. or sail the Caribbean with
older women In blkinis. Which reminded me. what if Rlck was right
about the 'babes'?
I tookthe cgarette, lit it onthe sixth
try and Inhaled deeply. I struck my
best come hither pose and waited ior
the girls to come running. But suddenly the smoke hit my lungs. I
stopped c o u g h Q a fewmlnuteslater.
Everyone was laughing. "You'll get
the hang of lt, dude," one boy tnformedme. 'Itebeensmokingfor two
years.' But I dldn't want to get the
h a y of it. I wanted a stick ofgum or
a Cert. or anythlq to get that taste
out ofmy mouth. hly eyeswerewateriry and my flngers smelled llke n
moldy basement. Even worse, the
smell was in my clothes, my hair; it
followed me Ilke allttle tell-talecloud.
I reallzed then that you can't believe
everything you see and hear. Smokiryhadnothingtodowithncingcan
and saUlng boats. Most disappointQ, the 'babes' never showed up. I
asked
~ - one
. shy-looking
~ ~ ~ girle to dance.
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Talking about AIDS from page
November 17.1992
1
U r n that AIDS is a dlsease that will
*.
b P P W
TNs dtsease is here to stay and
there's no getrid of it unless we
educate owselves and stick with one
partner.' statedWhite.
GctPmfdonalPinnncInl
Comett would like to see the emAdvicefmmnConsultnnt/
phasis shtR from'dying fromAIDS' to
Acwrmtnnt/BudnwOnner
' I l with
~ AIDS."
w/nBerkeleydegree.
To Comett and White. the battle
against this disease is a personal one.
Learn How YouCan:
Both would lIke to see more people
E RcduceYourLiutngExpcnscs
S A n a l y z c / C o n ~ r o l Y o u r C ~ ~ ojoin
~ in the flght.
S S a u c ~ a nThousandsInLffc
y
'I stress to you from the bottom of
S AuoldRtpoffsandSaucTfmc
my heart to open up your doors to
Order'The S t u d e n t ' s F c M
people with AIDS." sald White.
SdGPidc".
'Everyvoicematters. MakeadIITerSendonly$3.9LT MdaSASEto:
ence." urged Comett.
E.R.WntSon.266EhwoodAVe.,
~W233.Bufif1lo.NY14222
f m m infmtion calc
788-3269or 788-3445
An exhibition of illus&tions used
locallyinblo-medicalfleldsisonpubIIc Vlewlng in the Leah -bug
Art
gallery beginnlry November 14.
"Vital VIsIon: Medical Illustration In
Indlanapoh'willbeondlsplayinGood
Hall through December 11.
Theillustratlonswllle~lorethevariety of subjects, medla. and styles
employedbymedicalillustratorsinthe
Indlanapoh metropolitan area. Also
included will be slide presentations
and a display of three-dimensional
models and teaching shnulators used
in medical Illustration.
Medicalillustratorsfromareahospltals and medlcal centers will paNc1pate in the exhibition.T h e core will be
work from the studios of the Department ofhledicallllustrationat theIndiana University Schoolof Medicine. accordingto professorEarlSnellqkrger.
dlrector of the Leah Ransburg Gallery.
TheexhibitwUopenNov. 14at 10:30
a.m.withalettureentiUed'Cave~Vlls
to Computers: The History of Medical
Illustration.' It will be followed at 1
p.m.by'BiomedIcallllustrationTechniques.'BothwillbegIvenin213Good
Hall by professional medical illustrators, courtesy of the membership of
Indiana ArUst Craltsmen.
Exhibitorswlllbe CraIg Gosllng. dlrector of the Department of hledical
Illustration at the IndIana University
SchoolofMedlcine: JohnNIxon. asslstantdlrectoroftheDepartmentofh?edical Illustratlon. I.U. School of hledlclne: Jane\Vatatson.supervlsorofmedical illustrations at St. Vincent Hospital; SharonTeal. amedical illustrator
at the I.U. School of Medicine: Roland0
Decastro. D.M.D.. a dental illustrator
at the I.U. School of Dentistry: Karen
ChevaIIer-Smlth.a free-lance medical
illustrator: Gary SchnItz. dlrector of
medicalfflustrationattheIndfanaHand
Center; and Brenda Kester. a medIcai
illustrator at Methodist Hospital.
~~~
RAISEACOOE
$1,000
S
w COAPN
XNJUSTONEWEEDI
PLUS$~O~~FORTHE
lWEMEERWHOCALLS1
NoobIIg~tton.Nocoat.YouaInogcta
FREE.IIDN)PHONCTW)IOJustfor
1-8w-032-Os28,Ext.ss
'
RYOhEAlAYE
If you're n young person. twenty-one to
Ihirty-nine, !hacis an oppormnity waiting
for you in the Indimpolis IuniorChmber
of Commcrce (Jqrees). The Jaycees is an
intenutiod organkition which offers
leadership training and personl
development through community service.
If you arc in&
in more information,
plesc conat OUToffice at 6336363.
NEEDS
[FULL O R P A m 7 l h f E
1 DRIVERS.
1 GOOD KNOWLEDGE OF
.
I
I
WEEK PAID TRAINING.
1'
I!
I!
1'
I!
-
II
APPLY METRO TAXI
1 5 2 0 N. ALADAMA ST. I
1
I
11-4:OO
BRING D R N I N G
a
CALL RECORD.
I' NOW
034-4564
,
I
1
ii
II
L I I I I I I I I I d .
by Aaron Rinchnrt
SportsWritcr
Bill Bailey. who Is the Executive
Director of the IndIana Prevention
h alternate title for today's 2
p.m. convo could be 'Sex. D W S .
and Rock and Roll." D u m the
convo,Balleywillbeplayingsamples
of music that go along with his
discussion.
ResourceCenteratl.U..willdiscuss
roles of popular music. More precisely. Bailey's topic deals with the
mixed messages in mudc and how
theypertahtotheuseofalcoholand
other addictive substances.
-
International Employment
hfnke money tenchlnghglloh
nbmd.
JnpnnnndTdm.
Mnnyprovidc room8rboard
nndotherbene5tol
Make $2.000-$4,000+per
month.
Flnnncifdlynnd C d t u d y
Q95 is looking forenthusi3sticand
a n i c s l e individdsfor pm- lime
employment in the telemdketind
nxachdepwnentEvening
wsitions onlv. c3u257-7565 or
a
Y
E
' R e l i g w n d s e r a r e p w r p l a y s man@daiingthcpeopkJorthemomythrypy.
They're sflling ~kin'the~y'y selling Cpd Th;.humbeis l e L h e L 5 @ m iheirnrd!r"cards. ThepdlliclnnsSay Mtddrugs w h U e - d p f J o r h Lr&uulA&rf~a\\@~
fighting~u~~ecmp~~urr.MethebanksstayJat ondthepoorstaypr.Theh-h
get N h The cups get paid to look a w y as the one percent rules A m r i m
Qrwnrryche's GxJTate ln a song Jrom the album Opemtion' AlhdCrimr
!i I!
nanrdlnel
,
-
For employmentprogram call:
(208)632-1146 e*. J5580.
Come Join the Fun
Nov 1-30
Nov 12-30
Nov 9 & 10
Dec 1-3
Solomon's WardrobeShoedrivk
Zoobook and Baked Fruit Sales
Dayspringcenter
BellringingforSdvationhy
Meetings everyTkiursday
at2p.rn.DownstairsinSchWvitzer
Note: Don't forgetto lookin your closets
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November 17.1992
.
The 17thAnm d
. .
. . . . .
.,
Artsandcrafts
. .
.GROUPSERVICE
of niminal deviance. hlost of them
Falr will be in
NlcosmHalland
- OPWRTUNITY
have'been sent to the school after
Ruth Luly CenWith the ThanksgMng holfday riumerousactsofburglary. shopliftc o w nekt .w&; students ire 'ing,drhgdeallng. orminorfelonies.
ter on Saturday,
Nov. 28. 10
andousto~eta~~a~fromthe"schoo1
. We yill be meeting at 6 pm. on
a.m.-5 p.m. and
W d ' to re!^ at home for' a few ' Saturday in the lobby of North Hall.
days. Itis anotdtlngmomenttosee Romthereu.ewilltnveltoP13Jnneld
Sunday. Nov.
the W'setonds tick away in your fora7p.m.'rend~ous"\~~thCab.bin
29. noon-4p.m.
This event.
last class beforevacation Freedom 9ontheir&mpus'Cabin9isacabin
sponsoredbyNu
at last! But, It would not.be -so the houses some ofthe m x e m t u r e
Tau Chapter of
excltinglfyouhadtoremainhereon and responsible students a t ' t h e
Delta n c t a Tau
campus whlle you knew the rest of . school. We will remain thelr unU
Sorority . .of
yo&
peers <-ere at home having a a p p r a ~ t ~ 9 p . m . , a t r v h l c h t t m e
*.
.*
f
Greanvbod. was
goodtone.
. . .
we wlll travel back to U of I.
orlglnally a t B r i t t 3 n y ~ ~ I n h e r , n s t ~ e n t n t U o f I ' s D c v c l o p m h o o
Ifyou were a resident at the IndlSo,grabyourdeckofcds. brush
trlceout ncomputer purchneedbytheNuTauChnpter o
GresnvoodH!gh DeltnThetn
F
a
Boy's
School.
a
correctional
faup
on your pool skills. or just :
b
TnuSorority. From left, Susle Anderson
School. HOW- Dcltn Thetn Tnu. Dale Turner. Director of thc
cillty forjuveniles. th,enyou would.. readyto taLL;..alot! Comejoinus at
ever, last year Preschool. nnd Jnnfcc Schcfflcr. instructor. n n t c h
not.be able to go home for the holl- the Bay's Schml on Saturday. h'ov.
the move was
days: jQur d a p would.be spent on 21! Anyquesttonsmaybedtedto
made to U ofrs
. thelonelyi3qfsSchdCampuswith; Chuck Porter at 78 1-5309.Please.
campus to allow for additional parking work hours performed by sororl
out family, friends. or ?'cozyhome 1
mesageifChuckis not in.
space ndmomforfutureboothqan- members yearly as well as from cri
envlronment. . . .
. ,..
f a proceeds. Also, scholarships a
don
Into the Streets. aserviiegmup
.
.
.
Following last year's craft falr, the awardedtograduatesfromthreeGree
at U of I. is interested in prbvldlng
:' &SERVICE
. .
somrlty made a contrlbution to the wxd area high schools.
the resldents'of the Boy's School in
. . .''oPPoAthletic Department's Booster Club to
Over 150 exhlbltors from throug
Plaintleldwithamoreful0Uiryholl.Volunteers
i
In Senrice (VIS)
help purchase awards for unhrerslty out In&
and surmundlry stat
' day than'what they are .normally prog& has receivedmany urgent
athletesJecently..theN of JDqelgp;, ,yU.display their craRs for sale. Admi
: u ~ tdO ~ i n a C O ~ U O @ ~ i J S ~ t U'calls
U O ~for
. student. faCUlty. and S t d
mentalheschool received a computer, slon to thisyear's event isS2 foradul
.Ch.'Soturday. N o v e m b e r : 2 L ,volun~eer&The:fo~owing .the
computer table, printer and educa- Food and drinks wlll be a a b l e .
I.T.S. will be'taking a group d s t u te 'needs of ,magencies:
In addition to some unique gift i t a
tionalsoftware from& fair earnings
r i n g . C e n t e r : Ancmgdrg
dents to PlaMidd t o m d a n a . e n i n g
F,
and sorority d o r t s to obtah in-ktnd the Greenlvood Arts and C&
with the school's residents. We will
e Indlanapolls community
provldes an opportunity to help t h c
contributions.
shiply be 'hang1n'out"wlth them. IS the' need for volunteers to help
A number of agencies throughout less fortunate. Foraddltional inform
so to speak A popular actMty Wth. . sewethe&y'shomelesspopulation
the Indlar;lpous and Johnson County UoncontactAliriamNarmore. Omce
the' bays at 'the school is playins and to help oqpnlze donations that
areasbendit fromthe manyvolunteer Community Senrices, at 788-330:
cards (most cornonly euchre and are prodded for the benellt of those
Spades). Last yeir when we took a "inthat population. Please contact
p u p to the school. we played s e ~ -the omce of community senrfces;if
enlgamesofpool. tookpartin'what'.you are interested in volunteeriry
seemed like a h u d r d card games.
the Daysprrng Center.
watched
W...
andjust
Simply
dlvntion
Army B e l l R i n g e r
protected
from
diseases.
AU students carrying nine or more
k
d
.
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:
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December
1.2.
a n d 3 from4-9 p.m.
a
student's
childhood
vacclnatic
If
hours are required to have their stu' : . COntnry to misconceptions about "'(onehour blocks) a t the Greenwood
records
are
not
available,
or
if
he
dent-Health Record on Ne.This inthe school, it 1s redly not adolent Parkhlalloralocationnearcampus
cludes non-traditional and intema- she just needs to update his or h
place: in fact most of the students . to be' announced.
lmmunfiations. aclinlciswlthlnwal
tional students.
m just In need of a good role model :'. Call CommunitySewices (3303)
Kot only does this record provlde iry distance. It charges $5.00 for i
so their energies don't get focUsed~.or come to. the lower level of the
M o m t i o n about allerges and emer- needed shots. Please stop by the nu=
a'viol&t'or
d a l a n t ' v e r . .The ..SchwftzerCentertosfgnup.
,.
gency contacts. but it #ves the Health omce for details.
studenb'who
make
up
the
school's
.
.
. .
If a student needs a physlchn he
Center nurse uermlsslon to treat one
': . .
SHALOM!'
population
habeen
placed
in
the"
.
'
foranymhorhjufles orillness. and. sheshouldstopbythenurse'sace
institutionbecauseofrepeti~~acts
. .
.
.
.
when necessary, to
a referral to Cravens Hall. Referrals wffl be give
the university physician.
?he Health
rl.ucu1-1ma811-1k911111n.91
di
Forms are available in the A b - Record Is
slonsolllceorintheHealth Center.
required
ndianapolis
Allhpilth fnrncnwrl tnhemvnnlet.4 for admisand returned to the nurse's && after don.
3 at the Health Center, on a firstThanksglvtng break That gives stuNo s t u come fmt-served basis, through
dents a chance to see the& own ph)xi- dentwillbe
November 24. Center hour^: 8
ciansfor the required p h s s i d .
allowed to
nud G
,
Ai
'
,
L
'
'
are
'
'
'
,
1
j
,
'
'
H u shots
form.
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November 17. 1992
-
Ckde K is a c0llege-W Kiwanis The clubkeeps busywith outingssuch
Club, based on t h e -e
PrfnciPlesas as these, its volunteers often working
Opinion Editor
TheUofICircleKClub.accordlIy to
theKiwanLsclub.Itisthesecondofthe for mInlmum wage and yielding thelr
three levels in the 'K Famlly.' begin- pay to Circle K keeping nothing but
Clyde D. Fields, is 'pmbablythe most
ning With t h e Ngh school level "Key memories ofgwd Umes.
active servlce-oriented club on cam'I love the service projects.' said Ktm
pus and has been slnce its reorganizaClubs."
K
Is
curPhllbh.
Circle Kpubllc relations chair
Circle
tfon in 1989- it's a very actIve club."
rently
holding
a
shoe
said.They'realotoffunandtheyhelp
when the
was rechar*
I love the service projects. They're st lot of
throughout
people. It doesn't take that much d o r t
teredatUofr~September29~1989~fe'v
fun
and
they
help
people.
It
doesn't
take
campus
for
solobut it's amazing what you can do."
suspected it would grmv to be the
~t
much
C
E
O
r
t
but
it's
m
u
w
h
n
t
YOU
mods
Wardmbe,
a
Any student can become a member
l q e s t , most active club in In&ana.
Today'smembership is thelargest in C(II1 do.
-Phibin
project of t h e 91st of Circle K.Annual membelshtp dues
campushistory. appradmateiy<5 stuStreet Christian must be paid to the.lndlam District
Church. Donations and Circle K Intem~tional.;The& are
dents. The Club was rechartered aRer
itbecameinacthreoncampusin 1983The club is involved in an on-gohg will help t h e needy on t h e near east n o r e q u l r e m e n t s f o r r r ; ~ ~ ~ ~ h i ~ , '
due largely to the retirement of the sponsorshipofachlldin B d . through side of Indlcmapolls. Shoes will be col- a willingness to serve t h e community.
faculty adviser."
Compassion International. The club's lected attheendofNovemberandwill There is no obligation to participate in
The purpose ofCircleKis to develop monthly donations help the child re- bedistributedthroughthe 1OthStreet all activities; t h e member may chwse
how involved he or she wishes to get.
young persons on t h e basis of their ceive a Christian education, food and United Methodist Church.
Saturday, CircleKerswenttoBrorvn For more informationonjolnlry Circle
leadership skills and social skills. be- health care.
cause they work together. they have
Past Clrcle K Club projects have County to rake leaves. The check they l t contact president Cindy Blackbum
funumldm?toj?etherxrddrGthelrworld assisted Ltehthouse Mlssion. Hunger recelvedwvasthendonated toCircleK. at 781-5125.
a better placeto he,' Fields said:
Inc.. 1991coatsfor
Circle K dabbles in eve-.
from Kids. The Salvation
sellingpeanutstonkiryleavestotrick- Army and Camp
or-treatingforcankd goods.The club Riley,tonameafew.
collects money and clothes for the
needy. both local and global, helps
with natural &asters. most recent&.
thehurrlcanereLlefelIort.andpmvldes
senriceandleadersNpopportunityfor
its members.
By Jeff N n n n o n
Muncie, Indiana:
Thursday, January 14. Holiday Inn
3400 Madison Street
Registration: 500 8:OO PM
-
Bloomington, Indiana:
Friday, January 15, Indiana University
Indiana Memorial Union Solarium
Registration: 230 430 PM
-
-
Tuesday: J a n u q 5 -5 Friday, January 22
Registration 11:OO h~ 3:OO PM
-
(Aud.tlanr k $ n appmximaMy 15 mi&
,
a h rp~swatlon1-
hnther lnformatlonmnttd
Cedar Point Live Show
P.O. Box 5006
Sandurky, Ohio
(419) 617-1390
Performers
usicians Technician!
Berenstain BearsTM
. ...
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To Jackson:
Love's S t r o w Cord
One morning you wake up
And your world is somehow ne\%
The sun seems a littlebrighter,
The sky has never been so blue.
You do a lot of laughing,
It seems the world is yours,
And when you look into those eyes
You feel the tug oflove's strongcord
God has truly blessed you,
Und~savingthough you are,
And you can only hope and pray
His love wiU takeyou far.
___
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. - ~ --- .__.
-x--.r^^'..
-, - -__---,.
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.Ai.
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And then one dayyou wake up
And your world is somehow
Changed,
The sun isn't quite as bright,
And the blue sky seems to fade
hoking at the Chagdl glass in Chicago
1resliewhatIme;mttosllytoyou
You do a lot of crying
And youprayit'sjustadream,
But even in your nightmares
You would never feel this pain.
But when you look into those eyes
You feel that tug again,
But thistimeit is God's love
Binding you together till the end.
Love, Christine
That whcn you spak, wund brc& into j x e l e d light;
your laughter is ahandful of gorgeousblue distortions.
I meant to tcll you that you h t h e into me
a d c s s strcclm of daylight, colors stronger that grief,
dccper than night
I meant to say that all thacnight I wanted to
squcrze myself into a smooth, rcd disk of glass,
slip into your front pocket fccl
your warmth uuough p u r m p l c d w s ,
tasteyourfingcrtipsthroughmy tight ponx
-
And I
'm sure I meant to promise you
one perfect night, my hands in your hair
pushingbackthcfof thismpxilandscape,
piningdaysandnighkwithasilverythrcad,
SWSJllSITFGlting in WCh hiltOf your PdSC,
the full moon swelling my chest,
warmed by thisfragile, radiant confusion.
I promise you,
ERE'S AN OPPORUUNRUV UO GEE VOUR 5AVOROUE
OEU OR SUORV ON PRRNU! UAKE A GHANGE! SEND
8 VOUR VJORK! VJE'RR QOVE OU A ROOK OR UWO!
i e Student/Reflecforlsaccepting poetry and short story submissions for
Creative Writing Page. Entries may be sent to Sara Bastin through
Impus mail or dropped in the Reflector mailbox in Buxton 209.
ie Reflectorreserves the right not to print any submissions that violate
ir policies. For more information call 788-3269.
i
______
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. .
~
thisis what I meant to say
last night when you kisscd me.
Vicki Speckman
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SKATEBOARDING
Y N K I F C A X V S O O L J H
N E C A X O 6 V G N I K C A T
H I T E G R H P T N L J H F D
A B P N U N R S E I L B B O W
N Y O S X Q I V G T W R P 0 hl
G B K I L G S T E N D E B T Z
T X W U T A I E H Y I R H U Q
E N A L P R I A I3 G F H 0 C N '
N I F F O C E R L A I F S K J
I G G N I L R A ' E P R E A U F
D C A E V I F G N A H A W D B
Find the listed words in the diagram. They run in
nll directions-forward, hach-vard, up. down and
dingonally.
Casting For Men's Souls
*Ami Jesus soid to them. 'Fobllow mr and I niN d
e you
1:17
Simon and h & w were fihcrmcn on the Sw of Galilee
%henJcsusbdc them ioin H
s
i lcllau3hip. As fishermen,they.
-- - - -- __
Wanderings of an Absent Mind
AN
By Jenni Clarkson
HISTORIC MOMENT: THE. I S f \IEGFTppJ.AN AT A MANKSGIVIMG
~thlr.~ERWAS ACT~JALL~' A SPY FWM A FOWL EN EM^ CAMP.
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Nq-lxws, I'LL
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November 17. 1992
Page 9
~~
ARIES(hfarcl121-A~l19)Youare
a rea1 live wire this GerL You start
w i l d , a n d y o u e n d i i ~ ~ cwilder.
\ r ~ ~ with
partners hanging on the edge. dreaming. wishing and desiring. Oh well,
make the most of the quiet times niidweek IO get work done, ernnds run,
elc.
TAURUS (April 20-hlay 20) You
may think you can get into the groove
this week. but guess what? A tanttllizing offer appears before the work
week ends, and you're off. The boss
will see red if you don't get the job
done, so don't be surprised if you're in
the office over the weekend.
GERIINI (hlay 21-June 20) You
won't believe wliat you hear this week,
and you'll want to hear it all. You're
the sign of the communicator but also
of the twins, so be careful what you say
and to whonl. Consider isolation to
prevent foot-in-mouth disease.
. CANCER (June 21-July 22) Since
you are guided by the moon, you could
really be out of whack this week.
Watch out for extrenie mood swings,
possessiveness and Overspending. You
switch to high beams this weekend,
when another zeros in and responds to
your energy.
LEO (July 23-August 22) Sony,my
dear cat. but you peak early on in the
week. Whenit's good, it isreally great,
and when things start going downhill
midweek well, it still isn't that bad.
Once you bring home the bacon. you'll
want lo enjoy 3 little early T.G.I.F.
VIRGO (August 23-September 22)
You start the week in low gear, but
once you make that shift into high
well, you're on a roll all week long. Be
more aware of how extnvagant you
canbe. Enjoytlielavislilife,at least for
a day or two.
LlURA (September 23-Oclober 22)
Dingo! Everything falls into place
easily this week. Or does it? Plans fa11
...
...
~~~~
~
~
~~~
apart easily. but once YOU rebuild. it's
dn stronger ground. You fly into the
weekend in great shape, ready to con-
quer the universe:AIl YOU need to do
is smile and radiate.
SCORPIO (October 23-November
21) Responsibility is key-this week. If
your work performance shines, you
couldbe upforapromotion. Better yet,
a member of the opposite sex could
start winkine at YOU. TIYto DUI a little
fun into yo& schedule.
SAGITTARIUS (November 22December 2 1) Remember, there are no
problems, only opportunities. You find
yourself daring to break through barriers this week. Take this spirit into
work, and discover your sleuthing approach is contagious. As a resulf, you
get t o celebrate long before the
weekend.
CAPRICORN ( D e c e m b e r 2 2 January 19) Negotiate exactly what it
is you want from that special sonieone
this week. One-to-onediscussions that
lead to intinlate dinner cliats might
work. Otherwise, go bold and try the
exotic approach. The good news is,
you're on top of the world by the
weekend.
AQUARlUS (January 20-February
18) Others dominate. and there's little
you.can d o to change this. hfake
another's wish your conunand. Good
behavior brings many goodies. The
sky's the limit, 3s you gaze up to the
stars and wish. Somethine or someone
is making you very happy.
PISCES (February 19-hfarch 20) If
you think this is going to be 3 quiet
work week, you've 3 big surprise coming. Invitations flood in, and it behooves you to take up mother on at
least one or two of these. Expect a
mellow weekend, when you review
recent happenings and decide. on
~1131's
important in the long run.
- .
01932 by King Features Sjnd.
r
Fundraiser
-
Looking for a top f n t e r n i ~smity,
.
9-5 M 0 r u i c y - W
RESUME EXPERIENCE!!
Individuals a n d Student
Organizations wanted to promote
SPRING UREAK,
call the nation's leader
Inter-Campus Programs
1-800-327-6013.
..
.
.. . . . .
or student 0%.
that would like to e a m
$500 - $1500 for a one week oncampus marketing project nrust be
andhardmrn!
Can f8001592-2121 Bd308.
..I
Spring B r e d '93-Sell Mps.
Earn Cash & Go Frcell!
Student Travel Servicesis now
hirlry campus representath-es.
Ski packages also available.
Call 1-800-648-4849.
$8.00 to s M .
College credit avnilnble.
No Experiece necessary.
..
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November 17, 1992
Page 10
.
ALL hlY CHILDREN: Galen
goaded Cnrter into lunging at her,
proving he wasn't catatonic. and
couldstand trial. Jeremy told Trevor
he was considering moving to
Corinth to tench at Alden Univenity.
In Bwdapest, Edmund got 3 maid to
agree to spy on Dimitri. Erica toured
Budapest with Dimitri, and reconsidered his marriage proposal. Angelique told Jack she loved him, and
they made love for the fiat time.
Later,she hired Charlie to findHugo
hfarick's body. Brian offered to
move out of Dixie's home to keep
Adam from seeking custody of
Adam, Jr. W i t To See: A desperate
Dixie considers an act that could
backfre.
ANOTHER WORLD: After a
run-in with Ryan, Vicky accepted
Gnnt's propod. Kelsey defended
herself ngainst Professor Hunter's
testimony, pointing out what women
endure in male-dominated fields.
Dennis hired Ryan to find out what
Russ knew about Olivia and the
baby. After Jake and Lom3 bugged
Kevin's wr, Jake overhenrd something he considered damning. After
telling Rachel she was jeopardizing
their friendship by scrutinizing her
behavior. Felicia consulteda psychic
who had a disturbing m m g e for
her. When Felicia offered a reward
on TV for the killer (or killers) of
LUWSand Rick, a man working with
Kevin called to my he knew who
murdered the men. Wnit To See:
Jamie fenrs he nnd Kelsey may never
recapture what they h3d before the
sexml discrimination hearing.
AS T H E WORLD TURNS: Kirk
was shaken when Ellie told him why
she really went to Chicago. He
reminded her marriage is for making
choices together. Cal sensed something fhliarabout thecase inTexas
involving Shone's sister's work
with an oil company and an Indim
tribe. Fnnnie and Duncan agreed to
sepznte for a while, nnd she tried to
Felicia's memory was coming back
Leo runs into a problem awut the
deal withthe fact that he hadgone off
Sensing her danger, Mac tried to
silver.
to Des hfoines. Duncan and Tonio
ONELIFETO LIVE: Renee was
reach her by snowmobile; Bill
had a confrontation. Holden told
shaken by Viki's news that Clint
agreed the paintings ,had been
hfarsha he thought he'd seen Lucinswitched, and suspected Constance
unable to d a l with Viki's apparent
da in New York. Lucinda told Scott
Chspman did it. Jenny denied Ned's
feeling for Slmn
had left her.
she was attracted to him. hfargo ate r t i o n that Jack Kensington, Jr.
BIairandLunaplannedto bring hiax
tended an IIIV suppon group. \Vnit
fathered her child. Dominique
back to Llanview. Luna begged hiax
TO See: Royce Keller's (Terry
lashed back at Jessica's attempt to
to fight evenashis resistanceseemed
Lester) arrival in Oakdale creates an
intervene in their divorce proceedto wenrdown. Andrew told his father
unexpected reaction.
ings by telling Scotty they should try
he should lenve town for everyone's
BOLD AND T H E BEAUTIto stay mamed. Aware of Tiffany's
sake, especially Viki's. Kevin
FUL: Despite her misgivings, Sally
growing atuchment to little Lucas,
caught Lee Ann with Duke. Luna
saw"Den1h" kiss Max. Wnit To See:
agreed with Bill and Karen to go
Bobbie, Senn, and Tony fenred they
back to her once successful Spectn
might have a serious custody probLunaisdetemined touseherloveas
lem to deal with. Wait To See:
a wenpon in the light to save hf3X.
Shlock line of great knockoffs.
Taylor was shocked when Ridge arFelicia renlizes she m3y not escape
SANTA BARDARA: Although
rived to my he was going back to
she was found in Skyler's room,
Ryan's murderous nttempts.
Jodie told Reese and B.J. nothing
GUIDING LIGHT: Eleni and
Europe @ r a k e was still there), but
Frank tried to l a v e Springfield. but
happened with him. On the stand,
fiat he had totalkto her about somewere stopped by Alan-hlichael, who
B.J. had a series of flashbacks about
thing that happened between him
was delighted to l a m she was pregand Brooke. Jack reeled when
the gun nnd when Amold asked ifshe
shot Fnnk, she snid, yes. Ted and
nant. Vanessa, suspicious of
Stephanie unknowingly described
Nadine's pregnancy, sought out her
his son, Zach, whom she mid was a
Lilly announced their engagement.
C.C. l a m e d Sophia's doctor had
doctor. David locked Kat's date.
dangerous man, as was his father, for
not, as she told him. prescribed the
Keith, in a closet when he overhenrd
putting Felicia's life in danger. W i t
his plans for her. After Pierre turned
pills he snw her taking. Lilly overToSee: Stephanie is confronted with
h a r d Lisn on the phone to Rich
up. Alan-hlichael schemed to
two surprises, while Sheila hkes a
prevent Eleni from laming of his
saying she (Lilly) may have ALSO
big gamble.
tnpped Ted by the pregnancy ploy.
connection to the bombing. hfallet
DAYS O F OUR LIVES:
renlized he could hear when Julie
What, Lilly wondered,did that word
Lwrence tnpped Vivian intoadmitknocked something over inhis apartling that Niki is his and Cnrly's son.
ALSO.mean? hlicah wasstunnedto
learn iis emergency patient was his
ment. Wait To See: Alan-Michael's
On Lawrence's orders, Ivan dis.desperation _leads. 10. another,-. son. Wait To.See: And,ie,.is in
poscdofLiunne'sbodyinafierycar
c.<,,)\
wreck. Philip defied Clare to try to "' &nremussituation. * 7 , f . , ! , l u 1 11!31 .;"&&+ *ii!u:,
LOVING: All of Trucker's wedget hlarlena to help Kimberly. After
YYOUNG A N D THE RESTding plans came through, as the
LESS: Paul told Victor about follaming Roman had the videotape,
couple were wed in a ceremony
lowing Ryan and Victoria to a hotel
Philip was forced to tell him the
marked with sleighs and all sorts of
room, and calling Nikki when he
truth Lncey James is his sister, Kimbeautiful happenings. Stacey was
couldn't reach Victor. Cricket was
berly. hlarlena was bitten by n
being gaslightedby someone laving
devastated when Randall warned her
poisonoussnake. Stella forced her to
Jack's watch in the h o w , and then
lh3t the law was a maledomimted
rend a mesage to Roman that she
field, and she could risk her career if
making it d i u p p r . and calling her
was in Washington on an emergenshe pursued her actions against
on the phone using Jack's voice.
cy. Jack found an old manuscript
(Unknown to her, but not to us, was
hfichaet. Sheila persuaded hlolly to
nbout someone named Leslie hforthe gaslighter's identity, namely
all hurcn. Lauren persuaded Scott
gan. "nit To See: Lnwrence takes
Clay.) Jeremy came to Corinth to
to let hlolly visit,explaining she was
stem to recou~his child. his fortune.
accepttheteaching positional Alden
like a gnndmother to little Scotty.
ani~ar~y.
University, explaining that Cean
D~toldBladeshe'sgoingbackinto
GENERAL HOSPITAL: Ryan's
would join him later. W i t To See:
ballet, and like her sister and Neil,
amorous advances turned to mursheintended to workhard towardher
derous severity when he renlized
goals. WniI To See: Sheila is in for
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"The pheasant under glass
sounds excellent, but we'll
have the chicken under
five dollars."
"Face it, Wnyne...the closest
you'll ever get to a woman is
that lipstick stain on your
coffee cup."
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November 2 1is University of Indianapolis Day
at the Subshop located in Southern Plaza receive
15%discount on all orders (except specials.)
Don't forget y o u U of I I.D.
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Activitics
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-\i ii.c.d\
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Corner of Itockville'Kd.&>&
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Fellowship Groups -y..-,,.:
Call for free monthly calan
Bus pick up available o n campus!
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dLynnHcndersonandBruceFecney shonhowAIDStearsnt
. . . . .
fathcrdnughtc
0 courtesy u of I Theatre
l a t f o m p in A
d '. : ..,
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ay is that it A
entertainment value and become'
&IDS.
*..
. ~1ittle.more.thana 'let's grab the
Even the word.,carries f . r . For- : audienck by' its collectlve',,thrc+t
pp&Jy;<o$my$
i~;$f.J;3Judey~~;o
,;axici strangle.i t s prejugces into a
tuDghaSn't come clqeflough to:- h&he;;"<~nij$$iou$i~ produ
...
bereal-yet:Ifthelaw'ofavenges
' tion
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zeansanythlng.thetImeiscomIng I Ainva&'doesGt., . ' . . '
when mor6 and more will have to' ;Playwright Robin Myers ahd'diface the facts and join the llght.
rector Dr. FUchardA. JVlllIams avoid
Afiuwcs. a world premiere play the pitfds ,of mblaltzing and the
deals with thls issue in a sensitive .' danger of becoming boring by the
manner designed to fight gnoran" ':interjection of humor and music.
and make this plague real.
..
:.Ainoaves is about AIDS. true.
This play is the stow of a hip but it is not about death.
happening disk Jockeywhose grab . It is about knowledge and
aII thegusto you canlifestyle traps passion.Itisthestoryofmusicand
W i n t h e prison ofHIVinfectIon. . lau~terandpeoplewholeamthat'
?he magc of theatre is not found . :thi&is 'a,,tremer?dous: dlfkmce
,.-so.
ib''-'taking
"....,...c ................
Ilghllng eITects. betweenburylryone'sheadtopre: F C p t r n , rn!akeUP.:!c.,:
~
..
tendthatthereisnosuchthyas
The m@c is communication. . . ,AIDSand conlrontlng the *e
I t . & those'moments when the head-onashumanheings.
actors become the'characters and. . ,.b:\Vllliams states in his prothe audience becomes friends wit$ '. gnmnotes."Noonedeservestodle
those characters, The acting in this ofthismddem-dayleproosy.YounC!
playwas handled in a mutedkalls- people. adults- please WAKE UP1
tic style that mide the 'situation Readallthefacts.B,ecomeInv&zd."
a.
.
. AIDS is'a.diseasethat G
k cai
Oftenthe &&acta are not &sy beat. g\e
tollke:TheyaresomeUmesshallow~.' The first
uninformed, scared. illogldal.
.
.
.Theyareamirror. . . .
Nmornentstheyshlnewithcom- Saturday and Sunday' in'Rans-.
passion. understanding. and firm burg. ShowUmes are Mday.and
grasp of what it means to be alive. Saturdayat 8 p..m. and Sunday at
.Many preconcieved stereotypes 3 p.m. Tickets are free to students
about .this dlsease are faced and . and available at the bau omce out-.
&pelled. That in itself makes the. side of Ransburg. For more'info'on.
play worth ' an evening. of. an . .ticket prices to non-stuiients.'call'
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audience's time; . . . . . . . . . ,:, . . .: 788-3251.. . .. .. . . .
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,. The b'@est.danger in an issue.,. . . , .
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By Daryl Ewick,
NcF;s Wtor .
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.%u6er
d!
interested persons
Monday, 23 November 1992
3:00-4:30 P.M.
Krafft Conference Room
Emnnert Library (near computer lab flrst floor)
PleRSC attend lf you arc
interested in this Spring Term
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November 17. 1992
Page 12
'Nuning students collect
food for needy fomilles
riming students collected food to
donate toagromupcallcdHunger. Inc.
Hunger. Inc.. I s a nonproflt.
incorpomted agency. Hunger, Inc.
h=sbeen distriautingfood o t no cost
to reddents of Perry T o m h l p and
n:ccbcimneohce i s m 'rhepurpwe
of H q c r . h c . , L to provide food to
t h o = dth an immcdlstc need. The
nmingstudenb th3tpxrdcipatedin
thl3 volunteer ncrvicc were Kim
Peters. Uonnn Dcholonku. Decky
no!ci. Mary Drlskcll. Sandce hiennel.
Do- TkOlZpZOIl and T e d Stinson.
F h t o by *-cy M. D c n r d d
r------------I
Purchaseone II ?
uI . ticketatfull 1il
1
price, getthe I
Bi
secondticket II
B
i
T?mB
li
i
!with Student I.D.11
e
Good only at
B
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1LSouth
Iceystone TheaterJ
D=-IIImalt---=-I-
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cRrtb
n
J u COII
~ 634-3400
for reservations.
Dountowntwnax?abOJd25mb
utesandcost$30formtofour
passmgen r
n Fiidoy and Wrdw.
Rdes may bc less at other times.
-
KENE BYRD
Gusiness Service rAanager
42GO South East SI., B1
Indian;polici, IN 46227
Phone: (317)702-3170
BUSIIIESS SERVICES
CEllTER
FPX:(317)702-1266
1
SEHD
IC'
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00
Locally
11"SEEf
Within
%EET C0nt.U.S.
See Professom Hob Vernon,Behnviord Sciences,
Good Hnll, 101. Ts 788-3484.or Tc-dJohnson,
Communlwtlano. Ewiton €Id205.
. Ts 7ES-3445
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November 17. 1992
Page 13
In 1983, Weird Al's self-titled debut album was released featuring
is Weird Al's first time in Indlanapolls. "It feels the Toni Basll parody 'Ricky.' The
album also lncluded the J o a n Jett
great to be here." sald W w d Al.
Heperiormedsuchhitsas"Cradle0fLWe"with take-off 'I love Rocky Road." 'My
apolkatwtst. aversionofthethemefortheBevdy Bologna" and -Another One Rides
HuLbatfes to the tune of "I Want My hflV' by Dire The Bus."
1Veix-d A h talent has not stopped
Stralts. Inbetweenthe sets. theaudience enjoyed
cartoons and Weird Al videos. He used these rewrlung songswith acomical twist.
videos to openup some of his songs such as,"Llke UHF. JVeIrd Al's flrst feature-length
movie was released simultaneously
a Surgeon."
He played some orglnal music such as. "One with the UHF-OdginalhfotionPicture
hloreMLnute,"alove5rballadabouthow hewould SoundbarkfAruiOtherStqfl. Onthis
rather torture himselcwlth forks and mrsblades album.he re-created songsfmmthe
than spend one more minute with you. During Dire Straits, Tone Loc. REM. and
thissong.WwdAlventuredtughthe audlence Fine Young Cannibals.
OJfheDeepEndfeaturespmdles
g1viq.j sweaty scarfs to fans.
He did a tribute to food with songs like "Spam" 0fHammer.Gerardo. and hlllLlVanilli.
[ RE.hl. "Stand,") "Snack All NIght" [Mchael It also features a New Kids On The
\-.. Block remake entitled T h e White
Jackson's "Black orwhite.") and "Lasagna" (or@Std.' In thls hilarious song. Weird
nally performed by Ritchie Valens.)
Al sings a tribute to the "white stuDT
He ended the show with the award-remake ofMlchae1Jackson's*'Bad."\VwdAlonce of an Ore0 cookte.
JVeird Al said that he tries to plck
again used the big screen T.V. to open hls video
"Fat." from his E m Worst?album. which earned popular songs to re-word and that
Weird Al hIs second Gnmmy. Thls video showed thearlistsdonotmind.'?alwa~~get
Weird Al and his gang inflated to ten times their permissionflrst.Theyusuallytellme
normdsizes. The audlencewasshocked tosee the that they enJoymy work,"said Weird
. ,
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skuirj.lGkymantmnsfomedinto a300-pound- A.In the video of "Fat." Jackson
1v:>2.- . . . . . . .
W&l Al Yankovic performed at the Murat Temple November 16.
ulus man in black outnt Identical to Jackson's donated the New York subway set.
Photo courtesy of ScottiDms. Records. (eucept of course it was a lot bigger.) The
ny m ~ y
DCUTM
audlence clapped and yelled unU Weird Al
Feature Editor.
came backou t and sangforanencore'l'oda."
The hlurat Temple Is packed from wall to wall &h anxious a Klnks hit in 1985.
chfldren. teens, and adults. The Qhts dim, a hush replaces the
"I would change the lyrlcs of songs when I
chitter-chatter. Someone yells out -AI." Slowly, like a h e of
was younger to amuse my friends:' sald
dominos falling. auyone jolns him. Above the stage sits a big
IVeIrdAl. Hisroad tosuccessstartedthlrteen
screen T.V.. which begins to play portions of his movie UHF. The wars a o . Alfred Yankovic. an archltectunl
songs. He bompletedhls OJtheDeepEndTour, in
Indianapolis. According to local radio shows. thls
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7
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"A COMEDY
by Moliere
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Auditions
\*
L.
-.~-;!;:.'.<#b."
.L-L,
.-..4..
~F.
"The ImaEinarv Invalid"
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(
I
clean-Baptiste Poquelin)
An adaption by Milles
Malleson
November 16-17 &30-9:00 nm.
Ransburg Auditorium (Esch Hall)
University of Indianapolis
For more
information, d
~~
Roles For:
: 8 men (one singing role)
: 1female youth (15 years old)
: 3 women (one singing role)
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(317) 788-3455:
nmn4:00 p.m.
Monday-Friday
:
m
e
New name, but same
Faces! !!
CTS presents
A Chrimas Carol
Scrooge and M a y
Openin Night
Novem%er 27
Performancesare
November 28-29
December36 10-13
Times:
Thursdays at 730 p.m.
Fridays &Saturdays
at a p.m.
Sundays at 2 : s p.m.
or more informationor ticke
call 923-1516
9 a.m.-noon, 1-4 p.m.
Monday -Friday
788-9022
3826 Madison Ave.
(Formerly Sunny &Shears,
just next to the Chinese
Wage.)
Hours: Mon. - Fri. 9-8
Sat. 8-4
W e hcwe tannin.q beds.
YOU can spIit tinning
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November 17. 1992
Page 14
Lady Greyhound expectations high with five starters returning
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staffwriter
TheUofIwomen'sbasketballteam.
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1edbywtennCoachChuckMallender.
is eager to start t h e 1992-93 season
with all h e starters back fmm last
year's 18-10team. Coach Mallender
returns h e lettenvtnnersoff the bench
and has brought in a solid freshmen
class that should be able to provide
immediate contrlbutlons.
'I am~rypleasedwlththeattltude
and intenslty inwhlch the players are
using in practice. I can tell that they
are amdous for a very good season."
sald Coach Mallender. T h e players
know what It t3kes and how much
hard work It will take to accompllsh
the goal of a good season. I thlnk we
have a lot of potential and the thing is
to build that potential up by conference t i m e to do our best.'
The Lady Greyhounds frontbe Is
one of the best in the Great Lakes
Valley Conference. 61" senior
Courtney Sands and 5'10' senior Lori
Morgan are three-year starters and 6
junior Samantha Fenneman is a hvoyear starter.
FennemanaMnged 11.7pointsand
6.8 rebounds last season Morgan
earned second-teamAll-GLVChonors
last season. and she averaged 14.1
points and 7.3 rebounds per game. .
hlorgan be@ the season tenth on
the Lady Greyhounds all-time scoring
htwith 890careerpointsandsL.hallt i m e in rebounding nlth 549. T o be
successful this year, we must work
together as a team and make sure that
whenwegooutonthefloor.wewillgix
l W h a t alltimes. hlothWonisthebIg
key this year and that Is t h e thlng we
aregolngtoworkonthemost. hlyrole
on thisyear's team is to glve it my all
when I am on the floor and hopefully It
wlU rub off onto everyone else." said
Morgan.
Sands was hlVP last season when
she averaged 12.1 points and 7.0 rebounds per game. Sands was also
honorable mentlon in the GLVC and
startsthe seasonwithsevenLadyGreyhound records. Four of those records
areforfree throws made andattempted
in a season and career. and the other
three records are for blocked shots in a
game. season. and career. Sands stated.
'I think two of the keys to having a
successful season are running the offensewell. and the kshmen c o w in
helping us out a lot. We must be able
to run the system well by being rygresshe and wanting_t o. wln."
Sands became the ninth player in floor leadership for U ofy and she shot
IndIanapoh history to score 1.ooO 15 of 35 for .429?hfrom three-point
points. and she beg- her h a l sea- range. Herre averaged 6.5 points and
s o n . m t h on the schools all-time 3.8 assists per game 1 s t season. Five
scalng list with 1.022 career points returning lettenvinners will give Indlanrid flRh on the Indy rebounding Ilst n a p o h solid depth off t h e bench. 5'1 1"
% W i t h620. Coach Mallender com- sophomore &ne Cleary, 5'10" sophoments on these two outstandlry se-%..moreKenjaKendrlckand5'10'sophoniors by saying. 'Courtney and Lori moreSharylTruty areU ofIs frontcourt
have worked hard on thelrgame thls rekaves. whlle5'9JuniorErhDuncan
summer. and I can see it out here in and 5'6" sophomore Lon Hottell propractice. They cameinthisyearwith vide depth and experience in the
the attitude ofwanto be winners. backcourt.
wantlng to be leaders. and I just CYA talented gmup of freshmen could
pect to see very good things out of Immediately contrlbute for the. Lady
Greyhounds. 57" Ann Hensley of
them the entire season."
The Lady Greyhounds backcourt Mayette Central Catholic averaged275
will also be very solid wlth senior points per game last season which was
Sandy Herre and sophomore M e h a among the top in the state. Freshmen
G n h a m back A e r staNng last sea- Barble Baxter and Annette Bogusz
son. HerreandGrahamteamedupto should also see some playing time. U of
glve the Lady Greyhounds the top Iwlll have three asslstantcoacheshelpthree-point shootlng team in NCAA lng Coach Mallender. The assistant
DlvlslonII lastyear. The 5'4" Graham coaches are Mary Maravilla. Amy
flnlshed sLxth in Dlvlslon II in three- Johnson. and Brenda Nicholson. The
point accuracy. NtUng 57 of130 three Lady Greyhounds open thelr 1992-93
pointers for a .438 average. Last seasonDecember4th at theFerris State
season.Grahamavenged 11.4points. Invitational and then face Eve stmIght
4.4 rebounds, and 3.3 assists per road games, includlng the h t two.
the team in games of the tough 18-game roundgame whlle also leamlnutes played.
robinintheGLVC.--The 56" Herre provided excellent
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November 17. 1992
Wdtman era: Team
work
is
the
real
goal
of
a
tearn
team
Erikschvan
staffwriter
have a
that works, because a reayrfunitwashighpmIllebetngon
ballteam.Waltmanspendstlmeinthe
g o d team is m,"said waltman. He the 1987 championship team and the classroom. He teaches theory of basAnolderahasended. andanewone alsowantsawtnnlryseason.Hehopes Olympic team." said Waltman.
ketball and several actMty courses.
One t h y Wdtman stresseSI.5 that This lets me get to h o w other stuis about to begin. Soon U of I will be hahngawinnlngseason, toluremore
the team members always have to be dents besides the players.' he said.
starting a fresh basketball season un- recruits to U of I.
Wdtman is In his 27th season as a
der the &lion of new head coach
coach. Prior to DePauw and U of I.
Royce Waltman.
WaltmancametoUofIfromDeF'au~v Waltman was an assistant to Coach
University In Greencastle. Waltman is Bob Knight at Indiana Universfty. and
really excited about thls year's team before that he coached high schwl
and getting a program together. basketball in Pennsylvania. As for
\Valtmanandtheteamhavesetsweral being an assrstant under T h e Cenialsforthisyear.'Ourmalngoalisto
eral.' 'It was a great experience and
1ookWtowardnext season.The hardestt.hQlVdtmanflndsIncmchlryls
humannature. 'Playenhdithardat
times Wantiry to work and b e y unselIish." he added. "'By belng a head
coach you need to help overcome all
these dfversitks."
Besidescoachlngthemen'sbasket-_ _ _
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7-
November 17. 1992
Paee 16
Kenja's Preview
Greyhounds shooting for brighter days
KenJaKendrick .
Dusincu Uanager
Perhaps it Is unthinkable for a basketballteamwhlchlost somanygames
last year to be opUmisUc, but Indianapolisplayers areconvincedthat they
have what it takes for acomplete turn
around and as for the consensus so
does the student Myl
CurIousm & Curlouser. How else to
dexrlbewhat istobecomeofthe 199293men'steam? Uptothispointithas
been everything but clear sailing for
the former U of I squads - injuries.
Inconsktencles. and inexplicable fate
for the past several seasons. But now
with the new'coa.ching s t d of head
coach Royce IVaItman. assistant
coachesToddSturgeon.BradBmvnell.
and Tom Davls along with student
-
>r-
.
?he Greyhounds' mission (as is every team's) is strayhtionvard - win
their GLVC games and possibiy get a
tourney pick Coach IValtman Isn't
talldrychamp1onshlpsorbgtitles now.
but he Is not dlscounglng it either.
'I'mreallyexclted about thisseason.
Ithinkthe playersareready to tumthe
reputation and record attached to
formerteamsaround. lhnotreadyat
this point to say that we will win the
conference or anything at W point.
but my goal Is to have a successful
season."
Pmctice has been desgned into new
dimension for the team as well. Reseason conditioning invulved the team
Wng mwy other day duriry the week
at 6:30a.m. and then making time to
nlav on their own free will at 3 n m . in
off the court as W p l l n e is b e y
enforced and developed.
According to sophomore Tom
Gohmann. 'Dedication is a thing that
we didn't really lack last year, but I
guess it just wasn't obvious. Thisyear
it is obvious and I believe our turn
around as a teamwillbe pretty obvious
as well.'
The teamconslstsof15players who
~ a l t m a says
n are all worklngwell and
giving all that they have. He claims
that now thebest on the team are those
who are catching on to his system the
quickest. but the potential and talent
Is good enough that the best players
may actually come out later.
Assistant Coach Sturgeon. former
player for WValtman at DePauw and
beclnnh? his fourth season under
dentasslstant)andIhavebeenmaktng
strong promises to potential recruitsthat they would be coming into a. sue:
c e d u l pmgam here at the U of I. so
nowwemust prove ourselves honest.'
Wth plentyofworktobedonebefore
the season opener at powerful C e n M
MissouriState onNovember20. Indianapolis faces a rugged opening schedule of nlne s w h t road games, includlngastretchofsevenin 15daysto
open the season. They Greyhounds'
home openerwillbe January 7 against
Bellarmine. although they will play at
MarianintheCoca-ColaPeachBasket
Classic on Monday. Nov. 30 and
Wednesday. Dec. 2.
SUPPORT THE GREYHOUNDS AS
THEY CREATE THEIR OWN NEW
Dragoo, WBllace q
u
w for nationals in loss
to Butler; Men defeat Butler, lose to W. Ky.
Aaron Rinehart
Sports Writer
Mthough the women's swlm record
doesnot show it. theteamisofftoavery
fast start. ' N O team members have
qumed for natloxds. and the team
has been very busy settln(l Personat
bests.
Sam WVallace and Carrie Drag00
q u m e d for natlonatS for the 1hl: and
3M divlngplauorms.Bothwallaceand
D n g w set personal bests in the two
dMry events %*t
crosstown rival
Butler. Dngoo set a school record in
the 1M with a score of 264.35.Hedl
Butleralsosetapersonalbestwithher
&es this weekend.
Thediverswerenottiieonlyfemales
to set personal bests. NI and all. the
lady swimmers set 11 personal bests
in the meet against Butler.
Sophomore Nicole Rives and junior
m u Hamilton paced the lady Greyhounds with three first place finishes
each. nvo of Rives' b t place finishes
turnedout to be personalbests.
The mcn's srvim team w& a little
morefortunateSaturday.Themenbeat
Butler and lost to Division 1 powerhouse. Western Kentucky.' 'The men
have never lost to Butler, and they
nm~rwill.'~idCoachBaughdterthe
meet.
The men continued on their hectic
pacebysetllngtenmorepersonalbests.
7Ve swam well.' added Baugh.
The next meet is the Little State.
Saturday at the Natatorium. Themeet
starts at 10:30 a.m. and should last
until 5 p.m. The girls are the defending
champsand ire looking torepeat.
has all the services
&iii biisliicss ticcds:
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/Engraved Signs
Personalized
Business Farms
/Checks
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Credit Reports
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