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NORTH illiK CU LEGE 1 NOV 1 '7?
co ege news VOLUME 53 NUMBER 7 WEDNESDAY NOVEMBER 1 1972 CHICAGO ILLINOIS
A Royal Occasion:
Princess Christina Visits NP
by Dave Jacobs
On Sunday, October 22,
North Park was the scene of
a very special reception for a
very special visitor. The
visitor happened to be her
Royal Highness Princes
Christina of Sweden, and the
reception was held in honor
of her Highness' first visit to
Chicago, one of several stops
the princess is making on her
tour of the United States.
Princess Christina is the
Youngest grand-daughter of
the reigning king of Sweden,
Gustav VI Adolf; has two
sisters, the Princesses De-siree
and Birgitta, and a
brother, the Crown Prince
Carl Gustay. Although the
Crown Prince is the youngest
Child of the king's son (who
died in a plane crash in 1947),
it is he who will one day reign
over Sweden and not any of
his elder sisters because, by
Swedish law, a woman may
not ascent to the throne. The
princess, a true feminist,
commented in a recent
interview with Chicago Daily
News society editor Pat
Moore, "A Swedish woman
can be anything but queen."
The princess, herself, has a
full-time job in the Ministry
for Foreign Affairs' Informa-tion
Office, for which she
receives no pay, as that
Would be too unroyal, and
She must write a written
request for any time off.
The princess is no stranger
to the U.S., having studied
American history for one year
at Radcliffe College after
having attended ordinary
schools in Sweden.
The reception for the
princess was certainly varied
and fit for a Swedish
princess. A jammed Lecture
Hall was the scene for the
program tendered by the
Central Swedish Committee
for the Chicago Area,
Incorporated, and the partici-pants
included a male chorus,
members representing vari-ous
choruses of Chicago,
Vasabarnen, a childrens'
chorus and various speakers.
The main speaker was Dr.
Wesley Westerberg, pres-ident
of the Swedish Pioneer
Historical Society. He pres-ented
us with a very
informative description of the
history of the Swedish
community in Chicago, its
beginnings, and its uncertain
future.
Preceding the Princess'
brief talk were several other
honoured speakers, the Con-sul
General of Chicago Bo
Gunnar Jarnstedt, and Hu-bert
de Besche, the Swedish
ambassador to the United
States.
The Princess graciously
brought greetings from her
grandfather, the king, who
will be ninety years old on
Nov. 11. She also said how
happy she was to be in
Chicago for the first time,
and how she felt right at
home here today.
The Princess' personal
appearance was certainly
different from what I had
expected, but it was a relief,
I thought, afterwards, that
she decided to play the role
of a gracious human being
instead of a woman on a
pedestal. She wore a
short-sleeved brown suit with
a white blouse, large,
hornrimmed glasses, and had
shoulder-length hair worn in
a casual style. A smartly-dressed
woman, with no
frills.
A time for greeting the
Princess followed in the
College Chapel. I was able to
meet the Princess, being one
of many in the never-ending
line of guests. Naturally, I
was nervous, and unsure of
what to say, despite the fact
that I can speak Swedish
rather well. First of all, the
Princess' lady-in-waiting,
Mrs. Dagmar Nyblaeus,
asked my name and an-nounced
it to the princess. In
the next few seconds I told
the princess that I was a
student here, welcomed her
to the U.S., and excused
myself for my bad Swedish
(to this she nodded as
though trying to assure me I
was doing all right); then I
was sent on to the other
guests, to whom I bid a hasty
"Valkommen."
Later I returned with my
camera, hoping to get
perhaps a photo of Her
Highness from a distance. My
expectations were heighten-end
when the princess'
lady-in-waiting held back the
line of greeters, allowing me
an uninterrupted view of the
princess, who gently smiled
for my camera, something I'll
not soon forget.
It all happened so fast but
it certainly was an afternoon
to remember; after all, how
often do we get a chance to
meet royalty — and such
gracious royalty!
Lanza Del Vasta's Community of the Ark injects nonviolence into every-day
life.
Peace Passes
North Park's Understanding
by Steve Carr
Last Wednesday evening, a
large group of North Park
students and faculty sat on
the floor of the Campus
Center Lounge to listen to
Lanza Del Vasta discuss
"Community and Nonviol-ence."
Del Vasta, working with
Gandhi in India, was renamed
by him Shantidas, Servant of
Peace. Shortly after World
War II, Del Vasta and a
number of followers founded
the Community of the Ark, a
self-sufficient agrarian com-munity
in Southern France.
The Community stresses
nonviolence and simplicty.
They do all their own
weaving, make their own
clothes, and even make their
own paper. All decisions in
the community must be
passed unanimously by its
members; majority rule, says
Del Vasta, only ensures a
suppressed minority, fac-tions,
and individuals with a
need for self-aggrandizement.
Del Vasta spoke in slow,
measured tones, using sen-tence
fragments a great deal.
There were frequent pauses.
But the total effect of his talk
was terribly beautiful. He is
an old man with a
well-seamed face; he has a
thick, peasant's body; but he
moves with Gandhian grace.
People crowded in until he
The lovely Princess Christina receives a bouquet of flowers from one of her American admirers.
had only a fifteen-foot-long
aisle in which to walk.
There were the inevitable
interruptions. Idiots sat in
front of the door, making
entry and exit difficult and
noisy. A group met in the
Conference Room: words
and laughter drifted in to mix
with Del Vasta's voice.
Through the glass wall a
television could be seen
flickering bluely. What can
you expect, from a campus
more dedicated to the
exchange of football plays
than the exchange of ideas?
But the tone and content
of the speech was delightful.
It was all about division and
waste in human life, and the
distinction between a society
and a community; and how,
in the despair following the
Second World War, men felt
moved to attempt to create
community. The Ark was a
response to that need, an
attempt to eliminate divisive-ness
from life.
In the Ages of Faith the
Catholic Church referred to
itself as the Ark. It was
believed that only those
inside the Ark would escape
a great flood of disaster.
Perhaps a similar belief led to
the name "the Community of
the Ark"; that all outside will
perish in a widening gyre, a
blood-dimmed tide.
Perhaps they are right.
Thorburn-Stepan Coming!
The popular Thorburn-
Stepan Piano Duo returns to
the campus with sparkling
concerts this Saturday, Nov.
4. Two concerts are schedul-ed
this year, at 7 p.m. and
again at 9 p.m. in the Lecture
Hall Auditorium. Student
tickets at $1.50 are now
available at the Campus
Center Desk. The perform-ances
are sponsored as a
benefit for the College
Parents Association.
David Thorburn, member
of the music faculty and
director of the college choir,
has returned to the campus
following a year's study
toward a doctorate at
Northwestern. Former music
faculty member Russell Step-an
is now chairman of the
piano department at Biola
College, La Mirada, Califor-nia.
The two men have
delighted campus audiences
in the past. Their unique
keyboard stylings, replete
with impromptu segments,
practically guarantees sell-out
performances Nov. 4.
Students who do not plan
to attend the special dinner
on campus that evening with
their parents should plan to
attend the early performance,
since those present at the
6:30 dinner will be attending
the later concert.
•••••
Page 2 THE COLLEGE NEWS Wednesday, November 1, 1972
Walt Macuda
Politics Under
Glass
Whoever said "The more
things change the more they
stay the same" must have
had North Park in mind when
he said it.
Specifically I am directing
this column today to the
problem, and it still is a
problem, of the on and off
campus students. Things
haven't really changed.
Last year the off-campus
raised their voices to be
heard. They complained they
were not being treated fairly
and were shut out of SA
activities.
But the picture changed, or
so they thought. All of a
sudden off-campus people
were in positions they had
not been in for some time,
like commission chairman-ships.
Students commented
that it seemed to be an
"off-campus" year. There
didn't seem to be any clouds
in the sky so it looked like
clear sailing.
But they were wrong. They
asked themselves — what
changed? What are the
off-campus getting from the
SA now they didn't get
before? The answer —
nothing.
The naming of off-campus
students to chairmanships
did not heal the rift, contrary
to popular opinion. All it
accomplished was absorbing
the off-campus into the
on-campus establishment.
The appointments were
supposed to bring the two
student bodies together. The
attempt failed.
Off-campus students get
little in the way of benefits
from the SA. So looking at it
realistically, why should they
bother involving themselves
with it?
If they oppose something
the SA is trying to do they
are criticized for taking the
off campus point of view.
They are criticized for being
themselves. What is wrong
with an off-campus view-point?
Apparently everything.
The very name Student
Association is a misnomer. It
should be called the On-Cam-pus
Student Association. The
off-campus aren't included,
and they are getting tired of
it.
There are things the SA
can do for them. Like what
you ask? Things like turning
the gym lounge into a
"cranny" for the off-campus.
It could be staffed by
off-campus, thus giving some
a work opportunity. The
people in the dorms have a
short way to walk to get
something to eat. The
off-campus students, who
usually mill around Carlson
Towers have to walk back to
the Campus center. Granted
it is not a great distance, but
why can't they have conve-nience?
Or is there a double
standard here?
The entertainment on
campus is geared too much
for the on-campus students.
Why not bring in some
talents that would draw the
off-campus back to school on
weekends? The off-campus
here are geared to a different
form of entertainment than
those living in the dorms.
What the off-campus are
looking for is their own
identity. They resent, and
rightfully so, being absorbed
into the on-campus Student
Association clique.
The time has come for
ture, visible change. And that
time is now. Just wait and
see.
•
Signed articles indicate
the opinions of their
authors and do not
necessarily reflect the
opinions of the College
News.
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Thorburn-Ste pan In Two
Concerts For Parents Day
This Saturday, November
4, Parents' Day arrives again,
with its accompanying busy
schedule of activities. For par-ents
and early-bird students,
there will be a coffee hour in
the Campus Center Lounge
at 9 a.m. Following this, at
9:45 and 10:30 a.m., the
parents will have opportuni-ties
to attend special
parent-classroom lectures by
Mr. A. T. Johnson, Science;
Ms. Delores Johnson, Nurs-ing;
Mr. Craig Stewart,
Drama-Speech; or Mr. Ver-non
Wettersten, History.
The Parents-Students lun-cheon
is at 11:30 in the
cafeteria. On-campus stu-dents
may use their boarder
tickets; for off-campus stu-dents
and parents there will
be a $1 per person charge.
The parents are requested to
register so that the Dining
Hall personnel will be able to
plan accurately.
The North Park Vikings
face Wheaton's football
filberts on the athletic field at
1:30 p.m. Admission price for
parents is $2.50, for students
from other schools, $1, for
NP students, free with IDs.
Following the game, par-ents
will be able to meet
professors whom they've
heard cussed and discussed
at the Parent-Faculty Coffee
Hour in the Gym Lounge.
The Parents Association
Dinner and Program is at
6:30. Parents will have
registered by mail; students
who wish to attend with their
parents will be admitted with
their boarder tickets ($2.50
for non-boarder students),
but they must register at the
Campus Center Desk ahead
of time, again to enable the
Dining Hall staff to plan.
For those who don't wish
to attend the special dinner,
the first Stepan-Thorburn
concert is at 7 p.m. in the
Lecture Hall: $3 for adults,
$1.50 for NP students. This is
a benefit concert for the
College Parents Fund. It
might be wise to buy your
tickets in advance, since past
concerts have been sold out.
By 9 p.m., parents and
students will have left the
dinner, and had ample time
to make their way to the
second Stepan-Thorburn
concert. This ends the on
campus acitivities. For night
owls, there's always Old
Town, the top of Big John,
the Playboy Theatre's all-night
show, the Lake Shore
Drive, spy games at O'Hare,
and the countless restaurants
and coffee shops that line
Chicago's streets.
WNPC On the Air
by Lode Theriault
Have you even wondered
what it would be like to have
our very own WNPC radio
station again — run by our
very own NPC students for
our NPC students? It has a
certain appeal to it, when you
really think about it.
We could broadcast our
own kind of programs for our
own kind of people. When
WLS and WCFL are playing
all the latest hits fifty times
over, we could walk over to
the Campus Center or dorm
and listen to the nostalgic
touch of Sha Na Na or a
heavier sound like Jethro
Tull or Emerson, Lake, and
Palmer. And wouldn't it be
nice to be informed some-what
of what happens
around the campus by a
much more reliable means
SWildatt shop
3313 Foster Ave.
IR 8-0327
Gifts and Cards
from Scandinavia
Mon./Thurs. 9:30-9
Other days 9:30-6
We pack, wrap, and mail
Shafer Florists -
Corner
Bryn Mawr & Kimball
478-6276
10% discount to all North
Park Students and Faculty
Russell Stepan
than the NPC grapevine?
There have been a
relatively small group of
students who have indicated
very positive responses to the
above questions. This group
of students would like to
revive the North Park radio
station which was closed
down last year because of
lack of student interest,
resulting in a very poor
quality of broadcasting. The
station was also having
problems with theft, the
misuse of equipment, and a
definite lack of organization.
Students who are willing to
work together are needed in
order to retain organization in
a function such as this.
Publications and Communi-cations
Commission chair-man
George Spanske feels
that he has found such a
group of students who are
interested in helping with the
station, but he needs more
people
David Tharburn
Almost
Spanske, who has organiz-ed
and worked with a radio
station at Harper Junior
College in Palatine, Ill.,
believes that a station at
North Park could greatly
benefit the students.
Margaret Peterson of the
speech department, who is
the station's faculty advisor,
says that the program should
be an "educational exper-ience."
This does not,
however, place any great
limitations on programming
— only that it be organized
and the station not used as a
plaything.
Dean Carroll Peterson also
expressed an interest in the
station. He believes that it
could get going with enough
student interest to have a full
staff and plan for the future
of it. Dean Peterson also
stated that the school could
finance it as long as it
functioned in conjuction with
the department of speech.
Kurt's Beauty Salon
(formerly Mr. Marty's Coiffures)
3244 W. Foster, Chicago
Telephone — 539-9400
Welcome to Kurts, opening November 1st
North Park area, to serve you.
Tues — Sat 9-5
Thurs and Fri evenings till 7 PM
31
Wednesday, November 1, 1972 THE COLLEGE NEWS Page 3
Imo\ opmeN
111115\1-c) ‘11111".)
Noe
Donations keep coming in
— how nice! Mayhap now I'll
have time to study — no?
Perchance I may go to some
of these events? Fat chance.
A columnist never sleeps, or
makes merry ho ho! Work
work work! May you all enjoy
this, my sacrifice! Let me not
slave in vain! Have fun, enjoy
Yourselves cheaply! For
example, the Chicago Public
Library is celebrating its
centennial this year. So today
I rung up an overworked lady
in public relations and asked:
What's Happening?" Oh—
She thought that was very
funny. "Too much" says she.
"But I need to know now for
all my avid readers" says I.
"Oh boy" says she, "You'd
best write quickly" and here
are some exhibits being
shown in the Loop Library
main corridors some of which
are rather engaging, all of
Which are free:
"Folk art of Japan" is
sponsored by the Japanese- •
American Committee of
Chicago; sculpture by George
Quix; Irene Baer Alexandro-vich
memorial prints and
acrylic painting by Albert
Alexandrovich; Applied Sci-ence
8- Technology exhibit:
"Get the lead out!" by the
American Oil Company;
Natural Sciences and Useful
Arts exhibit: "Fossils and
Where to find them" with
Fred LaBahn; Music exhibit:
"Great sopranos of the past"
Photographs and engravings
can just imagine the petite
damsels) with Joseph Pek-nek;
History and Travels
exhibit: "Arab lands, pictures,
and facts" by the Arab
Information Center; Thomas
Hughes Room for Chidren:
'Watercolors of young ani-mals"
by Helen DelValle and
an exhibit of the art of
Chicago
Exotica
Englewood High School
Students.
It's enough maybe for me
to finally to get a CPL card,
wouldn't you say? The
Library also has a nice
collection of thousands of
volumes, many of which are
available on loan.
The Equity Library Theatre
has performances at 1 and 7
pm on Mondays, but my lady
was too out of breath to tell
me what is currently
performed. Also every Friday
there are Free Films at 12:15
and 5:45 pm. All plays and
films are in the Auditorium,
second floor off Randolph St.
Tuesday evenings at 8 pm
there is a lecture series
entitled: "The City in a
Historic and Philosophic
contact". Four lectures have
been given already and four
'more are to go till the 28th.
On November 14th (during
finals week, ha ha) Gwendo-lyn
Brooks is speaking — that
will be good.
Wednesdays at noon there
are Lyric Opera previews.
This Wednesday (Nov. 1)
Alfred Glaffer will hold forth
on Mozart's "Cossi Fan
Tutte".
Thursdays host the old
timey "Noon Hour Lectures"
which currently examine the
theme: "The Consumer Bites
Back." This seems to imply
that we consumers are
employing defense tech-niques
similar to those of the
canine community, ho ho.
This is all I could wrest from
my harried and helpful lady
over the phone — for more
information call yourself:
236-8922.
As a child I was often
taken to the Chicago
Historical Society Museum at
North Avenue and Clark
Street. I remember it as a
dank and dark and wierd old
place, but interesting. Where
else would you find the death
mask of Abraham Lincoln?
And some exotics of early
Illinois — marvelous! But rve
heard that the morgue
influence is being banished
— that the Zap generation is
being catered to with zingy
President Nixon has
exhibits (no kidding): "the
First Lady Collection" is
presenting inaugural and
formal gowns worn by Frist
Ladies from Mary Todd
Lincoln through Mrs. Richard
Nixon, come on Nixon fans.
"The Great Chicago Fire"
show focuses on the city
before the blaze, the massive
destruction, and subsequent
display of the "I will" spirit of
remarkable recovery. We
seem to love to celebrate
being burned alive in 1871.
"Chicago Buildings Desig-nated
as Architectural and
Historical Landmarks" opens
on November 4 and should
earned the support of young Americans.
warm the cockles of art Prof.
Stuart Carlson's heart. This is
a facinating photo study of
Chicago's architectural trea-sures
including Alta Vista
Terrace, the oldest house in
the city, Robie House and the
Rookery. The museum is
open weekdays 9:30 am to
4:30 pm, Sundays and
holidays 12:30 pm to 5:30 pm.
50c for adults, 25c for
kiddies, and $1 for families.
FREE on MONDAY!
My superior officer, Mr.
Steve Carr, informed me last
week that the Art Institute
gift shop is selling marvelous
reproductions of Miro posters
for 50c (chiep!); also for $2
large color reproductions of
paintings by Dali and Lautrec
and believe me many more.
Other items to be found at
good prices are art books and
jewelry. You could do a lot of
your holiday looking there
and earn an artsy reputation,
or at least impress the family.
Mr. Carr's remarks ended
with this: "Can you see
NPCers decorating their dorm
rooms with rejiroduced
Miros?" Ah — mad dreams
of glory!
see you,
Joan Henke
"III
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THE COLLEGE NEWS Wednesday, November 1, 1972
Reason Enou
As I look back on the past
four years of American
history, I have mixed feelings
about the events and
developments our country
has gone through. In 1968,
while a senior in high school,
I was a zealous campaigner
to elect Richard Nixon as
President. To me he was the
symbol of hope around which
the American people could
reunify themselves to further
the cause of our great land.
I remember the days of
1967-68 when every aspect
of our lives were being
shaken to their very roots.
There were race riots which
burned down cities, so many
war protest marches that
they became part of our very
lifestyle, and kids, friends of
mine, who were ruining their
health on the dangerous
chemicals called drugs which
were so free-flowing. I
remember seeing the Des
Plaines River flowing thick
with soap suds through the
forest preserve of trees
whose leaves were scorched
and withered by heavy hazes
of pollution in the air.
We were never certain
when we went to sleep at
night whether we would
wake up in the morning or be
disintegrated into atomic
mists as we slept. We had
more enemies than we had
friends in the sphere of world
relations and in these circles
our name was being linked
with many problems in many
of the world's trouble spots.
To me, electing Senator
Humphrey would mean a
continuation of much the
same policy, and that would
have been a disaster.
There have been times
since the last election that I
have given serious considera-tion
to action taken by the
President, namely, the Selec-tive
Service Lottery and the
expansion of the Viet Nam
conflict into Indo-China, but I
gritted my teeth and stood,
sometimes hesitately, behind
the man I helped elect. And,
looking back, now, I don't
regret it one bit. During his
campaign, Citizen Nixon
talked considerably about
planning for the future,
working toward a goal of
permanent peace. He dis-cussed
the idea of a
permanent strong foundation
upon which a house of peace
may stand. I began to see
what he meant by his
phrases. Sometimes, in order
for a situation, or situations,
to correct itself, the entity
which is needed is time,
patience,' and properly timed
executions of phases of the
plan which will aid in the
jelling process of the solution.
Some people are impatient
and in a hurry to get things
cleaned up and finished. But
even the skilled artist or fine
craftsman will tell you that a
job which is done slowly,
carefully, and with much
effort put into it to perfect it,
will be a better, long-last-ing
work than one that is
done in haste.
I feel that Mr. Nixon's
opponent offers us nothing
more than hasty ideas and
solutions. Some of these
ideas, if put into effect,
would cause us to lose much
of the valuable ground we
college news
Published seven times a term during the school year at North Park
College, Foster and Kedzie, Chicago, Illinois 60625. Telephone num-bers:
JU 8-7926 or JU 3-2750.
Signed articles indicate the opinions of their authors and do not
necessarily reflect the opinions of THE COLLEGE NEWS of North
Park College.
EDITORS: Steve Carr, Walt Macuda
NEWS EDITOR: Kris Ness
BUSINESS MANAGER: Tom Vikander
STAFF WRITERS: Diane Haglund, Fred Johnson, Bill Smetak,
Lone Theriault, Linda Walker
HEAD TYPIST: Nancy K. Larson
TYPISTS: Dot Schipper, Melissa Tipton
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ILLUSTRATOR: Joan Hanke
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have already gained and once
again place us in much the
position we were under in the
Johnson Administration. I
say this with regards to the
Senator's record of voting for
many of the war-escalating
proposals of the past
President.
Thomas Jefferson favored
decentralized government.
Mr. Nixon's revenue-sharing
proposals would give more
power to the states, decen-tralize
much of the federally-controlled
money, and give it
back to the people of our
democracy where it belongs.
Mr. McGovern's proposal
to give $1,000 to every
American regardless of need
would increase the taxes of
working Americans to almost
income level, place nearly
one out of every two
Americans on some form of
welfare, and create a state
where the federal govern-ment
would be manager of
half the income of the
country's citizens. This pro-position
would socialize,
demoralize, and build up such
a bulwark of centralized
bureaucracy, that our once-guarded
individual liberties
would be permanently jeo-pardized.
Time has shown this true.
There is improvement in all
phases of American life under
Nixon. He brought home
480,000 men from Vietnam,
cut our casualties by 95%
and refuses to give up our
POW's for a "quickie" end.
The environment is an
important objective. Anti-pol-lution
expenditures increased
by 95% and he created the
Environmental Protection
Agency. He signed into law
the Clean Air Act and
restricted the use of harmful
pesticides. He lowered the
voting age to 18, giving the
franchise to a wider scope of
Americans and is providing
for an all volunteer army by
June, 1973, lifting the dread
of the draft from so many
young American lives. He has
worked for equal opportunity
for all. Minority employment
has increased considerably
since 1968, even though a
general decrease of federal
employment is in operation.
People ask me: Why are
you supporting Nixon? From
what I have just written, and
much more, this is reason
enough.
Jay Anderson
McGovern
Lauded
On November 7 we will go to the polls and choose a man to
lead this country for four more years. The common man
-seldom has the chance, as he does in this election, to make a
choice which will actually determine the direction in which this
country will move. If we are responsible citizens and
Christians, we must carefully and prayerfully choose a man of
integrity, a man with a humanitarian philosophy, and a man
whose scale of values reflects this philosophy if America is to
find peace with herself in the next four years. For us the
choice is clear.
If we were all professional economists, historians and
political scientists, we could better understand the intricacies
of the issues we are presented with today. Most of us are not
professionals. For us the issues of this campaign have been
clouded even further, though. Read any reputable paper or
news magazine and you will see such headlines as appeared in
the October 23 issue of Newsweek: "Watergate: Very
Offensive Security" which describes Republican campaign
tactics as "a clandestine operation extending beyond petty
snooping into the arcane and disturbing realm of political
sabotage." Distortion of the issues by the President's attack
group is a prime objective in their effort to discredit Senator
McGovern while Nixon is able to hold himself safely out of the
public eye behind the protective walls of the White House.
Senator McGovern has done his share to cloud the issues with
his seeming indecisiveness on some of the technicalities of the
major issues.
To judge the candidates adequately we must leave the level
of calculated demagoguery on one side and ambiguous
articulation on the other and proceed to try to understand the
type of man we want as our president. If we recognize the fact
that the bureaucracy which supplies a president the
information he needs to make his decisions will provide
roughly the same set of alternatives whether he is Republican
or Democrat, we will see the importance of the quality of the
man at the top.
The New York Times believes that:
"In an America striving to realize its own vision of equality
and liberty under the rule of law, the Presidency requires
particular qualities of character, leadership and moral force
that transcend the narrow bounds of personal ambition and of
party politics. It requires a perception of the things that are
wrong with America — politically, socially, economically,
morally — as well as the things that are right; and a sense of
priorities that gives precedence to human needs and public
integrity over the panoply of wealth and the arrogance of
power."
We believe Senator McGovern best fills these needs.
Senator McGovern is known by his congressional colleagues
as a man of integrity. He is not the man who must hide such
scandals as ITT, Watergate, and the grain deals. George
McGovern is a humane man who believes that the individual
has as much if not more value than the current corporate
gods. He states: "It is time to realize that the true measure of
America's greatness is not its wealth but its wisdom and
compassion — how it cares for its deprived, its elderly, its
widows and orphas, its physically handicapped, mentally
retarded and emotionally disturbed." His plans do not include
such dehumanizing actions as "mass fingerprinting and the
like to prevent 'welfare cheating—, though he is no more in
favor of "welfare cheating" than Nixon. Nor does he intend to
ask Congress to slash appropriations for health, education and
welfare needs in order to meet the bloated demands of that
very military-industrial complex President Eisenhower warned
us against in 1961. Senator McGovern believes in healing the
wounds which so deeply hurt America, not perpetuating them
with his choice of a potential successor who so blatently
disregards individual and human rights. As Golfrey Connally,
younger brother of the former Secretary of the Treasury John
Connally comments in Time (Oct. 2); "The divisiveness of this
administration — openly pitting rich against poor, old against
young,whites against blacks — is unprecedented in our time."
Senator McGovern in all areas from the economy to national
defense to civil liberties seems to be moving in the right
direction and with far more consistency than his opponent has
ever shown. George McGovern follows the best traditions of
American democracy. He has been called a radical. But is it so
radical to worry about the lives of the people of Indochina
more than our honor? Is it so radical to want to maintain a
military establishment based upon need rather than on what
we can possibly buy or build? Perhaps these real alternatives
to America's present direction are not any more radical than a
return to America's historic concern for the common man. We
support George McGovern because he is a man of integrity, a
man with a humanitarian philosophy and a man whose scale of
values reflects this philosophy. For us the choice is clear.
John Liljegren
Paul Lindman
Dave Pearson
Marilyn Sandin
Wednesday, November 1, 1972 THE COLLEGE NEWS Page 5
Your colleagues, whose names are
listed below, wish you to know
that they are supporting
GEORGE
McGOVERN
for President
and a government of
SINCERITY — JUSTICE
COMPASSION PEACE
Gordon Ade11 Nodee E. DuBose Cindy Hovda Lynn Lundgren Janice Pollock
Ann Anderson Walter W. Drang Gail F. Howard Ken Lund Sam Psimoulis
Diana Anderson George Dusenbery Jeff Ichihaski Walt Macuda Kathy Reeves
Dennis Anderson Joey Ekberg Gerald Jackson Jeff Magill Hilda Reyes
Jan Anderson Steven Elde Joseph W. Jahrke Linda Malmberg Carol Rigmark
Marabeth Anderson Sue Elde Don Jobst Werner Martin Sarah Rockwell
Vincent P. Anderson Debbie Erickson John Joenks Diane Martino Don Rydberg
Terela Anthony Joyce Erickson Burton P. Johnson Steven Maxe Valerie Sanchez
John Anduri Peggy Erickson Daniel Johnson Ken Mencani Marilyn Sandin
Irene Arbetman Steven Eul Joel M. Johnson Mike Menk Bob Sellinger
Linda Bailey Pete Faklis Linda M. Johnson Bruce Metcalf Joe Serafin
Scott Baltic Joe Garofalo Mark E. Johnson Nancy Metzger William Srnetak
Kevin Barber Barbara L. Gibbs Phil Johnson Janice Mitchell Mel Soderstrom
Mark Bengston Kathy Goble Glenn Jones Jim Moncrieff J. Melburn Soneson
Tim Benson Stephen Goldstein Mara Karklins F. liurton Nelson Mable Spears
Al Berry Ellen Groce Jon Kempe Duane Nelson Randall J. Stanton
Randy Bergstrom Janet V. Gunn Phil Kennedy Ingrid Nelson Bob Stearns
Diana Bolton Ernest D. Guntermann III Thomas W. King Karen Nelson John Stromberg
Edward Boncy David Gustafson George Kondos Wendy Nelson Mark Sustad
Robert 0. Byrd Diane Haglund Peter Kondos Kris Ness Mark Thatcher
John Canger Phil Hakanson David Kruger Eric Newberg Helen Thomas
Steven Douglas Carr Karen M. Hammersburg William Kyryliw Leslie Norbury. Richard Tragasz
Dale Carlson Joan Hanke Sandi Lambert Jim Oberg Reynold Vann
Elsa Carlson Wayne Hansen Karen Larson Jim O'Boyle Dorothy Vann
Patti Carone Pete Heintzelman Nancy Kristine Larson Don Olsen Susan Vanderwoude
Glenda Ceaderleaf Tim Heintzelman Phil Larson Dave Olson Michael Voight
LuAnn Connole Ken Helander Ralph Lavieri Lauren Olson Linda Walker
Marvin Curtis Lorna Hinze Janice Lepke Carolyn O'Reilley Margie Warner
Daryl L. Darst Paul Hirsch Mark Liljedahl Dave Pearson Joe Weinshenker
Patrick Denning Judy Hoffman John Liljegren Charley Peterson David Wells
Jean Driscoll Donna. Hogan Joy Liljegren Curt Peterson Sigurd F. Westberg
Forrest Dahl Dale Holmgren Paul Lindman Jim Peterson Charles Wiberg
Bart Dahlstrom Frederick Holmgren Keith Lorenson Marty Pettus Kathy Wiberg
Earl C. Dahlstrom Katina Holmgren Randall K. Lowe Barb Phillips Candace Wickstrom
David Detwiler Mark Holmgren Bruce Lundblad Loren Pinski Owen Youngman
Our apologies to the numerous campus supporters of Senator McGovern
Whom we have failed to reach to verify their wish to be included in this list.
The cost of publishing this statement has been paid for by members
of your college community only.
Page 6 THE COLLEGE NEWS Wednesday, November 1, 1972
Apocalyptic Lectures Soon Attention! Vox Populi
To North Park Writers. • • Dr. James Perry Martin,
principal of the Vancouver
School of Theology, Vancou-ver,
Canada, will deliver the
Nils W. Lund Memorial
lectures at North Park
Theological Seminary on
Nov. 8 and 9. Open to the
public without charge, the
lectures are scheduled for 9
a.m. each day in Isaacson
Chapel.
Overall theme for the
lectures is Apocalyptic To-day.
The first lecture is titled
"Varieties of Doomsday
Culture" and the second, "so
Great A Salvation." Question
periods will follow.
A native of Canada, Dr.
Martin received a B.A. Sc. in
chemical engineering and
was first an instructor in
chemistry at the University of
Toronto and then at Prince-ton
University. He earned
two theological degrees at
Princeton Theological Semi-nary;
Th.M. and Th.D. (1958).
He has been on the faculties
of Princeton Seminary and of
the Union Theological Semi-nary
at Richmond, Virginia.
He has written several
articles for religious periodi-cals,
especially in the New
Testament field.
The lectureship memor-lades
the late Nils W. Lund,
who was dean of the North
Park Seminary from 1925 to
1948.
Christian Politics
November 3 is our next
required convocation. Profes-sor
Tyler Thompson of
Garrett Theological Seminary
will be speaking and respond-ing
to questions on the
general topic of "The
Christian in Politics." In his
talk he will develop the New
Testament basis for political
participation and then will get
into current issues, particular-ly
the South East Asia
problem. The convocation is
at 9:15 AM in the Gym. A
question period is scheduled
for 9:50-10:10 following the
talk.
Professor Thompson is
competent to handle this
assignment in a way that
should not offend partisan
convictions. He was a
, missionary, teaching in An-glo-
Chinese secondary
schools in • Singapore from
1939-46. Three of those years
were spent in a Japanese
interment camp in Singapore.
He has been a careful student
of Asian ways for more than
30 years. Since 1951 he has
been at Garrett teaching in
the area of Philosophy of
Religion.
Help Out The Poor
Alice Martin is 74 and has
no relatives living within two
hundred miles. Day after day
she sits looking out the
window. She is lonely and
often hungry because at 74
when you have arthritis it is
hard to get out shop, then to
come back home and cook.
The Services to the
Impaired Age Program is
TAXI LEASING
AVAILABLE
Both male and female,
must be 21 years or older.
Equal Rights Opportunity
Very Liberal Hours, Better-
Than-Average Income,
Be Your Own Boss!
Inquire 10 AM — 2 PM
Skokie Yellow Cab Company
8015 N. Lawndale
or call OR 3-0589
Ask for Mr. Trager
working in the Uptown,
Lakeview, Edgewater and
Near North communities and
is providing a network of
supportive services to the
aged in their homes. There
are many important activities
for volunteers to do, such as
delivering meals or making
friendly visits.
Help this program reach as
many elderly as possible by
volunteering a little of your
time. Contact Trudi Davis,
Volunteer Coordinator, at
784-7022.
NAPOLI PIZZA
and Dining Room
3340 W. Lawrence
featuring
afternoon deliveries
Mon./Tues. Special
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Annual Textbook Warehouse Sale
Our entire warehouse stock of over one million text-books
— new and used — both hardbound and paper-back
— current editions and out-of-prints.
50% or more off list price
CASH AND CARRY ONLY
All Sales Final
Mon. Oct. 30 — Sat. Nov. 4
9 AM — 5 PM
Chandler's, Inc., Textbook Div.
630 Davis St., Evanston, Ill.
Enter via alley on south side of the building
Registration for the Winter
Term is scheduled for Oct. 30
— Nov. 16. Only students
who will be changing their
programs and those who did
not register for the Winter
Term will need to register at
this time. ALL students are
required to see their advisors.
Students who will not be
changing their programs
need only report this to their
advisors. Students who will
not be returning for the
Winter Term should obtain
Non-Returning forms from
their advisors; these should
be returned to the Dean of
Students before Nov. 16.
Students who plan to
change their programs•for the
Winter Term only (no
changes are to be made for
the Spring Term at this time).
The program card should be
initialed by your advisor and
returned to the Records
Office. Since class tickets will
be pulled at this time, it is to
your advantage to see your
advisor at the earliest
possible time after Oct. 30.
If for some reason you are
unable to contact your
advisor, you make see the
secretary of the Testing
Office, Ms. Sondra Johnson.
The secretary of the Division
will make appointments with
major advisors.
The Records Office will be
open to process these
changes from 10:30 a.m. to
12 noon and from 2 p.m. to
3:30 p.m. each day. Students
who have not completed
their registration by Nov. 16
will be charged a late
registration fee of $10.
Sign Up For Trip
Applications are now avail-able
at the Campus Center
Desk for the Sonoran Desert
Ecology trip during Project
Week, March 30 — April 8.
RMA Election
Elelctions for the offices of
the Resident Mens' Associa-tion
will be held Nov. 3. The
President must be a returning
student. Petitions are avail-able
at the Campus Center
Desk; they must be turned in
by 4 p.m., Nov. 1.
WHO Min
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In my life day in and day out I become more and more
aware of the importance of making the right comment at the
right time. Not just with my friends or relatives, but with
everyone. Not just in my home, but at church, work, school,
and at all occasions and activities. Not just in conversing with
people face to face, but in writing also.
When one does this, one might say that he has the gift of
being "Tactful." I know of no conversational skill more
difficult to acquire. The reason it is so difficult is that it
requires listening to the other person. Many times when
people are in the give-and-take of conversation at least one of
them is so busy organizing his reply (in his head or on paper)
that he doesn't take the time to make sure he knows what he
is replying to. Acting this way could possibly be very
unfortunate because instead of speaking with each other they
have a tendency to speak past each other. Tact implies having
enough consideration for the other person to listen to him.
The Apostle Paul in the book of Colossians gives us a word
of advice to overcome the possible misfortune: "Conduct
yourselves with wisdom toward outsiders, making the most of
the opportunity. Let your speech always be with grace,
seasoned, as it were, with salt, so that you may know how you
should respond to each other." (NASB Translation) When
Paul spoke about the way someone should speak, he didn't
single out any particular kind of people but included everyone.
It is a matter of being aware of the gift of tact and then using
it to the fullest extent!
Tact certainly could be used in a person's Christian witness.
If one wants to win souls for God, no instrument will serve
better than tact. It was this which enabled the great Apostle to
adapt himself to all the different kinds of character he met up
with.
Christ is the greatest illustration of a person using
tactfulness. The four gospels show us instance after instance
of His skill in dealing with people. One example is when the
scribes and Pharisees brought to Jesus a woman caught in the
act of adultery. Our Lord could have blurted out, "You're all
sinners, and if you don't change your ways, you're all going to
be condemned." But instead, He directed a question to them
and let their own conscience partake of their wrongness.
The wrongness of not using tact could not only be
damaging to the other person, but also to the person who
didn't use it. For he could lose a friend, or maybe lose the
support of his followers.
Perhaps the words of the poet, Horace, would be applicable
at this time: "Examine well, ye writers, weigh with care, what
suits your genius — what your strength can bear."
So, North Park writers, season your writing, add a little salt,
and be "Christian Like."
Dennis B. Cropsey
Alumni Offers Aid
If you wanted help in
deciding which major to
choose or if you wanted
advice from someone in the
field you intend to enter after
graduation, do you know
where you could go to get
such help?
Through the work of the
Student Relations Committee
of the Alumni Board, a group
of alumni have stated they
are willing to aid students in
this way.
Herbert J. Hedstrom, an
Alumni Board member and
chairman of the committee,
has listed the fields in which
"alumni consultants" are
C. J. Kahman COrnelia 7-5769
Headquarters for Collegiate
Jewelry
North Park Jewelers
3240 Foster Ave.
Chicago, III. 60625
Watch, Clock and Jewelry
Repairing
Engraving Diamond Setting
Liberal discount to
North Porkers
•
DR. WALTER J. ZINN
OPTOMETRIST
Eyes Examined • Contact Lenses • Consideration for Students
Hours: Mon. and Thurs., 9-8;Tues., 9-12; Sat., 9-3
3304 W. LAWRENCE COrnelia 7-4411
available.
The fields include: advertis-ing
and public relations, art,
business, dentistry, educa-tion,
government, journalism,
law, library science, medicine,
music, nursing, psychology,
secreterial, seminary-Chris-tian
education.
If there are no alumni in a
specific field of interest, the
school and alumni will do
their best to get in contact
with someone who is.
The consultant service is
especially of value to seniors.
Alumni would be available for
them to get information and
advice about their careers
after graduation. Underclass-men
would also benefit by
the service. By meeting and
talking with alumni they can
better choose their major
field of study so it will benefit
them more in connection
with their intended career.
For more information
about the Alumni Board's
consultant service, contact
Bertil Swanson in the Office
of Development, first floor in
the Administration Building,
or Melvin Soderstrom in the
Placement Office, theird floor
of Caroline Hall.
A complete list of names,
addresses and telephone
numbers of alumni are listed
there.
Wednesday, November 1, 1972 THE COLLEGE NEWS Page 7
Basketball Prospects Bright
by Owen Youngman
The snow may not be flying yet, and the football team is still
out there cracking heads, but basketball is slowly working its
way into the collegiate sports picture across the country.
It's as true here at North Park as it is anywhere else, as
coach Dan McCarrell whips his Viking squad into shape for
What promises to be a top-flight season.
Nine lettermen, including all the starters, return from last
Year's squad that racked up a 17-9 overall record and tied for
second place in the CCIW. A total of 21 men are currently out
for workouts, with about 15 of them considered serious
contenders for the 12 starting berths on McCarrell's varsity
crew.
Among those returnees, of course, is two-time all-CCIW
guard Keith McDonald, who averaged 15.7 points per game
last year. Other veterans coming back are Bosko Djurickovic
and Earl Dorsey in the backcourt, Gene Profit, Bob Geist, and
Russ Hylen up front, and Jim Campbell in the middle.
Each of the seven was a starter at some point last winter.
Jon Christenson and Bill Killian round out the list of
lettermen. Up from the junior varsity for a crack are Mike
Groot, Ed Murphy, and Jim Williams; two freshmen, Frank
Dace and Ken Smagacz, and a transfer student, Jim
Hargesheimer, are making impressive bids for spots on the
roster.
"Our strengths this year will probably be our experience,
quickness, good spring (going after the rebound), and
balance," McCarrell commented. "We're one of the smaller
clubs overall in the conference, but we try to make up for it
Lunchtime with
(Cont'd from page 8)
Somewhat put out by his
introduction as the "little
Jewish boy from Brooklyn,"
Cosell proceeded to cut
down Today sports editor
and emcee Rick Talley in
typical Cosellian style: "I
don't like your humor or your
delivery; perhaps writing is
Your bag, yet I have seen no
visible evidence of that
either."
Howard then turned on
Tanner, who had just finished
Praising baseball. "I remem-ber
when baseball was played
seven days a week, the
1930's, when it was number
one. Maybe after a nuclear
attack, when we have to start
building up again and return
to the clang-clang trolley bell
era, baseball will once again
be number one."
He went on to proclaim
football as the number one
Sport today, claiming that it
contained "the principal
characteristics of our society
— swiftness and violence."
Without missing a beat,
Cosell proceeded to hold
court about a part of his life
which he obviously holds
dear — Monday Night
Football. He boasted about
MNF's status as one of the
top 10 TV shows in America
— "We gotta be doing
something right." Gaining
momentum, he then tore into
critics of the broadcasting
trio of Cosell, Frank Gifford,
and Don Meredith.
"The sporting scribes of a
prior era," he shouted,
"criticize us because we do
not give a 'proper reportage'
of the game. We are
desecrating the great religion,
but they don't play games in
Westminster Abbey."
Howard, with growing
eloquence, explained his
philosophy of sport: "We
must put it in its place; if it is
an escape, let's have it as an
escape. The world of sport is
not different from any other
part of society. There are
those who portray it as
a Camelot; that it is not."
After answering with "I am
never without them" to a
questioner wondering if
Howard had his Fruit of the
Loom underwear on, Cosell
Harriers Get Ready
(Cont'd from page 8)
Larry was down at the
Illinois Intercollegiate Cross-
Country championship in
DeKalb, where Southern
Illinois ran away with the
team title as four of their
runners (Dave Hill, Gerald
Craig, Gerald Hinton, and
John St. John) tied for first
In record time of 24:38.3.
Swanson was tenth at
25:11, half a minute behind
the winners. Glenn Behnke of
North Central, one of the few
CCIW runners competing,
edged him by several
seconds to take ninth place.
A week earlier, the Parkers
took third in the Valparaiso
I nvitational at Valparaiso, Ind.
S wanson won individual
honors, trailed by Batdorf
(10th), Roberts (17th), Cole-
Man (20th), Brian BaIdea
(23rd), and Steve Skahn
(24th). Southwest Michigan
won the meet, with host
Valparaiso second and Whea-ton
fourth.
Following the CCIW meet
this week, the harriers prep
for the NCAA College
Division meet at Wheaton on
Nov. 11th, from which the
top runners will head for the
University meet on the 20th
of the month.
ZWICK'S
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3340 Foster Ave.
Tel. IN 3-4380
with defense." He rated his Vikes as likely to be one of the
best defensive ballclubs in the nine-team loop.
And that is going to be crucial as the CCIW prepares for
what is expected to be a free-wheeling race for the cage title.
Defending champ Augustana welcomes back its entire starting
five, Wheaton could be tough again, and Millikin is expected to
cause trouble after a rough tussle with injuries last season. Of
the teams that tied for second, only Illinois Wesleyan lost
much through graduation — and they still promise to be hard
to handle.
"We could have had a share of the title last year if we
hadn't looked past a couple of our games," McCarrell
pointed out, "and we don't intend to let that happen again."
The Vikings should look about the same as last year, but
with a few added touches of refinement and improvement.
McCarrell plans to stick to his man-to-man defense and an
offensive philosophy where the players are "always moving.
We keep them moving to set up certain situations in the
defense, then take advantage of those defensive adjustments
to score.
"I guess you could call it a combination of a fast break and a
pattern offense. We'll run when we get the ball and when we
get a chance, but we play for position just as much."
IM Finals Thursday
The intramural flag football
season wound up last
Thursday, and the four top
Cosell
exploded at a query as to
whether he had ever played
any sports, and if he hadn't,
how come he knew so much.
"Don't throw that non-sense
at me," he roared.
"Look at the so-called jock
sportscasters. They have no
training, no background —
which college of journalism
did they attend, what law
schools did they study at? Is
the men who undergoes the
most operations most qualifi-ed
to be a surgeon?"
After commenting on his
role in the Olympics (no
apologies) and reminiscing
about Branch Rickey, Jackie
Robinson, and Vince Lom-bardi,
Cosell retired to
well-deserved applause.
It was, no doubt, a virtuoso
performance. There is only
one Howard Cosell.
teams in the league then
readied themselves for the
playoffs which began Mon-day.
Big Bertha, Pootz, the
Over-the-Hill Gang, and
B.M.O.C. took the four
playoff berths. Semifinal
games were Monday, and the
finals are scheduled for River
Park tomorrow afternoon.
REGULAR SEASON FINAL
W L
Big Bertha 5 1
Pootz 5 1
Over-the-Hill Gang 4 2
B. M. O. C. 4 2
Grit 2 4
Uni6n High 1 5
The Team 0 6
Two-time all-CCIW pick Keith
McDonald heads the lists of returnees
to a Viking basketball team that pro-mises
to challenge for the league title.
Ping-Pong
Tourney Set
The top 25 table tennis
players in the United States
will be in Wheeling, Ill., on
Dec. 16 and 17 for the U.S.
World Team tryouts. Five
men and four women will be
chosen to represent the
United States in the World
Table Tennis Championships
in Sarajevo, Yugoslavia next
April.
The competition at Wheel-ing
High School will be
entirely on a round-robin
basis, to be held in five
two-and-a-half hour sessions.
The Mount Prospect Jay-cees
are sponsoring the
event. Sessions will be at 2
p.m. and 7 p.m. on Saturday
the 16th, 10 a.m. and 2 p.m.
on Sunday the 17th, and the
finals Sunday night at 6:30
p.m.
Ski Viking . . .
before you hit the slopes
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Page 8 THE COLLEGE NEWS Wednesday, November 1, 1972
First Win of Year
Vikings Upset Carroll 42-35
by Dave Larson
WAUKESHA, Wis. —
Happy days are here again!
The North Park football
Vikings got that cherished
first victory last Saturday
over the Carroll Pioneers,
42-35. Not only was it the
first win of the season for the
Vikes, but their first ever over
Carroll in 13 attempts.
Coach Bill Gourley could
have been a circus' star
attraction with all the juggling
he used in the lineup to gain
his first win. He used a 4-1-6
defense — six men in the
secondary — to discourage
league-leading passer Dave
Anscheutz from throwing the
ball.
Anscheutz persisted, how-ever,
and the four intercep-tions
that NP defenders came
up with cost Carroll the
game. Bob Braun had a pair
of grabs, Tom Bagley one,
and Greg Nugent — going
both ways in the game — the
other.
North Park's opening
kickoff set the mood of the
game as Carroll fumbled and
Bruce Kaufman fell on the
CCIW Standings
W L T
Carthage
Augustana
Elmhurst
Millikin
Carroll
Ill. Wesleyan
NORTH PARK
Wheaton
North Central
6
4
4
4
4
3
1
1
0
0 0
2 0
2 0
2 0
3 0
3 0
4 1
5 0
6 1
RESULTS
NORTH PARK 42, Carroll 35
Carthage 47, North Central 18
ball at the 35. The Vikes went
eight yards before losing the
ball on downs; Carroll did no
better, so the Park had a
second chance.
Starting on their own 27,
the Vikes moved 73 yards in
seven plays for a score. The
drive was climaxed by Ed
Tankersley's 24-yard sweep
around left end into the end
zone. Bob Fabrizio added the
PAT for a 7-0 edge.
On Carroll's third play after
the kickoff, Braun picked off
a pass on the Pioneer 40.
Nine plays later, Chuck
DiPrima plowed across for
the first of his four TD's, and
Fabrizio kicked the game to
14-0.
Carroll struck back with a
73-yard drive, with Mike
Meinerz scoring the TD, the
extra point attempt failing.
The Pioneers then tried to
keep their momentum going
with an onside kick, but Bob
McAndrews foiled that strat-egy
and NP took over on the
50.
Their drive for a score was
interrupted by an intercep-tion,
but Anschuetz fumbled
on his own two-yard line
almost immediately and
DiPrima went into the end
zone with 9:43 left in the half.
Fabrizio's kick made it 21-6.
A 43-yard TD pass from
Anscheutz to Jack Miller and
a successful two-point con-version
brought Carroll to
within 21-14, but the Park
came back with a Tankersley
kick return, some Gary
Duesenberg passes to Dave
Holdener (playing tight end
for the first time), and a
topping four-yard scoring run
Loop CC Meet Ahead
Can Coach Ted Hed-strand's
North Park harriers
challenge for the CCIW
cross-country title? That's a
question that's been at the
back of everyone's mind all
season, but this Saturday it
moves to the front as the
runners head up to Kenosha,
Wisc., for the league meet.
The Park squad got a look
at the course for that meet
last Saturday — and maybe
an answer to that question —
when they took on Carthage
in a dual meet and took a
15-50 drubbing. Joe McGhee
won in a course record time
of 26:15 for the host Redmen,
and was followed into the
gate by six teammates before
a Viking crossed the line.
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Niles Batdorf then led a
parade of six straight NPC
runners in: Jim Roberts, Bob
Faetz, Tony Rosano, Jerome
Coleman, and Steve Powen-ski.
Viking captain Larry
Swanson, who last year beat
out McGhee for the league
individual title, was not
competing.
(Cont'd. on page 7)
This Week
In Sports
SATURDAY
Soccer
Ill. Benedictine at North Park,
9:30 a.m., Eugene Field.
Cross-Country
CCIW Meet at Carthage, 11 a.m.
Football
Wheaton at North Park, 1:30 p.m.
TUESDAY
Volleyball
Northeastern at North Park, 8 p.m
by DiPrima. It was 28-14 with
Fabrizio's point after.
Bagley's interception set
up the chance for Greg
Nugent to break Paul
Zaeske's all-time NP recep-tion
record, which he did just
before the half ended. Zaeske
had 133; Nugent is now up to
140.
After intermission, the
Vikings rebounded from an
unsuccessful fake field goal
try to score yet again.
DiPrima got this one, too,
and it was 35-14.
Carroll scored the next
three TD's to tie the game.
Anschuetz scored the first
one, Meinerz the second after
Dave Luisier's second inter-ception,
and Jim Wick the
third on a deflected pass. It
was 35-all, and it stayed that
way as the teams exchanged
possession four times.
Unbeknownst to many, the North Park women's Power Volleyball team
has been working out and taking part in contests with as much regularity
as the football squad. Just look at the action! Their next home game is
Tuesday against Northeastern.
Oh, Howard!
by Gordon Edes
He is hardly what you
would call an impressive-looking
man—short in stature
with a middle-aged paunch,
drooping shoulders, and a
prominent nose in the middle
of an otherwise undistinguin-guished
face. Perhaps his
most distinctive physical
characteristic are his vocal
cords, which rival a power
drill in decibel production.
Yet this man is seen in
millions of American homes
on Monday nights from
September to December; he
is the self-proclaimed "sex
symbol of Monday Night
Football" — Howard Cosell.
No other sportscaster in
• America provokes as much
The only things inflationary about it are the tires.
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controversy as this 52-year-old
lawyer from Brooklyn. For
every person who admires
Cosell, there is another who
will not hesitate to admit a
dislike that borders on hatred.
For this writer, Chicago
Today's Quarterback Club
luncheon presented an op-portunity
that could not be
passed up — to hear Cosell in
person. Accompanied by
Mark Thyren, I ventured
downtown to the classy
Sherman House where, after
an inspiring meat loaf-and-potato
dinner, we awaited
the special guest's arrival.
Cosell came in quite
unobtrusively, but once he
was spotted he immediately
became the center of
attention, as befits his status.
Mark, who had thoughtfully
brought his camera along,
asked Cosell for a picture.
Howard willingly obliged with
a smiling pose.
I then advanced upon him,
and after a stumbling, "uh,
Mr. Cosell, it's a great
privilege," was amused by his
response — "It is entirely my
pleasure." The hell it was, I
thought.
After listening to a parade
of other speakers (lesser
lights like White Sox
manager Chuck Tanner and
Cub stars Milt Pappas and
Rick Monday) with appropri-ate
boredom, Cosell moved
to the podium.
(Conrd. on page 7)
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