The Tan and Cardinal October 4, 1974

Page 1

October 4, 1974

Volume 57 Number,3

ALCOHOLIC 111 FORCE

Woodrow Wilson Fellow Robert Dietsch speaks to the college community on President Ford and ex-President Nixon.

Woodrow Wilson Fellow This past week, Mr. Robert Dietsch has been attending classes and meeting informal­ ly with students and faculty. By all reports the Campus Community is very impressed with this important and per­ sonable man. He states his opinions candidly, and will discuss or argue any issue pre­ sented to him. Mr. Diet ch is the Woodrow Wilson Senior Fellow staying at Otterbein this week under the auspices of the Lilly Foun­ dation. Dietsch is national business and economics editor for Scripts-Howard News­ papers, and writes indepen­ dent!) for national magazines. His knowledge extends to a great number of issues, includ­ ing: international finance, the middle east, Cuba, the civil rights movement, Watergate,

and many more. Mr. Dietsch expressed his willingness to work 24 hours a day while he was here, and his wishes have been taken quite literally. The Fellow spoke to a large number of classes, informally answering questions and asking a few of his own. The response was al­ ways good. Dietsch also host­ ed a number of students in his college provided home, discus­ sing national issues as well as life at Otterbein, once even discussing poetry. The Wilson Fellow will re­ main at Otterbein through to­ day, and will leave sometime tomorrow to visit his son at Denison University, before flying back to Washington, D. C. to resume his role as editor.

an open container of alcoholic . "Several Otterbein students beverage on campus grounds, have expressed their concern public areas of College build­ to us over the time element ings, and public areas of resi­ involved in the consideration dence halls and fraternities of the alcoholic beverage pro­ and sororities is prohibited. posal, which can't be brought Disruptive behavior while un­ before the Board of Trustees der the influence of alcohol is until June, 1975," stated the prohibited in all on-campus student members of the Alco­ areas, public and private. The hol Task Force at the Friday, penalties assessed for a major Sept. 27 meeting. violation are: Mr. Edwin Roush, chair­ I. first offense: disciplinary man of the Task Force ex­ probation or suspension. plained to the students that 2. second offense: suspen­ not enough information could sion for a minimum of be obtained and studies made one full term or dismis­ to bring the alcohol proposal sal. before the November meeting 3. third offense: dismissal. of the Board of Trustees. The penalties assessed for a The major order of business minor violation are: for the first task force meeting I. first offense: disciplinary were to review the Senate Bill alert. No. 13, titled "Alcoholic Bev­ 2. second offense: discipli­ erage Proposal," which passed nary probation or suspen­ the College Senate 3/ 6/74, s10n. adopt parameters for the task 3. third offense: suspension force, and the selection of a for a minimum of one full special consultant. term or dismissal. In brief, the Alcoholic Bev­ 4. fourth offense: dismissal. erage proposal states that Ot­ Students will be allowed to terbein does not encourage the consume alcoholic beverages use of alcoholic beverages; in the priv~cy of their rooms however, in our society the in residence halls and fraterni­ choice to abstain from or use ties and sororities according alcohol is widely recognized, although use is circumscribed 'to law. Parameters chosen in brief by laws relating to age, time, to guide the task force are: 1.) place and behavior. The con­ sumption and / or possession of Otterbein policy should con-

Artist Series Opens Otterbein opens this year's Artist Series season with ragtime piano by Terry Waldo on Friday, Oct. 11 , at 8:15 p.m. Ragtime music will be presented on the "rug" in the main lounge of the Campus Center, and students are invited to pull up a cushion and have a seat. Waldo will present the top hits of the era in his own vibrant and classic style. A Columbus resident, Waldo's interest in ragtime included researching its history and presenting lecture-concerts on the development of ragtime all over

the world. Waldo's style of ragtime is a combination of knowledge and creative talent. After an evening of gusty rag tunes, an ice cream social sponsored by the Campus Programming Board, will be offered upstairs. Any student can build his own banana split for just a quarter, topping off the old-fashioned evening just right. Tickets are now available in Cowan Hall box office 1-4 p.m. weekdays. Concert at no charge and ice cream social only a quarter for students with I.D.

Editor's Note: Our special thanks to Capital Composition for printing late news fur this edition. Their help is deeply C. N. appreciated.

Attention Comuters & off-campus students: You do have a mailbox in the basement of Towers. So get with it and start checking your box. Mail is piling up fast.

form to law. 2.) Otterbein, as an institution related to the United Methodist Church, should have policies in general accord with the policies of the church. 3.) College policy should generally reflect \\hat is viewed as acceptable and desirable by a majorit) of its constituents including stu­ dents, parents, alumni. and friends . 4.) Policy hould gi\e consideration to the College's role as an educational institu­ tion. 5.) College polic) should recognize the adulthood of stu­ dents. 6.) Policy should con­ sider problems of administra­ tion. Gilmour Associates of Co­ lumbus were decided upon as the consultant group for the Alcoholic Task Force. Much discussion will be compiled during December so reports can be made to the Task Force at the December 13 meeting. A sub-committee of the Task Force will review the questionnaires by Wed., Oct. 9 at 2:00 P.M., when the Task Force is meeting to apprO\e the questionnaire. The current usage questionnaire will be sent out around October 18 and the attitude questionnaire about Oct. 31.

Owls Beer Boou1e 1onlte Boogie and drink to your heart's content tonight at the Owls' Beer Boogie. The event, sponsored by Sigma Alpha Tau sorority, will take place at the Westerville Armory, 240 South State St., from 9:00 pm - 1:00 am. Providing the tunes will be

"Burnt." Tickets by the way are $1.50 presale and $2.00 at the door. They can be purchased today in the Campus Center during the lunch and dinner hours (In last week's T & C, the ticket prices for the Beer Boogie were erroneously listed.)

PROGRAMMING INNOVATION TGIF (Thank God Its Friday) dances will begin on Friday Oct. 11 from 3 to 5 P.M. in the Pit area of the Campus Center and will continue every Friday throughout the school year. This regular event sponsored by the Campus Programming Board hopes to provide Otterbein students with a chance to unwind after a hard week of classes. It will give students the regular opportunity to get together, and meet some new people with the background of your favorite sounds. "Music to boogie by" will be provided by MC Tony Tarentelli who guarantees sounds that will blow your mind. A Stereo Unit will be set up in the pit and

-records from various personal collections on campus will be spun. You'll hear popular stuff and sometimes some golden oldies that will take you back. If there are students who would like to bring records that can be used please mark them so they can be identified. You'll get them back immediately after TGIF. It really can be a lot of fur and laughs on a regular basis. Sc instead of playing cards in youi room or walking around wondering what to do before dinner, why not make the PITSTOP every Friday afternoon starting Oct. 11 for TGIF. Who knows, you may really enjoy it.

Executive Meeting Uneventful As President Kerr predicted. the meeting of the Board and Budget Control Committet was a fairly typical one. Progress of the Alcohol Task Force was the major i~­ sue reported. A budget ol $1800 was approved for the force's use . The members also accepted the help of a con­ sultant who will survey stu­ dents, faculty, and parents to be completed in mid-winter. This survey's results and other factors will determine the force's decision which is to be made in June. The. next meet­ ing was set for October 9. Student enrollment, use ot dining facilities, and housing were also examined, but Ill)t enough information was arnil­ able to come to any specific conclusions. This will be dis­ cussed further at the next meeting. Two resignations and four­ teen appointments were ap­ proved and a report on the financial operation of the bookstore was delivered. An application to the Exxon foundation (Project Shape) was considered. This is a three year financial proposal which could benefit the College.


October 4, 1974

TAN ANO CARD.INAL

AN EXERCISE IN RHETORIC I

IEDITORIAL '

'

The alcohol Task Force of the Otterbein College Board of Trustees met last Friday to discuss their course of a ction for the coming year. Reports coming out of that meeting are, on the whole, discouraging. It seems that politics have already entered into play, several of the member's minds are already deadsetly made up, and that the meeting turned out to be an exercise in rhetoric. It has long been a disappointment to me that alcohol should be such a time consuming and emotional issue on campus. There are better and more important things to con­ sider, such as the quality of living facilities, a mong others. Drinking goes on whether the college approves it or not. One need only live in the residence halls to find that out. It is not as if the college will suddenly allow alcohol on campus if such a measure is passed by the task force and board of trustees. Such action would merely legalize and bring out of hiding the consumption that already goes on.. :'llo, Otterbein has not gone to the dogs. Alumni have told me that they too had taken an unapproved nip from the bottle while they were here. What was a little frightening to hear from board members last year was the idea of hiring more administrators to patrol ' the halls and enforce the regulation of no alcohol. This return to the stormtrooping days, its even being considered by well informed and intelligent board members, is not only frighten­ ing, but sad. I hoped that kind of thinking·went with the sixties. Perhaps even more disturbing to hear was the heavy handedness with which the Alcohol Task Force was manip­ ulated. Student participaters were, by several reports, treated as though they were not important. This came out clearly and vocally as one member of the task force even suggested that the college not recognize the new 18 year old majority law in effect, by aslting the deletion of a task force guideline that recognizes students' privileges and the responsibilities as adults. Fortunately this suggestion did not go over with the entire task force. My hope is that the Alcohol Task Force will act as quickly and wisely as possible over the coming months, remembering students' wishes are paramount because they m ust actually live with what is decided upon by this task force and the board. Prohibition failed before, and it is failing now at Otterbein. Morality cannot be legislated. We learned that lesson once, or so I hoped. More important issues need attention now. Faculty is slipping away yearly a nd administrators are proliferating. The quality of the common courses is a concern of a surprising number of students, as is the decline of a number of depart­ ments other than the sciences. Living facilities, for men especially, should be looked into and hopefully improved. These issues need the attention of the board or its task forces. Drinking will continue no matter what happens with the task force or board decision. That is not a threat; it is fact, and I hope the board of trustees recognizes this when they come together to discuss this issue again. C.N.

I want to be an Airborne Ranger, I want to live a life of danger, I want to go to Vietnam, I want to kill some Charlie Cong. We sang it in basic, in advanced training, and hummed it as we landed in Saigon. I've been there ( 2 months in 'Nam and 23 in Thailand). I saw a brave generation being chewed up by a sick nation, and I wonder what we did to deserve it. Too few people know what its like to be 10,000 miles from home alone. Not knowing if' the nationals you see are friendly or a VC spy, wondering if that pregnant woman you just saw was pregnant or carrying 20 lbs. of explosives. We bore that mental strain even with the knowledge that if lucky enough to live, when we got back it didn't mean a thing. It didn't mean a thing because we didn't have any reason to be over there in the first place. We got our imperialistic nose caught in a meat grinder, so the same men who stuck it in there in the first place sent several million of us to pull it out. Not a man I ever met or knew who fought in Vietnam could really blame anyone for not wanting to go. Who were we to say what courage was? Is courage a muscle spasim in your index finger, or is courage the ability to tame the animal in us enough to look at life in its true perspective? Some men who avoided service by leaving either the country or the service itself may not have done so because of any great vision of life. Maybe they were scared. The bravery of these men is not the issue though. What is the issue is why must our government persecute

FORUM

It is difficult to express an opinion about an issue which concerns so many thousands or m i l l i o ns of A mericans. Otterbein, for example, emolls many students who are equally qualified and able to express knowledgeable opinions about national or international problems. These students come from all over the United States. The question of amnesty is one that affects many prople those who fled from war, basically; those people who prompted young men to flee from war and of course, the families of these young men. It is understandable that the emotions of these people vary and that many of their hard feelings are justified, but on the c o n t r ar y , shou ldn ' t we acknowledge the feelings of those families who have lost their sons, husbands or fathers in this war? What can be said against these emotions? Many individuals say that there was no purpose to the Vietnamese War. It is possible that the War could have been shortened, but whatever time was spent, seems to have been worth it. We as a nation maintained our international image as a basically sound, w e l l-p r o t e c t e d and w e ll-informed country; one continued on 3 ditor .............................. Chris Nicley Assistant Editor .................... Lou Ann Austen Business Manager ...................... Paula Weaver Faculty Advisor .................Mr.Michael Rothgery Circulation Manager .................... Sue Mathews Sports Editor .......................Tony Tarantelli Speech and Theatre Editor ................. Dee Miller Governance Editor ...................Stephanie Skemp Photography ..........................Steve Walker Staff Writers and Reporters Kim Cook, Mike Chadwell, Jeff Hunt, Sue Hall, John Reese, Elsa Giammarco, Cindy Hupp, Marsha Harting, Kerry Gould, Paul Garfinkle, Greg Beasly, Mike Emler, Mrs. Ann Pryfogle, Charles De Klyn, Jeff Liston, Christy Hlava

them for not supporting its mistake? This nation doesn't need a re-incarnation of the draft, or as we called it: the "life tax". Mandatory 2 year service for returning evaders and deserters is a modern version of just that. These men have spent more time away· from home and family than most men who went into the service in the first place. They've served their country by helping to awake the national conscience. They've showed courage by discarding their entire life to start again from scratch, just because they didn't want to support a mistake. I'm prejudiced, I guess, because I think those who served gave more of themselves than those who emmigrated to avoid doing so. Their pain may be piolonged, but it can end. Ours is more intense and may never end. Even so we want them home, we want them free, we want it finished. It's sad that the greatest democratic society in the world must punish its citizens for free expression of choice. It is even sadder when those people most affected by these decisions have no say in forming these policies except by the most remote means. DD

J ASK HIH. ---

Ill I&. ASI< I&. JftfR, Ill I.I..

SH6SA~S,.

/ ~AS!<

l/OUR

FATI-fBR-

I(

I ASl< HIH.

He" �Alic;, �STOP

p·.

_ BOrnERlt.JG�

us,.

fl

- WHt/ CAk)'T 1H6V SA'! WHAT 1H6V M�AEJ IU 1H6 FlRST

PtAC6?


October 4, 1974

continued frorn 2

point of amnesty should be taken as fact. There may not be any solid facts about this issue_ well, of course there are stnct rules which govern such areas of war but what sort of -'opinion' sho~ld be taken as solid fact? It is very hard for me to sympathize with war evaders. They have shown misunderstanding and irresponsibility. They put themseives into their positions. It is true that these men do not have to be told to do everything; but if they were told anything, they were warned of the consequences of evading war. If these draft evaders acn . actually stand up to a mqther, father , wife or very close friend of a deceased war hero and tell them that their 'man' was actually wrong in his full-hearted cause ; and take it in stride, then I guess that they have their own selfish way of comforting themselves against their guilt. KG

POINT What goes around, comes around. Or to put it loosely, the dung has hit the fan. The economic pestilence of America with its infectious exudation of capitalism, has reaped upon itself a full harvest of dues long unpaid. This irony lends itself to the current international oil situation. For centuries now, U.S. economic advancement has been solely the result of capitalistic exploitation. American obsession for economic and industrial expansion has undenieably had adverse affect on underdeveloped and third world nations. The adversity has been felt in every phase of their own attempts for growth and recognition. Presently, we find these third world nations pooling resources and utilizing the same capitalistic attitudes this country has advantageously used and mastered. The effects of these logical manuvers for economic development has been the long-awaited establishment of a decent standard of living for a few third world nations. In response, A U. S. president, reflecting the inherent auariciousness of his people, issues a series of statements that amount to threat of force and physical intervention. If it wasn't so tragic, it would be hillarious. What goes around, comes around, and to a nation of people one-fourth in world population yet 3/4 in world resource consumption. the inference is exactly what it suggests. GB

student Trustee

Garfinkel Reports

The first meeting of the alcohol task force was held last Friday in Towers Hall. It was an organizational meeting, one of policy and guideline determination. It was a disappointing meeting. Because of the necessity to carry out, complete, and ·evaluate a survey of students, faculty, alumni, admin.istrators, church people, et al., the task force will be unable to report to the full board of trustees until next June. In the meantime, there appears to be a tense conflict beginning to brew. On the opposition side to the bill Dr. Harold Boda, former Bo~rd Chairman, appears to be taking the vocal leadership. Among his deeds for the day Dr. Boda saw to it that a policy guideline, recognizing the rights of students as adults, was modified to recognize us as adults, but only within the institution framework of the college. I won't risk any interpretation here, but make of it what you will. On the pro side of the bill, there is myself, and at least one of the two other students of the task force. Personally, I wish to make no bones about my unconditional support of the bill. I will either side with it to success, or go down fighting. It is th'e right of Otterbein's­ students to have the responsibility of making mature and rational decisions, including the consumption or non-consumption of alcoholic beverages. It is an affront to our rights as adults and to our human integrity to have these decisions handed down to us from on high. The students of the school are not pawns to be pushed around in a game of administrative chess. The students ARE the school. Dr. Boda and those of similar thinking should realize this, and hopefully will by June. There is still hope ... but it won't be easy.

Valerie Hammer

lllllate Artist Nilled Valerie Hammer, Montana-born dancer, will be the 1974-75 affiliate artist. Otterbein College puts in only one-sixth of the total amount for this artist-in-community program. The Sears and Roebuck Foundation and the

National Endowment for the Arts sponsor the rest of the amount. Last year's affiliate artist was Miss Carol Courtman, an opera singer. The program is designed to bring in various kinds of artists from music, dance,

theatre, or the visual arts. Public Relations director Fran Bay is Ms Hammer's campus and off-campus co-ordinator. Her first campus visit will be October 29 November 3 and her second visit will be November 18-24. Miss Hammer will return after the first of the year to complete her 56-day stay at Otterbein. Valerie will work closely with Dean Van Sant and participate in several classes, but she is strictly a performer not an instructor. Denver, Colorado, was the place that Valerie Hammer began her training as a child. While attending the Universi~y of Colorado, she worked as a dancer/choreographer with their dance group. ln 1971, she came to New York City to study at the NYU School of the Arts, graduating in 1973 with a BFA in dance theatre. Her choreography has been seen at N.Y.U., Cubiculo Theatre, The American Theatre Lab, Abbey Theatre and at Dancer's Theatre. Three new choreographic works by Valerie Hammer will be presented in concert October 11, 12, and 13 at the American Theatre Lab. The concert will consist of the three premiere works: "In the Meantime," "Clearance," and "Faded."

Secure YOUR Valuables A thief usually steals money or · something he or she can quickly convert into money. With your help let's make it difficult for the thieves to cash in on your valuables. Lock doors when leaving room for any r·eason, even for a few minutes. Do not leave money or jewelry in full view. Report all suspicious persons in dorms and buildings. Take your purse or wallet with you. Thieves know where most people store personal valuables. In Library, rest room, classroom and Campus Center or any other public place, keep your valuables with you or immediately and constantly in view. Thieves circulate in these areas and it takes them but a second to take vour belongings

and leave undetected. Leave nothing of any value in your car that is visible from outside or in the glove compartment. If you need to store something, please place it in the trunk. Some of your valuables already have factory serial numbers, but not all items have them. Some portable television and small appliances for instance. Campus Security recommends that your valuables be marked with your social security number. Do not place your social security number on or near an existing factory serial number plate. The thieves will most likely remove the plate or try to deface it in some way, so you can see what will happen to your social secuirty number. After marking your belongings,

make a list of each item marked and the location of the mark. Put the list in a safe place out of view. Here are a few items that can be marked. Typewriters, televisions, tape recorders, stereos , radios, sporting equipment, musical instruments, clocks, cameras, binoculars, appliances and any other item you may consider valuable. When items are stolen, notify Head Resident or House mother, local police and campus security. Also tell them about your list in case identification is necessary. If you have insurance on stolen items, your insurance company may require a police or secuity report. Report any loss as soon as possible, even when chance of recovery is remote.

SICK and other stuff Food Handler permits continue to be processed Monday through Thursday, 9:00 to 11 :00 a.m., and 2:30 to 4:30 p.m. All Health Records for incoming freshmen are now due in the Health Center. The Health Center continues to see an above average number of patients, averaging 66 per week day and · 25 on weekend days. Only 4 students have been admitted to the infirmary overnight. Colds, caused by viruses continue to be the leading cause of calls to the Health Center. These viruses cause symptoms,

varying from person to person, which include fever, sore throat, cough, aching, slight enlargement of neck glands and nasal or sinus congestion. Unfortunately, there is no "magic medicine" to eliminate the causative virus. Cold viruses spread easily on drops of secretion from the nose and throat. These drops are projected in large numbers when you cough or sneeze. Pratecting yourself from direct contact with a person who has a cold is a preventative measure. Good health measures including adequate rest, well balanced diet including fluids, are additional safeguards against colds.

EDDIE'S RESTAURANT AND DARI-TWIST Homemade Hot Doughnuts steaks, chops, seafood, fish-n-chips Fish on Friday All you can eat for $1.85 call-in service

drive-in windO"V

OPEN 6 a.m . ..:.. 1 a.m. 475 S. State Street

882-1147


October 4, _1974

TAN AND CARDINAL

Page 4

High School Day Events "SPEND YOUR TIME AT THE BEIN" OTTERBEIN COLLEGE Saturday, October 5, 1974 8-9:30 A.M. - "Get Me to the Bein on Time" - Campus Center Lounge. Registration. Campus tours leaving from the Campus Center Lounge. Coffee and refreshments. 9:30-10:30 A.M. - "The Assembly" Cowan Hall Auditorium "Welcome to Otterbein" by Dr. Thomas J. Kerr IV, President. Announcements by Mr. Michael Kish, Director of Admissions. "Semblance". 10:30-12 noon - "It's not Fifth Avenue ..... " Campus Center Lounge. Departmental displays. Faculty Reception for High School Students. Refreshments. 10:45-11:15 A.M. - Planning for College and the Future?. You may attend either one of these sessions during this half hour. "There'll be Pennies from Heaven" - A -Look at financial aid conference room 2 and 3 in the Campus Center. Speaker: Mr. E. K. Witt, Director of Student Aid. "Where Am I Going?" - A look at Career planning and placement - Conference Room 1 in the Campus Center. Speaker: Mr. Jack Dickey, Director of Placement. 11: 15-11 :45 A.M. - Planning for College and the Future? You may attend either one of the above mentioned sessions for this half hour. 12 noon - Lunch in the Campus Center Dining Room. Entertainment by the Otterbein German Band. At this time you may wish to tour the Learning Resource Center of the Library, stop by the Admissions Office, visit the Campns Bookstore or rest by the steps of the Campus Center .... 1: 30-2 P.M. - "Let's Get Together" Area representative meetings. Akron-Canton area The Intercultural Center. Cincinnati-Middletown area - The Red Tub. Cleveland area Multi-media room in the Library. Columbus area - Conference Room 1 of the Campus Center. Dayton-~pringfield area - Faculty Lounge of the Campus Center. Mansfield-Wooster area - Cochran Hall Lounge. Newark-Zanesville area - Conference Room 3 of the Campus Center. Toledo area - Mayne Hall Lounge. Waverly-Chillicothe-Circleville area - Clements Hall Lounge: Youngstown-Canfield area - Hanby Hall Lounge. 2:00-3 P.M. ~ "To Tell the Truth" Student Panel. Campus Center Dining Room. Mike Bowers, Freshman from Greenville, Ohio; Ann Sheppard, Sophomore from Newark, Ohio; Steve Ricard, Junior from Fairborn, Ohio; Bruce Flinchbaugh, Senior from Dayton, Ohio; Lu Bullar, Senior from Worthington, Ohio; Rebecca Wright, Senior from Wayne, Ohio. 3:00-4:30 P.M. - World's Fair - OTTERBEIN '74. Campus Center Lounge. Meet Campus Organization leaders, talk to the\11 about their organizations and what they do on campus. Enjoy refreshments in Conference Room 2 and 3 of the Campus Center and meet some of the members of our fraternities and sororities. 4:30-6 P.M. - Dinner is on your own. 5:30 P.M. - Individual Band shows by high schools in Ohio Memorial Stadium. 7:15 P.M. - Otterbein Band and Pre-Game Show - Memorial Stadium. 7:30 P.M. - Otterbein's Fighting Cardinals vs. Ohio Wesleyan's Battling Bishops under the lights in Memorial Stadium.

Dems Open Office The Young Dems chose Chris Kapostnasey and Ben Rainsburger as their two delegates to the Ohio Young Dems bi-monthly conventions. As delegates, they will be voting on various issues that will concern the Young Dem groups in the state. The office on the second floor of the Red Tub is open now on weekdays from 9-11 a.m. and 1-3 p.m. In the office there are people to answer questions about the candidates and there's also campaign literature , bumper stickers and other assorted freebies for anyone who'd like them. Everyone is reminded that

the Young Dems are having their meetings every Wednesday night at 8 p.m. from now until the November election. Members and prospective members are urged to attend. Remember, elections are coming up and there are still a few days to go out and register if you haven't already done so. WHOSE WHO'S

LAVALIERED: Cathy Brown, Kappa Ph Omega, to Dave Kent, Lambd, Garn• , Epsilon ~ ENGAGED: Ma, . 1a Albritton, Tat Epsilon Mu alumna now a1 O.S.U, to Greg Landis, Lambdi Gamma Epsilon.

Moffit

Directs

The seven th annual high school Band Day will be held this Saturday. Participating bands are: Bloom-Carroll, Worthington, Cambridge, Gahanna Lincoln, Westland, under the direction of Otterbein grad Dennis Wollum, and Springboro, who's director is Robert McNutt, also an O.C. graduate. Otterbein's own band, the Cardinal Marching Band, under the direction of Gary Tirey, will also be featured. Festivities begin at 5:30 p.m. in the football stadium with individual shows. At 7: 15, the Otterbein band will do their pre game show. The halftime show starts approximately at 8: 30 p.m. with the Otterbein band first and then a combined mass

Band

Day

band show. Otterbein is honored to have Bill Moffit to direct the mass band show. The numbers to be performed, all arranged by Moffit,_ are: a premier version of the OtterbeJn College Fite Song, Duel Conductors, and the finale - an arrangement of two bands of the 1812 overture. Moffit, a native of New Philadelphia, Ohio, directs the Bill Moffit Clinic, a marching band workshop, which is held at Otterbein every summer. Currently director of University of Houston marching band, he has published over 120 marches, second only to John Phillip Sousa in number of published marching band arrangements.

Show

Bill Moffit

Frat _lnfonnal Rush Scheduled Due to scheduling problems on the social calender, changes have been made in the schedule of fraternity informal rush parties. The changes affect, Jonda, Sphinx and Zita. The revised and final schedule is as follows: Lambda G3:mma Epsilon (Kings) Friday, Oct."ber 11 at 10: 30. Sigma Delta Phi (Sphinx) Friday, November 1 at "10:00. Pi Beta Sigma (Pi Sig), Friday, November 8 at 9:00. Zeta Phi (Zeta), Friday, November 15 at 8:00. Pi Kappa Phi (Club), Saturday, November I 6 at 9:00. Eta Phi Mu (Jonda), Friday, November 22 at 10:00 Director James Avidon pays special attention to Jim West as Count Dracula and Sue Ann Kocks as his victim in the

l.fpcoming production of COUNT DRACULA. Tickets are available at the Cowan Hall box office, 1-4 p.m. daify.

Avid■ directs 'Dracula COUNT DRACULA, a new theatrical version of the well-known 19th century mystery novel, opens the Otterbein Theatre season Oct. 16. Director James Avidon began his duties as new theatre faculty member and director the first day of classes. Auditions were held and the season was off to a fast start. Previously Mr. Avidon directed at the Grand Rapids Civic Theater where he was Young People's Theater Director. He received both his bachelor and master of fine arts degree from Brooklyn College and then taught at his alma mater. In Mr. Avidon's opinion COUNT DRACULA is an entertaining play to be enjoyed by the students. Otterbein's production of DRAC(JLA will be done dead seriously and will

give students an opportunity to learn something about melodrama, an important part of American theater. He also hopes audiences will enjoy the play which is built more on "spectacle than heavy intellectualizing." 1-Iis professional credits as an actor and director include appearances at the Barn Playhouse in Stony Point, New York, managerial duties at the Frankford (Germany) Playhouse during his military service, a variety of roles in college and community theaters, the title role in a film short prepared at New York University and even.a stint as Santa Claus for a New York department store. "I have struck that last one from my resume." he admits. Students receive one free ticket with their I.D. Box office opens Oct. 2 to take orders.

Join SCOPE S.C.O.P.E........ Students Concerned Over People Everywhere is a group that gets involved in the surrounding community. Projects range from Cultural Exploration (Columbus) with elementary school children and tutoring (Westerville) with elementary and Junior High young people, to areas in helping people in convalescent Centers (Westerville), Cystic Fibrosis (Westerville, Worthington), the Juvenile Diagnostic Center (Columbus) and the State School for Retarted (Columbus). So far, only the Juvenile Diagnostic Program, the Convalescent Center program and the tutoring group has gotten necessary support, but the others are still available. If you enjoy helping people, and have some extra time, check . out the Red Tub, where the S.C.O.P.E. has it's base. Any ideas are welcomed if they have enough support. So far, transportation is needed so if you can help - join S.c'.o.P.E.


October 4, 1�74

Page 5

TAN AND CARDINAL

women intern MEET THE PROF c.P.B. Announces: Otterbein atMcCurdy

C.P.B. has changed theo traditional Scrap Day from Oct. 5 to Sat., Oct. 12. For you frosh, who never heard of Scrap Day, its competition between the sophomores and freshmen. -Events involved are relay races,o tug of war, balloon toss, sacko races, and many many more.o The time is 1:00 p.m. in Alumo Creek Park. Watch for moreo complete detaus.o Fri., Oct. 4 - Campus Movie:o "Train Robbers" with Johno Wayne and Ann-Margaret; 8 &o 10:30; $1 in lPrnay. Oct- 7 Free refreshments (popcorn) in th� pit .during Mon. nite football games. Fri., Oct. 11 - Ice Cream social in the Campus Center dining hall after the Ragtime Rug Concert. Students price is $.25 and adults $.50. C.P.B. covers ½ of the cost for the students banana splits. Sat., Oct. 12 - Scrap day at 1:00 p.m. in Alum Creek Park. Thurs., Oct. 31 - Halloween M o vies: "Black Cat" and "Comedy of Terrors." held in Lemay; $.25 for students and adults.

TRAIN ROBBERS John Wayne and Ann Margret Directed by John Ford FRIDAY, OCTOBER 4 8: 00 and 10: 30 LeMay Auditorium Admission $1.00

DON'T MISS IT!

It's a Snapl Hear ye! Hear ye! The Great Photo Contest is soon to be in session, the honorable T&C residing. A l l good Otterfolk are invited to submit any kind of shot (the film kind) to this paper in hopes we may cross thy palm with silver in accordance with 1st, 2nd, and 3rd places ($15.00, $10.00, & $5.00 consecutively) The victors shall have their winning efforts displayed on a feature page, and all effort will be made to glorify their work. No photographer may win more than one of the place prizes, but may still be eligible for an honorable mention finding himself on the top. Please enter your 4 radiant black and white pies before October 29, for winners shall be shown in the Nov. I issue. No pictures of any Lady or Sir Gadiva "Au naturale". Sorry Tom.

Or. Koo active, concerned, involved by Kerry Gould

Six Otterbein co-eds left recently to spend the fall term at the McCurdy Schools, Espanola, New Mexico. Those girls are pictured above: (L-R) - Mary Bowlos, Sandy Loos, Purr Huston, Josie Yeakel, Becky Shultz and Sue Streb. A limited number of junior students in elementary or secondary education are selected for the McCurdy Schools Plan. Study projects related to the merging of Spanish, Indian and Anglo-American cultures may be arranged. The program is supervised by the Education Department with help from

other appropriate areas. This year A.W. Pringle, an Otterbein of 1 940, will accompany the girls on study tours throughout the southwest and will supervise their research work during this off-campus study. Mr. Pringle is the e l e m e n t a ry principle a t Mccurdy. Any interested student in e l ementary or secondary education to be considered an intern for the fall of '75 at McCurdy should contact Roger Deibel in the Education Department.

WOBN-F M, O t t e r b ein College's radio station begins daily programming for the 74-75 school year on Monday, October 7 at 7:00 A.M. with Morning Music. This year the wakeup format will run until 9:50 when a new addition to WOBN morning programming will be aired, ten minutes of campus, local and national news. The station then signs off until returning to the airwaves at four in the afternoon with public service programming. At 5:00 P.M. the dinner hour will be graced with classical music. The "Dirty Thirty" format, WOBN's answer to Top 40 radio will run from six until eight, to be followed by a new c o n c e pt in Otterbein "Information programming Radio." Among the features that this hour will provide are talk shows, a program featuring the talents of people on campus, the second edition of the musically informative "Audio Chronicle" and a feature on Greek activities. At 8:50, information radio will be concluded by a news report leading up to 9:00 and the ''R o c k Studio," moving progressive rock indoors from the rock garden where it resided last year. Rock sounds continue 10:55 when the final news report is, given. Then at 11:05 ''Jazzland" c o n c l u d e s t h e d ay's programming with jazz until the one o'clock sign-off. This promises to be an

e x c i ting year for radio programming at Otterbein, and the staff and management at WOBN hope that you'll remember to make the 91.5 spot on your FM dial an addition to your daily routine.

WOBN

on the Air

SCHEDULE Schedule - Monday thru Friday 7:00 A.M. Morning Music 9:50 A.M. Morning News 10:00 A.M. Sign Off 4:00 P.M. Public Service 5:00 P.M. Classical 6:00 P.M. Dirty Thirty 8: 00 P .M. Information Radio 8:50 P.M. Information News 9:00 P.M. Rock Studio 10:55 P.M. Night News 11 :05 P.M. Jazzland 1 :00 A.M. Sign-Off

Calendar Changes The following events have been approved by the Calendar Committee and added to the Social Calendar: October 5 - Saturday Noon-2:00 P.M. - Concert Choir Bake Sale October 8 - Tuesday 7:00-8:30 P.M. - C a reer W o r k s h op sponsored by Placement

Otterbein's Dr. Koo is a native of Seoul, Korea. He re­ ceived his PhD. in Agricultural Economics at the Ohio State University. He attended the Seoul National University for his two years of law s1.:hool. His Bachelor's Degree in Ac­ counting is from the Univer­ sity of Georgia. He has a 'Masters' in Busivess and Ec­ onomy from the University of Alabama. Koo is an active member of the Alcohol Task Force at Ot­ terbein College. He believes that 'Otterbein should take a developmental approach in education and that our con­ cern should fall on the individ­ ual in this small liberal arts college.' "Too many times," Koo states, "the students are referred to as numbers, instead of individuals." When he speaks about the Alcohol Task Force, he re­ minds that 'drinking is not good, but in order for a stu­ dent to be permitted to drink in the privacy of his room, he must le..·un to be respon­ sible and not to disturb others with his practices.' "Don't get us wrong," urges Koo, "We are not, in any way, encourag­ ing the use of alcohol on cam­ pus; we are simply looking at t he situation in a sensible manner. If the student wishes, he should be able to drink an alcoh o lic beverage with o ut s uffering criminalistic conse­ quences, by the College, such as suspension or expulsion." "Also," he remarks, "the College should abide by the church's idea which concerns alcohol. Otterbein chose to be affiliated with a church organ-

ization, therefore the school should obey the following rule which has been set by the church: 'Do not promote al­ coholism, however do not pro­ hibit the use of an alcoholic beverage.' This seems to be a reasonable rule to follow." Some of his other activities involve the "advisorship" to the Country Club (Pi Kappa Phi); and mem bership in the Campus Regulations Commit­ tee and the Long Range Plan­ ning Committee. Koo is also the Chairman of the Econom­ ics and Business Department at Otterbein. Every year, he sponsors two Korean girls who attend Otter­ bein. This year, his guests in­ clude Sonny Cho, a senior and Yei-Yun Kim, a s o phom ore. He is married to Dr. Chung Han and has two children Jah-Hee (girl) 11 and Jah­ Won, (boy, 7). He mentions: "In Korea, the women, by cus­ tom, do not accept the last names of their husbands. My wife, Dr. Han, is a pathologist at the Licking County Mem­ orial Hospital." Koo is a commuter to Otter­ bein from Newark, Ohio. Dur­ ing the summer, he took tennis lessons and he says that 'it's a tough game!' He has pub­ lished several articles in the ''A gric ult ural Econo mics" Magazine and in the "Colum­ bus Business Forum." His top­ ical interests lie in economic, forecasting. He concluded by stating "A school such as Otterbein can be a success if we take advantage of its small size and show concern for each individ­ ual."

LIKE TO VISIT LONDON

Plans have been finalized for the two week Londqn Theatre Tour during the fall inter-term, according to tour organizer and escort Dr. Charles W. Dodrill, Director of Theatre. The two week will depart on November 28th and return December 12th. Tour activities include travel from New York to London via Air India 747, first class hotel with private bath, TV, etc. in the heart of London, five theatre tickets, two tours of London's east and west end, full day tour to Oxford and Stratford-upon­ Avon, tour Windsor Castle and Hampton Court, Breakfast for the entire two weeks, free membership in 9 London discotheques, 10% discount at over 100 shops and restaurants, a free Avis car for 2 days (you

pay mileage and gas only), and a "Taste of London" . program which offers two meals for the price of one at over 40 London restaurants. Based upon figures currently available (pending further changes in air fare and hotel expenses) cost for the two week tour is $544. The tour group is restricted to 35 persons. A deposit of $100 reserves your place with the remainder of the tour cost due 30 days prior to d e p a r t u re (persons may withdraw up to 30 days before d eparture with complete refund). Interested persons desiring to make a deposit or wishing further i n formation should contact Dr. Dodrill at his office in Cowan Hall (891-3909).


SPENDIN'

SOME TIME AT


THE

'BEIN


October 4, 1974

TAN AND CARDINAL

Page 8

WEEKLY SPECIAL· by Jack Anderson

NIXON'S WOES: Friends of Richard Nixon teil us he is in no condition to testify at the Watergate trials. He is so depressed, they say, that he can't bear to discuss Waterg­ ate. Any cross-examination, they fear, would cause his emotional collapse. They definitely hope, therefore, that the court will accept his phlebitis condition as medical grounds for ex­ cusing him from the witness stand. The discovery of a new blood clot in his lung has strengthened his case. Nixon had been sub­ poenaed earlier to be f deposed in a Watergate-rel- · ated lawsuit. But his friends feared he couldn't stand the emotional strain. They per­ suaded him to enter the hos­ pital the day before he was scheduled to testify. Our court sources believe Judge John Sirica will even­ tually order independent doctors to examine the former president. Sirica is expected to study their diag­ nosis of Nixon's physical and emotional incapacity before ruling whether he must testify. If the doctors believe he is too ill to appear in court, the judge is expected to order Nixon's deposition taken quietly at San Clemente - . perhaps on film so it can be shown in the courtroom. WASHINGTON WHIRL: President Ford is fiercely op­ posed to the campaign reform that Congress is fashioning. He objects vigorously to the public financing of presiden­ tial campaigns. He has pulled strings on Capitol Hill, therefore, to kill the cam­ paign-spending bill. In the aftermath of Watergate, it is likely that Congress will pass the reforms. And Ford, rather than risk public wrath, will undoubtedly sign the bill.... The General Services Admin­ istration is holding in "cour­ tesy storage" some 1,100 boxes of gifts that Richard Nixon received while he was in the White House. The value of the gifts is estimated in ex­ cess of $2 million. Special Prosecutor Leon Jaworski has assigned a task force to examine the questions raised by the foreign gifts, particu­ larly the jewelry. As of now, say our sources, he is leaning toward the conclusion that most of the gifts belong to the government.. .. Some major stumbling blocks stand in the way of a Cuban-American de­ tente. There is the billion-dol­ lar question, for example, of the property Fidel Castro seized from U.S. interests. On thP- other hand, Castro would

like to get rid of the U.S. Naval base at Guantanamo. The two governments will probably agree to resume normal travel, but it is not likely the United States will give up Guantanamo or that Castro will make full pay­ ment for the seized property. WASHINGTON - Since Secretary of State Henry Kissinger's role in the CIA "destabilizing" operation in Chile , a'> revealed, he is once again being accused of perjury. Kissinger's critics are asking the same question asked of former President Nixon: Is anyone above the law? Foreign diplomats, however, are upset over the attacks on Kissinger. Some have let it be known that they consider Kissinger almost in­ despensible to continuing the East-West detente and set­ tling the Middle East crisis. With Richard Nixon gone, only Kissinger has a personal relationship with the key leaders - Soviet party leader Brezhnev in Moscow, Chinese Premier Chou En-lai in Peking, President Sadat in Cairo, President Assad in Syria and Prime Minister Rabin in Israel. The Soviets are particu­ larly uneasy over Kissinger's future. They have developed a special relationship with him, which they want to con­ tinue. They respect him as a formidable adversary. But they have developed a trust in him that makes it possible to deal with him. They are unsure whether they could establish the same relation­ ship with his successor.

F.B.I. Harassment Enemy lists, mail tampering, FBI harassment: Orwellian paranoia hangs over the Socialist Workers Party of Colorado

(SWP). Citing incidents of government intimidation, the SWP refuses to give Colorado or the Federal government a list of its campaign contributors until alle.ged FBI run-ins with its member cease. "For us to turn over the names, addresses and places of occupation of contributors to our election campaigns," says SWP spokeswomen Nora Danielson, "means to supply the government with a ready-made enemy list. We refuse to turn over any such list." The SWP claims "200 documented (nationa-l) incidents" of recent government harassment of SWP members.

Terrorist Blackmail: Washington officials are secretly alarmed that ter­ rorists soon will be able to blackmail the government with nuclear weapons. The security of nuclear weapons, they believe, is in­ adequate. Just a few weeks ago, according to intelligence reports, two teams of Army Green Berets tested the security system by attempt­ ing to penetrate it. They were able to break into nuclear weapons stockpiles, which they concluded were "dan­ gerously vulnerable." As an expert put it, the security system is "people weak." Last year alone, around three thousand per­ sons with access to nuclear weapons were fired. Among them were alcoholics, homosexuals and even a few who were found to be insane. Among them were many who could have made off with nuclear weapons. The experts frankly expect the Palestinian extremists to get their hands on nuclear weapons and threaten Israeli cities with destruction. The experts foresee the day when mercenaries will steal nuclear weapons and sell them to the highest bidder. Libya's madman dictator. Muamar Qaddafi, for exam­ ple, has already let it be known he would pay millions for a big bomb. The experts are also con­ vinced that domestic ter­ rorists, such as the Sym­ hionese Liberation Army, will eventually acquire nuclear weapons and use them for blackmail. Already, officials of one Florida city paid a million dollars in ransom after receiving a threat, ac­ companied by an expertly drawn diagram of a nuclear weapon. In this case, they later discovered that the blackmailer was a pre­ cocious teen-age boy. Runaway Inflation: U.S. economic advisers are now confessing privately that the economy is in trouble. Inflation has forced the labor·unions to raise their de­ mands. They have aban­ doned restraint and are now going after big wage boosts to catch up with soaring prices. Policemen, teachers and other public employes, caught in the price squeeze, are becoming militant. There will be police and teachers strikes this fall, despite laws forbidding them. High interest ra~es and building costs have already caused a crisis in home building. Only the rich can now afford new homes. Mid­ dle-income Americans can't find mortgage money or raise the downpayment. The automobile industry, which is vital to the Ameri­ can economy, has also been thrown into a tailspin . Domestic car sales are down a drastic 20 per cent from the level of a year ago.

AMNESTY LOOPHOLES Laws and loopholes go hand-in-hand. Ford's amnesty plan is no exception to this pattern. By squeezing through a loophole, military deserters, unlike draft resisters, can avoid their alternative service requirements. The amnesty program for Vietnam-era deserters works like this: A deserter turns himself in to the military, pledges allegiance to the United States and promises to work up to two years in a low-paying hospital or other community job. The deserter is then handed an undesirable discharge and ordered to report to his Selective Service director for the terms of his alternative service. Yet if the deserter plays hooky from his hospital job, the military can't prosecute him because he's no longer in the military. An undesirable discharge is the deserter's only badge of dishonor. It doesn't pay for the deserter to play fair, say military observers. Even if the deserter accepts the terms of amnesty, he is still branded with a social stigma. The "clemency

Braves Beat U.S.&. Citing "governmental misconduct" a federal judge in St. Paul disgustedly dismissed all charges against American Indian Movement (AIM) leaders Russell Means and Dennis Banks in connection with the occupation of Wounded Knee last year. The trial ended in a flurry of bizarre incidents that led to US District Judge Fred Nichol's blistering one-hour denunciation of the FBI, the Department of Justice and the chief government prosecutor. After eight months of court proceedings, the trial had developed into a forum for charges of government miscues. Last spring a five-week evidenciary hearing of illegal government wiretaps at Wounded Knee led to the suppression of all evidence gained through the taps. Early this summer five of ten charges against Means and Banks were dropped when Judge Nichol ruled that US Army activity during the Wounded Knee occupation was in violation of the federal law requiring that the President declare a civil disorder before he uses the army for domestic purposes. One of the more dramatic moments occured in the closing stages of the trial when defense attorney William K~nstler yanked open a side door of the courtroom and discovered two FBI agents eavesdropping on the testimony of a fellow agent.

discharge" is a brand new discharge, created by Preside:-1c Ford specifically for those deserters who fulfill their alternative service requirements. . Any future employer could immediately tag a clemency discharge holder as a military deserter. Neither an undesirable nor a clemency discharge permits the deserter to collect veteran's benefits. Both discharges are less than an honorable discharge. The deserter's civilian counterpart, the draft resister , has his own problems. Instead of a Selective Service director, the draft resister reports to the US attorney in his district. If he reneges on his alternative service pledge, the resister faces federal charges, trial and a possible prison term. The amnesty loophole, says Col. Phelps Jones of the Veterans of Foreign Wars, is a "natural consequence of layering the existing legal system with Ford's administrative mechanisms." The inequities created by loopholes "may op~n up total pardon," predicts Jones.

Help Save Star Trek Fans of the TV science fiction series "Star Trek" are trying to get together a sympathy blitz of Paramount Pictures to help revive the show. Specifically, plans are now in the works for a Star Trek movie, hopefully starring as many of the old regulars as can be wooed back. The holdup in the movie is Paramount Pictures, which holds one-third ownership of the show's rights. Paramount is afraid to sink a lot of money into a movie based on a show that has been off the air for five years. Despite that very fact , NBC still receives about 100 letters a week protesting cancellation of the show, and reruns of the original 79 episodes are outdrawing other programs in a number of cities. On top of that, the "trekkies" cult of Star Trek fans is still strong. Fans assume that a Star Trek movie would be financially successful enough to make NBC consider reviving the series, and are mounting a nationwide letter-writing campaign to Paramount Pictures in November supporting a movie based on the series. The address to write to is: Frank Yablans, President; Paramount Pictures, 5451 Marathon St., Hollywood, CA 90038. The coordinators also ask that letters be sent so they arrive between November 4th and 15th.


October 4, 1974

HALL IN THE FAMILY bySusanHaU

Page 9

TAN AND CARDINAL

The Waiting Game

PEARLS FROM THE CESSPOOL byMiketmler

What's Happ'nin' Part II

Another herd animal is the working ... How long have you Hi. By now, most of the glamour quarters for just one more game. biology major (alias Bio-Wierd). Oh, God, you look awful! A very dangerous, and been sick? has worn off. You now know Long hours in labs reeking with What on earth is wrong with Oh, about two weeks. Ever why they call this place therefore more satisfying formaldehyde twists their minds. since the Blast. Which reminds Waterbein College, Westerwhere pastime is watching those you? Their favorite pastime is making Nothing on earth. me: are you going to the Beer· Ahia. Even the slow ones among lovable fellows called JOCKS. people ill at dinner by relating What do you mean? Boogie? us are tiring of the three year old They are capable of inflicting how they "harvest" their rats. I'm going steady with Count The what? top 40 hits on the roost juke much bodily harm at times, and Psychology people are very Dracula. Want to see the marks The Owls' Bee-r Boogie bo~, even the soul songs are are easily enraged - thus care disturbing. Everything you say is Friday night. I can hardly wait. putting you to sleep. Since we must be taken not to molest or on my neck? analyzed and incriminates you. Hey. That's not funny. You You're not going? In your are· versa tile Liberal arts feed them. Most times they are condition? They usually sit around and are the palest thing I've ever seen st.udents, we must be resourceful good natured, too good-natured. stare knowingly. El. Ed. majors Of course. I've hardly been in finding entertainment. Here · They usually run in packs of out of a Vincent Price movie. sit around and look for Oh, I'm all right. I've got a out of the dorm except to eat all are a few humble suggestions. If three to ten, and are surrounded week. I want to go out and have you have some additional ones, by hordes of giggling, screaming, husbands. Government majors cold. a good time. You too? Everybody's getting write long letters to the T&C please don't bother with them. I well-built young ladies (who are and tell everyone that they are so sick! I feel fine. I'd try showing up in class will first deal with Otterbein probably very smart, no doubt). POLY-SCI majors and try to be Here, let me breathe on you. once first, if I were you. Maybe people types. These virile fellows flex a lot, trustees. Theology majors spend he said eleven instead of and delight in picking up one of Satan has his icy fingers on You're the third person who's ... most of their time hiding from seven 90 lb. females and throwing the our soul in the roost. Those said that to me today. The other the Campus Crusaders. Econ and You know, you should get infernal PINBALL games will her over their shoulders two were guys, though. Soc majors continually convince out more. Why don't you go steal your soul. You may well (satisfying some primiordal Yeah, well, there's a lot of with me? themselves that they are actually biological drive). They do, laugh, but few things are more that going around. scien tis ts (like alchemists). Where, the Health Center? however have a good sense of off a tragic than the sight Guys? Where? Freaks sit around and convince No, no. To the Boogie. PINBALL ADI CT. These lost humor (I devoutly hope). Well, they must be themselves that they are Naw. I'm not up for it. Different majors provide souls wander aimlessly, somewhere. What are you doing, You're not? Oh, I am! I'm breathing. interesting personality types. permanently blinded and anyway? so much fun. I'm So much for the personality going to have Theater people are the most deafened by the glaring, blinking Waiting for a phone call. at Otterbein. More going to dance and drink and lights and the constant din of obvious ones. They dress Oh. What time did he say he drink and dance, and go home the bonus bells. They walk somewhat strangely, and are entertainment hot spots next was going to call? week. with someone new and always reading lines into vacant glassy-eyed, fingers twitching Seven. interesting. air. They show even more of a uncontrollably, begging for It's quarter after eight. I'm interesting, maybe, but quarters for just one more game. herd instinct than do the jocks. I know. I'm getting pretty old, I'm sorry Oh. Can I have a Kleenex? to say. Help yourself. Have you been Oh, I meantto the Health Center? My phone! Hello, hello? Oh, Are you kidding? I go there by John Reese so often they've got a honey . . . Oh, hi, honey! Oh, censorial power he had was ..... C'mon, Nicely! Print thermometer with my name on honey! Oh, hi! Awake! Arise! Be grateful! A exhibited. He fired off a th e word! I'll hide it in a couple Oh, Lord. it. new era of far-right conservatism delightfully paradoxical editorial of parentheses. ( .... ) No! No! Maybe my phone's not has just dawned on Otterbein! in which he "refused" to censor No! Print it! P*ss! That's better. No, not the alleged plot by the articles. In the same issue, a But get the damn asterisk out trustees of our school to hire couple of words were snipped this time. Pi*s. Just going to former Prez Nixon to our from last week's edition of this move it, eh, Chris my boy? O.K. soon-to-be-vacated Dean of column. The heavyweight word Have it your way for now. But Students position, but of this pair was one that you'll be sorry. The leftish pinko something . with even greater de scribed, in stark realistic commie dupe longhairs on implications. The Otterbein Free detail, a certain normal campus won't stand for this. Press has met with physiological process that occurs . And plus, when you least expect bowdlerization. That's right. with increased frequency as one it, I'll slip the word in. Just you This very paper that you hold in sups more beer. Interesting wait, Chris. Any time now, Piss. your lap right now is correlation, eh? That word· CENSORED FROM ABOVE. From here on -out, it will be touch-and-go if I can tell my shocking story. I never know whether a random word or two COMPLETE SMOKER'S SUPPLIES might slip out of my text somewhere between typewriter and press. But, with full 14 N. STATE STREET knowledge of the risk involved, I 11 in the ALLEY SHOPPES 11 shall make at least some of the truth known. Remember the little 882-6404 front-page article about the IFC Beer Blast? That one word, beer, Donuts which refers to a certain alcoholic beverage, was deleted. Coffee Our 5th Year Offering Why? It's so simple, I'm sure Cookies FREE DELIVE.RY you have thought of it by now. SUN. thru THURS. Obviously, the T&C didn't want people to get the idea that there was going to be beer at the Beer Blast. People might have anticipated beer. They might OPEN DAILY have been disappointed with. Genessee. at 6:00 a.m. DoJg Redding So, with this seemingly Gtterbein ·71 innocuous ex1s1on, plucky 14 N. State Editor Chris now felt the "in the ALLEY SHOPPES"

THEJOYRAG

Abridged Troubled Waters

882-7710


PagelO

October 4, 1974

TAN AND CARDIN'AL

s p O R T s ~!~~~~t~!d i~~~~e~y ~7!~~~ ·~,,~.~~d,!~r

Joe Lopez attempts extra points, with Dave Daubenmire hold­ ing in the Card's 16-13 loss against Capital.

WIN-HUNGRY OTTERS HOST OWU

......

After one and three point losses to Kenyon and Capital, respectively, a victory-hungry Otterbein grid unit ( 1-2) will hope to return to the wirt column when they entertain Ohio Wesleyan University (2-1) in a 7: 3 0 p.m. Saturday nondivisional encounter at Memorial Stadium. The Cardinals are still fuming from Saturday's loss, which saw Capital score late in the fourth quarter to post a 16-13 victory and notch · their 11th straight Cap-Otter triumph. Saturday's contest shouldn't be any easier. The Jack Fouts-coached Bishops sport an extremely big defensive line, featuring tackles Ted Durchik ( 6-1, 260) and Chip Johnston (6-3, 225) and defensive end Brian Burby ( 6-1, 205), called "one of the better ends in the OAC" by Otterbein coaches. Offensively, the Bishops are spearheaded by quarterback Bob Mauck, who ranks fifth in OAC passing (28-53 for 357 yards) and seventh in loop total offense (143 yards per game). Mauck's favorite receiver thus far this season has been Tom Scurfield, a shifty split end who ranks fourth in conference receiving with 14 catches for 191 yards. On the ground the Bishops rely on fullbacks Mike Herchik and Tim Schmitt for their inside game, while speedy tailback Bill Nutting gives Wesleyan its outside attack.

Otterbein will continue with a wishbone offense built around freshman quarterback Bill Hillier and backs Ron Gorman and Jim Cox. Both runners are averaging more than seven yards per carry, while Gorman also leads the league in kick returns with a 28.4 yard average. The inside game should be handled by Steve Schnarr, who gained 51 yards in 11 carries against Capital after being sidelined a week with a severe thigh bruise. Up top, the Cardinal mainstay is senior split end Neil Mairs, whose 13 catches for 218 yards ranks him fifth among OAC receivers. Mairs caught a 43-yard bomb from Hillier last week to score Otterbein's first touchdown. Sternly tested in the past two weeks, Otterbein's defense should get assistance from linebacker Bernie Sokolowski. The burly sophomore, whose right knee has finally responded to treatment after a ten-day layoff, should see action Saturd

the opening frame, Capital put together a 97-yard drive in 16 plays, capped by a five-yard run by workhorse Mike Opalka. The durable fullback, who rushed for 122 yards, set a Cap single game record with 34 attempts. Following Opalka's touchdown, kicker Dan Maloney added the extra point and the Crusaders took a 7-0 lead. After an exchange of punts, the Cardinals saw a 69-yard, 1 7-play drive stalled as quarterback Bill Hillier, was dumped for a yard loss on fourth down at the Capital ten yard line with only 1:25 remaining in the half. Otterbein forced Cap to punt with less than a minute remaining, however and scored on a 43-yard desperation pass from Hillier to split end Neil Mairs, who out-wres...tled Crusader defensive back Tom Hilt in the end zone with no time showing on the clock. A Joe Lopez extra point knotted the score at 7-7. The lone second half tally by the Cardinals came on their first opportunity. Otterbein mounted a 77-yard drive in nine plays',

Jim Cox encounters heavy traffic as he churns out 1st down yardage at the Capital game.

Editor's Note: There is no sports quiz this week, due to the hospitalization of our sports editor. He is now back

-rhtl FritJndly State"

aa NORTH STATI: aflll:1:T NESTERVILLE. OHIO ,aoe1 PM-■

from Hillier to split end Steve Mott. Fullback Steve ~chnarr scored the TD for Otterbein on a six-yard run, but the conversion by Lopez was blocked and the score remained 13-7. In the fourth quarter, nothing seemed to go . right for the Cardinals. Midway in the stanza Otterbein held Cap on third down at the Crusader 30, forcing a punt by Cap's Joe Schleppi. An illegal use of hands penalty was charged against Capital on the kick and Otterbein elected to move the Crusaders back 15 yards and force another punt. It was then the burly Capital kicker rocketed a booming 80-yard effort which was downed at. the Otter five. The Cards drove to their own 26 in five plays, only to lose a Jim Cox fumble near the left sideline where the Crusaders recovered on the 25. A stiff Cardinal defense held Capital on downs at the eight, but the Otters faired no better after taking over and were faced with a fourth and four situation at the Otterbein 12. In a difficult decision, utter coaches elected to have quarterback

eea-aaea

Agent for Russell Stover Candies

up and around, and coniving a sports quiz that will separate the real trivia nuts from the weekend fans. C.N.

~~cV

I. I

his own end zone for a two-point safety and set up a free kick at the 20. The strategy apparently ·worked, as Joe Lopez drove the ball to Capital's 35 and Otterbein kick coverage yielded only a seven-yard return to give the Crusaders a first and ten at their own 42 yard line with only four minutes remaining. A punt by Daley from his end zone would have had to travel 46 yards with no return to achieve the same result. Things looked bright for Otterbein as Steve Gwin's first two passing attempts fell incomplete, setting up a third and ten situation. On the next play, however, Gwin scrambled out of the pocket for a first down at the Otter 48. Then, after a 23-yard pass to split end Steve Walters and a 21-yard strike to tight end Terry King, fullback Opalka scored his second touchdown from four yards out. Cap's Maloney added the extra point to make the final score 16-13 and extend the Otterbein frustration to 11 straight seasons.

Harriers Overpower Muskies Last Tuesday the Otter Runners beat Muskingum 25-32 on a rough and hilly course at the New Concord College. The course was slow, but the times would not indicate this as it was at least 600 yards short of the usual five miles. Pµil Forshey of Muskingum was the individual winner as he toured the course in 25:31. Tom Bachtel led the Otters as he finished second with a time of 26: 22. The Otter pack was close behind to put the meet away. Kyle Beveridge was third in 26:35, Jeff Hunt 5th in 26:49, Dave Brown 6th, in 27:08, Mike Chadwell 8th in 27:23, Jeff Ankrom 10th, in 27:54, and Ed Stockwell 11th in 27:58. Other finishers for Otterbein were Pat Byrnes (12th-28:22), John Berens (13th-28:28), Greg Jewitt (lSth-28:57), Jeff Yoest (16th-28:59)

(J'J~<uPad£1

14 N. State St,eet ;n Alley Shoppes

~~~~~~~~~~;? . this coupon. LIMIT ONE COUPON PER PIZZA

-

I I

l


TAN ANO CARDINAL

October 4, 1974

Page 11

at the helm of the Sphinx offensive team while Bob Evans made sure that the defense for the Sphinxmen didn't allow a score. Evans scored 3 touchdowns, Campbell had 2 and Jeff Howlett had the other offensive score for Sphinx. IM football standings as of Tuesday, October I:

Otter Runners Third in O.A.C. The Otterbein Cross Country team finished third behind Mt. Union and Baldwin Wallace last Saturday at Wooster. Mount's three teams scored an incrediable eight points while B-W had 27 points. Junior Co-Captain Dave Brown and Frosh standout John Berens romped through their ten miles in 51 :53 to capture 9th place. Berens .averaged 5: 1O per mile while Brown averaged 5: 12. Sophomores Mike Chadwell and Tom Bachtel finisi. ,ct in 13th with a total time of 52 :13. Bachtel had the best average among the Otter runners, 5:08. Chadwell's average was 5: 18 per mile. Frosh Kyle Beveridge ana Sophomore Jeff Hunt toured tht, course in a combined time of 52: 57 to finish in 18th place. Hunt's average was 5: 15 while Beveridge's average was 5:20 per mile. These three teams combined for a total score of 40 points edging out Oberlin for third place. Oberlin's scored 42 points. Other finishing teams for Otterbein were, Jeff Ankrom, Ed Stockwell (23;54:02) and

Greg Jewitt, Pat Byrnes (38; 56:28). Tom Hoover, Jamie Brunk, Greg Morgan, and Scott Warner also competed, but were not counted in the scoring of the meet. Mount Union's Jim Ansberry and Bob Lunn took the individual team honors as they burned the course in 50:02. Coach Dave Lehman was generally pleased with the results, but told the team this week that it is in store of some rough workouts for the next two weeks. Lehman said, "I think we can catch B-W by the Conference (the OAC Conference Meet is Nov. 2), but it takes a lot of work for us to catch Mount (Union)." Lehman continued by saying "I have never seen anyone dominate the relays like they did (Mount). They are tough but that does not mean that we can't get them" Team Scores: Mount Union 8, Baldwin Wallace 27, OTTERBEIN - 40, Oberlin 42, Marietta 64, Ohio Northern - 67, Wooster - 69, Muskingum - 71, Denison - 88, Ohio Weslyan - 95, Heidelberg - 116, and Capital- 121.

FRATERNITY DIVISION 1. Tie Club-Sphinx 2. Kings 3. Tie Jonda-Pi Sig 4. Zeta DORM DIVISION

Clu~ber ~om She a runs outside for a gain in intramural game agamst Kmgs.

Inttja~ural News. This weeks IM football action has seen Club over Jonda by a score of 50-0. Jim Inninger, Randy Smith and Pat McElvoy were the offensive standouts. The highlight of the game came when Pete Miller intercepted a lateral in the offensive backfield of Jonda and scampered 20

. John Berens

TEAM STATISTICS POINTS SCORED FIRST DOWNS by Rushing by Passing by Pena Ities NET YARDS RUSHING TIMES CARRIED Average Per Carry YARDS PASSING Passes Attempted Passes Completed Percentage Passes Had Intercepted Yards Int. Returned Total Offensive Plays TOTAL OFFENSE PUNTS TOTAL YARDS Punting Average PUNT RETURNS-YARDS KICKOFF RETURNS-YARDS FUMBLES - BALL LOST

74 43 25 13 5

622 148

.B eren helps progressing tea,m John Berens, from Newark, Ohio, is probably the best runner ever to join Otterbein's X-Co team, as a freshman. In the Capital/OWU Trimeet, he placed 5th, running as fourth man for the team with a very good time of 27:38. Last Saturday, at the conference relays, he and his relay partner, Co-Capt. Dave Brown, placed 9th. John had the second best individual time for Otterbein, next to Tom Bachtel. Berens is also one of the best runners to come out of Newark High School. He holds the school record in the 2-mile run of 9:28, set last spring in the district track meet. That fine race qualified him for the State Track Meet. Last fall, he placed 15th in the individual race of the State X-Co championships. John' should help this strong, young team to it's best season ever. Look for him in the top 7 all year.

4.2 359 52 25 .481

1 11 200 981 12 384

32.0 6/95 11/216 10/7

OTT

14

26

OPP

14

14

RESULTS OTT 31 OTT 30 OTT 13 RUSHING Jim Cox Ron Gorman Bill Hillier Steve Schnarr Larry Roush Rob Dodge Rick DoCobo

Manchester kenyon Capital A

24 20 56 26 16 5 1

VOS

AVG

TD

218. 28 50 16 7 9 17

16.7 9.3 12.5 16.0 7.0 9.0 17.0

1 0 2 0 0 0 0

6 CP ATT INT VOS TD 465 PASSING 25 52 359 4 142 B. Hillier 3.3 KICKOFF RETURNS NO VOS AVG 442 Ron Gorman 5 142 28.4 69 D. Daubenmire :2 57 28.5 32 Jim Cox 3 77 25.7 .464 Bob Fresch 1 0 0 3 NO VOS AVG 0 PUNT RETURNS 210 D. Daubenmire 2 33 16.5 934 Larry Roush 3 17 5.7 16 Rick DoCobo 1 45 45.0 603 TD 37.7 PASSES INTERCEPTED NO VOS 4/13 Tom McKelvey 7 0 2 0 14/246 Scott Reali ·o 0 6/3 Tom Harbrecht FUMBLE RECOVERIES Abe Hatem Pete Lenge

SCORES BY QUARTERS 24 10 74 14 22 64

INDIVIDUAL SCORING Bill Hillier Ron Gorman Dennis Cockayne Joe Lopez Jim Cox Rob Dodge Neil Mairs Steve Schnarr

yards for a touchdown. Sanders-Scott defeated Davis Hall by a score of 24-8. In Monday's action it was Sphinx over Pi Sig 44-0. Tom Wolfe and Mat "Ziffle" Arnold each pulled in an interception and Paul Bradford scored on a 60 yard punt return. Scott Campbell was

RECEIVING NO Neil,Mairs 13 Rob Dodge 3 OPP D. Cockayne 4 64 Larry Roush 1 48 Jim Cox 1 25 Steve Schnarr 1 17 Steve Mott 1

OTTERBEIN COLLEGE THREE GAME STATISTICS OTT

2-0 1-1 0-1 0-2

TD

K

R/P

FG

TOTAL

3 2 2 0 1 0 1 0

0 0 0 4 0 0 0 0

1 0 0 0 0 1 0 0

0 0 0 2 0 0 0 0

20 12 12 10 6 2 6 6

17 31 16 NET

TD

AVG

177 139 116 113 67 10 0

1 1 3 1 0 0 0

7.4 7.0 2.1 4.3 4.2 2.0 0.0

NO

2 1

VOLLEYBALL Oct. 5 (Sat.) at Capital, 10: oo· a.m. Oct. 17 (Thurs.) at Wooster, 6:30 p.m. Oct. 18 (Fri.) at Ohio University, 4:00 p.m. Oct. 26 (S .a t.) Ashland/Central State, 10:00 a.m. Nov. 2 (Sat.) Wright State, 1:00 p.m. Nov. 9 (Sat.) at Muskingum, 10:30 a.m. Nov. 12 (Tues.) Kenyon/ Denison at Denison, 7:30 p.m.

1. Sanders-Scott 2-0 2. Garst 1-0 3. Davis 1-1 4 . Tie Engle-King 0-2 JM Cross Country is October 15 at 4 : 30. Have teams at the stadium at 4 : 15. Remember the deadlines for intramural rosters. Vo 11 e yball rosters must be turned in by October 12. Basketball, Bowling and ping-pong rosters must be in by November 23 and no later than this date. Ping-pong teams consist of two singles and one doubles team. Bowling rosters must have at least 6 names. Basketball rosters must have at least 8 names and volleyball rosters must have at least 8 names. All rosters must be turned in to Don Coldwell at 70 W. Home St. For further information call 882-7133.

Dave Brown

Brown Keeps Improvin' Dave Brown, a Junior from Junction City, Ohio, represents the experienced runner on Otterbein's X-Co team, being one of only 3 juniors. He was elected Co-Capt. along with Jamie Brunk, and has shown the importance of steady improvement. At New Lexington High School, his two-mile school record of 10: 1O still holds, as well as his X-Co course record. He came to 0 t terbein and improved to become one of the leaders this year. Last year, as a sophomore, his constant improvement really began to show when he had a flock of freshmen to run with. Most of the year, he was second or third man. In the conference meet, he placed 28th. That fine finish enabled him to go to the Division III National X-Co. championships in Illinois. He led those 300 plus runners from all around the nation for a half mile.


TAN AND CARDINAL

Page 12

October 4, 1974

.,,.

Get Goin'

-> ,,­ z m . -<

The 26th Annual Bargain Box 1 sponsored by the Junior League of Columbus, Inc. will be held at Veterans Memorial Exhibit Hall on Saturday, October 5th, from 9:30 - 5:30, and Monday, October 7th, from 9:30 - 2:30. Bargain Box offers an opportunity to purchase quality merchandise at exceptionally low prices. In addition to sale items donated by the Junior League's 600 active and sustaining members, approximately 177 local merchants have donated merchandise for the sale. Bargain Box is a gigantic sale and boasts a fantastic selection of items including clothing for children and adults, toys, books, furniture, small appliances, sporting equipment, linens, china, hardware, notions, and many specialty items including antiques, art objects and handcrafted items featured in a Country Store Selection. In addition to providing the community with a wide selection of high quality new and used merchandise, the proceeds from this sale are used to assist local agencies and community groups in providing services for the people in the greater Columbus Area. Over the past 25 years, Bargain Box has brought in over $375 ,000 which has been used to assist many community services. They are COS! , Columbus Junior Theatre of the Arts, "Bottoms-Up" newspaper printed at Gladden Community House, The Columbus Zoo, the A.B.C. Program (A Better Chance), Drug Abuse TV spots, Research on Runaways, 4-C program and Retired Senior Volunteer Program and many others. The Junior League of Columbus in addition to financial support offer_l!d these local projects through the proceeds of Bargain Box also provides the community with countless hours of services donated by trained League volunteers. The first Bargain Box netted $8,254 which was used for a pilot study for a psychiatric center which later became The Children's Mental Health Center in Columbus. Chairman Mrs. Richard D. Anderson says, "In 1974, a year of real price increases, Bargain Box's low prices remain almost the same malting the sale a bigger bargain than ever." Assistant Chairman Mrs. Robert W. Butler adds, "And in a year of such inflation, local agencies and service groups really need the financial assistance that the proceeds of Bargain Box could provide." Bargain Box '74 Sale Hours are Saturday, October 5th, from 9:30 - 5:30, and Monday, October 7th, from 9:30 - 2:30

:;; :I:

Cl)

Cl)

-<0

m -,, Cl)

,,

-< Cl) m

.

0

co

.:_,

C

'<

z-

30 E. COLLEGE WESTERVILLE, OHIO 43081 PHONE 882-0351

FRIENDLY ICE CREAM Now has part-time positions Hrs. 5 - 12:30 weekdays Anytime - Weekends Call 891-0890 for appointment Equal Opportunity Employer

GIFTS 'N' THINGS

en

-.,,. ii, n

REPS WANTED -

Represent nationally known brands of stereo equipment for established distributor. Excellent opportunity. Apply : Impex Electronics, 15 William _St., NY NY 10005.

Z 0

;::::.

~

.,, .,,

VI

.

C:

II>

n,

::r II>

~ ;;

~

0

_,,.

"' !P.

C)

z z :::;;,

c,., 0

00

THE YELLOW LION IS

OPEN LEGAL BEVERAGES to all legal patrons, Music as you like it, & atmosphere beyond compare( Live Bands Every

\Ne,9k. End

Quad Tapes on VVe~k- Nights Lighted Dance Floor Panoramic Photo- Imagery Special Happy. Hour \Neek Plenty of Free Parking Game Room

Days ~j" to?pm

Strictly Campus Atmosphere-Com~ As You Like Ir

I

OTTERBEIN

I.

Call 475•2794 1JC

TO ,.71

Mor-.t lld

r- I

NOW

OPEN·,

I GAHANNA

Ciel ......,_--r--+---!H~ERE WE ARE £.atl

..,._.d SI

CD

;;,:,

;;; z s:

us 16

COME BOOGIE WITH US


Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.