FPC Hearings To Continue - OWU DRC Home - Ohio Wesleyan ...
FPC Hearings To Continue - OWU DRC Home - Ohio Wesleyan ...
FPC Hearings To Continue - OWU DRC Home - Ohio Wesleyan ...
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iuiauud, nuuumg may hid lie lNdJJUIUcH OllUUlUldl LtllllUII 1<br />
By Bob Procelli , . , ,u j- -<br />
.1<br />
and been confined to a closet in the was removed due to water building due to settling. In hot weather, ollices directly<br />
Nancy Bugbee rehearsal room," Gwynne added, damage, revealed large gaps A Delaware building contractor, above the boiler room experienced<br />
Is the theater-speec- h depart- - Water flows out of a closet off where the concrete floor does not Virgil Mitchell, said that under temperatures live to lo degrees<br />
$1.5-millio- n ment's baby falling the rehearsal room. The flooding meet the wall. normal conditions no cracks should higher<br />
apart? Do cracked walls and originates from faulty construction A six-inc- than the rest of the<br />
h concrete trough was appear after only one year. "If the building. The source blamed a lack<br />
flooded closets in Chappelear of a three-ste- p stairway adjacent added to drain the closet. The footings were laid when the of ventilation in the boiler room.<br />
Drama Center indicate the usual to the rehearsal room. Robert trough, which protrudes into the ground was frozen, or if there was Rust and water marks along the<br />
settling ol a new vice-preside- nt building or poor Meyer, lor business renearsai room, nas causea several something geographically wrong boiler room walls indicate leaks in<br />
architectural design? affairs, said, "The situation has accidents, according to a faculty with the area, then there might be several pipes.<br />
"The basement has been flooded gotten to the point where that source. "If an outsider looked into a few cracks along the seams of the A hole less than 10 yards from<br />
several times-no-, more like a entire section may have to be that room during a rehearsal, it cinder blocks," Mitchell added, the northwest outside corner of<br />
couple dozen times," said William reconstructed." would seem more like a Cinder Blocks Split the building has collapsed and<br />
Gwynne, designer and technical<br />
Rainv Dav Pumn gymnastics room," he said. "It's The north and south walls of the been relilled Irequently. It is<br />
director of the TheaterSpeech Pfocontk, a riir, iA rpallv Hanp-prnn- s a situation." nmcnirvrnnm nJ u cm,th unii presently covered with a saw<br />
Department.<br />
cvctom Hruin tlio ,v,Qr, it The carnpntrv and harkst.are nf tr,p hanWsta mnm V,r.uo.ot- - horse. Meyer attributed this<br />
"At one time, when it rained rains. One informed theater source areas of the theater have several have cracks which run through the weakness to drinking water wells<br />
heavily, a large portion of the floor said that at times much of the long cracks in the walls. Sydney blocks. The studio walls and many located under the preconstruction<br />
won d he covered with water haspmpnt is twn innhps Hppn in Wynne, director ot the Physical storage room floors also are Site.<br />
Howe"er, the flooding has now water. Plastic floor molding, which plant, said cracks form in any large cracked and separated.<br />
<strong>Continue</strong>d on page 5<br />
Did U02AM(QPU<br />
AN INDEPENDENT STVDENT NEWSPAPER<br />
Vol. 106, No. 16<br />
V i- -<br />
<strong>Ohio</strong> <strong>Wesleyan</strong> University, Delaware, <strong>Ohio</strong> 43015<br />
111<br />
Individual Studies' Degree<br />
Sent For Final Faculty Vote<br />
By Brad Adams<br />
The Bachelor of Individual<br />
i,.' U Studies (BIS) degree will be<br />
Price-- 25 Cents Feb. 15, 1973<br />
religion and BIS subcommittee The BIS evolved from an<br />
i<br />
chairperson.<br />
attempt last spring to eliminate<br />
'J<br />
If approved, the program would distribution requirements. After<br />
UWE WOLTEMADE right, associate professor of economics and presented to the faculty Monday be implemented spring term. the faculty voted to retain the<br />
<strong>FPC</strong> member, speaks in favor of WCSA's proposal to place two for approval. The Academic Policy The BIS program would allow requirements, a Bachelor of<br />
students on the <strong>FPC</strong> at Tuesday's faculty hearings. Harry Bahrick, Committee (APC) voted Tuesday students virtually total freedom in General Studies was suggested<br />
professor of psychology, who opposed the proposal, looks on at left. to adopt the proposal, written by choosing curriculum and method of and an APC subcommittee was<br />
See Story, below. 1'hnlo Hy Cindy Davidson Robert Montgomery, professor of<br />
<strong>FPC</strong> <strong>Hearings</strong> <strong>To</strong> <strong>Continue</strong><br />
By Scott Benson "input of all University constitu- - instruction. A maximum of 35<br />
students would be admitted to the<br />
program during its first year.<br />
No student on academic probation<br />
would be admitted to the program.<br />
Traditional University require<br />
Jones said the hoards are ments of completing 37 credits and<br />
Open hearings convened by the encies at a11 levels of the ineffective because each board English composition would stand,<br />
faculty's Executive Committee to University, including personnel "garners opinions of majors and Freshmen could not enter the<br />
consider WCSA's proposal to seat decisions." Jones said WCSA's does not reflect non-majo- rs the Prgram until spring term of their<br />
two students on the Faculty move would provide a step toward who take courses in that 'resnman year, ina<br />
Personnel Committee (<strong>FPC</strong>) are achieving a "true campus department." formed to investigate it.<br />
TrusfcosSIiou<br />
Young Profile<br />
By Kathy Linderman<br />
This weekend's Board of<br />
BIS Trustees meeting calls to mind an<br />
candidates would take i<br />
image of stuffy, pipe - smoking<br />
not over. Another hearing is community." .... supervised by one of the . elders passing judgment in quiet,<br />
Jonest said there is no insurance five-memb- er ,..if-w- j ru o, Uwe Wnltemade assnriato<br />
BIS<br />
ovucuuitu iwi cuncsua,. i cu. Li. ' 1 . , ., committee, . , ms carpeted rooms.<br />
- - . nnw npavi v pn. wpirnc t-- ro . al : u mi . . . .<br />
(-<br />
A specific time and place have yet protessor ol economics and t PC j" , , J. - -<br />
.<br />
uunng uie serious eacii siuutm me preconception is naraiy ac- -<br />
to be determined member, supported the proposal, boards evaluations in making wou(j develop an "overall curate. As many students who are<br />
Attendance at the Monday and though he said he found sizable decls'ons. Students would provide educational plan." Also, a faculty to meet with Board committees<br />
Tuesday hearings was low, with opposition from colleagues. Citing<br />
check, according to Jones. "preceptor " would be chosen to will see, the trustees are far from<br />
vice-preside- nt approximately 40 people at each arguments against the proposal, Robert Lisensky, advise and evaluate the student patriarchal stodginess.<br />
session. About equal numbers of he said some faculty members for academic affairs, said the throughout his academic career. One statistic showing the<br />
faculty and students attended the feared a "lack of experience and present boards are not consistent. The tutorials would be limited to changing face of 0WUs Board is<br />
hearings. expertise," on the part of students He suggested strengthening the seven students each. the average age of the members-Jun- ior<br />
Rick Jones, head of for <strong>FPC</strong> matters. departmental boards themselves. Paul Dahlquist, assistant pro-- 52.4 years. Only six years ago the<br />
wrsA'c Ar3HUm,'n AfVoio r "Qtonts i,op a Hirw.ni cml ,i ifforontiati ; fessor of sociology and anthropol- - averaee age was 58 with no<br />
ecodiscussions<br />
on <strong>OWU</strong> activities and<br />
set up conferences with the<br />
admissions staff. Although the<br />
emphasis is on academics, the<br />
students will be entertained by the<br />
Orchesis Dance Program and a<br />
Marx Brothers movie Saturday.<br />
Most of the students are from<br />
-<br />
1<br />
nomics insu uctoi aim mTOA viwn essennai , .. , , --H,,,1<br />
"We ii7 ij each iLonnnuea - on oaee - j f<br />
v,<br />
member, said, y, c judge uuec caul<br />
other on what we see and hear<br />
about each other outside the<br />
Black student week-end- , which classroom. The students judge<br />
begins today and runs through rom what they see inside the<br />
Sunday, is expected to draw 50-6- 0 classroom."<br />
black high school students to the i answer to faculty fears of<br />
campus. Last year, 76 students relinquishing power to students,<br />
attended. Woltemade said two students<br />
The students will stay in the couid not control <strong>FPC</strong>, since the<br />
residence halls, attend classes and present number of seven faculty<br />
members would remain.<br />
Students could be chosen by<br />
WCSA, by <strong>FPC</strong>, by a joint<br />
student-facult- y board or by<br />
campus-wid- e students. said Harry Bahrick<br />
"pretty unwieldy in many ways.<br />
A J<br />
j<br />
l - :<br />
.<br />
referendum, according<br />
to Jones.<br />
Samuel Pratt, professor of<br />
<strong>Ohio</strong>, althoueh several come from English and head of <strong>FPC</strong>,<br />
Massachusetts, New York and contended WCSA's proposal j0HN SAGAN, chairperson of the Board of Trustees' Organization<br />
Pennsylvania. Student visitors would l improve matters. Pratt mittee, opened Monday's session perspective that is valuable," he needed" between faculty and ogy and APC member, objected to members younger than 40 years<br />
stating rationale behind the said.<br />
the degree's red tape. He called it old.<br />
proposal. He cited the value of<br />
At that time, the Board's<br />
Students Judge From 'Inside<br />
1 He said many students would pass<br />
DlackUcolrcnd Katherine Bobula, home<br />
Begins <strong>To</strong>day<br />
Committee spoke to the journalism seminar class last Saturday,<br />
pay their own. expenses, according sad students already have input m<br />
Sagan saij ne thought opening trustee meetings to the media might<br />
to Richard Payne, associate personnel decisions through de- -<br />
. inhibit ree discussion of controversial topics. For The Transcript's<br />
director of admissions.<br />
partmental boards.<br />
editorial view, see page 4. Hh.i. b, nd, Davids<br />
all-whit- e membership included<br />
Rahrick said Deer judgement is up the plan because "so much time only two women. <strong>To</strong>day, of the 41<br />
to facultv morale spent up in Dureaucraiic mem per toiai, inree are DiacKs ano<br />
four are women.<br />
Only 10 trustees are active or<br />
retired businessmen. Eight are<br />
involved in church work. The<br />
remainder includes six educators,<br />
three attorneys, two public relations<br />
workers, two graduate students<br />
and one housewife. Additional<br />
careers represented are real<br />
estate, medicine, government,<br />
publishing and writing.<br />
Weekend Agenda<br />
Under student affairs, the<br />
trustees are to vote this weekend<br />
on the WCSA-passe- d policy to<br />
allow alcohol in the Union. The<br />
Board also will examine the<br />
recently-undertake- n study of institutional<br />
racism at <strong>OWU</strong>.<br />
Remodeling of Sturges and<br />
Edgar Halls, part of the five-yea- r<br />
Master Plan for main campus renovation,<br />
will be reviewed. The<br />
Board will also take up planning a<br />
fund drive to finance the Master<br />
-- Plan.
Page 2<br />
<strong>To</strong>day, Feb. 15<br />
8:00 p.m. Orchesis, Chappelear.<br />
Friday, Feb. 16<br />
10:00 a.m. Forum, "Technology<br />
and Recordings," Leonard Marcus,<br />
High Fidelity Magazine,<br />
Gray Chapel.<br />
8:00 p.m. Orchesis, Chappelear.<br />
8:15 p.m. Junior Recital Gordon<br />
Murray, flute; Richard Dacks,<br />
bass-bariton- e, Sanborn.<br />
Saturday, Feb. 17<br />
7:30 and 9:30 p.m. Film, "A<br />
Night at The Opera," Phillips.<br />
8:00 p.m. Orchesis, Chappelear.<br />
JrCuinvtLK<br />
tions," Joe Kavanaugh, director of<br />
residence life said. "We are<br />
pleased with faculty and student<br />
interest in this new housing arrangement."<br />
Students who wish to live in a<br />
special-interes- t small living unit,<br />
corridor or living-learnin- g center<br />
next year must submit a program<br />
proposal to the Student Affairs<br />
Office by Feb. 23.<br />
"We need to know what goals<br />
students have for the unit," Miller<br />
said. The Residence Hall Advisory<br />
Board will allocate the housing by<br />
the end of winter term.<br />
Kavanaugh said one student<br />
group has expressed interest in a<br />
Meditation House. Existing houses<br />
reapplying for next year will have<br />
their programs evaluated.<br />
"We see value in random selection<br />
of students' through room<br />
Sunday, Feb. 18<br />
Community Ambassadors<br />
Carnival, Union.<br />
7:00-10:0- 0 p.m.<br />
7:30 & 9:30 p.m., Film, "A Day<br />
At The Races," Phillips.<br />
Monday, Feb. 19<br />
7:45 p.m. Faculty Meeting, Union<br />
Ballroom.<br />
Tuesday, Feb. 20<br />
4:15 p.m. WCSA, New Science<br />
150.<br />
Wednesday, Feb. 21<br />
11:00 a.m. Chapel, "What Does It<br />
Mean <strong>To</strong> Be Both Patriotic And<br />
Religious," Phillips.<br />
00 p.m. Human Sexuality Lectures,<br />
Phillips.<br />
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MENS and WOMENS<br />
GRAY'S<br />
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THE TRANSCRIPT<br />
Cross-Cultu- ral Group Eyes Bashford<br />
By Pat Iovino<br />
A coed International Studies<br />
Center in Bashford Hall is among<br />
proposals to bring a new<br />
dimension to student housing next<br />
year.<br />
"Living-Learnin- g Centers" would<br />
enhance Small-Livin- the current g<br />
Unit program by offering student-initiate- d<br />
course instruction within<br />
the unit.<br />
James Miller, director of housing,<br />
said "About seven groups<br />
have expressed interest." He said<br />
he did not know exactly what each<br />
group will propose.<br />
The Bashford plan and traditional<br />
French House plans have<br />
been proposed to date.<br />
"Proposals for Living-Learnin- g<br />
Centers must include a departmental<br />
commitment in terms of<br />
funds for films, speakers,<br />
resources and faculty<br />
library<br />
inst.rnc- -<br />
J Your friendly neighborhood grocery j !<br />
drawing, for a few small living<br />
units," Miller said. "Even if applications<br />
from interest groups<br />
exceed space available, we may<br />
hold out one or two units for room<br />
drawing. Seventy-fiv- e Oak Hill<br />
and Jenkins House were assigned<br />
in that way this year."<br />
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Gordon Murray, flute<br />
& Richard Docks, baritone<br />
y Junior Recital<br />
February 15, 1973<br />
and J<br />
J Sanborn Hall Friday, Feb. 16 8:15 p.m.<br />
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jj
February 15, 1973<br />
Neldon said.<br />
"We've been locking the door at the proram tnis summer<br />
. . r oa 1 Ic- - full " -<br />
y or y:ou uecaust; lug piac ,a iuu,<br />
Neldon said. "We've closed early a<br />
couple of times because there were<br />
hardly any people in here."<br />
He also denied rumors that a<br />
possible reason for closing early<br />
was the fact that no profit was<br />
made after 9 p.m.<br />
(<br />
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THK TRANSCRIPT<br />
Approximately 25 students will<br />
meet informally with Board of<br />
Trustees' committees tomorrow.<br />
For the first time, students will be<br />
permitted to attend other than the<br />
Student Affairs Committee meeting.<br />
Under the new policy,<br />
portions of the meetings will be'<br />
reserved for students. They will<br />
not be permitted to attend the<br />
entire meetings, however.<br />
Students will meet with the<br />
Academic Affairs and Facilities<br />
Committees of the Board. No<br />
students expressed a desire to<br />
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Approximately seven students<br />
will meet with the Academic<br />
Affairs Committee, said coordi<br />
nator Judi Hetrick, a junior.<br />
No agenda had been drawn up<br />
for this group yet. The session will<br />
be held tomorrow at 7:30 p.m. in<br />
the Union.<br />
<strong>FPC</strong>...<br />
<strong>Continue</strong>d from page 1<br />
regarding personnel decisions. He<br />
said faculty members are<br />
promised fair judgment by<br />
colleagues they elect. With no<br />
rnntrnl nvpr student nart.irination.<br />
LEONARD MARCUS, of High Fidelity Magazine, will speak in<br />
Forum tomorrow at 10 a.m. in Gray Chapel. His topic will be<br />
"Technology and Recordings." He will also talk in the Union<br />
following Forum.<br />
Camp<br />
en-ce- nt<br />
organized this year,<br />
of the funds collected, have thusiasm lagged,<br />
come from faculty and ad- - Community Ambassadors, one<br />
ministrators. The fund drive, of the organizations funded<br />
which began Jan. 11, asked each through the Campus Chest, will<br />
person to donate $3 or $4. "This hold a fund raising carnival at the<br />
7-1-<br />
Union Sunday from 0 p.m.<br />
Juq StaVS Open The carnival will feature a raffle<br />
3 offering a Maytag dryer as first<br />
Rumors that the Brown Jug : nihr mi7 inrlnHe sift<br />
Restaurant, 13 W. William St., is certjficates to the Style Shop,<br />
planning to close at 8 p.m. daily, Hither & Yon, Stair's Carry-Ou- t<br />
were denied by Rick Neldon, an(j otner Delaware shops.<br />
Brown Jug manager. The Jug is Senior Ann Muenster, last<br />
and will remain open until mid- -<br />
summer's Community Ambassa- -<br />
-- ft L.,<br />
meet with members of the the<br />
Finance and University Relations faculty moraie would suffer,<br />
Committees, although they are according to Bahrick.<br />
'<br />
open under the new policy. "Democracy means some control<br />
Students attending the Student over y0ur controllers," he said.<br />
Affairs Committee plan to ask that -<br />
.<br />
,, . . j Bahrick suggested student<br />
a us Chest At Less<br />
to the full Board.<br />
Also to be presented to<br />
Thnn Half the<br />
Of Goal Student Affairs<br />
Campus Chest has collected only might have been too much to ask,<br />
Committee is a<br />
request that all campus media be<br />
$2,500 of the projected $7,100 goal, Williams said, "but students aren t<br />
allowed to cover both<br />
according to chairperson Linda willing to give money anymore.<br />
committee meetings and the full<br />
Williams. She said the fund drive Last year. Campus Chest<br />
Board meeting.<br />
collected about $6,000, including a<br />
"has gone very poorly." She does<br />
Progress reports will be<br />
not expect the total to "even reach $2,000 allocation by WCSA. Last<br />
submitted on the Committee on<br />
half the goal" although con- - year's goal was also $7,100. She<br />
Institutional Discrimination and<br />
tributions are still being accepted, said although "we were pretty<br />
the Union remodelling program.<br />
Williams said $500, about 20 per well<br />
A request for the enlargement<br />
of the Lecture-Artis- t Series will<br />
also be made to the Student<br />
Affairs Committee.<br />
Fifteen students are scheduled<br />
to meet with this committee,<br />
according to junior Vanessa<br />
Byrne, coordinator. The session<br />
will be held tomorrow in Welch<br />
Hall Private Dining Room at 2<br />
1 students concerns expressed to .<br />
participation on a Faculty<br />
committee members be reported<br />
view laculty<br />
compromise<br />
I George Birthington's J<br />
J Washday Sale X<br />
Monday J<br />
J February 19th J I<br />
additions as a<br />
to the WCSA<br />
proposal.<br />
.<strong>To</strong>nes said rnmnrnmisp is "nut nf<br />
formal tne qUestion" until all arguments<br />
are presented.<br />
(Ularklmnt h<br />
Come in and see us<br />
at SI<br />
night Monday-Thursda- y and until dor to israel, said carnival funds g A Dl. T Cai-- S?X<br />
1 a.m. Friday and Saturday, ,ih hPln finance the four 9 rlUUUV S I OWNm OTOI U 0 I<br />
students wno win ro auruau unuci , --<br />
i ct. iaiiil wiNlbK Trn ':<br />
u J<br />
Page 3<br />
Meeting time and place have not<br />
yet been announced for the<br />
Facilities Committee.<br />
IlSim-EOBBlH- S<br />
February's New Flavors<br />
(Now being scooped)<br />
Cherry Vanilla<br />
Daiquri Ice<br />
Nutty Coconut<br />
Blueberry Cheesecake<br />
Nutcracker Sweet<br />
and<br />
Featuring the<br />
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the Month"<br />
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A chocolate ice<br />
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Doesn't it sound<br />
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1 1 Hours: a.m. - 9 p.m.<br />
Sign up now<br />
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picture taken for<br />
J& 7?yew 1973<br />
Pictures will be taken<br />
Feb. 19<br />
thru March 4<br />
j
Page 4<br />
The Transcript<br />
an independent student newspaper<br />
Founded 1867<br />
Published weekly September through May except daring University<br />
holidays and examination periods. Second class postage paid at<br />
Delaioare, <strong>Ohio</strong> 43015. Subscription rates: $5.75 per year mail $6.25.<br />
National advertising represen tatives: National Educational Advertising<br />
Services, Inc., 360 Lexington Ave., New York, N. Y. 10017. Editorial and<br />
Business Address: <strong>Ohio</strong> <strong>Wesleyan</strong> University, Delaware, <strong>Ohio</strong> 43015.<br />
Editor<br />
Gary K. Shorts<br />
Associate Editor<br />
Marty Lewis<br />
Academic Affairs Editor<br />
Linda Revay<br />
Faculty Affairs Editor<br />
Judi Hetrick<br />
Sports Editor<br />
<strong>To</strong>m Stinson<br />
Features Editor<br />
Rick Jones<br />
Business Manager<br />
H. David Pace<br />
Advertising Manager<br />
Michael E. Portnoy<br />
Managing Editor<br />
John B. Keith<br />
Asst. Man. Editor<br />
W. Joseph Campbell<br />
Copy Editor<br />
Judy Collinson<br />
Student Affairs Editors<br />
Jeff Fruit, John Thullen<br />
Student Government Editor<br />
Scott Benson<br />
Arts Editor<br />
Cindy Davidson<br />
Circulation Manager<br />
Dana K. Simeone<br />
<strong>FPC</strong> <strong>Hearings</strong><br />
Students are often barraged with the University's<br />
efforts to establish "community." The word is much<br />
bandied about in the dorms, the classrooms and in<br />
countless committees and task forces.<br />
Yet <strong>OWU</strong> maintains tired traditions which often<br />
militate against a sense of community. One such case is<br />
the faculty's persistence that students not be seated on<br />
the Faculty Personnel Committee (<strong>FPC</strong>).<br />
If, as we are told, <strong>FPC</strong> places great emphasis on<br />
teaching effectiveness, the current policy which locks<br />
students out is a perplexing contradiction. Who can<br />
better evaluate the classroom expertise of an individual<br />
than those who actually are in the classroom with him?<br />
We hear the argument that voting student members<br />
would negate faculty power. Two votes out of nine is<br />
hardly enough to carry a motion.<br />
We understand that student input is utilized through<br />
the contribution of departmental boards. But those<br />
evaluations reflect the attitudes of only departmental<br />
majors. There are no set guidelines for the<br />
accumulation or use of student evaluations. Some of the<br />
boards rarely meet. Some interview prospective<br />
teachers, some do not.<br />
Even if the boards are made more effective, student<br />
perspective will be necessary to interpret the<br />
evaluations and set policy.<br />
<strong>To</strong> quote one opponent of WCSA's proposal,<br />
"Democracy means some control over your<br />
controllers."<br />
We believe it. Does the faculty?<br />
Open Board<br />
Again The Transcript is compelled to appeal for full<br />
media coverage of trustee meetings. We appreciated<br />
last fall's post-meetin- g press conference. But it didn't<br />
really improve our coverage.<br />
The press conference permits analysis of only one<br />
person's view of Board actions. The media's scope is<br />
thus restricted to one perspective, while in reality<br />
there are 41 trustees, all of whom may have a different<br />
opinion in a given situation.<br />
The <strong>OWU</strong> community has a right to know the pros<br />
and cons of all Board actions not just their results. The<br />
most effective way to communicate such information is<br />
through the campus media.<br />
<strong>To</strong> capture the full flavor of Board meetings, to<br />
analyze responsibly and accurately, we must actually<br />
hear debate and dialogue which occur within the<br />
meeting.<br />
There is fear that media coverage would inhibit input<br />
by some members. We reply that input from outside<br />
constituencies is hindered by the present cloak of<br />
secrecy.<br />
THE TRANSCRIPT<br />
; r<br />
k .4<br />
Librarian Notes<br />
Columnist Error<br />
Editor, The Transcript:<br />
As chairDerson of the Standing<br />
Editorial opinions and decisions are made by the Editorial Board and are Committee on the Status of<br />
not necessarily those of <strong>Ohio</strong> <strong>Wesleyan</strong> University or the student body. Women, I would like to correct a<br />
Signed articles reflect the opinions of the authors. small error in Mr. Morehouse's<br />
article in the February 1 Tran<br />
script. The proposal for the<br />
establishment of the Committee<br />
came from the Executive Committee,<br />
not the University<br />
Concerns Committee. Status of<br />
Women and University Concerns<br />
were established within a month<br />
of each other, and University Concerns<br />
had no elected members as<br />
yet at the March 13, 1972 faculty<br />
meeting which voted Status of<br />
Women into existence. It was<br />
proposed at that meeting during<br />
discussion by, I think, a male<br />
faculty member, that University<br />
Concerns could also handle<br />
en's concerns and thereby prevent<br />
the establishment of yet another<br />
committee. The faculty women rejected<br />
this, arguing that women's<br />
concern would again be submerged<br />
and diminished by other<br />
university concerns. The Committee<br />
was then voted on and<br />
passed by the faculty.<br />
Cites Misconceptions<br />
There are on this campus, however,<br />
some misunderstandings and<br />
misconceptions concerning this<br />
committee. Part of the University<br />
community does not understand<br />
the composition, purpose and<br />
Unanswered By Request<br />
.<br />
"Now, About The New Gym..."<br />
; f)<br />
.<br />
r<br />
authority of the Committee. Let<br />
me make this perfectly clear. We<br />
are not a Women's Liberation<br />
group, although some of our members<br />
may belong to such groups on<br />
a personal basis. We do not<br />
represent or have any connection<br />
with the student group "<strong>Wesleyan</strong><br />
Women," although some of our<br />
student members may belong. We<br />
do not write or publish "Catalyst,"<br />
although some of our student<br />
members may contribute to it. The<br />
Committee is not composed<br />
entirely of women; we have two<br />
male faculty members and one<br />
male administrator on the Committee.<br />
We are not all faculty<br />
members, we have representatives<br />
from the student body, the<br />
staff arid the administration.<br />
We are a standing committee of<br />
the University, charged by the<br />
faculty "to review all policies and<br />
procedures in any way affecting<br />
women faculty, administration,<br />
staff and students" and to<br />
communicate this data to the<br />
faculty, administration, the student<br />
body and other committees.<br />
It is possible for women to be<br />
reasonable, logical and objective in<br />
their examination of their own<br />
status; it is possible for women to<br />
be feminine, polite and agreeable,<br />
as men hope we will be, and still be<br />
a force for constructive change. It<br />
is possible that changes in attitudes<br />
and relationships of both<br />
men and women may be<br />
necessary. Many men and women<br />
are often not aware of their own<br />
discriminatory practices and<br />
-<br />
.M i<br />
February 15, 1973<br />
attitudes toward women; the<br />
Committee hopes to point out any<br />
areas where change is possible or<br />
desirable.<br />
Hilda M. Wick<br />
Chairperson,<br />
Committee on the Status<br />
of Women<br />
Student Praises<br />
SUBA Program<br />
Editor, The Transcript:<br />
Academic discipline may provide<br />
us with the particular knowledge<br />
we need for a vocation, and it may<br />
prepare us to face and appreciate<br />
various trials throughout our lives.<br />
We acquire that discipline primarily<br />
through the conventional<br />
modes of learning with which we<br />
all are quite familiar. But too often<br />
these modes leave us unaware of<br />
realities which can stifle our<br />
potential capabilities; or worse,<br />
they can effect our failure as<br />
human beings.<br />
"Alfred Academia" suddenly<br />
discovers dog-eat-dogis-<br />
m and.<br />
sincerely regrets that in order to<br />
maintain his company's durability,<br />
as president of A.T.S.C. (Amalgamated<br />
<strong>To</strong>ilet Seats Covers) he<br />
must liquidate Flush Easy, Inc.,<br />
leaving his competitor's employees<br />
jobless.<br />
The university Alfred attended<br />
put questions to him, and he<br />
answered them. He shied away<br />
from raising questions he thought<br />
<strong>Continue</strong>d on page 5<br />
Marx Bros. On Parade<br />
By John Schroll<br />
anti-Establishme-<br />
For Pendy and Zeke:<br />
- In 1939, Mussolini issued one of<br />
his lesser known edicts. In it, he<br />
condemned the Marx Brothers and<br />
ordered his subjects not to laugh<br />
at them.<br />
The Marx Brothers were<br />
"America's madmen during its age<br />
of normalcy. They were excessive<br />
and profligate through the pinched<br />
years of the<br />
rising Fascism<br />
Depression.<br />
in Europe<br />
Amid<br />
and at<br />
home they raised the<br />
free spirited anarchy."<br />
banner of<br />
(So reads<br />
Paul Zimmerman's "The Marx<br />
Brothers at the Movies.")<br />
Two<br />
Night<br />
of<br />
at<br />
their<br />
the<br />
best films, "A<br />
Opera" and "A<br />
day at the<br />
Races," will be<br />
shown in Phillips<br />
Hall this I Saturday and -<br />
Sunday at 7:15 Schroll<br />
p.m. and 9:15 p.m.<br />
<strong>To</strong> see who preceded today's<br />
youth in outlandish dress and<br />
nt insults,<br />
recall<br />
the Marxes in the thirites and<br />
forties. Groucho: the master of the<br />
shady deal, leering eyes and the<br />
insult. Harpo: a duffel bag with<br />
legs, garish shirts and ties and a<br />
trench coat that conceals everything,<br />
including the kitchen sink.<br />
And Chico, both suspicious and<br />
ambitious and the "master of<br />
affable insanity."<br />
The Marx Brothers rocked the<br />
higher education boat long before<br />
the Free Speech Movement 1932.<br />
In "Horse Feathers" Groucho<br />
plays the new university president,<br />
hired to produce a winning<br />
football team.<br />
"Where would this college be<br />
without football. Have we got a<br />
stadium? Have we got a college?<br />
Well, we can't support both.<br />
<strong>To</strong>morrow we start tearing down<br />
the college." Where will the<br />
students sleep? "Where they<br />
always sleep, in the classrooms."<br />
Harpo and Chico are enrolled in<br />
an anatomy class. "Well, left get<br />
on with our lecture," says the<br />
professor.<br />
"I wish you'd go on without your<br />
lecture," remarks university president<br />
Groucho, who is observing<br />
the class. (Wish you had the<br />
nerve?) Groucho takes over: "Now<br />
in studying your basic metabolism,<br />
we first listen to your heartbeat.<br />
And if your heart beats anything<br />
but your diamonds and clubs, it's<br />
because your partner is cheating,<br />
or your wife." Nothing makes<br />
sense, it isn't witty, it's just<br />
nonsensical hilarity.<br />
Later, Chico and Harpo are<br />
assigned the task of kidnapping<br />
rival football players.<br />
"Your sister, she's a very sick<br />
man," says Chico, obviously an<br />
experienced con man. "Come, we<br />
take you in our car."<br />
"Yeh? Well, I have no sister." a<br />
player replies.<br />
"That's okay, we gotta no car,"<br />
answers Chico.<br />
If you have ever seen the Marx<br />
Brothers, you will know that to<br />
try to put Harpo's antics into mere<br />
words is to insult his genius. If you<br />
have never seen them, what about<br />
this Saturday and Sunday night?
February 15, 1973<br />
Editor's Note:, This is the second Colleges association, according to fessor of English and president of<br />
two-pa- rt of a series on the tenure Robert vice-preside- nt Lisensky, tne <strong>Ohio</strong> AAUP Private College STRAND<br />
process at <strong>Ohio</strong> <strong>Wesleyan</strong>.<br />
for academic affairs. Council, said, "We must be careful<br />
THEATRE j- -<br />
. T7,VJ<br />
By Judi Hetrick<br />
Most institutions have no more no1 to ''0k in' JB a department by<br />
tAil WINTER 11.<br />
614-363-49-<br />
14<br />
Faculty than 50-6- 0<br />
Affairs Editor<br />
per cent tenured," Riving too many members tenure."<br />
Lisensky said.<br />
PLAYING<br />
Protection of faculty members'<br />
academic freedom is one of the<br />
Tenure Grants Limited Most grievances concerning<br />
TONIGHT ONLY<br />
During the last decade,<br />
purposesof the tenure system. Itis<br />
tenure academic freedom are handled<br />
At 6:30 8 9:30 P.M.<br />
was relatively<br />
often viewed as a method of<br />
easy for new faculty through faculty structures, such as<br />
7th offering of<br />
members because of<br />
t assuring job security, however.<br />
the need for<br />
the Faculty Personnel Committee,<br />
the Film<br />
teachers, Lisensky said. He cited according to Violet Meek,<br />
Festival<br />
as- -<br />
in a<br />
After a prolessor receives<br />
series of ten<br />
this as a radical deDarture<br />
Li<br />
tenure he can only be dismissed<br />
from sociate prolessor ol cnemistry ana<br />
the 1950's when faculty members chairperson <strong>OWU</strong>'s AAUP I Mj m. Winner ol I<br />
for "adequate cause," such as the<br />
had to "break<br />
DEREK WALCOTT, poet, play- - phasing out of a department due to<br />
their harks" to get Committee on Academic Freedom<br />
ipnnro<br />
and Tenure. M wright and director, will read tignt nnances or uisin-teres- t.<br />
siuaeni Now, in light of the "financial<br />
selections from his poems<br />
mymmmmmmmummt<br />
crisis in private colleges, tenure R<br />
Tuesday in the Union at 4:15<br />
full-tim- e Of <strong>OWU</strong>'s 162 faculty<br />
grants are limited. "We are trying<br />
p.m. The New York Times called members, 115 (68 per cent) are<br />
not to create too many tenured E Ma<br />
Walcott a "front rank" English<br />
Fnrtnr I<br />
tenured, ims is ine nignesi positions so that tenured faculty<br />
poet.<br />
percentage in the Great Lakes i<br />
i , , . , 7S<br />
7 Academy<br />
Awaras<br />
0UW1M -<br />
"BEST I If I T&tfeNGE V,CTUREr<br />
it I (lih I ViS Irfl I<br />
Chappelear<br />
the floor is uneven and<br />
required frequent sanding.<br />
has them this spring. A cost estimate<br />
for repairs has not been made.<br />
Letters... <strong>Continue</strong>d from page 4<br />
were irrelevant to the subject at Dick Gregory, among others pro-han- d<br />
and soon forgot to question vide us with a special awareness<br />
altogether. Academics trained him which instructors cannot provide,<br />
for a vocation, but failed to pro- - Other factors, like the Union,<br />
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THE TRANSCRIPT<br />
Tenure Protects Jobs, Freedom<br />
' pvuic win iiul nave LU uc X Buff-o- n Shadow x: I " I<br />
For our dear departed Brother Party Murphy who died I<br />
Wednesday evening of Delirium Tremens.<br />
His spirit will carry on in the hearts of his Brothers. They will I<br />
mark his passing at a wake this Saturday. Feb. 17 at the Rota Rota f<br />
House, beginning at 8 p.m. Brothers wishing to pay their respects<br />
fare invited. Flowers and contributions will be gracefully accepted. T<br />
Page 5<br />
Adults $1.50<br />
Students 12 8 over $1.00<br />
<strong>Continue</strong>d from page 1<br />
Several theater students com- - The inside of the auditorium<br />
plained about stage floor con- - seems to have faults also, Gwynne<br />
struction. The two-inc- h top layer said. He called the sightlines<br />
of soft pine (the type used in most "atrocious" and added, "When<br />
theaters) was waived by the seated in the third row all you can<br />
sub-contracto- r, Cincinnati Floor- - see is the heads of the people in<br />
ing, for a two- - to three-inc- h the first two rows."<br />
plywood surface.<br />
Contractor Responsible<br />
"The pine floor would have been<br />
good for 15-2- dismissed for financial reasons,"<br />
he said.<br />
Although <strong>OWU</strong> is instituting no<br />
official quota for granting tenure<br />
d, across-the-boar- an unoflicial ft<br />
tenure quota wunin departments<br />
is practiced, Lisensky explained.<br />
Libuse Reed, associate pro-<br />
0 years, whereas the Wynne said the construction<br />
present floor may have to be contract holds the Knowlton<br />
replaced after five," a faculty Company, which built the theater,<br />
member said. "Whenever you roll responsible for materials and labor<br />
something heavy across the stage, after completion. Wynne said<br />
you can hear the floor breaking Knowlton has been informed of the<br />
up," he added. Gwynne claimed theater's defects and will correct<br />
-<br />
Play , STARTS FRIDAY<br />
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Monday 1 B ??<br />
I I Z extendable U 1 !<br />
February 19th applicator 6 Jm - . .<br />
'"VSSn f<br />
mote a questioning attitude or to function<br />
important questions which thusiasm<br />
he found he was unprepared to Gregory's<br />
en-rais- similarly. But my e<br />
stems from Dick<br />
appearance in Gray<br />
answer. Chapel Feb. 5, and I know many<br />
share my appreciation.<br />
Fortunately, there are factors at Purposely disregarding the<br />
<strong>Ohio</strong> <strong>Wesleyan</strong> which work to soda, meaning ohio <strong>Wesleyan</strong> has<br />
supplement the education students nffp A T pxnrpss m v prat ;t,ide<br />
normally receive through an .<br />
f academic meaning. The<br />
academic discipline, une sucn tendency to indoctrinate rather<br />
factor, SUBA, not only raises ,v tr, 0J..9 iiruonllv callo fnr<br />
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<strong>Wesleyan</strong> students, but it provides<br />
where; but tms improvement<br />
factual information concerning .,,. ; ,uof ,. ..<br />
current national and international<br />
Idnca<br />
affairs (which, we soon learn, have<br />
1 uui in wimi, ui nun yuii<br />
fortunately) extracurricular ac- -<br />
tivitinc Fnr orfinn like STTRA. Wp<br />
a profound effect on all our lives)<br />
owe special thanks to SUBA for its<br />
and suggests answers to the trials endeavor to stimulate-n- ot merely<br />
we must face through Us program suppiement-educat- ion at <strong>Ohio</strong><br />
IH oucaiei: train vcdi. 1 ncac<br />
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(<br />
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THE TRANSCRIPT<br />
Pag,e 6<br />
Peace Corps Recruits Here<br />
February 15, 1973<br />
Office. Peg Boecklin, director of ln terms of applications per<br />
the Placement Center, said, "Mc- - thousand students. Oberlin<br />
Caman interviewed about 25 Kenyon are other <strong>Ohio</strong> schools<br />
seniors," who were considering that have ranked in the top ten in<br />
applying. He is not scheduled to be recent years,<br />
on campus again this year. $190 Allowance<br />
Application and acceptance pro- - Columbus Peace Corps and<br />
The Peace Corps and Vista are<br />
cedures are handled entirely by two of six federal service<br />
Peace Corps people, Boecklin said, programs in the ACTION agency.<br />
Applicants will receive word from Volunteers receive a living<br />
Your Delaware Representatives<br />
DUNKIN JEWLERS<br />
7 N. Sandusky St.<br />
'They do not love<br />
that do not show their love.<br />
William Shakespeare<br />
the Columbus Peace Corps Office ' about Per<br />
a'Cf, month- - McCaman said. It may<br />
Vista recruiter. Noel McCaman, within three months.<br />
,,-iIo- h .cW According to McCaman. <strong>OWU</strong> vary according to the community<br />
6-- 7 Feb. to recruit volunteers from ranks first in<br />
in<br />
the<br />
which you<br />
nation<br />
are working."<br />
in a<br />
<strong>OWU</strong>. Student interviews were survey conducted by<br />
McCaman who served as a Vista<br />
the national<br />
scheduled by the Placement headquarters of the Peace Corps<br />
volunteer in Pauhuska, Okla. said<br />
his living allowance and use of a<br />
and Sovernnlen'' car was rnore than<br />
adequate<br />
McCaman worked to establish a<br />
low-incom- e credit union for a<br />
black, white and Indian com- ORCHESIS DANCE THEATER opens a three-da- y engagement<br />
munity. He said, "Personally I tonight in Chappelear Drama Center at 8 p.m. Practicing for'The<br />
have many valuable memories Truth Is...," one of seven numbers, are 1. to r. freshmen Karen<br />
from the experience and some Greaney and Helen Urion, senior Kathy Stebbins and freshmen<br />
lasting friendships."<br />
Susan Robinson and Denise Whitmire. Admission is free.<br />
An individual's experience depends<br />
largely on his supervisor<br />
and the degree of organization in More Jobs For Women, Blacks<br />
the local program. Graduate<br />
No ex-volunteers,<br />
schools look very favorably on<br />
news isn't such good news graduate schools so far. Boecklin<br />
job-huntin- g<br />
McCaman said.<br />
for <strong>OWU</strong> seniors. said the scene "looks bleak'' for<br />
"All liberal arts fields, including<br />
This year's market remains teachers and law and medical<br />
familiarity with Spanish and tight. The situation is easing, com- - school applicants,<br />
French are in demand," McCaman<br />
pared to last year, said Peg Although statistics are un- -<br />
said. He called the arts an(j Boecklin, director of planning and available, job opportunities for<br />
sciences graduate the backbone p'acement. blacks and females have improved,<br />
of both programs<br />
Although 100 per cent of the Boecklin said. "Men and women<br />
Boecklin said the Placement Of- - senlors nave registered at tne have the same joo opportunities<br />
fice rarely hears from volunteers Placement Office, less than ten this year," Boecklin said.<br />
while they are serving. seniors have been placed in Due to strong federal pressure,<br />
business and industry must prove<br />
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improving opportunities for blacks<br />
females. "White males<br />
begun to realize that there is more<br />
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only job discrimination this year is<br />
. anti-whit- e male," Boecklin said.<br />
4fr Although career-oriente- d women<br />
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r they are a minority at <strong>OWU</strong>,,<br />
Boecklin said. "Most women on<br />
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February 15, 1973<br />
J<br />
THF, TRANSCRIPT<br />
odd DoMe toys dtomffr<br />
Some inner-cit- y ghettos have special schools. For little<br />
boys who don't talk.<br />
Not mute little boys. But children so withdrawn, so afraid<br />
of failure, they cannot make the slightest attempt to do anything<br />
at which they might fail.<br />
Some don't talk. Some don't listen. Most don't behave. And<br />
all of them don't learn.<br />
One day someone asked us to help.<br />
Through Kodak, cameras and film were distributed to<br />
teachers. The teachers gave the cameras to the kids and told<br />
them to take pictures.<br />
And then the miracle. Little boys who had never said anything,<br />
looked at the pictures and began to talk. They said<br />
"This is my house." "This is my dog." "This is where I like<br />
to hide." They began to explain, to describe, to communicate.<br />
And once the channels of communication had been opened,<br />
they began to learn.<br />
We're helping the children of the inner-cit- y. And<br />
we're<br />
also helping the adults. We're involved in inner-cit- y job programs.<br />
<strong>To</strong> train unskilled people in useful jobs.<br />
What does Kodak stand to gain from this? Well, we're<br />
showing how our products can help a teacher and maybe<br />
creating a whole new market. And we're also cultivating<br />
young customers who will someday buy their own cameras<br />
and film. But more than that, we're cultivating alert, educated<br />
citizens. Who will someday be responsible for our society.<br />
After all, our business depends on our society. So we care<br />
what happens to it.<br />
Kodak<br />
More than a business.<br />
V,<br />
Page 7
Page 8<br />
By Paul Kaliner<br />
The Bishop cagers continued<br />
their "season of frustration" Saturday<br />
in a 76-5- day (out with an ankle sprain) hurt<br />
the team considerably.<br />
Rieker is expected to return to<br />
4 loss to <strong>Ohio</strong> Con- the lineup before the OC tourney<br />
ference leader Muskingum at Ed- which begins next Thursday.<br />
wards Gvm. The defeat was the Shannon remarked that the<br />
fifth straight for <strong>Ohio</strong> <strong>Wesleyan</strong> Bishops did a "good job" in<br />
(5-1- 4 overall, de-fensi- ng<br />
Muskingum's leading<br />
3-- 8 in the <strong>Ohio</strong> Con-<br />
ference) since the Jan. 26 win over<br />
Kenyon.<br />
Coach Frank Shannon said he is<br />
"bewildered by our inconsistent<br />
play" and added that the absence<br />
of senior Mike Rieker last Satur- -<br />
Mermen<br />
Capsize<br />
Capita<br />
The Bishop tankers captured<br />
their third victory of the season by<br />
beating Capital University 78-4- 2<br />
last Saturday. This brings the<br />
Bishops' overall record to three<br />
wins and four losses.<br />
Saturday, <strong>OWU</strong>'s swimmers<br />
will be among eight schools<br />
participating in the Great Lakes<br />
Colleges Association (GLCA) swim<br />
meet. Wabash College in Crawfordsville,<br />
Ind., will be the host for<br />
the tournament. GLCA invited<br />
four colleges from the <strong>Ohio</strong><br />
Conference and four schools<br />
outside the OC.<br />
In last Saturday's meet against<br />
Capital, the Bishops won 9 of 13<br />
events. Coach Dick Gordin said he<br />
was pleased with the victory and<br />
the overall performance of his<br />
team.<br />
Standouts in the meet were<br />
seniors John Ford and co-capta-<br />
in<br />
Chris Copeland and freshman<br />
Mark Raedle.<br />
nv<br />
if Mu!<br />
JUNIOR JOE CAMPBELL 40<br />
attempts a tip-i- n against OC<br />
leader Muskingum last Saturday.<br />
C M A<br />
UNDERSTAND<br />
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Freshman Jeff . Foerster - has<br />
been named Athlete of the Week<br />
for his one minute pin over Deni-son'-s<br />
158-pound<br />
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This is Foerster's first AOW.<br />
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THE TRANSCRIPT<br />
scorer Gene Ford (held to 14<br />
points Saturday), "but our<br />
problem all season long has been<br />
the fact that we can stop the<br />
opposing team's big gun but not<br />
the whole team"<br />
The season has been "frustrating"<br />
for the team. Shannon<br />
conceded and said he feels the<br />
players "are waiting for it to end."<br />
The end of the regular season<br />
comes Saturday against visiting<br />
Oberlin, an OC foe which <strong>OWU</strong><br />
last vanquished four years ago.<br />
Sports Sis!<br />
SATURDAY<br />
Swimming <strong>OWU</strong> at Great Lakes<br />
Colleges Association meet,<br />
Crawfordsville, Ind.<br />
Wrestling-OW- U at GLCA meet,<br />
Holland, Mich.<br />
Basketball <strong>OWU</strong> vs. Oberlin,<br />
7:30 p.m., Edwards Gym.<br />
SUNDAY.<br />
Bowling-I.- M. Championship Turkey<br />
City vs. Sig Ep, 3 p.m.,<br />
Union Lanes.<br />
rUODItfl I1UIMCU "We're wrestling better now<br />
tnan at 'me tms season- -<br />
AthlOtG Of Wk I We're improving all the time,"<br />
commented wrestling coach Ray<br />
"x Leech after <strong>OWU</strong>'s two victories<br />
last week.<br />
Thus, he projected that the<br />
Bishops (now 4-- 5) are "ready" for<br />
Saturday's Great Lakes Colleges<br />
Association (GLCA) tourney at<br />
Hope College (Holland, Mich.).<br />
. 0 V, T - , <strong>Ohio</strong> <strong>Wesleyan</strong> won the GLCA<br />
two years ago and finished second<br />
to Wabash last year.<br />
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February 15, 1973<br />
'LIE. i<br />
LEADING SCORER senior Dan Penrod 42 has a shot blocked in<br />
last Saturday's loss to Muskingum. Penrod totaled a game high of 20<br />
points in the 76-5- 4 defeat. See story, left. Photo By Cindy Hudson<br />
Improving Matmen Head For GLCA<br />
Last week's victories an 18-1- 2 Recording pins against Denison<br />
triumph over Wittenberg on Feb. were seniors Barry Reutter<br />
(heavyweight),<br />
n7<br />
Joe Coy (190),<br />
anda a 44-- a a 6 routi o f visiting Deni- -<br />
sophomores Ken Kadel (177) and<br />
sion last Saturday undoubtedly Phil Wolf (126) and freshman Jeff<br />
gave the Bishops a needed uplift. Foerster (158).<br />
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