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.--:.'r; \CEN""' fUC'\- ·NEW:S·RECORD\150 :'University.of··CinoinnatifrJ' Pubtisned-Tue 19 '\9\; Vol. 56sday s andFridaysdu rin g the AcademicCincinnati, OhioYear'l'xCl'pt:I" sc hvdu lcd.'Tuesday, April 8,-1969No. 377'!-CourtRu les I D.ViolatorsMust Have DueProcess: GATHERED ON THE STEPS of Beecher HaH last Friday, Black students, discussed various matt rs white acrowd of curious passers-by looked o . .'.,. . . .(NR photo by Rod Pennington)Optionor HousemothersStep Closer. To' Real it,Fraternities-moved a step closerto an optionalhousemothersetupas 'a result of .a recent action bythe Board of Fraternity Affairs.The Board passed unanimously aproposal making· the acquisition"and, retention of a housemotherby a fraternity entirely optional.The .Board suggested, however,that although the choice lay withthe individual house, it. felt itadvantageous'thatfraternityhouses do have housemothers.The Boardincludesin. itsmembership. representatives fromthe -faculty, the Dean of Men'so.ffice,andtheAlumniInterfraternity Council, as. well asmembers of the present IFC,including President Bill MulvihiH.The housemother proposal- wasoriginally proposed in !FC lastFebruary 17., as reported in theNR. The rationale presented forthe bill,. which passed at thatmeeting by a vote of 27 to 2,stressed that by having to have ahousemother fraternity men werebeingforcedto acceptanauthority which' was unnecessary,andoftenundesirable.Inaddition,it was noted,thefinancial' outlayrequiredwasoften prohibitive for a small housein relation to the benefits derived.The new optional system cannotbe put into effect until it receivesfinal approval from the Dean ofMen and is, ratified by the IFC.The NR was told, however,. that"the proposal is as good as in'effectright now,"since theneeded OK's have already beengiven indirectly.Each of' thegroups who have yet to considerthe plan will do so at their. nextmeeting, and IFC. officials reportthat they expect to have all therequired sanctions within the nextcouple of weeks. 'Ford Grant Awarded ToTop UC German Scholar"-.", C. David Greenway, a senior atUC, has been named one of 40nationalwinnersof a FordFoundation Doctoral FellowshipInsideStoryMr. BearcatPage 2Chicago RiotsPage 5-.-;.;. -Free UniversityPage 6Spring SportsPage 8 .1 ;.Election CandidatesPage 10for Black Students. GreenwayvaGerman major, plans to apply the 2500 per year 'grant towarddoctoralworkinGermanphilology and linguistics.·Geeenway,who served' inGermany and Scandanavia whilein the armed services,' was aparticipant in the first of 'UC'swork-study programs in Hamburgin the summer of 1967. . 'I'he Ford Fellowship is not thefirstawardGreenwayhasreceived, In 1967 he won theGottfried Merkel Book Prize for.outstanding work in German, ague Prize, for contributions toGerman culture in the Cincinnatiarea. In addition, he receivedhonorablementionin theWoodrowWilsonFellowship,- competition.Greenway, who admits that hefindslinguis-ticdifferences"fascinating,"plans to continuelinguistic research after obtaininghis doctorate. In his words, hefeels that "learning more aboutthe spoken word can do muchto war -d n a r row i n g 't h ecommunications gap."r'Hours'Po lieyUnder ·Rev,iewA proposal that would offerself-determinedh o.urstosophemorewo'meninallUnivetsity residences and wouldextend. curfewfor freshman.womenfrom1;1:00 p.m. tomidnight on weekdays will comebefore Women's Housing CouncilMonday night forapproval.(Continuedon page 5)In a hearing held last Monday,March 31, Student Court laiddown precise guidelines for theconviction of students / chargedwith LD. card violations, anddecidedthatit "cannotbesatisfield with anything less thanproof 'of guilt which conforms toreasonable rules of evidence andwhichsatisfieselementaryrequirements of due process oflaw."The conditions the' Court laIddownfor such a convictionreq uirethepresentationofironclad evidence of the student'sguiltby witnessesandtheconfiscating official.The case under considerationarose from the charge that astudent had used another's LD.card' at the - UC-Miami footballgame on November 23. The ChiefProsecutor attempted to. establishthe student's guilt by 'offering asevidence a list of the names ofstudents whose .cards were takenat the game, prepared by one ofthe Pirikerton guards; a list ofnames 'allegedly igned noridentifiedinanyway;' a"c.ompletelyunidentified"handwritten list of students whoseLD. cards were taken on thatdate, allegedly prepared by JosephDavis, Assistant- Registrar at thejtime; and' a memo from Goeringto Chief Justice Dornette, statingonly that" the .Defendant's LD. card was taken on that' date.The Court, however, found thata failure on. the part of theUniversity official who takes' astudent's card to file a report withFree .U . Programming 'ith"Nig,gers,Honkies'. 'by-Margie BabstSecond of Two-Part Seriesuq's ,.F;re :Univ isity . ill offerJeff Mitchel's Progressive RockSeminar and Bob Walker's Niggersand Honkies this quarter. KenCogan's, Civil Disobedience classand .?oel chwartzman' Jew in aMulti-FacetedBag have beendisconfinued.Starting tomorrow, Mitchel willconductone two-hour .lectureevery Wednesday at 7: 30 p.m, inRoom 401 B, University .Center,Walker will hold two two-hourseminars and, will announce detailslate 'this month.Both areintermediatecoursesand notrepeats of winter quarter.Cogan and Schwartzman both., stated that their subjects requiredtoo much preparation. Kim foundhe does not have the time it takestor0u n dup speakersandma t er ia ls ; g research.' .The Free' University is currentlyin need of someone to coordinatethe program. Carol Timmerding,who spearheaded the program thefirst two quarters, has resignedbecause of involvement in studiesandstudentteachingresponsibilities.Any. studentsinterestedinassuming responsibilityfor theorganizational side of the FreeUniversityshould contactValHabjan,. the program'sadviser(321 University Center)."The. FreeUniversitywasdeveloped by students and mustbe maintained by them," Habjancommented. "The administration.is ready to assist students," hesa id , "butthe .administrationIR ueh Ima AtN 1Ci ncinnatiMayorEugeneR uehlmann will be the guest oftheNewmanCenterthisafternoon at 12: 30 in anotherof the group's "Coffee Hour"programs. Admission is open toall interested persons;.Ruehlmann, a 1948 graduateof the University, has beeninvolvedinCincinnatigovernment since his first termon Council in 1959. The Mayor'will focus in his talk on thecrises facing the cities today.theUniversityRegistrarconstitutes a denial of due-processof law.The Court can only feel the dueprocess to be satisfied when thefollowing items are presented: thename and address of the personholding the card when it is taken;the name' of .the person to whom. the card was issued; the date andtime of confiscation; the exact. location of the confiscation; thesurroundingfacts; names andaddresses of witnesses: and the-n a meand signatureof, theconfiscatingofficiaL"Thedefendant," the Court stated, "isgiven the opportunityto knowthe identity of his accuser andconfront him in open court." Inthis case the Court .dismissed thecharges against the defendantbecauseit "lackeda factualbasis."Concurring .in : the judgement,Justice Byman commented "This. court is completely aware of theramifications introduced .by thisdecision, and appreciate that agreat majority of the, J.D. cardviolation reportsmay presentactual cases of deliberate misuse.However, a finding of guilty tosuch a charge is tantamount to aconviction for an offense of moralturpitudeandpresentsapermanentn:mron J"a-.student'srecord.With this in mind, the Courtcannot be satisfied with anything'.-.less than proof of guilt whichconforms to reasonable rules ofevidenceand which satisfieselementary requirements of dueprocess of law."C ntinu,si/ Rockcannot substitute for their work."At the end of winter quarter thefour teachers paused to evaluate'the- success. of. their courses.Generally, they found' themselvesexperiencing the same difficultiesthat "regular" teachers meet.Only Bob Walker did not havetrouble eliciting discussions. Theother teachers; who attempted toteach . ratherthanlead anexchangeof opinions,foundstudents could not afford' to buybooksand did not respondfavorably to the idea of requiredreadings in non-credit courses.Despite these expected pitfalls,the teachers were optimistic aboutthe total weekly attendance ofapproximately280 interestedstudents who stayed- with theprogram to the end of the quarter.These students came because theywanted to, the teachers pointedout, and none of them fell asleepin class.In evaluating their courses thefour teachers discussed who theybecame teachers,. explained theirformats and-goals, and noted theirsuccesses and failures.Jeff Mitchel (A&S '70) hasnever been deeply interested inanything other than rock music.I-Jehas studied rock intensivly forthe' last four y-ears and says helikes being given a chance 'in theFree University to "get it off hischest!'The purposeof hisProgressive Rock Seminar is .toapproach rock "intelligently , notloosely."Close to 100 students a weekattended his class during winter -(Continued zm: ::::: ::: : :: ::M :: : ( :::: m:: . ift -m: ::::::g::::f::::::::::::::::::: :::::f::::::::::::::::on page 6)#

#''''':THEPage Two'3215 JeffersOn A've.and LOUNGE8 a.m.-2:OF CINCINNATI30 a.m.In Clifton Nr. UC CampusFEATURING THE FINEST1NAMERICAN & ITALIANFOODSBUSINESSMEN'S LUNCHDAI LV - STEAKS.CHOPS -SEAFOODSBy Cliff RadelFeature EditorA crisis has arisen in .the den ofthe old Bearcat mascot, who dueto his feeble condition is retiringfrom the, paths of conflict atNippert Stadium, the Fieldhouse.and Laurence Hall.There are four types of mascotsin colleges today. There is thecolorfulmascotsuch as theLouisville Cardinal, the gymnastictypewhichis typifiedbyMichigan State's man; and theclown which is exemplified by theOhio UniversityBobcat. TheBearcat is the fourth type and avery different species from the. otheranimals;a, sort . ofjack-of-all-trades. mascot.Mr.Bearcat commented on this typeof Mascot: "The great thing abouta jack-of-all-trades mascot.js thatif a gymnastic stunt falls throughthe Clown can come' through" andthe crowd does not know thedifference.".The colorfulaspect. of Mr.,Bearcat is shown by the 75.00head that he wears under alladversities and the hairy pawswhich are a new addition, thanksto the retiring Mr. Bearcat. Thehead is source of much concernand pride. The concern js causedby the tremendous 'temperaturethat builds' up inside the headpiece during the basketball gamesand wrestling meets, which Mr.Bearcatalways' attends.Thetemperature,whichreaches90-,10 P ,.: 'egrees inside, is; I LASJ:\GNAt RAVIOLIePIZZA SPAGHETTI-MEATBALLSFor Carry Out 961-7400OPEN 8 A. M. TO 2:30 A. M.Room Available-,Meetings-DinnersA, ServiceWhy PayCharge'?HOMElot 'FEDERAL :5 fO.Savings and 'LoanAssociationof Cincinnati369. LudlowAveI,6 MonthCertificate.Phone 221-1122withinWalkiiig. Monday thru. Thursday. FridaySaturdayOistance10:00 A.M. to 5:30 P.M.,10:00 A.M. to 7:30 P.M. 10:00 A.M. to 3:00 P.M.SERVICEwithTO STUDENTSACCOUNTS(1) Check Cashing'(2) No Charge for Money Orders '.,. J3) 1% Bonus on Paidup Christmas Club Accounts.(4)Travelers Cheques(5)Dividends Paid Quarterlycontributingfactor·to . thereddening of Mr. Bearcat's facewhen there are two' basketballgames in a week. "During thefootball season, the head helpsprotect my face -frorn the coldweather," said the outgoing /mascot.During his three years as theunknown Bearcat,Bearcat hashad many rich and difficul texperiences. In his first-game,which, 'was a Dayton footballgame, he was struck. by a baseballbat from a group of paradingstudents.'The Dayton' and Xavier games,along with all the away games,have always been sore spots forthe mascot. Following a basketball game with "X", the freshman'football team had to protect himafter UC had lost to the Muskies."The away games are alwaysunique since you can never trustthe home 'crowd;" Mr. BearcatSaid. The St. Louis basketballgames were always on the order ofa shooting. match,' with Mr.Bearcat the target, .and cans andbottles the ammunition.Mr. Bearcat would like to thankMiss Rita Klenke, the cheerleadersadvisor; and Dr. Robert Hornyak,UC Band Director', for theirassistance and ideas throughtouthis three years. Thanks are also.due to Sawyer Hall for the redcarpet, the Dean of Mens Officeand. Coaches Rice, Baker andKelly. Special thanks are in orderfor the man who will be workingSUND"AY APRILMr.13thONLY'WAYNE COCHRANandThe c.c. R'IDERSIi;:;::.:'WAYNEeOCH,RAN .INNER .CIRCL'E;:::;::-., 621 VINE STREETComing: Micky B! LarryJoy Dee and the Starliqhters"Six arid The Single Girl"I:!Iii !KARATEAND,SELF-DEFENSE:::;:::\., :. )Tuesday, April 8; 1969'Mr . Bearco" Recolls"MemoriesOf ThteeYearsAs 'Cal Mosco'The ,J··E ·FFEiRSONRESTAURANT:'0UNIVERSITYthe next year's Mr. Bearcat,Gymnastics Coach Gary Leibrock;"One of the things I learned isthe real meaning of the wordhumility. When you put on thathead you are no longer anindividual, you are the Bearcat- spirit. 1 felt that this spirit was atit highest in the last three footballgames of this season. The studentsreally made me proud to be Mr.Bearcat when they turned out insuch spirited numbers to cheer onthe Bearcats, When you are Mr.Bearcat your accum suffers, butthe feeling of satisfaction that 'youreceive from the close contactwith the teams, coaches, trainers,cheerleaders, and students cannever be duplicated."Petitions for Mr. Bearcat can bepicked up in the Cheerleaders MailBox in the Tangeman Center onApril 20. Selection will be basedon a presentation of a platformand a physical tryout on April 30in the Laurence Hall Gym. A 2.2accum is, required to be nextyear's Mr. Bearcat.Interestedpersons are asked to contactBearcat cheerleaders Bob Petersonand Pam Schneider.*S.D.S SpeaksWith MilitaryNavy and Air Force militaryrecruiters holding interviews oncampus. this weekare being confrontedwithan unusualnumber of appointments due tothe response of the UC Studentsfor a Democratic Society .At a meeting of S.D.S. attendedby some seventy students lastThursdayafternoonin theFaculty Lounge, a suggestion wasmade for students to sign up withthe recruiters. The response wasoverwhelming and approximately half' of these attendingfiledappointmentsat' the' · 'eire ei·Relations Office in the UniversityCenter after the meeting brokeup.Jack Reinbach, A&S senior andchairman of the UC group, statedthat the logic behind the students'action was to fill the time slots ofthe recruiters so that they couldnotsee otherstudents.He'mentionedthat some of the'questions to' be asked. of therecruiters would be, "how manypairs of socks areissued?"; "what'is the color of the underwear?";"how many times must one shine. his shoes?"; and "when must a. soldier go to sleep at night?"Sophomore DayFriday has been designated asSophomoreClass Day forsecond year students in all ofDC's colleges, when they willc alla moratoriumonclass-attending, studying, andsimilar activities and attend adance in Disabled VeteransHall at 3043 Clifton from 2:00PJn. to6:00 p.m, 'TheClass Day will also Iinvolve an art exhibit in theUniversityCenter'sMainLounge and. a Sophomore Hanof Fame in the same area forthose sophomores who haveshownabilityin ndother fields.'. . Class ifiedmay be more becoming than a conventional round-cut.On a capable hand - one of strength and characterthe emerald-cut looks best. The sl nder hand, withtapering fingers, lends itself to a graceful marq'uise.Thepear-shapeis almost universally flattering.Call,10ONE FREE·LESSONNO OBLIGATI'ON,CALL,·· ,NOW.JE\'·EI, EI l :,RACE NEARFIf TH' (NEXt TO BONDS) 721-5555WALNUT HILLSKENWOOD MALLTRI-COUNTY MALL}YIILFORD SHOPPING CENTERWESTERN WOODS MALL".MT. WASHJNGTONMIDDLETOWNCOVINGTONNORWOOD/AdsRecord officeor place in N.R.mail box 4 days priorto insertioniiiiiiiiNEW DOWNTOWN 'LOCATION.News" . .221-4365UN·IVERS lTV KARATE ACADEMYKOR EAN KARATE ASSOC IAT ION3130 JEFFERSON AVE. (NEAR U.C.cents a word,FOR SA'LE: 1962 Galaxie, 2-dr., radio,htr., has ctass, Baby blue with whitetop, immaculate condition.Can beyours for best offer. Call 75l-2730evenings after 6.'FOR SALE:GE Stereo, Portable,Pillow Speaker 25, Rod 751-2730SQUACK POP FESTIVALFOR SALE - '65 Pontiac TempestConv.Red 1295 662 45a4Apt. for R.ent- westWOOd,2 BedroomTownhouse, Furnished, Available May16-July 16,662-4584

Tuesday, April 8, 1969 THE UNIVERSITY OF CINCIrt ATIPage Three\ 1 .:::Z '!REG "'s:Direct Line "1( -CLEANERS -, ,when no input information hadA. "This proposedalternatebeen provided for that purpose. Inplan- was under discussion by theNO'W LOCATED AT TH-E1966-67 and 1967-68, we wereFoodSe r v i'c e sAdvisorySIGNOF'THE GREEN CANOPYasked to do some "crash-type"Committee on February 10. Theresearchstudies of our thencommittee heard from Mr. Moyer,2510 CLfFTQN AVE.currently enrolled students andCampus Food Service Director,come up with estimates andCalhoun Across Irom DuBois -Booksconcerning the cost figures ofapproximations for various racialimplementing such a service.categories. This procedurewas .The cost of this alternate planunscientific,incomplete,andwould be 18.50 per student perunsatisfactory but was required.year. or .56 per week, or .11After much insistence on theDRY CLEANJNG FOR PARTICULAR PEOPLEper day for every day this plan ispart of - the University registrarsin operation.With these factsand other records officers across2S YEARS IN CLIFTON HEIGHTSknown, "the committee requestedthe land, forms for reporting datathat Mr. Moyer present theseAtCo rne r of Cli f.ton and McMillanfigures./" to the StudentFoodin 1968-69 were secured from thefederalgovernmentenoughServices Committeeof Siddallmonths in advance so that weHall. No other action has beenwere able to make plans to secureinitiated. DIRECT LINE suggestsethnicinformationfromourthat any dorm students who. desireenrolled students. This system wasfood service, dorm policy, etc,used in the' 1968-69 Autumnchanges, to work· closely withQuarter, but it is of interest totheir.electeddorm,studentreport that only 87% of thosegovernmentorganization.Aregistered elected to complete thego v e rnme nt : canonlyberacial data card, and some of theseresponsive to the needs of thecarried spurious answers.governed if they make themselvesEven now, apparently it is notheard.legal to require a student tosupply such information and someDC. Baseball: /refuse to do so. Nevertheless, viE::Today 3:30'feei that for 1968-69,)'VehavePhillip Meyers Fieldacquired a data base that! isreasonably valid and adequate for -meaningful estimates to be made.Thus, for the first time in theUniversity's history , .we now havethe capacity to collect and processstudent information on an ethnicbasis and this is being done.Obviously, we do not yet haveanyprevious' informationongraduates from the black or anyrace, but we will be able to derivesuch data in the futre.'Theobservationshouldbemade, however, that there aremanyHl usf r io us blackUCgraduateswhosechronologyextends back over a, period ofmany' years. Many of them holdRick Munger and Neva Rae Powers have the lead 'understudy assignments forimportantpositionsacross the"Now Is The Time For All Good Men". Munger is .understudy for T. V. starcountry and have been' awardedDavid Canary and Miss Powers works with female- lead Bonnie Hinson,honorary degrees and otherwiseOpening night is Thursdav April 10 with follOWing night performances on Fri.granted special recognitionbySat. 'arid ,Sun. A special semlnerIn the Great Hall on Sunday at 4:00 p.rn,their alma mater. There is everyconcerning current trends in theater will feature David Canary and author ofreasonto thinkthatBlackthe musical Gretchen Cryen.studentsand graduateswillassume an even more significantrole in the life of the University inthe future."Garland G. ParkerVice Provost for Admissions. and RecordsQ."Iwouldsuggest thatbreakfast be extended one halfhour. This would make it possiblefor many people to eat after' 8 :00class. The cafeteria would notneed to open as early -because veryfew people Come to breakfast at6:45 a.m.Stever SmiltzerBus. Ad. '73Complaint,question,suggestions? Write Brian Zakem'sDIRECT LINE, 1040 TowandaTerrace, Cinci nati,Ohio, .45216.I ncludenameand universityposition; This information will bewithheld if desired. Sponsor Student Senate.Q. "I'd be interested in knowinghow many black students havebeen granted each of UC's variousdegrees and what their sex was. Inorder to interpretthis letterbetter, information for the last tenortwentyyearswouldbeinteresteing,but it would beimpressive to have the. totals forthelast150 years."Namewithheld on request.A. "Given the vicissitudes of fireandotherphysicalperils,unfortunatelythere are. manykinds of student records that nolongerexistfor theearliersegments of the last 150 years.Thus, even if ethnic records werekept in the earlier years, they arenot available. The records of thelast several decades, which areextant, do not reveal ethnic orracial data, because, until veryr ecen tly,tocollectsuchinformation on students was heldtobetantamounttodiscrimination. This was the viewtakenbymanygovernmentagencies, civil rights organizations,and the University community.Consequently,University policydid not permit the collection ofstudent data on a racial basis.In 1966, the federal' governmentsuddenly became interestedinracially-oriented student data andbegan to ask for and even demandit. Anyoneknowledgeableinstudent or other complex systemsis well aware that one cannot turnthe clock back and secure dataNr.NEW PHONIHe'll put .In 'plenty of'OVERTJMEvote'GMarkSerrianneKILEY HERE FRIDAY(STUDENTcRichardKiley,formerPresident , of the CmcinnatiTeachers'Union,will bespeakinginAnnieLawsDrawing . Room in TeachersCollege -at 4:00 p.m, Friday.JIis topic wiD be the currentsituationin the. Cincinnatischools.-'Kiley, who has been aneff ectivecriticoftheCincinnati School Board andits policies recently' resignedfrom the Presidency 'of theUnion to work for the Tax'Levy."'E: 751-42,00BODY V.P.INDULGE IN AN P,ICUR ANOR·GYEVERY.The meeting is sponsored bythe Graduate Education Club,. and students' and faculty fromaD departments are welcome,TUESDAY NIGHTSTUDENTS ANDFAUJLTY NOW YOUCAN STAY IN A,NY"SHERATQN.HOTElAT SPE'C;IAl RATES'FOR RESERVATIONS AND INFORMATIONCALL BILL SPEAR AT 475-2748(DAY),421-2566(NIGHT) CONTEST r' HAIR ALBUMSMOVIE TICKETSBYRD TICKETSAND,MUCHOM&RELISTENTOW.FIB-I ALL THE PIZZA YOU CAN E.ATFOR ATG 1.005-12 p.m.CARESfor a real student314voice in UNIVERSITYLudlow Avenue.decisions l,PAI'I'ER KORNI'CKVOTE A,PRI.l·,15 ,16 UNIVERS',ITY CENTER \.\\'

'rUE UNIVERSITY, OF, CINCINNATIil1 day: ptil 8 1l 1969ft s ' ''O u r -:C;h,oiceI -.'iA, ."".,.;. With student elections bearing down upon us, maybe irstime we called time out and took a look at the issues we willbe facing next week-In addition to the student body officers,Senators, arid Tribunal members to be elected, there are alsotwo -rvery important documents being submitted to thejudgment of the student' bOQy tbe proposed new studentgovernment' Constitutionand the 11-point Charter ofStudent Rights and Responsibilities.BEARCAT 'FORUMLew MooresThe Cele'brote.dThetrialofNewYorkcolumnist Murray Kempton andthirteen of his cohorts, alreadyintoitssecondmonthofproceedings, has cast interesting'lightonwhatmay'haveconsidered a "closed" case on thecelebratedChicagoriots.Kempton has, been charged withdisorderly' conduct, whichis apoli te way of saying he acted likeaNew York Post columnist., Juxtaposedwith the Kemptontrial are the trials "'ofJerry Rubin,. DavidDellinger,andAbbieHoffmanwhoseYouthQuite a bit-of the pre-election discussion will center aroundInternationalParty and National.the two documents mentioned above-rthe new ConstitutionMobilizationCommitteewereand the Charter-andwith good reason. Both representresponsible for coordinatingtheupdated interpretations of what it's all about to be a student;events which simulatneously tookthe Constitution attempts to, clearly define the student in place --during the Democraticrelation to his governmental structure, and the Charter, to 'National Convention. They have'been indicted for crossing statedefine the student in his societal setting on-the campus.lines to "incite a riot." TheseBecause of previous' space commitments, the Charter will trials plus the investigations intoalleged acts of police brutalityappear in full in Friday's 'NR. Make a point to read it, midhave served the continuumofread it carefully, This is the distilled product of a combined.denunciationwhichhas beenstudent, faculty, and administrative effort to define the tightsdirected at the Chicago police andChicago Mayor Richard Daly forand responsibilities of students. Several of the points are foodaggressions comparable to thosefor controversy, and, in the opinion of some, go too far. So,enjoyed by the Third Reich.read them closely before you' go into the voting booth. TheA Sense Of Righteousnesseleven points will be voted on individually, so the documentThese attitudeshave been acannot be accepted or rejected on an all-or-nothing basis,culmination of the deliberate andincessantcommuniquesbeingThe textthe new Constitution appeared in full in the r e laye d to theAmericanMarch 7 NR, and. when, you vote you had better be familiarconscience today of irrepressibledesirestoassociatethe'Yith the entire document, because it's not going to be voteddiscontenteddeviates from theOn"in sections. Rewriting constitutions seems to be an annuallaw with martyrdom.exercise of student government, and-now we have this year'sIt is no longer a symbol ofedition.' Whereas.other drafts, of previous years differed littleillegal transgression to be sent tofrom their predecessors, this one does. Included in it; among jail, but rather one of ultimateother points, are' new 'guidelinesfor determining the sacrifice in a "worthy" cause; aworthycause being one thateligibility .ofstudent to represent, other students as an exactsaninconvenienceonofficer in. their government, and a definition of the another person. Hence, sitt-ingAdministrative Cabinet, its .members, and its duties. Also down in an intersection to protestspelled out, more clearly than in' 'the past, are the the war in Vietnam enables one,being atrested and convicted,relationships of Senate to the various Boards which are afterte exhort systematic oppression inresponsible to it. All of this, and more, for your serious society today.consideration:'Thus, the trials, no matter whattheir outcome,will. end in, aCombine the Charter and the Constitution, and you get a baptism of righteousness for thoselot of student power. Combine those with the right people involved and, more importantly,will 'not allay the convictions offor the right offices, and, you are giving your governmentfighting chance to relateitself to your needs. Makethe Wrong many that the true "villians" ofChicago have not been brought tocombination, though, and you come out with nothing better trial.than what you have now. But how do you know who andKempton explained a few weekswhat is in your better interests if you don't bother to find ago in court that they had helpedout? And with what we have before us to vote on next week, recruit the march' to the ChicagoAmpitheatrewh-erethewith the alternative directions we can give our self-governing convention was being held Auguststructure, your vote will count more than ever.'29. When stopped and warned bya National Guardsman that hewould ,be arrested if he tried totraverse police barriers, Kemptontold the obstinate Guardsman, "Iwant to go to the Ampitheatrewiththesepeople,"referringUniversity' o'f Cincinnatipresumabletothe3000marchersNational EducationalAdvertising Service,-Inc.which stood behind him': TheRooms 41l·12·150, Union Building. Cincinnati. Ohio 45221Guard was adamant In his refusal,475-2748. 2749\ but Kempton attempted -anyway'3.50 'per year. 10 cents per copy.Second Class Postage Paid, CincIDJ atf.Ohioand was arrested.lneq ity Justifies DemonstrationsMember: Assoc:i.ted Collegiate Pre sIt is through explicit testimonyEDITORIAL' STATEMENTas this and the moral bankruptciesof Rubin, Hoffman,: and Dellinger(he letters and columns appearing in the News Record represent that the events of August weren'tsolely the views, of their writers'.editorials reflect only the as po l ice-In itiated .as. many,views of ·the edit rial staft of the 'J) per ,i: and do not represent maintain. The reasons for thedemonstrations'oranyUni ersity policy.demonstrationis to protest anexisting atmosphere ,of inequity.An ambience of insecurity wasEDITORIAL SrAFFestablished in August, not bytheEditor-in-ChiefEstablishment out by the forcesLenny Greenof dissent,Rennie Davis and Tom HaydenExecutive Editorexplained in a pamphlet entitledDiana Risse"Movement Campaign 1968: AnElectionYear Offensive" thatAssociate Editor"We must continually show -that- Bernard Rubintheantiwarmovementisincreasingin militancyand.numbers."Theessenceofldanagmg EdItor,,.,,,Sue Stengerostensiblesupportfor such.Sports Editor ,,-. ,Richie Katzmovements oftentimes, takes theTheaterEditor.,. ',':;"BillSpe31 - .m o refamiliarf.o r m ofPhoto Edit6rs,,-. ,.' . John Sedgwick, Todd Bardesconfrontationwheremedia,coverage ves the illusory effectofl mme nsesupportwhileBUSINESS liceBusiness Manager, . . ;. '. Toby Beseckeroppression.Advertising . . .;HowieKleinmanTheNationalMobilizationDick SnyderCommittee 'to End the-War -in'Fritz SteinerThe contest for Student Body President features two menwhose views differ dramatically, from one another, and athird 'non-candidate'who, although not an officiallyrecognized candidate for the office, has brought up a numberof points worthy of consideration. The NR

evidence a list of the names of students whose .cards were taken at the game, prepared by one of the Pirikerton guards; a list of names 'allegedly prepared' by University Registrar John Goedng,' neither signed nor identified in any way;' a "c.ompletely unidentified" handwritten list ofstudents whose LD. cards were taken on that

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12.DO NOT damage the power cord:)a DO NOT pull or carry appliance by the cord or use the cord as a handle. b) DO NOT unplug by pulling on cord. Grasp the plug, not the cord. c) DO NOT stand the appliance on the power cord, close a door on the cord, pull the cord around sharp corners, or leave the cord near heated surfaces.

Powr-Flite dealer. Do no pull or carry by cord, use cord as a handle, close door on cord, or pull cord around sharp edges or corners. Keep cord away from heated surfaces. Do not unplug by pulling on cord. To unplug, grasp the plug, not the cord. Do not handle plug or appliance wi

Thoracic spinal cord: The thoracic spinal cord, making up the middle of the spinal cord, and containing 12 vertebrae: T1-T12. Lumbar spinal cord: The lumbar spinal cord, correlating to the curve in your lower back, and consisting of five vertebrae: L1-L5. Sacral spinal cord

product with another charger. Before use, check the charger cord for signs of damage or ageing. A damaged or entangled charger cord increases the risk of fire and electric shock. Do not abuse the charger cord. Never carry the charger by the cord. Do not pull the cord to disconnect from a socket; grasp the plug and pull to disconnect. Don’t wrap the cord around the charger .

Hemp cord is made up of natural fibers and is the best selection for macramé. Use a scissors to cut this cord. This cord can be cut with a scissors. Leather cord is a round, smooth cord that comes in a variety of colors, can be knotted, and is best used for wide-holed, large beads. This cord can be cut with a scissors.

6. To prevent the appliance cord from disconnecting from the extension cord during operation, make a knot with the two cords as shown in Table 1. 7. Do not abuse the cord. Never pull the pressure washer by the cord or yank the cord to disconnect it from the receptacle. Keep the cord away from heat, oil, and sharp edges. Risk of Electrocution

6. Do not abuse the cord. Never pull the pressure washer by the cord or yank the cord to disconnect it from the receptacle. Keep the cord away from heat, oil, and sharp edges. Risk of electrocution Inspect cord before using. Do not use if cord is damaged. Keep all connections dry and off the ground. Do not touch plug with wet hands.

DO NOT immerse the steam mop into water or any other liquids. 10. DO NOT handle plug or steam mop with wet hands or operate appliance without shoes. 11. DO NOT pull or carry by cord, use cord as a handle, close a door on cord, or pull cord around sharp edges or corners. Do not run appliance over cord. Keep cord away from heated surfaces.