the wooster voice (wooster, oh), 1972-02-18

9
e College of Wooster Open Works e Voice: 1971-1980 "e Voice" Student Newspaper Collection 2-18-1972 e Wooster Voice (Wooster, OH), 1972-02-18 Wooster Voice Editors Follow this and additional works at: hps://openworks.wooster.edu/voice1971-1980 is Book is brought to you for free and open access by the "e Voice" Student Newspaper Collection at Open Works, a service of e College of Wooster Libraries. It has been accepted for inclusion in e Voice: 1971-1980 by an authorized administrator of Open Works. For more information, please contact [email protected]. Recommended Citation Editors, Wooster Voice, "e Wooster Voice (Wooster, OH), 1972-02-18" (1972). e Voice: 1971-1980. 32. hps://openworks.wooster.edu/voice1971-1980/32

Upload: others

Post on 14-Feb-2022

3 views

Category:

Documents


0 download

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: The Wooster Voice (Wooster, OH), 1972-02-18

The College of WoosterOpen Works

The Voice: 1971-1980 "The Voice" Student Newspaper Collection

2-18-1972

The Wooster Voice (Wooster, OH), 1972-02-18Wooster Voice Editors

Follow this and additional works at: https://openworks.wooster.edu/voice1971-1980

This Book is brought to you for free and open access by the "The Voice" Student Newspaper Collection at Open Works, a service of The College ofWooster Libraries. It has been accepted for inclusion in The Voice: 1971-1980 by an authorized administrator of Open Works. For more information,please contact [email protected].

Recommended CitationEditors, Wooster Voice, "The Wooster Voice (Wooster, OH), 1972-02-18" (1972). The Voice: 1971-1980. 32.https://openworks.wooster.edu/voice1971-1980/32

Page 2: The Wooster Voice (Wooster, OH), 1972-02-18

Talking about racismhas been and showssigns of continuing tobe a futile endeavor -

Nate Speights - 1970

i

ffiC Pennies Objectives

f. IIT

TO.V V 7 y

nCD

isPUBLISHED BY THESTUDENTS OF THE

COLLEGE OFWOOSTER

Wooster, OhioFriday, February 18,

1972

Volume LXXXVIIINumber 15

Chairman Russ Jones, afterthe Human Relations Com-

missions meeting said, "It'shard to come out of this kindof meeting with concreteplans."

by David Thomas

The second meeting of theHuman Relations Commissionwith representatives of cam-pus organizations ended lastThursday with the formationof a set of racial relationsgoals but "no concrete plansof action," according to Rus-

sell Jones, chairman of thecommission.

However, after further meet-

ings, Jones hopes to issue astatement by March of "over-all human relations goals andspecific plans of action forthe coming year."

"It's' hard to come out ofthis kind of large meetingwith concrete plans," Jonessaid. There were 60 students,faculty, administrators andtownies at the meeting whichwas addressed by J. GarberDrushal, president of the col-

lege, at its conclusion.Several student participants

expressed "disappointment"with the results of the threehour meeting. Most felt theproceedings were "too philo-sophical" with too little em-

phasis on action or specifics."All the talk was good be-

cause of the communication,"one student said, "but unlessa few people take it uponthemselves to do more thantalk there won't be anythingdone."

Another student said shefelt as if "we were all stand-ing around waiting for some-

thing to happen.""There is a definite need

for follow-u- p meetings," saidJohn Lahr, a faculty member.

The meeting was brokeninto seven discussion groups-Housi- ng,

Student Recruitment,Curriculum, Town-Gow- n,

Faculty and Staff Recruit-ment, Campus Organizations,and Athletics. Each groupcontinued on page four

It's not the rap; it's the map"It's not the man; it's the

plan. It's not the rap; it'sthe map." This quote fromOzzie Davis summarized aspeech by Alex Poinsett, Sen-

ior Staff Editor of Ebony mag-

azine, on "Black Politics:A Critique, A History."Speaking before an audience .

in McGaw Chapel Thursday,February 10, Black ForumSpeaker Poinsett emphasizeda need for black political mo-

bilization."Black people have been

engaged in politics ever since1919, when the first blackperson was brought to Amer-ica," Poinsett said. However,since that, time there hasbeen a "systematic exclusionof us (blacks) from meaning-ful participation in politics."The American political sys-tem, he stated, had managedto keep the role of the blackin politics an insignificantone. "At best, we have in-

fluence on the American po-

litical system only from the

outside We have. . . alwaysbeen the object, not the sub-ject," he went on. "We havebeen the horse, not the dri-

ver."Poinsett traced the develop-

ment of black discontent inthe 20th century, to the six-

ties, "an explosive decade.

m r

I J J ) '

Hi.II C

. A .

Alex Poinsett

Black folks stood tall, proudof their blackness." He citedattacks by Dr. Martin LutherKing, Jr. and Southern stu-

dents upon "America's bas-

tions of racism" the church,schools, labor unions, andpolitical parties.

Poinsett conceded that"superficially" in the seven-

ties there has been a weaken-ing of the thrust behind theblack political movement, butBlack Power has not fizzledout: "We have moved to dif-

ferent struggles against Amer-

ican racism." Blacks haverealized that revolution doesnot happen overnight, and thatthe structure of American in-

stitutions is designed to pre-

vent radical change, accordingtn Pninsptr. Therefore therehas been "increased involve-ment in electoral politics,"that is, working within thepolitical structure.

Blacks, said Poinsett, are"powerless in a nation thatcontinued on page three

EDITOR ADVERTISING MANAGER

MANAGING EDITOR SPORTS EDITOR1

BUSINESS MANAGER CIRCULATION MANAGER

:TV i I

1 '-

i ' ! I).

"

j

K"'

' ' ' N '

' ' i' 'v

m 1 " ZL ''

i -

':T. .

'

i;, MfT-- i: ; ': A "

. ... .. ; ' f v ' t.

' '

H.

i 1 r "

Applicants must be stronger than .

a locomotive, willing to sacrifice

mind and body, able to leap inept

staff members in a single bound,

and faster than a speeding bullet.

Check one:

() Applicant is faster than a

speeding bullet

O A slow bullet

() Able to recognize bullet

() Able to shoot gun

( ) Injures himself when attempting

to shoot gun

Application may be made to Nate

Speights, vAo, disguised as a

mild mannered editor of a small

midwestem college newspaper,

fights a never ending battle for

Truth, Justice, and the American

Way. And as we all know .....

This is a

job forSuperman

Page 3: The Wooster Voice (Wooster, OH), 1972-02-18

Page Two

Editoral

What you are is what you getI was asked the other day. "Why isn't the VOICE bustling"

and my reply was, in short, "because the campus isn't bust-ling."

Ours is a campus of mute dreamers, and in our silence ourdreams begin to do nothing more than drive us deeper into apool of intellectual, and emotional stagnation.

Voice plays a reflective role in our Community, and if theimage n nolds of the campus is one of a non-motil- e, cynicaland dying social atmosphere, Voice can, and will be littleelse.

The situation we find ourselves in at Woosfer is one ofsignificant potential, its been said before, and it will be saidagain. But potential as long as it remains that, is just asdead as it would be had it no promise at all.

As long as we are content and remain folded inside ourworlds of dope, books and benign bitching, the campus will bewhat it always has been.

The solution is to be found in casting off the cloud ofpessimistic passivism that smothers us in its grayness, anddevelop, for ourselves, a community feeling ofspontaneousactivism. The urge to do, anything, is what we lack. Wemust not yet be concerned with what to do, for the plans anddesigns will follow. We are in wanting of the will to activity,and until this happens, our roles and relationships in thisschool will remain submerged in our own muteness.

Commentay

"The Social Code Myth"

by Stanley E. PerdueThrough the years man has continually put down on paper

numerous things he has a fleeting belief in. One example offleeting beliefs is very much exemplified in the Codes ofConduct each living unit has to submit to Campus Council.The very essence of the Code of Conduct is to give the col-lege an inkling about how sweet you are going to be the com-

ing year. Are you going to get in at a respectable hour or areyou going to get those distasteful young men out of your roomafter 1:00 a.m.? Often I have wondered who we are we turn-ing these codes in for, for the students benefit or for somescrutinizing trustee who thinks girls should be in their roomseach night by 8:00 darning socks for their boyfriends who arebusy studying chemistry, physics and all those manly sports.

- Let us take a look at what exactly goes on when you turnin a Code of Conduct. The big thing this year is the raceclause that all college' living units had to include in theircodes. In essence you had to tell how many times you weregoing to talk to Blacks publicly and with sincerity. You hadto list the times, dates and preferably refreshments served.Also a big issue in the codes was the matter of Open House.A lot of people took the impressive jump to 24 hours whichflopped in their faces. Some took more moderate steps to 3:00each night. What precisely does all of this mean? Well, I'lltell you, absolutely nothing. I do admit there were a numberof very good looking codes which had everything C.C. wantedto see. C.C. praised them and passed them. Dormitory talk:Now that it has passed.let's act natural. It takes little effortto write a good Code of Conduct, if you know what a good codecontains. It doesn't take a group of people examining their deepbeliefs on paper to write a code. So who exactly are we stag-ing this show for?

Let it be known that all of the students are not con menand women but some are very sincere. It's a pity that theirsincerity is not always exemplified in their Codes of Conductbut shown in their everyday experiences. I praise those peoplewho put down precisely what they believe, be it 24 hours openhouse or bars on all women dorm's windows. This kind of ag-

gression is healthy and from it stems great things. My onlyhope is that Campus Council along with the college community

' reexamine their priorities and actually look and listen to thestudents for valuable help.

I earnestly believe that phrases such as "punitive meas-ures" will disappear when students feel -- free to submit whatthey as a living unit feel is the truth.

Publish sd weekly during the academic year except holiday and examinationperiod by the students of The College of Wooater. Opinion expressed in edi-torial and feature are not necessarily those of the staff and should not beconstrued a representing administration policy.This newspaper welcome signed letters to the editor. Address all correspondenceto VOICE. The College of Wooster, Wooster, Ohio 44691.Member of United States Press Association and Ohio Newspaper Association.Entered as second class matter in the Post Office, Wooster, Ohio. SubscriptionRate: $6.00 per year, 2nd das; $9.00 per year, 1st das.

NATE SPEIGHTS, Editor

LYNN WAGNER, Managing Editor

DAVE BERKEY, SportsBILL SPEARMON, Buuneu Mgr.

JOHN MORLEY, CirculationBOB KETTLEWELL, Editorial Intern

Ststf: fcferri Wan am alter, Rob Reid, Richard Kielbowics, David ThomasJohn Sharp, Anne Matthews. Sally Drigge, Chuc Garver, Jeff Adair,Beth McMillenr Stanley Perdue, Deb Neuswanger, Deb Randall, LarrySprague, Karl Zeleny.

VOICE Friday, February 18, 1972

Going home ...by Chuc

Going home is such a rideGoing home is such a rideIsn't going home a low and

lonely ride.-- Dory Previn

Mythical Kings and IguanasFollowing the lead of many

of my fellow students - not tomention a novel by DorisLessing and a movie starringBrenda Vaccarro and Jan-Mich-ael

Vincent - I decidedto vacate these scholarly prem-ises and join those who were"Going Home".

My bank book being what itisn't, a friend and I decidedto opt for inexpensive Akroninstead of Michigan where myimmediate (nuclear?) familyresides. Akron is the homeof my semi-liberat- ed - sheowns, works in, and runs ahardware store - Grandmother,and her sister Pauline, whosebaking hobby produced no lessthan 6000 Christmas cookies,the crumbs of which are spreadvia "Care" packages through-out North Eastern Ohio.

Ric and I arrived Fridayevening and began stuffingourselves almost immediatelv-ther- e

is something about beingable to eat what you wantwhen you want it that makesone ravenous.

In addition to the food, weconsumed at least an hour'sworth of family gossip andthree times as much television.The latter, we discovered, hasdeveloped an exploitive at-

traction for the Jewish wifeand mother. After a couplehours worth of "You ate itRalph" and "This is snow;S-N-O-

-W! Snow!!" we beganto wonder "Where is the JDLwhen we need them? "

Gor'chaDear-whoever-is-in-charge-of-V-

oice:

No, No, NO. Applications for the Euro-pean Comparative Urban Problems quarter,or for any other international program, arenot to be found in the possession of Floyd

SGA Reform?Dear Editor,

We would like to propose some reformsfor the election of Student GovernmentAssociation officers. During the week oftheir election we would suggest that thecandidates either address the student bodywith short campaign speeches during aConvocation meeting or print a policystatement for campus-wid- e distribution.

This will allow the candidates to maketheir viewpoints and qualifications forholding office. Hopefully it will alsoprovoke some thought on issues, programs,and the role of student government on ourcampus. It will give the candidates theopportunity, if they choose to use it, todetermine in their own minds whetherstudent government is going to become asignificant part of our school.

The question of how to seek and bestrepresent the student interest could beraised. Whether the governing power oncampus should be vested in S.G.A.'sbroadly based membership instead of thetwelve-memb- er Campus Council (which

HOPES SOMEOHECm

Watts. They are to be got from the Internat-ional Programs Office in Babcock.

Yours,with emphasis,

Floyd Watts

could instead function as a final arbiter)is another matter. - Should the StudentGovernment Association, through a revi-talized General Assembly assert a leader-ship role on campus, students represent-ing fellow students in the democratic tra-dition?

These are several issues that could beraised at the discretion of the candidates.We believe that campaign speeches orpolicy statements for candidates for thestudent government offices of President,Vice President of Educational Affairs,Secretary, and Treasurer would be advan-tageous in letting us students know moreabout the qualifications and proposals ofthose we elect to run our student govern-ment.

Sincerely,

Charles SchollenbergerBeth BartlettPeter RosemondCarla HirschfeldJeff Tassey

Home Sweet HomeMy cousin Susan came Sat-

urday morning, via her fatherthe banker, from the midwestversion of the American DreamMachine, Hudson, Ohio. De-spite the fact that she incitedRay (our cousin) to wake Ricand I up - another "plus" ingoing home is, there, a bedis a bed is a bed ... insteadof a mattress on chicken wire-Su- e

is a terrific person, andlistening to her rich tales ofthe High School blues helpedpass the time when I ran outof people for Ric to meet.This wasn't often, as the castincluded everyone from myAunt Coralie, whose ensuingprofessorship in art at AkronU. qualifies her for that eliteclassification known as Sub-

urban Bohemia, to my 12 yearold cousin Kurt who's havingdifficulty getting his guppiesto . . . make babies!

The rest of Saturday includ-ed American Bandstand, a carbur of "the Rubber City" --

one hasn't lived until he orshe has been taken on a ridearound Akron with a 16 yearold speed demon behind thewheel who is "practicing"for his driver's test. ThankGod Ray waited till we return-ed before telling me he wasn'tinsured. The day culminatedwith a great late show called"The Opposite Sex" completewith feminist plot: Girl getsboy, girl gets rid of boy, girlgets boy.

We left Sunday afternoonfollowing a dinner with Su-

san's family. My uncle rippedalong the icy roads - I was re-

minded of our "tour" the pre-vious day, like father likeson? - while Ric and I assuredhim CKLW would not be haz-ardous to his health. Slouch-ing down in the cool vinylseat, "hearing" the motor

sounds bouncing ott the dash-board, I began to reconstructwhat the weekend had meantfor me.

One question that seemedto be on everybody's lips wasvarious forms of "How are yougetting along"? The moretime I spent in Akron theeasier it got to answer, and Ithink I know why. More thangoing home, Akron meantGoing Away from school. In

.otherwords, the trip was re-

action not action; which in-

cluded everything from bath-tubs to being able to get apiece of coffee cake at 2:30a.m.

This fact, coupled with an-other, provides the crux for agood portion of our experience.Certain by-questi- ons preceed-e- d

the "getting along" one.Virtually all of these referredto the physicality of collegelife; How's your room? Whatwere your grades? Are drugswidely used on campus? Haveyou lost weight? Little or nointerest in what I was learn-ing, less on what it meantemotionally to be in college.And as we exchanged dialogueat the dinner table and in theliving room of this Halfwayhouse (in the sense that thiswas and was not my "family"who did and did not "know"me) we found it very easy towrap conversations aroundhardy parties, funky badmin-ton classes, and burnt lasagne.

Indeed a paradox arose: wewere being judged for a "col-lege life (style)", we werenot living.

I'm not sure if this has any-thing to say of the "culturalgap" that the media would '

have us believe exists be-tween the students and theinhabitants of the "realworld." All I know is that

continued on page fiv

Page 4: The Wooster Voice (Wooster, OH), 1972-02-18

Friday, February 18, 1972

CC (Discusses Desirabilityyv voucii uinicoirpoinnffiioin)

Incorporating the Voicewould provide the Collegewith some protection from li-

bel suits, but there is "noclear-c- ut answer" Jim Turnerreported to Campus Councilafter his conversation withattorney John Veney.

Veney cautioned, Turnersaid, that incorporation wouldnot provide an air-tig- ht an-

swer. A party suing the papermight also bring suit againstthe College because thesmall assets of the paper maynot cover damages.

The paper could also fileas a separate tax exemptorganization to protect theCollege's tax exempt status.President Drushal is worriedthat any political endorse-ments in the Voice, whichare prohibited by a tax exemptstatus, would jeopardize theCollege's position. Turnernoted that the separate statusdoes not require incorporation.

Turner also told Councilthat it would cost $300 inlawyer's fees to incorporateand $50 to the state for aprofit status and $25 for anon-pro- fit status.

Veney told Turner that "hedidn't see the need for incor-poration," but conceded thatif he were the College Presi-dent he would undoubtedlyfeel differently.

Henry Copeland feels thata more closely managed organ-ization would result from in-

corporation. A profit-maki- ng

corporation, he added, wouldloose its tax exempt statusand could make political en-

dorsements.Karen McCleary expressed

concern that a corporation

MORE ON

continued from page 1

dotes on power." The "powerlevers" large accumulationof wealth, control of corpora-tions, the military-industri- al

complex, the crime syndicate,and organized labor rest inthe hands of whites; blackshave only their numbers goingfor them.

Poinsett, who later describ-ed himself as a black nationa-list, defined black nationalismas "neither love of violence

WASHINGTON (CPS) --Thetotal freshman enrollment at4-y- ear colleges is down for thefirst time since World War IIsays a recent Carnegie Com-mission on Higher Educationreport.

According to the study, the444 four-ye- ar institutions par-ticipating in the study reported40,600 freshman vacancies.Commission Chairman ClarkKerr pointed out that if therate of the decrease was ap-plied to the 1,500 four-ye- ar

institutions in the nation thetotal may reach 110,000 inall. That increase, then,would amount to 14 percent .

over 1970.The total undergraduate en-

rollment increased by 2.4 per-cent. A little more than halfof the freshmen decreases wasin private colleges, the re-

port said. .

Commission Chairman Kerrsaid that registrars gave thedecline in job opportunitiesand the poor economic situ-ation as reasons for the

might not be able to sellenough stock on campus.Other Council members saidthat Council would be able toguarantee a certain number ofsubscriptions.

Turner, Chairman of thePublications Subcommittee,told Council that there werefour, alternatives. One wouldinvolve revisions in the pre-sent Publications Constitu-tion. The second is the samebut would incorporate Coun- -

(CPS) A Student was ridinghome the other day on the busand a woman sat down nextto her.

As people on buses are aptto do, they started talkingabout various things. (Olderpeople often try to start rele-vant conversations with col-lege kids on buses. Have youever noticed that?)

Anyway, the conversationswung around to welfare, andthe woman was rather upset.

"I can't understand how allthese people who are on wel-fare can just sit back andtake money for nothing. Theydon't work, so why shouldthey get anything?" Thus shewent on and on.

Finally the student askedthe woman, "What about thepeople in Appalachia?They've been laid off theirjobs a long time since indus-tries moved out of the area.They can't go anywhere else.What are they supposed todo?"

"Their own country shouldtake care of them," theman replied.

pDirDnor hatred of whites, but aheightened sense of aware-ness" of one' blackness. Ablack nationalist, he said,takes American history ser-iously and thinks of blacksin terms of "we rather thanthe impersonal they."

Poinsett discussed thequestion of whether, at thispoint, blacks should work out-side or inside the "racistframework" of the party sys-tem. Although blacks havetried establishing a blackthird party, he stated, for themost part "blacks are asmuch locked into the racisttwo-par- ty system" as theyare into the entire Americanpolitical system. He showedhow the Democratic partysince Franklin D. Roosevelt'spresidency has maneuveredthe black vote and retainedthe support of the majority ofblack voters. However, al-

though 20 of the member-ship or seven million Dem-ocrats are black, blacks aregrossly misrepresented inparty structures.

The issue of black major-par-ty

candidates is one whichmust be decided by blacks,Poinsett said. A writer forthe New York Times has sug-gested a "moderate militantblack" as a Democratic vice-president- ial

candidate. Thewriter, declared Poinsett,knows nothing about the po-

litical aspirations of blacksand is not qualified to makesuch a judgment. "We willnot leave these important

VOICE

cil Chairman Glenn Bucher'sproposals. The third possi-bility would be a non-pro- fit

corporation. Last, he offereda profit-maki- ng corporationas an alternative.

The Subcommittee was di-

rected by Council to recom-mend three model Voice organ-izations next week. The firstwould combine alternativesone and two involving revi-sions in the PublicationsConstitution. And Turner isto have attorney's draw-u- p

models of a profit corporationand a non-pro- fit corporationfor alternatives two and three.

Council passed Dunn Housesocial code with 4 voting infavor, 2 opposing and 4 ab- -.

staining.Doris Coster presented the

report of the Social CodeSubcommittee. The proposalswere tentative, she advised.If adopted, living units wouldonly have to organize a gov-

erning body within the unit.A description of the govern-ment would be submitted to .

Council. There would be noindividual social code, butrather each unit would abideby the College Social Code.

Next week there will bediscussions on the possiblechanges in the Voice andconsideration of the CollegeSocial Code.

(CPS) Private James Ste-

phen Cleghorn, of Huntsville,Alabama, was sentenced tofour months in Army prison be-

cause of ornamentation wornon his uniform. The ornamen-tation was not the now-fami-l- iaf

peace symbol, but thecross.

150lksu

decisions to whites," hestressed.

Although "clearly, thecoming presidential electionchallenges blacks," Poinsettstated, "equally importantwill be the extent of our po-litical participation betweenelections." He suggestedgoals toward which blacksshould motivate their increas-ing political power: betteremployment, housing, crimeprotection, black education,health care, urban centers,and economic aid to Africaand the Third World. . Blackpolitical activism in theseareas, he said, has potentialfor "triggering the develop-ment of viable black alterna-tives" to present systems.

(CPS)--" A "Dial A Racist"service has been establishedin Seattle. By dialing MA2-062- 3,

one may hear FrancisTroy, the self-proclaim-

ed

leader of a white power move-ment deliver diatribes such as"Negroes do not want to beour brothers. They do notwant to be part of our culture,and they do not want to behavelike civilized human beings.They can't; it's just not theirnature." '

Troy claims that "the Biblescriptures tell the white manto completely destroy all Ne-

groes from the face of theearth."

Review

Brtmfcarbby Ros Reid

Television has reduced the fine art of comic melodramato mass-produce- d, soppy melodrama. Once, the empathy ex-perienced in observing the desperate plight of a virtuousheroine was made entertaining by light humor and a happyending. Today, our heroine is rarely virtuous; neither is therehumor in her plight nor any ending at all.

The second College-Communi- ty Production The Drunkard(or, Down With Demon Drink), adapted by Brian Burton anddirected here by Dr. Schutz of the Speech Department, provid-ed a refreshing break from the tedium of modern melodrama.The play, given in the Little Theatre February 9-1-2, was athoroughly entertaining rendition of an old-sty- le "boo the vi-llaincheer the hero" melodrama. Though the writer cannotjudge the production's authenticity, perhaps it is enough tosay that the atmosphere, at least, was authentic.

The villain, of course, was the key character in the play,and the role was played to the hilt by Donald Curie, a commun-ity participant in the production. As the "Deep-eye- d Villainand Foul Tempter" Lawyer Cribbs, Curie provoked not onlyloud boos and hisses but bombardments of paper wads, eggs,and marshmallows with his thoroughly evil portrayal.

In the title role was another community player, Will Logan.As the fallen hero Edward Middleton, Logan, whose perform-ance was also nearly flawless, was the object of a great dealof the audience's pity and concern.

Suspender-snappin-g freshman Jim Finney, as Edward'sfoster brother William, emerged as the true hero and nearlystole the show with his depiction of a good-natur- ed countrybumpkin, bringing on the loudest cheers with his triumphs overthe villain.

Another freshman, Debbie Arnold, was well cast as Mary,"An Innocent Flower," a widow's daughter who by her ex-treme goodness and blushing maiden virtue captivates ourhero and becomes his wife. As Agnes, William's sister, soph-omore Cornelia Brenneman presented a passionate and evenappealing portrayal of insanity. The classic role of the spin-ster was even included, and Very humorously played by EmilyCurie, another community participant.

Among the lesser roles, the performance. of Raymond Mc-C- all

(of the English Department) stood out. As the human-itarian Arden Rencelaw, McCall's performance had an exagger-ated stiffness which added a great deal to the humorouseffect. The real stars of The Drunkard were the audience.There was rarely an awkward pause; moments of suspensewere ad-libb- ed by the playgoers.

The production crews should be commended for a sensa-tional finale. The uproarious chase scene in which the villainis finally apprehended and "good wins in the end" was anunforgettable masterpiece. The olio acts of the BarbersFour, Bob and Chuck, and "the twinkling toes of Maria Lake"also served to break the near-monoto- ny of the extended melo-drama. And all to the "rippling ragtime rhythms of BettyCessna" on the honky-ton- k piano ...

"Applause! Applause!"

exhibitionand saleoriginalgraphics purchases may be charged

WOOSTER COLLEGE Mon- - Feb' 21

ART CENTER 9 A.M. to 5 P.M.

CHAGALL, BASKIN, ROUAULT, DAUMIER AND MANY OTHERS

F ARRANGED BY FERDINAND ROTEN GALLERIES

BALTIMORE, MARYLAND

Page Three

Good luck to the Fighting ScotWRESTLING TEAM ;

SWIMMING TEAMWOMEN'S BASKETBALL TEAM

MEN'S INTER-TRAC- K TEAM

andTHE MEN'S BASKETBALL TEAM

in the upcoming meets and games.

TheWooster Lumber Co

Across from the Fairgrounds Phone 262-801- 5

Page 5: The Wooster Voice (Wooster, OH), 1972-02-18

Poge Four

MORE ON

VOICE Friday, February 18, 1972

(ConmiiMDSsi'om Mates Kecwinnieinidla'SDdDiniscontinued from page 1

was charged with fixing defi-nite goals by which campusrace relations could be im-

proved in its. area of concern.After 45 minutes of discus-

sion, the groups presented thefollowing suggestions:

HOUSING1. Racism cannot be elimi-nated by large scale, inter-racial housing, rather, moresmall group housing seems tobe a better solution.2. An evaluation should bemade of the sections' use ofthe'r dorms to see if someform of small group housingmight put the dorms to betteruse.STUDENT RECRUITMENT1. A black, preferably a wo-

man, should be hired for theAdmissions Office.2. More effort should be madeto acquaint black high schoolcounselors with Wooster.3. A --definite minimum quotafor minority students should beset for the college.4. A greater effort should bemade to bring prospectiveblack students to the campus

faculty cSetUi

by Jon LindgrenOnce upon a time, there was

a group of farm animals whodecided to set up their ownfarm, with each animal to beresponsible for cultivatinghis own field according tohis own interest. Accordingto this plan, the rabbit wouldspecialize in growing carrots,the horse would grow apples,the cow would grow hay, thechicken would grow corn, and,well, you get the picture....

In order to expedite the op-

eration of the farm, it wasdecided that one kind of an-

imal would control the deve-lopment of and access to theall-import- ant collection oftools and implements. Andso it came to pass that thepig was assigned this respon-sibility, which he handledwith relish and grace.

The whole concept seemedto work pretty well, for be-

fore long the pig, utilizing hisown special brand of genius,had learned to cope with theamazing variety of problemsthat came up. For example,he learned that as new toolswere developed in the out-side world, a new type ofmanure, for example, he hadto keep abreast of these de-

velopments and acquire thesenew tools. Often, it was acase of sink or swim!

And he learned, further, thatevery tool had its specialseason of usage, and new sys-tems were devised to copewith this problem, too. As aresult, you would likely hearthe chicken ask, "Are there- -

any more sixteen-inc- h rakeson closed reserve?"

Alas, the only trouble was,the Tool Shed was not exactlyan unlimited fount of tools andimplements, and as one passedby the shed, one could occas-ionally hear anguished criesfrom within, such as: "Who'shad the twenty-inc- h hoe out

and the black recruitment ef-fort should be greater.CURRICULUM1. Outside groups and indi-viduals should be brought tothe campus to create a faculty"sensitivity" to blacks.2. Bibliographies of blackliterature and history andsimilar information sourcesshould be made available tothe faculty.TOWN-GOW- N

1. A permanent, on-cam- pus

organization should be formedto inform students of oppor-tunities for social work intown and to coordinate stu-dent efforts.FACULTY AND STAFF RE-

CRUITMENT1. Though it is not a popularidea, the possibilities of afaculty exchange involvingblack professors should be ex-

plored.2. Each department shouldexamine its structure to seehow more black faculty "couldbe fit in."

CAMPUS OR GANIZA TIONS1. The scope of many cam-pus organizations is too nar--

all day?" and "Don't we haveany more shovels than thai?"and "Can't I put a tracer onthe pitchfork?"

Still, the system worked sur-prisingly well, until one daythe beagle decided that he wasso far behind with his culti-vation that he would have to"borrow" the hoe for an ex-tended (and unauthorized) per-iod of time. And so, while .

one of the pigs was eyeing thechicks, the beagle stealthilyslipped away with the neededhoe and made off to his fieldunobserved.

And then, as the time of har-vest came nearer and nearer,the laments over missing toolsbecame increasingly shrill asmany of the other animalslearned to grab off the toolsthey needed unbeknownstto the pigj And before long,the whole farm was teeteringon the verge of virtual col-lapse. Even the beagle, whohad begun it all, was nowhurting.

MORAL: Rip-off- s beget rip-off- s;

or, don't squeal aboutmissing tools if you too havecontributed to the break --downof the system.

mn jtm crv w tow --v - m --w r a

row, there is a need for moremixing of different groups.2. The Student GovernmentAssociation should have moreaccess to student money.3. The findings of the De-

troit Industrial Mission, agroup of black professionalsconcerned with urban racism,should be diseminated to thestudent body.

ATHLETICS1. The question of a blackphysical education teachershould be referred to theFaculty Recruitment Commi-ttee.2. If the college can't find ablack who meets the require-ments for a physical educa-tion professor, the require-ments should be rewritten.

Though the Human RelationsCommission has no legisla-tive power and can only makesuggestions, "the power ofthe commission lies in thosemembers who are parts of ,

other organizations who canimpress on others the needfor change," Jones said.

To date the commission hasfunded five student programsdesigned to create an aware-ness and sensitivity to min-

orities. A total of $1,425has been allocated to theAfro-Americ- an CurriculumCommittee for recruitmentefforts of black faculty, astudy of black militancy byFirst Section, the comingappearance of the HowardUniversity Gospel Choir,special programs of the BlackForum, and the Detroit Indus-trial Mission Race Education"Program for Selected Facultyand Students.

When the Human RelationsCommission was formed last .

fall it was charged with thetask of initiating action toease racial tension on cam-pus and with promoting"racial understanding andsensitivity. "

n0

3n

Now thru Tues."The Gang That Couldn't

Shoot Straight"

COMING

Cliff Robertson

J. W. Coop

btitiiac imnmnnaBibrniHnbaoH

DA... "DA...

DAY ISz MERE

"mtiiunrMmm

Coach Pat O'Brien (left) with Coach Rob Nye at Human Rela-tions Commissions meeting.

( Valentine IV shopping?J

Why not selectcompanionable

Surprise her this Valentine's Day with a gift thafs bothpractical and heart-warmin- g a no-minimum-bal- ance

ThriftiCheck Personal Checking Account.ThriftiChecks will keep your ladylove company where-eve- r

she goes they'll protect her cash, save her fromcash payment annoyances, help keep personal financesshipshape.And watch her face light up when she sees her namesmartly printed on her ThriftiChecks. Open her accountat...

The Wayne County Natl. Dank"THREE CONVENIENT LOCATIONS"

CLEVELAND-BEAL- L OFFICE.Opposite tfco hospital

MAIN OFFICEPublic Square

BOWMAN STREET.OFFICE806 E. Bownoa St.

Page 6: The Wooster Voice (Wooster, OH), 1972-02-18

Friday, F bruary 18, 1972

w--i

1

K

Mr. John Carruth of the Music Department plays "Vexationsto help raise money to meet the McGaw Challenge ...

- - - - .1; -- , , rf;

MORE ON

VOICE

Going Home . .

continued from pogo 1

it was disheartening to rea-

lize one will have to eventual-ly live "out there"; wherepeople are more engrossedwith Yves St. Laurent thanJean Jacque Rousseau, betterversed on Sanford and Sonthan Soul on Ice and insist onreferring to the women's move-ment as "well I agree withequal pay for equal work but. . .'! U

Perhaps I am over-generalizi- ng

about something thatbelongs in a "personal exper-ience" niche. It's just thatI dread the second status in- -

WASHINGTON, D.C. (CPS)Tuition and room and board

fees of private, non-pro- fit

colleges and universitieshave been exempted fromprice controls by the Cost ofLiving Council.

The action affects thousandsof church-relate- d schools and

tellectual, (and in some in-

stances) creative and emo-

tional expansion will inevi-tably take under the weight offamily and job obligations.Fear that the things one hasto do to obtain that piece ofcoffee cake at 2:30 a.m. are

.way out of proportion to thesacrifice one must make inregard to his "self".

For the very Aunts and Unc-

les who wince at a referenceto "The Social Contract" arecollege graduates themselves;and it has not taken long fortheir cackles over bed checksand hquor in perfume bottlesto stiffle and wax into nostal-gia. Frightening indeed!

But the alternatives to thisare even bleaker. PerhapsThomas Wolfe will have thelast words, prophesizing "Youcan't go home again."Dean Cropp announced lastweek that faculty membersnow have the privilege of eat

otherother privateprivate schoolsschools nation- -nation-wide.

QOOOOOOOOOOOOQJ wide. TheThe CouncilCouncil justifiedjustified rSmmmn " ft

l itsits actionaction byby sayingsaying thatthat feesfees OlSt5S"J V 00 ST EM ft'; chargedcharged byby suchsuch schoolsschools -- " "" "" ft

f ; "are"are usuallyusually insufficientinsufficient toto Q ftcovercover educationaleducational costs."costs." QZlP-A-DEE-DOO-DAH-'.Q

. . . Mr. Brian Dykstra, also of the Music Department, finishes J w CIlIlfllDL 0the marathon concert on Saturday morning by completing the M TV" ! rawsiroToii ? Q" '840 rendition. A m v r r w u.' I. t...Ji O

Now you're onyour way up.

Some people think getting to thetop means scaling skyscrapers.

At Hoover, the top is on thefourth floor. Of a neat brick build-

ing. On tree-line- d streets. In aquiet town. Where the air is fresh.And the horizon is sky.

That's where you'd start. -

But not necessarily whereyou'd stay.

Hoover has 1 3 plants in 8 coun-

tries on 5 continents.Two-thir- ds of the

21,000 Hoover peopleworK ouusiae

You don t have to go.You might stay at

Hoover's home orifice. Gointo marketing, finance,manufacturing, engineer-int- r

Take graduate coursesoat the local colleges and t.

Pag Fiv

ing up to two meals 'each weekin either of the student din-

ing halls, free of charge.Cropp feels that this will pro- -.

vide an opportunity for moreinformal contacts betweenfaculty and students.

oui? .

SOLITAIRE

diAMONdSTRikES A

bRilliANT J--OV MATCh V

The gracaful solitairedestined to match

her elegant femininity...in one of our designer-perfe- ct

settings.

Bank Americard ChargeJewel Box Charge

Open Fri.Nights Til 9 pm

THE JEWEL BOX

120 E. Liberty St.Wooster, Ohio

EDITOR NEEDED j 34 West NorthA Evening.: 7:00 - 9:00 pm X1--1 Cr Phone:262-315- 1 j Sot-So- n Matinee: 2:00 pm Q

-- - -- IMfeQ5 i

n

n

THE OLD ONE IS LEAVING. NOT

HE DOESN'T CARE. BUT

I v y a r i W33HE'S GRADUATING. AND

WE THINK EVERYBODY NEEDS THE VOICE

VOICE IS A PART OF YOU

IT MAKES YOU LAUGH. CRY, CUSS, SPIT. . .

SO SOMEONE CALL LARRY STEWART, EXT. 575

Woo s tor'sDiamondStore

university.Or you might go to one of

Hoover's 200 Field Offices. Andlearn how we move over 80 differ-

ent home products.Whatever you do, you'll grow

fast. You'll have to. just to keepup. Hoover's a fast growing com-

pany.'First half sales in 71 were

up 14.' The year before

Cl.JWrT

i ,i; i i I r

umimMt i 1 il ,1

wasn't a bad year, either.Sin 1970, Hoover's total

net sales were over $34omillion.

DO, 11 you want uu- i "inn. etodown tovourplace--

f, fyment office.ign up tor an inter

view. We'll be on carppusMarch 6th.

(To about the 68th floor.)

I

Page 7: The Wooster Voice (Wooster, OH), 1972-02-18

Pag Six

tournament tomorrow at Gran-ville.

The GLCA is comprised oftwelve teams representingthe states of Ohio, Indiana

j )': l :)

I y f

Sophomore sensation Wes Dumas will try to repeat as 150-champi- on

at the Great Lakes Colleges Association meet thisweekend at Granville.

VOICE

banas: Anns M Repeatby Phil Johnson

The Wooster Fighting Scotwrestling team will competein the GLCA championship

and Michigan.Last year the Scot sopho-

more Wes Dumas, was theGLCA champ in the 150 poundweight class. Coach PhilShipe hopes that the sopho-more sensation can repeatthis year.

Last Saturday the Scot mat-me- n

closed out their regularseason at Alliance when thePurple Raiders of Mt. Unionand the Student Princes ofHeidelberg downed the Woos-

ter team by the scores of27-1- 3 and 31-- 9.

Sophomores Jim Rastetterand Wes Dumas were againdouble winners for the secondstraight week.

Rastetter defeated his op-

ponent from Heidelberg, BobMoncheck, 14--6 while BillMcDonald of Mt. Union wasbarely beaten, 3-- 2.

. Dumas ran his season rec-ord to 8-1- -1 by decisioningthe Princes' Mark Hada, 6--3,

and the Mount's Mike Stanley,4-- 2.

Other sophomores, LarrySprague, Mark DiFeo andMarshall Wenger, each grabbedanother victory.

The 158 pounder Spragueearned his victory by crush-ing Mike Clark of Heidelberg,11-- 2.

DiFeo (177) finished theregular season with a 6-3--1

mark by decisioning Mt.Union's Mark Hessler, 10-- 3.

Marshall Wenger soundlydecisioned the Raiders' BobMoncilovech, 13--2, in thebattle of the 190 pounders.

JV's Nipped By OtHterbein;.

Seven -- Gome SfrreeoEt EndsJunior Varsity basketball

coach Dave Hopkins has putaway his gray suit, whiteshirt and blue tie for awhile.

Hopkins wore his "goodluck" outfit through his team'srecent seven-gam- e winningstreak (he washed the shirtbefore every game) which com-

pletely turned around an 0-- 5

season into a 7-- 5 one.After losing close games at

Heidelberg and Grove City,the freshmen Scots droppedtough decisions to Ohio State,Ohio University and Ohio Wes-ley- an

before pulling them-selves together.

One of the changes Hopkinsmade was to start Jay Schmidtat the point in the 1-- 4 offenseand move Ed Snyder to awing spot. Another key hasbeen the maturation of for-

wards Gene Schindewolf, Mor-

ris Edwards, Jeff Requarthand Barry Stephens in adjust-ing to college ball. All fourhave learned to block outmore for the rebounds and fillthe lanes on the fast break.

The Scots grabbed theirfirst win against BowlingGreen-Firelan- ds on Jan. 14,and since then have performedas a confident unit. They woneasily on occasion and attimes had to fight back towin by a narrow margin intriumphs over Case-Weste- rn

Reserve, Ashland, Kenyon,Oberlin, Muskingum and KentState.

Muskingum was consideredthe OAC's best JV squad withan 8-- 1 record when they fellvictim to the Scots and thetough Kent State freshmen

finally succumbed in over-time.

In the tiny Otterbein gymlast Saturday, however,Hopkins' luck ran out, butit .wouldn't have had the ballbounced differently.

The Scot frosh were down,53-5- 2, to the Cardinals whenWooster obtained the ball ona turnover with seven secondsleft. The Woo JV's had foughtback from as much as a 12-po- int

deficit and weren'tabout to give up their victoryskein.

The play called on the benchat the time out had Snydertake the ball on the in-bou- nds

pass and dribble the length

of the court to either getfouled or score on a lay-u- p.

Snyder did just that as heweaved in and out of the Otterdefense and down the base-line toward the bucket. Hisunder-the-backboa- rd shot atthe buzzer rolled around therim and out and the JV's were .

human again with a 7-- 6 record.But indications are that

Hopkins will have plenty ofoccasion to wear his outfitwith pride in years to come.His JV squads have been anessential part of the Woosterbasketball program in recentseasons and the fruits of hisefforts will be reaped in theyears ahead.

Cagers ReboundThe Scot roundballers suffer-

ed a heart-break- er at Otter-bein last Saturday, but every-thing turned-ou- t all right any-way.

After a come-from-behi- nd

victory over Marietta lastWednesday, 87-8- 0, Woosterprepared warily for the tripto Westerville and the begin-ning of the "Big-Thre- e" con-frontations in the South.

Mike Grenert and JohnCreasap led the Marietta on-

slaught with 19 and 17 points,respectively, but it took ayeoman's effort in the secondhalf to win. Marietta led at

the intermission 42-4- 0 andthe Scots came up with 10straight at the startof thesecond stanza for their 20thOhio Conference victory in arow.

The Otterbein gym compareswith Wooster's old Severanceedifice in size and the noiseis like an echo chamber. TheCardinals rolled to a 9-- 0

bulge right off the bat andsome of the outnumberedWooster followers felt likeslipping silently away.

continued on page eight

Friday, February 18, 1972

sport speculation

By Dave BerkeyVoice Sports Editor

According to last week's column this was supposed to beanother "Whatever happened to ... " story about Tim Baab,Dick Cornwell and Pat Roach.

All three are still playing basketball Bambi while takingcourses and working in Wooster, Pat for Rubbermaid, his em-

ployer, and Colt for the U.S. Air Force.Although the Capital game is tomorrow and another nostal-

gic trip into the past might be interesting, a look at the pre-

sent seems more appropriate at this stage of the season.AT THE END OF THE 1970-197- 1 "best ever" year,

teams around the Ohio Conference weren't picking Wooster toplace or show, much less to finish in the winner's circle. Nowwhile the Scots make a run for the roses, the old OAC mythseems to be faltering.

The myth says that such wonderful things as successfulteams happen in cycles. When a great team loses its top per-formers through graduation in the Ohio Conference, its dynastyis automatically supposed to come to an end. The school isto dwell in the depths of mediocrity until that next fabulousfreshman sensation makes his admissions deposit.

It's an easy myth to believe because in most cases it'strue. Denison had its Claggett, Kenyon its Rinka, Otterbeinits Carlos, Baldwin-Walla- ce its Johnson, Wittenberg its Deemsand even Wooster its Dinger. Places like Mount Union, Mar-ietta, Ohio Wesleyan and Capital periodically come-u- p with adream senior class, then nothing.

In a conference where recruiting as such is illegal as areathletic scholarships, the competing schools must rely on theirbuildings and academic programs to attract top athletes. Thus,there seems to be a fairly even distribution of wealth, as faras basketball talent is concerned.

AT WOOSTER, HOWEVER, A PATTERN seems to bedeveloping which plays havoc with the cyclical theory. Afterfour years of observing Scot basketball in the prime of theVan Wie era, there are certain characteristics of the programhere which never seem to change even with graduation.

Four elements go into every Wooster basketball seasonthat almost guarantee some form of success 1) stress on con-

ditioning and fundamentals, 2) a well-prepar- ed game plan, 3)a winning attitude and 4) class.

Conditioning begins for the Wooster basketball playersearly in October. They don the familiar gray sweat suits andamidst much hand clapping and spirit (superficial or not) theteam goes through a half hour workout on the track, golf courseand stadium steps. Each lap step or mile is geared to give theplayers needed stamina four, months later in the final gamesof the season.

When November indoor drills begin, the squad is usuallyin good shape to get down to the mechanics of playing baske-tballwhere the fundamentals are stressed. Monotonous, time-consumi- ng

drills throughout November make for victories inFebruarymost notably the blocking out drill and the Scot lay-u- p

drill which emulates the patented Wooster fast break.

THE SCOTS TRADITIONS OF STAMINA, a better-than-oppone- nts

rebounding average, a game-breaki- ng fast breakplay and top field goal and foul shooting percentages come asno accident.

While getting physically prepared, the Scots are also get-

ting mentally ready through one of the most scientific approach-es around. Wooster has an elaborate scouting system whichhas coaches Dave Grube, Dave Hopkins, Frank Pilsitz or IraZeff sitting through at least one game of every opponent ovthe schedule for the OAC foes it's usually several.

The detailed report of the team its strengths and weaknes-ses, its defense and offense and even pictures of the playersmake game preparation a lot easier.

A key to the Wooster successes in recent years has beenthe work of the Red Team which tries to emulate the patternsof the next game's opponent. Men like Larry Shyatt, GaryFranklin, Scott Ayers, Dave Wilber, Rich Dutter and JohnEvans get together and often beat the starters in practice.Van Wie can never say enough about the work of the Red Team.

WITH SUCH A COMPLETE GAME PLAN, the third char-acteristic of a winning attitude comes easy. No matter whothe Scots face from week to week, they go into the game withthe feeling they can win. Part of this comes from the coach-ing staff, but a lot of it comes from the players themselves.

Seniors John Creasap, Greg Bryant and Mike Grenert aremost important in the transmission of this attitude throughoutthe squad. They've been around long enough to know that themental and physical preparation put in by the team is worthpoints on the scoreboard.

"We believe in ourselves," says Creasap," and after aloss such as the Otterbein game, we feel even more confident."Each time on the court, the Scots learn more about themselvesand their capabilities which will help in getting ready for thenext game.

This all boils down to what Van Wie so often refers to as"class". It's very easy to tell whether a team has it or itdoesn't.

A TEAM WITH CLASS is abundant in the qualities of self-contr- ol

and poise, on and off the court. While winning is amatter of deep pride to the team with class, losing is a build- - :

ing experience, not a tragedy. A team with class is a unit,on and off the court, and the concerns of one member are theconcerns of another.

Co-capta- in Mike Grenert says, "When the announcer intro-duces our starting line-u-p, we don't look like much but wewin. -- What this team has inside, no team can match."

They may not be asking, "Whatever happened to Wooster",for some time to come.

Page 8: The Wooster Voice (Wooster, OH), 1972-02-18

Friday, February 18, 1972

cots D on"It's a whole new ball game"That's the way Wooster bas-

ketball coach Al Van Wiesummed-u-p his feelings at thescene of the Scots 92-6- 4

ESSE

(?5J "

L2TSM

No. 1,000 Senior John Creasrp twists past a host of Denisondefenders to score his 1,000th career point against the Big Redin Tuesday night's 92-6- 4 victory. Creasap finished the nightwith 10 points to move into eighth place on the all-ti- me Woo-ster scoring list.

Why was the JnJex late?

Why hasn't there been athis year?

What's really happening with theUoice?

Come (question the editors) at an open Publication

Committee meeting in LC pit at 6 p.m. on (Tuesday,

February 22.)

VOICE Poge Seven

IFSirsIt; Soege M'G&piKtail. TomnKorrorjvictory over Denison Tuesdaynight after he heard that Mus-kingum upset Capital 84-7- 6.

Later he learned that MountUnion had edged Otterbein,

5

0

76-7- 5, making tomorrow'sconfrontation at Capital thebig game of the season forthe second straight year.

Going into this fatefulweek, the Crusaders were17--1, ranked nationally, andalone atop the Ohio Confer-ence standings with an un-

blemished, 8--0 mark. Cap hasOhio Conference winningstreak last Saturday in West-ervill- e,

69-6- 6. Wooster enter-ed the week a half game be-

hind the Crusaders at 8-- 1

while Otterbein was one gameback at 7-- 2 and Wittenberg,6-- 2.

Then it happened.

Tuesday night the Scotsput together a superb team ef-fort in defeating Denison asevery player scored and thestarters received needed restafter the barnburner at Otter-bein. The win gave Woostera 9-- 1 loop mark, 17-- 5 overall.

While the gym was all butcleared out, the phone rang atthe scorer's table and assis-tant coach Dave Grube report-ed breathlessly from Musking-um that the Crusaders hadbeen upset. The news wasrelayed to the Scots that theywere how in first place, a half

SPORTS THIS WEEKENDTODAY-Wrestl- ing at G.L.C.A.

(at Granville)TOMORROW-Basketb-all vs.

Capital (at Bexley)JV Basketball vs. Capital

(at Bexley)Wrestling at G.L.C.A. (at

Granville)Indoor Track vs. Hiram &

Kenyon (at Gambier)Swimming vs. Ohio Wesleyan

(Severance pool, 2 p.m.)Women's Basketball vs. --

Ohio Wesleyan (PEC, 1

p.m.)

Dkisit

game ahead of Cap's 8-- 1

record. With the Otterbeinloss, the two antangonistsfind themselves alone at thetop on the eve. of tomorrow'sbattle in Bexley.

THE STAGE WAS SET forthe Wooster-Capit- al game thisyear long before this week.The two teams have been bit-

ter rivals for the last fewyears, especially since thefiery Chickerella took overthe reigns of the mediocreCrusaders and built them intoa winner.

. In 1968, "Chick" moved fromthe high school ranks to aCapital team that had not hada winning season since 1960.His first team was 14--9, 9-- 4in the conference, and advanc-ed --to the semi's of the tourna-ment.

THE SCOTS WERE unde-feated in the conference atthis point last year, workingon an 18-ga- me winning' streakand also needing a victoryover Capital. Last year Woos-ter was barred from the OCtournament because of a sum-mer basketball camp and theScots' only chance of anNCAA bid was an undefeated

. OC regular season mark.

The game in the PEC wasone not many will forget.With a standing-room-on- ly

crowd on the inside and 200-pl- us

angry fans trying to getin on the outside, the Scotsovercame a half time defecitto win the OC title, 87-8- 1,

and get the NCAA bid.

Consequently, revenge willbe on the minds of the Cru-

saders tomorrow night inAlumni Gymnasium. Thelast time Wooster played be-

fore the highly-partis- an

ital fans in 1970, the Crusa-ders won a laugher, 103-6- 6.

But there's more at stake thistime.

VHE CAPITAL SUCCESShas not been based on super-stars but rather a well-balanc- ed

scoring punch. Thefour returning starters thisyear each average over 12points a game for his careerand at Capital, offense is thename of the game.

In 1969-7- 0, Capital .Diet-ed a perfect 13-- 0 mark, 2U- -overall, and wvnt to theNCAA Regional with a teamthat boasted of two freshmenand two sophomores in thestarting line-u- p.

.

Ohio ConferenceFebruary 16,

' That group returned lastyear to ar-iv-

e- at this point inthe season with a 10-- 1 OCrecord, 17-- 3 overall, and need-ing a win over Wooster toguarantee a second straightNCAA bid.

The two seniors are 6-- 4 for-ward Bob Arnold and 6-- 6 for-ward Don Kalb. Arnold enter-ed the season in 6th place onthe all-tim- e Capital scoringlist with a 13.5 career aver-age. This season he hasscored 27 points on twooccasions. Kalb, the otherco-capta- in, is also in hisfourth year as a starter witha 12.6 career average. He'sninth on the OC field goalpercentage list and had one22-poi- nt, 16-rebo- und effortthis year.

The two juniors, 6-- 8 MikeStumpf and 6-- 0 Scott Weakley,might be called "pesky" bymost OC foes. Stumpf wasi e All-O.- C center last yearand led the loop in reboundingHis 16.7 career scoring aver-age reflects his uncanny in-

stinct for the basket under-neath. Stumpf had 34 pointsin one game this season.Weakley has a 14.2 careeraverage is the team's floorleader and ball hawk.

JUNIOR JOE JACOBUSat 6-- 5 has been the otherstarter with 25 and a 27-poi- nt

efforts already turned in thisseason. Sixth man JerryFrancis had 26 against BereaCollege (Ky.)

The height and reboundingedge go to Capital, but thetwo teams are even in shoot-ing percentage from the lineand the field. The.Scotswill have to stop fouling asmuch as they have been late-ly and start hitting more oftheir charity tosses.

But in the final analysis, itboils down to a battle of wits.Both teams have outstanding,well-disciplin- ed personneland coaches who have wontheir share of the big ones.The home-cou- rt advantage isalways a factor but in a gamelike this one, it's hard to giveanyone an edge.

THERE'S REALLY nothingto get excited about though,since the Ohio Conferencechampion and NCAA bid willbe decided by the post-seas- on

tournament.

Jurt try to tell 28 players,two cocching staffs and 3,000plus fans not to get excited.

1972

Team W L'

Overo

WOOSTER 9 1 17-- 5

Capitol 8 1 17-- 2

Wittenberg 7 2 11-- 8

Otterbein 7 3 14-- 6

Ohio Wesleyan 6 3 11-- 8

Muskingum 5 5 9-- 9

Baldwin-Wallac- e 4 5 8-- 12

Mount Union 4 7 10-1- 0

Kenyon 4 7 7-1- 4

Oberlin 3 6 8-- 10

Marietta 2 6 5-- 13

Denison 3 8 7-- 13

Heidelberg 19 1--16

Page 9: The Wooster Voice (Wooster, OH), 1972-02-18

Pog Eight

The Fighting Scot swimmersclose out their 1972 homeseason tomorrow against .

I1' "YN i

i r--y.

; Jj g

' '5 It" J ' f

Senior Joe Cummings will perform in his final home meet forthe Fighting Scots swim team when Wooster hosts Ohio Wes-

leyan tomorrow in Severance pool at 2 p.m.

MORE ON

Round boi lers Reboundscore was only 12-1- 0, Otter-bei- n,

and the tight affair con-tinued on those terms for thelast 35 minutes. The Card-

inals scored mainly from thefoul line and on inside lay-u- ps

to post a 41-3- 6 halftime' lead while the Scots hot out-

side shooting prevented atallied 12- run-awa- y. Creasap

the first half. -

Wooster began whittlingaway at the lead early in thesecond stanza and the lastsix minutes were played withno more than three pointsseparating the two well-disciplin- es

foes.But in the end, the Scots'

demise was a terrible foul-shooti- ng

percentage and thedefensive heroics of theOtters little guard, Don Sul-

livan. While outscoring Otter-bei- n,

28-2- 2 from the field,Wooster clicked on only 10 of19 free throws to 25 of 32 for

ONE HOUR MARTINIZING

Jn 4 MurrulWooster's One Hour

1855 BeoU-Colleg- e Hills

powerful Ohio Wesleyan. Div-ing competition will begin at ,

2 p.m. at the YMCA Pool.

their host.And in the end, Sullivan

stole the show literally.Wooster had the ball threetimes in the last 46 secondsand the score reading 67-6- 6,

Otterbein, but the Scotsdidn't score. Sullivan stolethe ball twice, once via ajump ball, to preserve thevictory.

Tuesday night's surprisesremedied any disappointmentfor the Scots, however.teen Wooster players partici-pated in the scoring circusthat netted Al Van Wie his150th career victory, 92-6- 3

over Denison, while Capitaland Otterbein fell.

The Scots were never head-ed in the affair vs. the BigRed and had at least a 10-po- int

lead for 33 of the 40minutes. Greg Bryant scored15 and Grenert 14, most in

One Hour CleaningUntil 4 p.m. Daily

Shirt Service Included

Cleaner'sShopping Center

Next to Sears

VOICE Friday, February 18, 1972

The swim events will takeplace at Severance Pool at 3p.m.The Wooster tankers will be

out to upset the Bishops.With Wednesday's win overMuskingum, the Scots evenedtheir dual meet mark at 5-- 5.

They need to win two of theirfinal three weeks to recordthe first winning season since1964.

Wooster was crushed byWittenberg 80-4-1 last Saturdaydespite another record break-

ing performance by Jim Imler.

Imler, the Scots' standoutbackstroke specialist, record-ed a time of 2:10.1 in the 200yard backstroke. The clock-ing shatters the school recordof 2:10.8 the junior set earlierthis season, and breaks thepool mark of 2:10.7 establish-ed by Kenyon's Dave Guillionback in 1963.

Mark Carrell picked up wins

SpBtos tttth Dun (QSE RehjysThe indoor track season

gets in full gear tomorrowwhen the Scots travel to Gam-bi- er

for a triangular meetwith Kenyon and Hiram.

Wooster's spikers will usethe meet to get their times inshape for the upcoming GLCAand OAC championships aftera 10th place finish at lastSaturday's Ohio ConferenceRelays.

"We'll find out a little moreabout how strong we are to-

morrow at Kenyon," says headtrack coach Bob Laffertyafter the low but encouragingfinish in the Relays.

Kenyon has a good-size- d

the first half, and Creasapbecame the school's eighthleading scorer of all time inboosting his career total to1,008.

For the "Super-subs- ", MarkVogelgesang had 10; ScotAyers, eight; Keith Van Hornand Larry Shyatt, six-eac- h;

Rich Dutter and John Evans,five-eac- h; and Fred Nevar,Dave Wilber and Gary Frank-lin, two-apie- ce.

I ..g I MM- -

FC3 maRES eMatious

THE SMOOTH TRAVEL WAY

264-98- 99

in both the required and op-

tional diving. The wins werethe first for the freshman.

. Freshman Bill Deyle pickedup Wooster's other first placefinish in the 200 yard breast-strok- e.

"They had too much depthfor us," said swim coachTracy Hetrick. "I was pleas-ed with our squad's overallperformance.

"Imler is back to full streng-th again as evident by his

. time in the backstroke. Deyleis continuing to improve inthe backstroke and in the indi-

vidual-medley. And 1 can'tsay enough about the wayCarrell has Come on in div-ing."

Hetrick also had plauditsfor Joe Cummings. Cum-min- gs

recorded his best timeever in the 1000 yard free-style,- 11:31.8. The effortnetted him only second place

squad which finished in a tiefor seventh with Capital atthe Relays. Hiram boasts ofsprinter Ulpian Toney whowon the 300-ya- rd dash at theOAC Indoor Championshipslast year. Toney also wonboth the 100 and 220 yarddashes at the outdoor champ-ionships.

Baldwin-Wallac- e came out ontop of the 13-tea- m field at theWalter J. Livingston Relays(OAC) at Granville for thethird straight year with 90points. Mount Union was sec-ond with 81 and host Denisonplaced third with 42. The

SPORTS THIS WEEK

TUESDAY Swimming vs. U.of Akron (at Akron)Women's Basketball vs.

Muskingum (PEC, 6:30p.m.)

WEDNESDAY Basketball vs.Hiram (PEC, 8 p.m.)JV Basketball vs. Bliss Col-

lege (PEC, 6 p.m.)

however.Cummings is one of those

people who age like wine; hegets better each season. Thesenior co-capt- ain has been akey performer in the distancefreestyles the past four years.

Joe has had one bad habit,however. He is a slow start-er who doesn't reach the peakof his performance until latein the season.Cummings has improved each

season in both his startingand overall performance.Coach Hetrick notes that Joeis in the best shape he's everbeen in, at least for this earlyin the season.

Joe conditions for the swimseason by running cross-country in the fall. He was .

the Scots' co-capt- ain in thatsport last fall. Cummings'improvement this year is at-tributed to a weight programhe worked on before the startof the swim season.

Scots tallied ten points.The best Wooster perform-

ance was turned-i- n by themile relay quartet of RickSollmann, Paul Rieman, TimMcLinden and John Helmwhich finished third in a com-bined time of 3:41.7.

The two mile relay unit ofMike Malovasic, Dan Younger,Andy Naumoff and Paul Copetook fifth place in 8:44.6.

A sixth place finish wasturned in by the Scots' eightlap relay squad of RonCetovich, Doug Fix, BruceHiHer and Ned Compton in atime of 2:17.6.

Wooster picked-u- p anothersixth in the sprint medley,but it could have been better.

An unfortunate occurrancehappened on the final lapwhen McLinden, the anchorman, fell trying to stretch forthe finish line. The trio ofHelm, Sollmann and Cetovichhad started fast enough to giveWooster second place hadMcLinden not slipped. Theeventual clocking was 3:03.1.

"Overall, we didn't do abad job," said Lafferty. "Ofcourse I was disappointed inthe sprint medley, but thosethings happen."

Eiiiiiliiiiiiiiiiillllliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiig

LAST CHANCETO TOUR EUROPE WITH THE CHEAP

S YOUTH FARES 5

AFTER APRIL 1 The Price Goes UP

Call us for details

FLAIR TRAVEL

CONSULTANTS346 E Bowmon St

264-650- 5Phone: 262-66- 5) Sat. - 8 a.m. to 6 p.Doily -- 8 cm. to 8 p.m

Vop,$ter Auto fflft SlIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIlE