arly students had it rough

Transcription

arly students had it rough
L"1VERSITY OF DAYTON
FLYER NE
STUDENT PlJBLILATU)
TlJESDA Y, FEHIU/AltY 5, 1974
\'QL. XX, :\'O. 34
University Fee appropriated
to pay organizational costs
By Rosemary Preidis
FN Staff Wriler
(UDPS foto by Mellinger)
BOBBY RIGGS , TH E P .T. BARNUM OF CHAUVINISM,
·~.1d1·s volleys with UD cheerleader Lau r a Salva ti . T he 55-year
od wnnis toreador and vitamin junkie was in t he UD Arena
atu~day ni ght to tape the Phil Dona hue show.
mu think it's had now...
The tuition additive , known to
every s tud e nt a s th e Uni ver s ity
F ee, is far from jus t ano t her
ambi g uous frin ge cos t once its
purpose a nd fun cti ons a re cla rifi ed .
The $50 r eceive d by UD from
eac h s tud e nt per se mes te r he lps
to pay off lia bili t ies. Twe n ty fi ve
dollar s is a d irect a llocation . Five
dolla r s is assessed to t he Lib r a r y
debt and five dollars is assessed
to t he Ar ena de bt. Ten do llars is
a llocated to inte r collegia te athletics and the fina l five dollars is
divided between t he pr oposed
Physical ActiYities Center Fund
wh ic h rece ives t hree do lla r s a nd
Stude nt Gover nment r eceiv ing
t he other two do llars.
T h e aggr egate a m o un t of
money r eceived by eac h fun d is
comp uted by t he n umber of
stude nts en r olled mul ti plied by
t he d ollar s assessed to eac h a llocation.
T he r e mai ning $25 is t he una llocated porti on of th e U ni ver s ity
Fee w h ic h is dist ri buted amo ng
s uch cam pus functions as t he
F lyer News, Daytonia n, intramurals, Fl yer et tes, deba te tea m ,
Or phe us, UD Player s, U niver-
arly students had it rough
By Martha Yenmko
FN Staff Writer
a a cold winter mor ning at
larv' Institute. Getti ng up
for classes was never any
but a student was always
awake when he got to
Abrisk morning das h out
"Crystal Palace'" guaranlhat.
above is a descrip tion of
formerly called St. Mar y's
tutr) around 1903. Th e
tal Palace" was a general
use, now better known as
t
Office.
ECOLD MORNINGS
rding to Bro. Elmer
, "Every morning people
bal'e to run out to t he
-even in winter. Most
hers and water basins in
rooms but in winter they
metimes freeze over.'"
uden , who totaled about
, time, lived in parts of
. and t. Joseph's Halls,
t priest and brothers
~rty and Zehler Halls.
f 1built in 1871) was
o( the whole UniverBro. Lackner. "It con-, administrative of'tory rooms, laboraeating facilities.'"
lEHLER' FOLLY
bry' Hall was conone of the largest
around the Dayton
people came to look
_ht that it was so
Ycalled it "Brother
t after Bro. Max
"gned it.
tllnpus was orig-
ina lly a 125 acre fa r m t hat was
bought by t he Ma r ia nists in 1850
for $12,000. T he first class consisted of 14 students (all fr om
Dayton) who paid $18 per
quarter fo r boa r d and tuit ion a nd
of co urse "only Catholic boys"
wer e ad mitted .
Students enjoyed a mixtur e of
sports, academics and re ligio n
(manda tor y cha pe l service ever y
Thursday ). The difficulty of th e
courses is re lat ed t o th e fa ct t hat
only 139 students r eceived degrees between 1891 and 1911.
stud e nts to the fact t hat things
have r eally cha nged s ince t he
"Cr ystal P a lace" days of St.
Mary's I nstitute.
s ity Activities, Art Snies, Place
me nt Office a nd Studrnt Life
Co un cil. T he Ika lt h Center and
K ennc>dy Un ion ar c a lso sup
por te d .
How mu ch money thPse or gani
za ti ons r eceive de pe nd s upon
th (• ir "npt di ffe r ences." If an or
gan iza ti on's ex pens(•s exc(•ed its
budget, th e dc• fi cit w ill be
cove r ed by t his un..:ommitted
portion, Comptrollt>r T h omas
W cckesser Pxplained.
T he money accumulatl'd from
t he fee t h is Yl'ar is estimated at
$588,000 Sincl' it 1s c·losPly tied
to student en rollment, any sharp
fluctuat ion in thP student body
will inva r iably be reflected in the
fee.
Since UD's leaner enrollment
has eaten into the revenue, the
Univt> r sity Fee r eserve ha
suppll'mented it. In mo r e
affluent yea r s, the fee amounted
to $700,000. Instead of boosting
tuition, t he r eserve has been
de pleted to meet t he vi tal costs.
The Stud e nt L ife Co u ncil con-
MR. \ 'O~DERBRl~K
sidered the idea of including the
fl•e in a comprehen 1ve or
general type fee.
However, there i. a remote po
s1bilitv of this in the immediate
fut un:, aid 1\larg-arct Holland,
dean of studl'nts.
•
Ohio decree revises
crimin al ordinan ces
By Sean Breen
FN Staff Wri-
W h en the O h io legislatu r e
passed House Bill 511, t ht• lives
of t•very per son in t he state were
indi r ectly affected.
"It totally changed t he codified
statutt•s and ordinance,- of Oh!O
in the criminal section and
changed the courtroom and detl'ntion pron•dures ." e.\plained
l'D . l·curity director Timothy
Fl•nlon.
The hill.,, hich became effecti\(•
Jan. 1. condt•nsed or eliminated
all , l'rtions of tht' criminal cod
and rl'dun •i tht' total numbt'r of
statutes by t,,o third,. The
rcns10n 1.,in•s thl' nt', codl'
much .1::n•att•r CO\"l'ra(!e th. n thl'
old Ont', statt•d Fenlon. "It i
sonwthing- ,, t' dt•,pt'ratt'ly
m•l'dl'd m Ohio:·
.\s a re s t,lt, tht' "t•ommon la ,, "
of Ohw ha s bl't'n l'limin:llt'd .ind
capital pum shnll'nt ha s bt't'n
br ought bat·k for t't' r tam t·as t' s oi
aggr a ,·at t'd m urdt'r .
WOMEN ADMITTED
In 1936 women were admitted
fo r t he first tim e a nd " the idea
was to merely accommodate
D ayton wom e n ," said Bro.
L ac kn er . During this year,
wome n attended classes separate ly from t he men but t he
classes were coeducational by
th e following year.
Also t he "Crystal Palace" was
refin ed and converted to a me n's
rest room. Not until after 1950
did it become a Post Office.
St. Mar y's I nstitute became the
University of Dayton in 1920
when a moveme nt to establish a
ci v ic uni ve r sity in Dayton
started. F earin g t hat it wou ld become a secular school, St. Mary's
changed its name.
There has not been a complete
history of UD s ince 1937 when
the last one was writte n. Students in the Am erica n studies
dept. are presently work ing on
one in conjunction with member s
of the Library s taff.
Such a history will e nlighte n
( UDPS fo1o byl.ourash)
"T he n ' a r e no,, minimum timt'
lim it s t hat a ~wrs on t·:in lw ht·ld
prior t o tr ial fo r a t' t'rt a rn cnnll'
depe ndent on,, hl't ht·r it"s a m is
dl'mean or or a ft,lony ... :;a id
Fenlon. T ht' s usp t'l' ts "\•otild n' t
bl' wait ing fo r ;\ tri a l longt' r than
tht• lllil'\llllUlll t inll' t ht•y l' OUld
sustain if t hl' Y Wl' rt' found
guilty ."
Prior to Jan . l iwoplt• t·ould wa it
a long tinw for tht· ir trial to
l' lHlll'
up in court. , O\\, l' \ t' ryday .1
su::.pl'l' t St' rY1' s bdon • his t n:11
counts as t hrt' t' days 1)f his
st•ntenl't' if lw is found guilty .
la,,
Ft'nlon statl•d that all
11f
fil't' rS Ill tht• stalt' must ta kt• .1
training pro~ram to fan11liari. 1'
tht•m with !ht• nt'\\ 1'otfr. l ll)"s
Sl'l'Urity fon·1• hat- just f1)mpl1·1t>d
th t• prog-ram .
( UDPS foto b y Campbell)
MS. BOBBI SCOTT HAS AN UN US UAL occu pation and a wry
big personality. If y ou're curious, t urn to a specia l story on pagt' ,1.
T ht• r t'\ isl'd t·rim i na I t·od1·
s hould makt• t ht• p1)li t't'n1.1n' s Joh
111ul'11 t'as it•r, st.1t 1•d F t•n l()n
1
PAGE 2
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THE lJI) FLYEll NEWS
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Those Who Don't Listen
Th e S tud e n t Government surve~· in the las t is sue surfaced a
, ,·ry di s lurbing fact .
The point of whether or not SG
wa, doing a good job was insignificant compared to the fact that
Hi prrcent of the students qu estiom•d were unable to evaluate
S(; 's accomplishments because
they were unaware of what it
wa, doing.
The common excuses given b y
s ludents were: ' 'SG doesn ' t
affect me," or "SG s hould become
more in touch with the btud e nts."
Each excuse is ridiculoub.
SG does affect each and eve r y
student. Effectively run and w ith
strong student s upport it can be
an extremely important voi ce in
thi s University.
The present SG , unlike tho ~e in
the past, has tried to e xpl a in
what they are doing but unfor ·
tunately few have lis te rwd .
They've tried open caucu ses but
Policy Box
LETTERS
EDITORIAL
The fl YER NEWS welcomes contributions
All editorials
a ,-Jo,-tty
to Box 8: Letten to the Editor. let1en
should not exceed 2.50 words. The FN opinion of the fl YfR NEWS editorial
reserves the right to edit letten not board. ~ columns, car100nl and
meeting this standard. All contributions letten to the editor ant the oplnlar. of
must be signed. Deadline fo< letten to be their respective authors, and do not
published Friday is 3 p.m. T.-day and fo< necessarily reflect the oplnk>tw of the
Tuesday, 3 p.m. the preceding Friday.
editorial board.
....,,._en1
what good b an opt•n rau r u ij
wht•n onl y thn•t• Ntud1•nt 1, 1, how
up . No , S(; isn 't at fault. It iN tlu•
apallH'ti r attitude of th1• , tud1·nt
body .
ll l) , nt•vt•r known for it'h ,tu•
dt•nt acti vis m , hai. , lid d1·1•pn
int o un a patht•t ir m old .
llt•n• an• so mt• good t•,a mpl .. :
Tht• F ood ~t·n ir t• ho lds an op1·n
mt•t"t ing to h l'ar t h t• g r ip1•, o f t ht•
a l .... a, , r r itira l ,t ud1•n t hoth and
u hug t• th rong of t1·n atti-nd .
('i r dt• K . an orgnni, ation ,- hirh
h1• lp s r h ild n •n \ hospital,, ma,
d is band ht•rau,t• ol l1trk ul , ulun
lt•1•r ,
I h1• ,\p pularhi11 ( luh , \ d for
",p t•cia l ( ' hildr,•n and utht•r
,- ort ln, h ilt• ,l,(roup, 11n· 111,-a,
a, k ing !or t· , tra ,tud,·nl lu Ip hu t
ran·h gt·t it .
m r
Iii, • than I 11110111\ •., and th
Ca,hha .
lO
R ,~p,,,., io11.~
An1erican is111
By Tim Longi<>y ( A&S-31
ASIDE FR0:'11 ·TH E EXORCIST ," t lw hot ll',t wr , ,11 11111 '", q nn •
l he country t hesp ri.1v , 1, a n •c·ordinl{ of an ,•,s.1} wr it t ,· n h_, <'.1n d1an
.1ou r1 :a li ,t Go r don :--inrlarr. ,, hirh is sr1rpl,1· entitl, ·d " A n, 1·n ,·:1n , ." Th ,•
m ,,n d1•\\ ~· Pyed ot our patrrots an• harlinl{ it a , , 1111.0• kind of a
p hil<"nphica l br eakthrnul{h into Consi·rou,nPs, T,•n a nd, ., 1•n man) in
l. ,. harn hea d ed
an• tlaiminl{ that the rah r;.t, ,· d it11rial i, ~o "'
11.,tio nal th era py. ,h for Sinclair him,PII. I und1 ·r, t,1,1d thal h.. a
d•,nai in g hi s r oyallil's from LhC' rtcord to thp Am, ·r i,·;111 H, ·d ( russ, o
ap parPn tly his s in n·rity is not lo be impugnt•d .
.... lllff ittlll
()II
.
/Jl"(JJ( , .,
w,
Stiil. I d on't muc h likl' thL· record . I n its unqualifi, ·d. u;l!'rrtir .rl pra1, ,•
"' .\nwrira n bC' h:•vior and in its attempt to justify ,\111, ·rl<';in ,, .,J.111 11 n
1· .. ,11 rht· res t 0f th <' world com mu nrty, it Pn,·our;1 ..:1, ,l!I, llrtu d of
" ,Ir •·rl{h:eous np~s and cornplacrncy and, hrstori1·;tlh . th a t .1tt itu d <'
1
• :0 ' • d onl y l o Lhl' dow 11fall of civilizalrons.
•
1)1- COl'ltSE, that rs no grl'at tragl'dy if lhl' c: ,·rli zal io n in <J ll l' SLJon
·,uyrd out a nd has not hi ng- left lo offer th(• human ran• ' ' " ·,•pt 1L
. n ha ug-h t , sP lf conl{ratu lal ions. l do not. how(•vt•r , pla<"l' th, • l ' n rt ,•d
' ,1 p , i:11ha1 cal•·g-nry : I be lieve t hat its potpnlral lo pla.r .1 l''" ill \ <'
,· •11 • ,. 1 hi· ht:i ldi nl{ of tltC' L'arl h is tr(•ml'ndous J)('rhaps unpar,d lt ·lt ·d .
l • , ,., ... 1, tn 111(' Lha1 thns(' w ho app1L·ciatt• that pol!'nt ial ou •Ill l o h, •
,· ,, , ., n tly c ha ll p ng-i n l{ t h(• Amprican community to go hl')ond 1ts,•l t,
,r ... r • ad of lu llin g it into sm ugm•ss with hargarn hawnwnl . p,11 r iotr rn .
1,
1n
rnpr ,, ,•m nt
Th,· "'urce of t his ro u ntry\ moral str<•ngth i, not to h, • 11111 111 1
hang- rng fr um fl agpoles; rat h(•r, it is found in thl' con,u111111 a 1, )\
human pr inc ipl es in whose namP lh(• C'OUnlry wa, C'hart, •n ·d , T it:,
hC'li' ( t ha t al l hum a n !note: a ll ) arc (•qually Pnlrtl,·d to Iii,•, rnn ,w nn
an d t he o ppor t u nity fo r fulfi llmpnl IS st ill h,·ady stuff, S(JII .,
r,·1·o lut10nary notion in a w or ld w here two lhrrds of !ht· popub(ro n 1
It'll lo t wi s t s lo,vly, .,; Jowl y in th< · ill wrnd of malnulritron .
A:'ID WE OF THE AFFL UENT SOCIETIES who iak, • tlw hr, •.i d
from th e ir mouth s and fas hi o n it in to can d y hars for tHJr'f •lv,·s wou ld
appar(•ntly jus t as soon ignor e t he ir s u ff< •ring :i- lrft a fing,·r to h, •lp
th e m. In fa c t, th e H ouse of ffrpn•se n taliv<•s, in an ;tl't of I unn irt)'
ra llo us ness, a ctuall y votPd to w it hh old from th1• poor nal i,,rl', th is y,,,11'
l' IL' n lh e mod es t s um w e have bel'n a<·<·us lom ,•d lo givinv ih,, 11 1
throu g h th e W orld Bank . So j us t ho w S!' lf (•v rd, •nt art• t ho"· t n;t h, '" '
hold , fellow patriots , fell ow "gen e rou s A nu ·ri ('ans'!"
. Th,•rp is no ques tion that we ha v!' a<"I ualw ·d ma ny o f 0 11 r fo u nd rr1g
1d .. al s 111 thi s la nd . But rn many othpr rns l a n,·,·s. w,, hav, • nol as y,·t
1·onw !'lose. Ev pn so, Lh<· vpry fad t ha l w1• ,·on( irru, , ( 0 p ro f;,
alfq~ranre Lo thos<· idea ls offc•rs hop<• for our futun • and 11 111, ,·d . r
sug-g-Psl that tha.t is when• thP fruition of thi s nalron \ pot1 •11t ra l lr ,•s 111
tht• fulun•, not 111 thC' pr<·scnL and ,,v, •n l1·s, ,n th, , pas t Wrlh drr,
r<'spl'd lo Mr . Sinclair, if~" h<·<·oml' loo !'nlhrall,•d wilh ,·,•l1 •hr :rl rnv
our drst·ovt•ry o~ Lht• Am1·r11"an way w1• art· apt to Jos i s r~: ht oft It,· f:rl'i
that w,• an• strll s<•arching for it.
,
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THE UD FLYER NEWS
Great expectations shattered
Freshmen face adjustments
By Poul Rolfes
FN Staff Writer
When a person leaves the
confines of high school and enters
college, he goes through a period
of emotional and psychological
change.
Part of the stress can be caused
by the high school senior
creating a series of fantasies
about college life. When reality
hits and the great expectations
remain unfulfilled, the letdown
can cause serious problems.
"About 50 percent of the
freshmen come into the Guidance
Center each year," Dr. Charles
Scheidler of the Center said.
"Some come in to check test
results but many come to discuss
social, emotional and career
problems."
DISAPPOINTMENTS
Dr. Scheidler sees high school
seniors expecting too much from
college. "Many students are
disappointed to find it's high
school all over again."
(UDPS folo by Mellinger)
HRIS SAUTER DISPLAYS melodramatic emotion as the
o-faced Lady Audley in the play "Lady Audley's Secret." The
· y opened last weekend and will close with shows Friday and
turday in Boll Theater.
He said part of the pressure is
caused when the freshmen
students find another four years
of dependence on their parents,
ne per£ormances highlight
elodramatic 'Lady Audley'
By Jill Blardinelli
played by Bill Lester (Bus-3) and
John Tobin (A&S-1) were done
with humor and charm but better
projection in the case of Tolboys
would have gotten him even
more laughs.
Jim Nicholas (E-3), as Luke the
town drunk, played his role well
and brought out every nuance of
humor in his lines.
The strongest characters in the
show were Sue Rupert (A&S-4)
as Phoebe, the servant, and Patti
reason for seeing Spitler (A&S-2), as Michael's
udley" is the fine cast. daughter. Sue was also meloh some performances dramatic, yet the goodness and
tter than others, the honesty of Phoebe was a pleasadded significantly to ant contrast in the show. Not
ould otherwise be a once did the audience strain to
how. Chris Sauter hear her lines, even though she
displays much physical wasn't speaking as loudly as the
\y and melodramatic- rest of the cast.
as the two-faced Lady
Patti, as Alicia Audley, was the
ince melodrama tradi- funniest, and most energetic
ulls for loud volume, member of the cast. Her lines
her role would have were the best in the script and
e effective if she had her vocal control, inflections and
facial expressions were excellent
(even when the spotlight wasn't
udley's husband, Mi- on her).
the most difficult role
The s'ets didn't reveai any
t required a complete originality and except for the inn
voice and posture to set, the play could have been
age and illness. Bob performed just as well without
,21 played Michael them. Improvements could have
and was consistent in been made on the set in the first
yal throughout the act to create more atmosphere.
The crew did a skillfull job,
rting roles of Robert with the burning of the inn, when
d George Tolboys, Lady Audley started the fire
FNS1affWri1er
past year has been
us for an over-abundance
ays and films which
ze on second-hand nostaldy Audley's Secret" does
roblems stemming from
t that it's a melodrama
ll, melodrama did die out
for soap operas). Yet,
most second-hand nosta lplay is really worth
The Godfather
Makes You An Offer
You Can't Refuse
Vote
1CK GIANG/lll/0
with a spark from cardboard
flames. (Even Lady Audley
grinned at the silliness of it). But
when the fire flared, the
audience gasped at the newly
frightening atmosphere.
Lawrence Selka's direction of
this play deserves much praise
because choreography was especially important in diminishing
the effect of a poor script.
while friends may be out working
and earning their living.
Dr. Scheidler added that
counseling by the Guidance
Center usually solves many
students' problems "or at least
we'd like to think so."
COUNSELING
Before a high school senior
chooses a college he usually
approaches an admissions counselor or "recruiter."
Myron Achbach, associate
director of Admissions, said that
the University staff of 11
counselors visited 1,400 high
schools and 100 "college night"
special presentations between
last September and Christmas.
"We try to raise the students'
interest in visiting UD," he said.
"If we get the students 'On
campus the possibility of their
becoming freshmen is greatly
increased."
15,000 INTERESTED
The Admissions Office recently
announced that it had 15,000
names of persons that showed
some interest in UD. At least, it
is hoped, ten percent of that
figure will materialize as freshmen next year.
After enticing students to come
to UD, the Admissions Office
continues to help the newcomers
adjust to the University. "Often
during the first week of school a
number of students come to us
with the normal problems,"
Achbach stated.
He sa;d this is usually because
the students consider the
counselors their "friends" because their first contact with the
University is through them.
Achbach said he often receives
feedback from the students he
has encouraged to come to the
University. Most comments are
positive but some are unfavorable to UD.
Once a student has experience
the first few weeks on campus he
can usually adjust to the social
life.
Despite the observations of Dr.
Scheidler, several students
polled did not build up any false
hopes of college life. After a year
at UD not one could find any
problems to which they could not
adjust.
'Tm learning," Mary Miller
(A&S-1) said of the life at UD.
"Advisors and everyone go out of
their way to see that you really
get your money's worth."
Ms. Miller had planned on
entering the Air Force and
registered on the first day of
classes at the University. The
only problem she has found is in
commuting from her Dayton
Home. "It's hell on the student,"
she said.
Lucy Mullins (Ed-1) agrees that
unless students live near campus
(Continued on page 5)
Letters ...
(Continued from page 2)
criticism so that we may adjust
our programs accordingly. There
are several open caucuses to
which all students have been and
are invited. One will be held this
week. I urge you to attend and
voice your opinion.
If you have criticism but not the
desire to attend an open caucus,
please direct it through the
proper channel. Panchi Torrado
is not Student Government.
We've discarded a patriarchal
system of government -- there is
not a great white (or Puerto
Rican) father manipulating this
office. Student Government is a
collective effort.
Kathe Engro
(A&S-4)
We;d like to ask you
some qyesti ons
And ''how fas~ can
you type ? '' i sn' t one
of the~.
A lot of companies are still giving women the same old runaround. Show up
in a skirt, and the first thing they want to do is plop you behind a typewriter.
Diploma or no. While the guy who sat next to you in management class starts out
with a title and twice the pay.
It's a waste of your talent. And we don't buy it.
We're Hoover. A company who thinks that after a woman has sweated her way
through four years of college, her brains are worth a lot more than her typing speed.
So when we talk to you, we'll want to know what you do best. Whether it's
engineering, finance, design, marketing, management. Or whatever.
And if you do it well, we'll pay you for it. Every bit as much as we'd pay a guy
for doing the same thing.
It makes good sense for Hoover to have women have a hand in running our
company. Our products are designed to work for women. So we need women to work
for us. On every product we make. And that includes a lot more than just vacuum
cleaners. About 80 other products, to be exact. Everything from washing machines
to blenders to toasters.
So sign up now for an interview with Hoover. Where smart girls don't get
stuck in the steno pool. Your Hoover recruiter will bP on campus Fd)l'uar~ :20.
An Equal Opportunity Employer.
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THE UD fJ,YElt Nt~WS
PAGE 4
Todd ' burlesk' a show to ren1emher
Student samples ~finer' arts
By Dick Hammenmith
FN Staff Writer
I just kept telling myself, "It's
just another news assignment,
just another assignment," but it
wasn't really.
It's not every day that yo u sit
for an hour or so in a dingy
theater watching some lady take
her clothes off. Then 15 minutes
later stand there red -faced in the
lobby, asking some silly question
like "What's a nice girl like you
doing in a place lik e this?"
Well, that's sort of what happened wh en this reporter, along
with Flye r News photographer,
Art Campbell, took in the 3:30
p.m. s how at the Todd Burlesk
Theater on Brown St., as well as
interviewing its feature attraction, Ms. Bobbi Scott.
It's one experience I won't soon
forget.
After a bri ef squabble with the
assistant manager at the door
(s he wouldn't let Art bring his
ca mera into the theater while the
s how was going on), we got in
rig ht after the first act had
started.
I had been to a few such performances in Cincinnati while I
was in high school but under different circumstances.
At that time, t hose of us who
went were usually und er age, a
little drunk and pretty loud. The
audience today, all 20 of them,
I.AUCH
ALLTNEWAY
ft THE
BLOOD BANK.
looked lo be mostly middle-agrd
businessmen who sat quietly as
the strippers did what they do
best.
PEOPLE WATCHING
I think ha lf the show at some
thing lik e the Todd is watchingthe a udi ence. Two business
executive types sitting l wo rows
in front of us kept nudging each
other and gigglin g at every bump
and grind.
Another man a littl e on our left
must hav e gone through ten
candy bars in ten minutes and I
co uld have sworn I h rard
someone singing along in th(•
rear of the s how as Ms. Scott
danced to the Beatles' "SomP
th in g In The Wa'y She Moves
Me."
The live burlesque show lasted
about 45 minutes. It consi led of
four acts: Cindy Lee, Little
Jessica, Gidget a nd, of co urse,
Bobbi Scott.
I'm no dance critic so I'll give
you my opinion of the s how as a
mal e, 21-year-old college student.
I know a ll the women's libber s
wi ll probably hate this article
and burn something or other in
my front ya rd but here goes.
A LITTLE BOltlNG
kind of lik ed the show at
times. It did get boring after a
while. I mean, what else could
they rea lly do except take off
what they had on and do a little
soft s hoe?
Of the three acls preceding Ms.
Scott, I lik ed Little Jessica thP
best. S he see med like she stayed
with her music a little more than
the ot he r girls.
From where we were sitting,
s he looked awfully young and for
some reason I kind of felt orry
fo r her.
somrorw part of hN C'Ost unw, , h1 ·
g-ol ('aug-ht up on tlw <'t1rta111 A
clip or hook or what1'v1•r got
tang-lrd and sill' ('ouldn't gPI fr.·1• .
S ill' k(•pl h1•r ('ool d1•sprt1 •
laug-htrr from t lu· aud11•111·1 ·.
Whi le on(' half of lll'r dar11·pd, tht•
other half s tru1ml1·d with what
ev(•r she was C'aught up on
Finally she fn•ed h1•r,l'II .
'T HE THIN(~'
Anoth(•r thing- wh1('h "'"' dif
ferenl was t lw mystl'rious hand
that kqit ('Oming- out front IH'hind
the ('Urtain . Th(• g-irls would tak1 •
something off, dam·1 · ov1•r to t lw
sick of t ill' stag-(' , hold tlw pi1•1·1·
of clothing- near tht• n1rta1r1 and ,
presto! out (·am(• tlw hand and
tlw ('loth1ng- ,-.is gon1•. So \\!l'>
t ht• hand.
Hob bi· S('ott, htlkd a, t lw •irl
with th(• "11 rnch p1•r"111:d11 ,"
was the f1•atun· and rl1·st ·n t·rl il
so. Man. 1·ould sh!' mm 1•. , · ht' " .i'
on!' spnsuous lady.
Thi' th ing is. .dt1·r ,rt tlll'
through thn•l' pn•, iou, ,tl't I
bt•g-an lo wond1•r what ,ht • loo I d
lik(• with h1•r cloth1•s on rath 1 r
than \\hat sht• look1·d li· 1 "' ith
them off. whH'h I kn o" sound
prt'l ty st ran Kt'. \\' t·ll, I " 0111d
soon find that out .
\\ II \ T [() 1)0'
Art Campht·II pulll'
tunt l
thought on!~ " 11rk1·<l an t 1,
mo\'ies. Ill' "rot t• onw kind of
mpssa)!I' to;\!,. s.-ult, a\ ll to
th!' projp1·t 111ni, t, "ho in turn
took 1t haC'k,t.1 ,. JI, · c 111 , b i:
and told u, :-.1 . " <:O t "'ould b
out in a ft•\\ rmnut,• .
One time as she danced over to
the side of the stage to hand
Earn up to $80 every month.
Just for living.
You join our imponant plasma
program and donate blood wher>ever you have the ~me.
It'll take you only 1 '/, hours
twice a week.
It's safe. It's simple. Just relax.
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Come by or call us. Now.
Because.
I di,Jn't ha\t' u l' h
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to cover postage (del1<ery time 1s
I to 2 daysl.
RESEARCH ASSISTANCE, INC.
~ blood alliance
165 Helena St. - Phone 224- 1973
(Fonm<ly Dayton Blalogkals)
1]941 WILSHIRE BLVD .• sum ':2
LOS ANGELES, CALIF. 90025
(213) 477.3474 or .477-5493
Our research material is sold for
research assistance only.
~=ATTENTION-~
New York Students~
Going home for the long weekend?
(Feb. 14 - 18)
Let TWA Take You
We are ~ffering the U.D. community a specia l rat(• of
$81_.50, . confirmed reservation, for round trip to LaGuardia,
which 1s cheaper than stand by and youth fare.
For Information and Reservations:
Contact: Barb Marquis
294-4141
Oakwood Kettering Travel
Hurry Limited Space Available lteservations
MUST BE MADE NO LATElt THAN FEB . B
SUBSCRIPTIONS
For the '74 Daytonian are still
being taken
Mon, Wed, Fri:
Tues, Thurs:
11 :00 - 2:00
12:30 - 2:00
Oaytonian Office 229-3226
for ·
Turn about King
CHESIRE CAJ
RECORDS
THE UD ft,YEll NEWS
TCE DAY, FEBRUA RY 5, 1974
Aid for Special Children. which
with retarded and handi
capped children. will meet
Wednesday, Feb. 6 at 7 p.m. in
KV 207.
11 ork
*****
The Attica Brigade will sponsor
a for um on what's behind the
energy cr isis, today at 7:30 p_.m.
in the Faculty Dining Room (first
floor of KU).
*****
Any student interested in going
to Europe for 6-8 weeks and
picking up academic credit
hould attend an organizational
meeting today al 6 p.m.
*****
Theftguard is a free service
available to all on a nd off-cam pus
students. Call 229-3541 for an appointment.
*****
Recycling is in full sw ing. Paper
is collected in each dor m. In the
offcampus area, bring all paper,
glass and metal to the 300 Stone
mill parking lot on Saturdays
between 1-4 p.m.
*****
An orientation meeting for the
Summer Study Abroad Program
in Italy, Greece and England will
"alolofkids don't have much of a
sO<'ial life."
The Marycrest r esident believes she has adapted q uickly to
college life. "I we nt lo a liberal
all girl 's hi g h sc hool and I
.tdJusted rea lly fa st. Bu t for some
kids il is really difficult."
"l really didn't expect anything
out landin g on coming to UD,
but now I love it," Ms. Mullen
id.
Jose Montero (A&S-1) wanted
o study in a la nd fo r eign to his
atire Puerto Rico a nd came to
he University partly on a
r1end's recomme ndation.
··1 like a small university
cause you get lo k now more
ople and th e teac hers have
ore time for the student," he
id. "l heard lha l UD is good in
r·med and I th ought I could get
~ood education her e."
lonero had a slight problem in
•aking Englis h flu e ntly beuse the only English he knew
s learned in school.
he la t student polled was
eg Ellison (A&S-1) who is a
ciology major a nd s pends
ut 35 hours each week
rkmg a a manager for the
sity basketball team.
expected college t o be
erent than high school," he
mented, "but I didn't expect
*****
The Nature Apprt>ciation C'lub
is sponsoring a film strip presen
talion on ecology of the Great
Lakes, Thursday, Ft' b. 7 at 8 p.m.
in KU -311.
Todd Burlesk
• • •
(Co ntinued from page 4)
lot of trouble with cab drivers
and people like that."
Ms. Scott wasn't even aware
there was a University of Dayton
and said that there haven't been
that many younger people in t he
audience.
When we reached Frisch's, I
thanked her for talk ing with me,
said I enjoyed the show (which I
did) and wished her luck.
I meant the par t about luck too
Expectations .
(Continued from page 3)
be held Tuesday, Feb. 5 at 7 p.m.
in KU 315.
because she was really a gracious
lady. She had class. On the way
up to the Flyer News office I
kept telling myself it wasn't a
dream, it really did happen: an
afternoon at the Todd Theater
and a talk with Bobbi Scott
walking up Brown Street.
(UDPS foto by Bianchi)
STASH THAT TRASH! ReC'ycling is in full swing in the on and
off C'ampus arpas. Ilpre trash is stored at 300 Stonemill, the <1ff·
eampus piC'kup center. Paper is also being colle('tNJ in f•ach
dorm. The new project is being run in conjunction with the
Off Campus Center, with the manpower provided by servic:<·
groups, engin<>ers and Olher inlerc:sted students.
KROGER
of Cincinnati and Dayton
will be on campus February 14, 197 4
• •
the amount of work involved--th e
reading is unrea l. "
"UD looked like a good p lace to
go to school," E llison continued.
"The campus was nice and the
people were really friendly."
A few comments cannot
thoroughly evaluate the current
of opinions among the entire
freshmen class at UD t h is year.
But if they hold true to some
extent, then maybe the University is doing something right or
maybe students are more easily
satisfied today than in past
years.
Kroger is expanding to meet the growing population demands
for more and better quality food services.
Our interviews are open
to all graduating seniors with interests in retail management,
distribution management and computer technology.
Contact the placement office
to arrange for your interview
We are an equal opportunity employer
JOBS
in
EUROPE
(a1es 17 to 24)
Temporary openings for any six to thi.rtttn·
week period year ' rou n d; employme n t
guarantttd bcfoce departure fo r Europe; protected by strict local and fedenl regulation;
foreign language hel pful bu t not required.
College I.D. Night
Wednesday, 8 pm to 2 am
Complete package includes round trip
on sched u led jet ( NO CH AR TE R S ) ,
orientation, room, board, all documentation.
For 11[1>lic11tio11 11nd complete
in/ormaliort, write or telepbo,u
EU ROJO BS
Elox 1108, Milwaukee, Wis. 53201
(or telephone 414-258-6400
"DRINK & DROWN"
Present Your Current College I.D.
at Door
Forest Park Plaza
"Meet HER at the She"
JI /I, I>
, 1111 1 1 A l V
THE UD l<'LYEll NEWS
PAGE 6
VMI
rl'tirl's~
76-60
Dayton win sszzzZZZZ.
• •
By Stev Wllck.r
f N Sport1 Wrlf\,r
1
If you h.id ck<'i'.lt·d lo, lak•.' .'
short snooz1• dunng llll" 71, fl()
sl1•Pp(•r ov1•r \'Ml ill I tw 1\rPr!a
Saturday night, th•• nu• I t•X<'tl
ing thing you would h:1v_,. 1111 ,,cl
was an ov(•rzl';tlou
In• hrnnn
spilling his pop<'orn ,111 ht f;lrl
frit•nd's lap. Yawn . . .
But ,Priously, tht• 111osl ,•x<'ilin'
thing to lw ~t'('ll al l hi' An•n 1
Saturday was l'ht·l'ril',td,•r l,yn
<iPII<· !'hillips doing h,•r oulful
8Pattl1• strut durin • th•• tun•
outs
( UD PS foto by Mellinger)
OVER THE TOP. Mike Sy lvester jumps jus t a li t tle bit highC'r
t his t ime , as he gets over a VMI defe nd er for t he s hot.
Hurry
on
down
/111 t t'
f
(1 .. , , , ,
to
HardeeS®
for 5 c C offee ... I
ocH ot Choeola t t•
ANYTIME!
MONEY-SA VING coct•f)
Redeem Only At
Hard~es.
I
I
Brown and Lowes Street
I
II L
7~2
0
IP!I~,-~-- - - - -
I
Price
I
Fis h Sandwi ch !
25c
!with coupon !
U;•;'F~~,E~,:' '"' i __ J
Be a winner! Look at th~ !li am11 of
th e Day ... on our bulldin board!
HardeeS
CHARCO BROI LED qRANOEO HlA HAVOA t
U D's Very Own Hardee's .
I
TOM LOLLI
for
Turnabo ut King
AK
Signs of Transcendence
I' \I, I ' i
THE UD FLYER NEWS
TCE DAY, FEBRCARY 5, 197-t
DeAnna portrays Dr. Franlrenstein
•
•
as icers rise out of division cellar
By Ma,k Znido,
FN Sports Wdte,
Walt DeAnna is playing the role
of Dr. Frankenstein in guiding
the once-dead corpse of UD
hockey back from the dark woods
of defeat.
By notching two weekend wins,
the Flyers moved to within a half
game of second place in the
southern division of the MCHA,
by whipping Miami and the
Toledo Rockets at dingy
Winterland Arena.
COME FROM BEHIND
On Sunday, the Red and Blue
came from behind twice to down
Toledo, 8-5, in a contest which
saw the home-tow ners overcome
their own senseless penalties to
Win.
Trailing 5-4 in the third period,
Dayton's Jim Fahey poked a
five-footer into the right corner
of the net to tie the score. Bill
Bommarito made the play
possible with a nifty centering
pass.
At 3:31, just 27 seconds later,
defenscman Gil Viskovirh slid a
10-footer underneath the goalie
to put the Flyers ahead for good.
It was a startling turnabout
because the charges of Walt
DeAnna looked miserable in the
second period when they were
caught for six penalties. un had
to skate short-handed for mon•
than six minutes.
"Toledo wasn't b(•ating us," said
DeAnna, "We were rpally taking
some stupid penalties. ThPn' was
no excuse."
HANGOVERS
Dayton appeared
to
be
suffering from Saturday night
hangovers in the first period
when Toledo took advantage of
nonexistent dc>fense to tally a
pair of quick garbage goals in the
first four minutes.
NOTICE THE FORM that
Danny Jones puts on this
shot against Thomas More
Saturday. Unfortunately,
the Flyer reserves were
less than picture perfect
in the second half, as they
dropped a 93-83 decision.
Women'.~ B-Ba/1
team captures
fourth straight
This was just not the weekend
to challenge a Dayton team ... any
Day ton team ... to a game of
haskelball.
The unbeaten UD Women's
roundball squad (4-0) stayed that
way over the weekend, knocking
off Ohio Dominican 38-32.
However, head coach Elaine
Dreidame wasn't too happy with
what her charges did Saturday,
saying, "After t he big win
a~ainst Miami Wednesday, we
weren't as up as we were for
~liami. \V(• really didn't have it
ll>day.
'l'h(• r'lyers had an especially
bad shooting day hitting only on
15 of 53 shots for a poor 29
Pl'rt't•nl from the field.
"ll°l' '''<'rt' gelling our good
,hots, but we just could not get a
ha. kt•t," said Dreidame.
.\ pair of buckets late in lhe
l'l'ond period by Sandy Johnson
aw the Flyers their biggest
I,·ad of the game, 21 13, but
hrough the re t of the game, UD
1d Just enough to keep the
anlht•rs al a distance.
R1•lty Burke, who scored seven
her team's nine points in the
r l period when UD squeaked
a 9 7 edge, was high scorer for
e game with 14 point followed
Y Johnson and
Thelma
martie with 10 points apiece.
aytor:'s J\' also had a good
tin~. knocking off the ODU
mes 55-27.
In ]CU tourney
Fah,•y and Wu•dc·mn "a"h had
four goals, while• Viskr,vid1,
Marty GrP<'howiak and Hrm1ma
rilo had two api<'c·1·.
ICE CHIPS: N1•xt gam,·s . .< ir1
cinnati, 1:30, at Wintl"rland ,,11
Saturday, and I :aO at Ob,•rl111 ",
Sunday ...
In till' pPnalty marred S{'<·ond
period, F'ahey hit on a 15 footer
slappl'r that heat the goalie at
th<• bul.Zl'I to l'nd the period.
Thrc-1 Flyers an, on tht· inJw•·d
list: Steve Petrison I sv,,,I '''l
ankle), Pete King ( mon,,nud,,,,
sis) and Paul Kikta I bruisi·d
shoulder and collar borll·I . .
UD is now 2-4 1 on ch<· ,,·ar. ..
The Fl}t'rs then went to work
on thl' Ro<'kl'ls, who didn't have a
praypr from then on in.
;•:•:..:•:•:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:•:•:•:•:•:•:•:•:•:•:•:•:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:•:•:•
i
~
~
~
:::
jj
(UDPS fo1o by Mellinge,)
Saturday, !Jayt,,n d1•rn//l1~1i, ·d
'.'vliami, 18 :J, as th" Fl"•rs
rt,s<•mbled a l'raz1·d brahrna hull
doing
a
nurnbPr
on
an
inPxp<·ri<•nc·i,d 1·owb,1y.
lJ 1) failt•d to covt•r Lhl' Tol<'do
wings who w(•n• <'ht'atmg by
sailing down ir<· whPn !Jayton
was on offens<•, giving mighty ·
mite goalit> Vinni(• Sgro little
chanc<· to do his magic·.
But Mark Wa·dPm(•r's 10 footpr
off a steal by frosh Tim Dunigan,
and Gil Viskovich's stuff shot
with 2:J s(•conds ll'l't in the p<•riod
k<·pt th(•m in l h<· game, as tlwy
trail<·d aflt•r om• pPriod, 3-2.
CLASSIFIED ADS
••
~
V
.:!··:·:·;·.·~·:·~·-·:·:·:·:·:·:•:•:•:•:•:•:·:···:•:•:•:•:•:•:":•:•:•:•:•:•:•:•:•:•:•:•:•:•:•:•:•:•:•:•:•:•:•:•:•:•:•:•:•:•:•:•:•:•:•:·:·~-:-:
Wrestlers finish ninth
By Marjorie Knutson
FN Sports Wdte.
CLEVELAND--For many
wrestlers, the National Catholic
Invitational is the high point of
the season.
"You wait for it, hope for it,"
said Flyer captain Will Place.
"This is the big one. It doesn't
really matter what you do in the
season."
But just as it did most of the
season, the winning formula
evaded the Dayton wrestlers as
they finished ninth in a field of
ten. Place, down from 177 to 167
for this match, came in fourth
place in his division to give
Dayton its only eight points.
The Flyers lost unanimously
Friday night in the quarter
finals. Since all but two
opponents went on to the finals,
Dayton had most of its team in
the consolation match on
Saturday.
Craig Demeo (190) was injured
in the first round, while being
pinned for the first time since
grade school. " He (Schaeffer of
SL Joseph, Pa.) grabbed my arm
and kept pulling, till it started to
hurt like hell," Demeo said .
In Saturday's consolation
matches, Mike Sheridan (118)
lost a decision 5-0, Mark Cermak
(124) lost by a pin, as did Mark
Reilly (142). Demeo, with his
shoulder taped, lost 7-2.
Bob Koshinski (158) wrestled a
close match with Larry Osterhaus of St. John's, only to lose
3-2. Osterhaus was the 1973
158-division winner.
Place went on to the finals after
opponent Dave Riley (St. John's)
defaulted the match during the
first period, due to a neck injury.
In the Saturday night match,
cOFF-CAMPUS STUDENTS-,
House Pictures for the
'74 DAVTONIAN
are being taken until
SATURDAY, FEB 9th ONLY
There will be NO RETAKES
Daytonian Office KU 232
Place finished fourth after losing
by decision.
"Will
showed
a
lot
of
determination," said Edwards.
"All the guys put in a good
effort."
With two weeks left in the
season, the team will need more
than effort or determination to
finish, at best, 5-7. A miracle
might be in order.
30 cents a line, five words 1o a line, 60 cents minimum. Mail prnpald to: Flyer
News, Box 737, Univenlty of Dayton, Dayton, Ohio 45469 Of" thr..:,ugh Campus
Mail.
Degenerate-Anarchist, in1o whole wheat
bread and yogurt wants someone to
occupy thei, •oom in a large, homey apanment, five minutes from campus. Call Art
at 228-0403.
MNII i• a lush. I
to. itself.
1---------------~
---------------1
Tu,nabout '74 Dance. Feb. 8th. 9-1,
Wamplen. Music by Sunnuva and Slone
Soul Image. Tickets $5 in advance on sale
in KU coat..oom. $6 at the door.
mean the evidence spea
BOSS
Movie: "Days of Wine and Roses," Feb. 7,
Wohl. 8:00 and 10:00, 50 cents - 75 cents
per- couple.
1------------------i
What this campus needs is a
STATION.
RADIO
11-----------------1
Klinkman, I hea, W.R. is tak ing you 1o
Turnabout, or is Moutain takin· you.
Plu1o
you are 19, ya'II don't have an excu~e for
acting like a kid,
,,___ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ ___,
A late Happy Birthday Harvey. Now that
t-----------------11
Is PINOCHILE DIPLOMACY anything like
PING-PONG DIPLOMACY.
O,de, you•
74 Daytonlan
Daytonian Office, KU 232.
NOW!
lt-----------------1
11-----------------1 BOSS'S pomes get pretty hearty. Ask
Cowboy and Plu1o.
KING Of THE BALL HAS IT ALL Vote fO<"
Michael Bu,ke, Td-Lomb Turnabout King
Candidate.
t------------------1
0.-der- you, date flowers fo, Turnabout
1-------------------i outside the KU snackba,.
BART and MKI: Wait until BO JO JONES'
successor makes the scene. R.l. \V.
Pick a winner. vote fo, MIKE BURKE for
Tu,nabout King, T6-Lomb Condida'e.
English 332 now ,ecrniting all and any
Kentuckians. How about that Briar Bill.
The BOSS is as exciting as o stale M&M..
Don't miss the Dating Game, Wed .. Feb. 6,
El Granada, 8:00 p.m- FREE.
We double that statement.
MNII
BART IS.MK!
To all the candidates in the Tu,nabout King
Contest. I beg your forgiveness for running
those ads about a certain candidate. It was
a mistake. What can I say?
BOSS
House pictures for the '74 Ooytonion ore
being 1oken this week. Sign up at the Daytonian Offic e.
lt-----------------1
.
Help me Donna, fielp, Help me Donna. I
got6 test.
Jay.
BOSS: You are a mistake!
lf-----'-------------i The shadow lu,ks
l UOPS fo1o by Bianchi)
WILL PLACE
Good things come in small
packages
VOTE JIMMY CASELLA
for Turnabout King
Thurs, Fri, in KU
ATTENTION STUDENTS:
Don't get your hair cut
Get it styled
HOFFLEH SIIAGS
and FASHION
CUTS
..•••••............
WINTERS TOWER BARBER
AND STYLE SHOP
Appoint. Rec.
224-7181
2nd & Main
Main
Floor
Winter's
Bk. Twr.
in the mind of those in
HAVE FUN! UD students are fun. .. Travel
with 15 fOf" 6 weeks, 15 Count..ies, ,eally
see Eu.ape. Meeting 1onight KU 207, 6:00
p.m. F,. Cy. 4140.
11-----------------t
T's Tuffies basketball, Tuesday 9:30 at the
fieldhouse. Everyone come.
Kathy I<_ Shoest..ings fo, sale, why bothe
to wear shoes, slippers come off easier.
Hello. is Doug them?
'1'his is Doug."
"Doug, I love you."
Mac - 50 baby rats, and they are 5000
sweet. Come and see. The Keepe• and the
Vote the Little Big Man. Vote Jimmy
Casella fo, Tu,nabout King, Thur-s.-Fdday
in the Union.
Karen, next time yoJ lose yourself on
4-F.
Hogan's our Hero. Vote Dan for Turnabou
Ki"9-
rati..
Lowes - use a compa.ss.
t----------------1
---------------1
Hogan fo, King.
Dea, BART and MKI: If I we,-e you I'd quit lt----------------1
instead of wait. You wouldn't under-s!and
this yea, of 1onnent you'd have ·,o go
th,aug~
Vote to. Tu,nabout King outside the
Snackba,, Thur-s. 11-2, 4-6, Fd 11 -2.
lt----------------f
~----------------1 and
Speaking of soggy. it's funny how
MKI are the ones that wern
Attention Men: Are you afraid 1o have
you, long hai, cut: We are specialists in
long hai. styling. We are featudng the
Shag, Buffalo and Laye, Cut. Call M,.
Wodd Hai, Designer-s, 275-2101 .
BART
a bit
moist, if not soaked last Wed. The wetheads are dead.
BOSS
----------------.1
lt----------------1
We like Bu,ke fO<" Tu,nabout King. TdLomb Candidate.
Thanks 1o the dirty old man who gave me
$1.00 fO<" a badly needed ddnk the othe,
night at the Den.
MNII
"Hello, Is Doug the,e?" "No he Isn't, may I
take a message?" "No I'd rathe, talk 1o
him myself, who is this?" "Mike Hart,
H.A.R.T.," "Oh well, I'll call tomorrow.
5ofTy I woke you."
'
I
t
'
'
f f • f
I do not appreciate MNII walking in1o my
bedroom at 1 am without a formal invifa.
tion. And don't hold you• bn,ath waiting
to. one.
Love.
Big One
I didn't know that MNII was a voyeu,.
BOS
1---------------Does this mean she gets a,ound?
t-----------------4
This may be late, but Happy Birthday, Cal I
BOSS: Remember you can never drowr.
wom,slllll
Pictures talk.
Some little boys don't.
Some inner-city ghettos have special ~thool.. For little
boys who don't talk.
Not mute little boys. B .t children so withclra\\'n, i.o afraid
of failure, they cannot make the slightest attempt to do a11ything at which they might fail.
Some don't talk. Some don't listen. Most don't IJl'ha\'l'. A11d
all of them don't learn.
One day someone asked us to help.
Through Kodak, cameras and film \\'l'rc distrib11t1•d (11
teachers. The teachers gave the cameras to the kid and told
them to take pictures.
And then the miracle. Little boys who had nPvPr llaid a11 ·
thing, looked at the pictures and began to talk. Th1·y sa1,f
"This is my house." "This is my dog." "Thi~ iH whtin• I lik1•
Kodak
More thana business.