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THE
CoVOLUME 52, NUMBER 12
NORTH PARKege newsCHICAGO, ILLINOIS WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 19, 1972
Origins of India War Explained
by Steve Carr
Dr. Charles Wiberg and Dr.
Harold Anderson conducted a
sYmposium on India and Pakis-tan
last Wednesday in the Cam-
Pus Center Lounge. Dr. Wiberg
Sketched the history of India
from the late nineteenth century
to 1947. Dr. Anderson discussed
More recent events.
Dr. Wiberg began by re-viewing
conflicts between Mos-lems
and Hindus in India. Only
25% of its population were Mos-lem.
Feeling under-represented
al the largely Hindu Congress
Party, they started an opposition
Party, the Moslem League. These
tensions made the British re-luctant
to leave "because they
were afraid the whole sub-continent
would explode."
BY mid-1946 it appeared that
accomodations could be made,
so the British departed. When
they did, Prime Minister Nehru
contended that he had com-mitted
himself only to Mos-lern-
Hindu participation in the
constituent assembly, and of-fered
no guaranteed protection
of rights to the Moslem minor-
ItY. There was a movement for a
separate Moslem Nation.
.The Congress Party, Dr.
Wiberg said, desired a united
secular state, but "they ac-quiesced
in this division as the
better path to follow." Never-theless,
"Once divided, you still
have substantial minorities in
each of the two divided por-tions.-
W. Pakistan was 21%
Hindu, E. Pakistan was 29% Hin-cl
u. The tensions erupted in
violence and there were massive
Population migrations to avoid
the fantastic bloodletting in the
wake of the independence move-ment.”
Dr. Anderson said that al-auild
Up Your
Own Package
Under a new program adopt-this
year, students at North
Park have the opportunity to
subrnit their own pattern of
eneral Education requirements
approval by the General
education committee.
In an interview with the Col-lege
News, Dean C. Hobart Ed-gre
n repeatedly emphasized
What the new ruling was not
rnade for. "We don't want this
`0 be an easy way for students
t() substitute courses in their
'E • requirements. The student
List have a definite reason for
Wanting to change his require-
Illerits• Also, the program he
qresents should show a pattern
vvhich reflects his major, back-ground,
and interests."
Information on alternate pro-gtrarns
can be found on page 8 of
he 1971-72 supplement to the
e°Ilege catalog.
The chairman of the General
• (Continued on page 7)
though Pakistan lacked ex-perienced
professional people
and had transportation and com-mercial
difficulties, it "made re-markable
progress." Conflict
continued between Pakistan and
India, however, particularly over
Kashmir. At the time of parti-tioning,
this state had a Hindu
ruler but a population 90% Mos-lem.
This is still a contested area,
and "is divided almost in half."
There were also conflicts be-tween
East and West Pakistan.
"They were held together only
by their religion," Anderson
stated. "They really had nothing
else in common."
East Pakistanis, treated as in-feriors
by their counterparts,
were convinced by Sheik Muji-bur
Rahman that they would be
guaranteed human rights only
when they formed an autonom-ous
nation. Rahman's Awami
League won control of the na-tional
legislature and moved to
elect Rahman President. This
would have meant a complete
reversal of power relations. The
ruler of W. Pakistan would not
permit this, and attempted to
(1) Dr. Wiberg listens silently as Dr. Anderson discusses the political
conditions that led to war.
(2) Students concentrate as Drs. Wiberg and Anderson relate the history
of tensions between India and Pakistan.
Campus Ecologists
Organize Programs
Students for a Livable World
is a new, student-originated club
with the objective of promoting
"activities which will help to
increase the quality of life on
earth." This broad objective al-lows
almost limitless possibili-ties
for activities, and the club's
members hope that any student
with any desire or ideas for
improving the quality of life on
this earth will join.
At this time the club is work-ing
to start a recycling center for
glass, cans, and paper on the
campus. It also hopes to have
occasional projects to raise mon-ey
and food for the hungry here
in the U.S. as well as in other
parts of the world. Students for
a Livable World feels that polit-ical
action N necessary in order
to solve problems such as an
exploding population, a de-teriorating
environment, and
poverty, and for this reason it
hopes to influence legislators to
concern themselves with these
most vital problems.
If you are interested in join-ing
this club or helping in any
way, come to a meeting at 10
P.M. tonight, Wednesday, Jan.
19, in the Campus Center
Lounge.
put down a rebellious E. Pakis-tani
population with 90,000
troops.
Anderson cited two main rea-sons
for India's intervention in
the war. One was India's moral
outrage at the brutality of the
W. Pakistani army, but the major
reason was that "India saw an
opportunity to dismember this
nation which they have never
wanted in the first place."
Approximately thirty people
were present for the short lec-tures
and the discussion after-ward.
This 86-year old Cuban refugee
is tutored in English by a North
Park student. See story on page 3.
Directors To Meet
With Students, Profs
"The next Board meeting
may be of historic significance in
the life of our school," accord-ing
to Dr. Lloyd Ahlem, College
President. This Friday, North
Park's Board of Directors will
spend a day talking to students
and faculty about the goals and
purposes of the College, and
what its direction and policy
should be.
The schedule begins with a
convocation at 9 A.M., at which
student attendance will be re-quired.
8 A.M. classes will be
excused at 8:50. Board members
and the day's program will be
introduced.
The convocation will, how-ever,
break up into six student
discussion groups with three or
four Board members in each.
These will last until 10:30 A.M.
The topics for discussion an-nounced
by President Ahlem
are:
1 . Christian college and
church-related school? Is there a
difference? What is North Park?
(LHA)
2. What is Christian life-style?
Where is piety in personal
life today? (C-34)
3. What is "in loco par-entis"?
Should students of legal
age be subject to its governance?
(L-1)
4. Should North Park take a
stand on moral and political
issues and options? (C-13)
5. North Park is a complex
institution. What image should
be projected as representative of
the school? (C-33)
6. What priorities should
prevail in establishing budgets?
(L-36)
Regular classes will then re-sume
with 10:10 classes begin-ning
at 10:30. All during the
day, Board members will be at-tending
classes of those profes-sors
who have indicated that
visitors will be welcome. They
will also be eating with the
students in the dining hall.
At 3:45, teams of two Board
members will be meeting with
student organizations such as the
Senate, College News, Cupola,
Social Services Commission,
Black Students Association,
seminary students, Relgious Life
Commission, and Students Off-
Campus. Other Board members
will be meeting with the faculty
at the same time.
John Liljegren, organizer of the SLW, expounds his views on the quality of life before prospective members of his
organization.
Page 2 THE COLLEGE NEWS Wednesday, January 19, 1972 V
Pakistani Fast Participants
Commended By Covenant
"Please convey to all the
North Parkers who participated
in the September 26th Fast for
the Hungry our heartfelt grati-tude,"
asked Clifford W. Bjork-lund.
The secretary of the Cove-nant
also stated in his letter to
John Liljegren last week that
Pakistani refugees were the re-cipients
of the $250.00 which
was raised in the first fast.
The Fast for the Hungry, on
Sunday, September 26, netted
$181.50 from 242 students, (75
cents per person who fasted was
donated by the Food Service),
$54.50 from contributions, and
$14.00 from the Social Events
Commission's Box Social.
During the second fast, 201
students gave up a dinner, this
time valued at 70 cents dona-tion,
and that $140.70, together
with student donations of
$99.76 and gifts from Edge-brook
Covenant Church of
$86.51 and North Park Cove-nant
Church of $55.00 also went
to Pakistani refugees in India.
NAVAHOS AIDED
The Navaho Indians of Cot-
Cal Katter was one of the many who gave time and energy to renovate
the student store-front.
tonwood School in Chinle, Ariz.,
have now received the 95 boxes
of clothing and $130 for pur-chase
of toys that the North
Park Domestic Affairs Com-mission
raised for them during
the fall of 1971.
The toy money came from
the proceeds of a Freeway Gos-pel
Team performance in early
December. Judy Hawkinson,
North Park graduate and teacher
on the Indian reservation in the
area, was overwhelmed by the
response.
On the reservation live about
120,000 Indians, 51% of whom
are unemployed. The median in-come
is $710 per year. The
school at which Miss Hawkinson
teaches is plagued with the same
problems that bother the entire
community—low self-esteem on
the part of the Navahos, a lan-guage
barrier, and other prob-lems
resulting from the low
economic level.
The North Park contributions
to the school and the com-munity
have provided the In-dians
with a great deal of
material they otherwise would
not have had. The Domestic
Affairs Commission, pleased
with the results of this appeal, is
planning more such thrusts
against poverty and other social
ills in the future.
Students Work With The Elderly
Every week three freshman
girls set aside a few hours from
their schedules and head for
the heart of Chicago. "Where are
you going?" is the question they
most often encounter as they
bound out the door. "To visit
my old lady," is the cheerful
reply.
The Lutheran Welfare
Agency, in cooperation with the
Social Services Commission,
established a new means of out-reach
this fall. Recruiters were
sent to the campus to find
young people who would be
concerned enough to visit an
elderly person once a week. The
elderly people the volunteers
visit are without much of a
family and are very lonely. The
three present volunteers had
these comments:
Lisa Bringerud — "It's such a
rewarding experience to bring a
little joy into someone's life; just
one weekly visit gives the elderly
person something to look for-ward
to to relieve the monotony
of loneliness. The woman I visit
has practically adopted me and
eagerly anticipates my visits. It
may be selfish of me, but it's a
nice feeling to know that I am
necessary for someone's happi-ness.
And it's not just a one-sided
relationship, either. I have
learned a lot about life, just by
listening to the tales of one who
has lived a full life. Generally I
have found these visits some-thing
to look forward to, not to
dread or consider a bothersome
chore."
Becky Sander — "It's really
interesting. I've heard a lot
about how life was when the
woman I visit was young. She's
90 years old, so there's almost
one century crammed into her
lifetime. She has her idiosyn-cracies,
too, for example, she
doesn't believe in TV's!"
Sue Black — "Since I might
major in social work, I consider
it a valuable experience. It's fun
to make people happy. What
really bothers me the most are
the families who abandon their
elder members and leave them so
lonely. My lady has suffered
greatly from being alone, in that
she hallucinates about people
because she has no one to talk
to. If I don't visit for a few
weeks, she withdraws into her
(Continued on page 3)
ATTENSHIM
INSULATED SKI SUITS
FLANNEL & WOOL SHIRTS
CAMPING EQUIPMENT
10 OZ. DACRON SUB-ARCTIC PARKAS
LEE & WRANGLER WESTERN WEAR
DISCOUNTED BOOTS & SHOES
ALL JEANS & PANTS $4.98
GOOSE DOWN SKI JACKETS
FOREIGN & DOMESTIC MAXI COATS
LOWEST PRICES
ariny -
navy 90000
ii
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1879 2nd St.
Highland Park
6602 N. Sheridan Rd.
Chicago
433-5151
'
Students Aid In
S.S.C. Projects
At least 50 North Parkers
have volunteered to be school
tutors this year, says Melody
Pearson, who is heading the pro-ject.
Most of this tutoring goes
on at the Social Services store
front, which was renovated last
year and is supported through
student money. Because of the
large number of volunteers and
the large number of people seek-ing
tutoring, there have been
some administrative problems in
getting volunteers and tutors to-gether.
Ray Warren, store front co-ordinator,
reports that so many
area youths have been seeking
tutoring that the commission has
had to stop even taking a waiting
list. Students seeking tutoring
call the North River Commission
office whose number is on the
store front window. As an ex-ample
of how tutors help, one
girl who was failing in math
now has a solid "C" average. She
is also being helped with her
reading. Tutoring keeps her froth
falling far behind her class.
Mel Pearson says the amount
of tutoring that the Social Ser-vices
Commission could do is
nearly infinite and more tutors
are badly needed. She says there
is so much to be done that the
present volunteers hardly seen"'
to make a dent. "Mostly, I guess,
it's the diea that there is someone
there that CARES," she added.
(Continued on page 1)
Today when Mr. Katter walks into the store-front he can see comfort and
purpose, not ugliness and futility.
TWO BIG BENEFITS
FROM THE
bank of ravenswood
TO ALL
PERSONNEL
North Park College
& Theological Seminary
FREE
CHECKING ACCOUNTS
* No minimum balance required.
* No monthly service charge
* No limit on number of checks written during the
month.
* Monthly statement.
* New accounts may be opened during regular bank-ing
hours at our service counter desk or by any of
our officers.
* Present checking account customers are requested
to contact the bank for transfer to free account
status.
NOW OPEN ALL DAY
...EVERY DAY!
INSIDE BANK HOURS
Monday through Thursday 8 A.M. to 6 P.M.
Friday 8 A.M. to 8 P.M.
Saturday 8 A.M. to 4 P.M.
DRIVE-IN AND WALK-UP HOURS
Monday through Friday 8 A.M. to 8 P.M.
Saturday 8 A.M. to 6 P.M.
bank of ravenswood
1825 W. Lawrence Ave. 769-2000
Wednesday, January 19, 1972 THE COLLEGE NEWS
Students Serve Their Fellow Men
by John Hunt
What do North Park students do? What sort of things are they
interested in? What extra-curricular activities are they involved in?
North Park students are interested in people, despite the fact that
their activities have not received much publicity.
North Park is a college where most of the students go into such
Professions as medicine, nursing, teaching, the ministry, social work
and counseling. Their extra-curricular activities follow their interests.
North Park is a school where people are learning to help people as
their Christian calling and work in the world. If anyone asks you
What North Park students do,tell them about these things.
Volunteers Tutoring Latin-
Americans, Oak Children
Approximately twenty North
Parkers are currently serving as
tutors and teacher's aids at Oak
Theraputic School located in
Old Main. Some are help-ing
teach subjects like English
and history. Tutors, like Oak
school teachers, work in a one-to-
one relationship with their
students. Four P.E. majors, Dan
Gooris, Jon Cooper, Randy
r3loomquist and Bob Hodges are
working to teach visual and mo-tor
skills.
Bob Hodges reports that their
students have many problems.
Some have brain damage, some
have had strokes, some are
hyperactive. Right now they are
teaching some students muscle
control in order to teach them
to crawl properly. These chil-dren
never learned this when
smaller and consequently have
been retarded in other sorts of
activities. The P.E. majors' tutor-i
ng activities are giving them a
chance to apply some of the
theories they have learned that
of Piaget and Domar.
Hodges reports that Randy
Bloomquist has taught one boy
how to walk downstairs properly,
which he couldn't do before. Bob
says, "Walking downstairs
doesn't seem like too much, but
for a kid like that it's great." He
reports that Oak School could
use more volunteers. Students
are invited to come in and apply.
ADULTS TAUGHT ENGLISH
Twenty to twenty-five North
Parkers are helping to teach
Spanish-speaking members of
our community English. They
teach Spanish-speaking people to
both speak and read English on
primarily a one-to-one basis,
using the Laubach literacy me-thod.
This program is sponsored
by the North Park Covenant
Church and the Social Services
Commission. Tutors take a
sixteen -hour training session. A
Page 3
Three North Park students help crippled children develop basic physical skills.
knowledge of Spanish is not
necessary.
Tom Kelly, who heads this
program, says that most of their
students are Cuban refugees.
Many are highly educated in
their own language, having been
school teachers, trained nurses,
or bankers. For many, this lack
of the ability to speak English is
the only thing keeping them
from a better job.
Students learning English run
from ages 12-86. The oldest stu-dent,
86, who comes very faith-fully,
is tutored by Jim Swanson,
and sometimes talks about his
wealth of experiences. He was
born when Cuba still had kings,
and he used to play in a jazz
band when he was young.
About a dozen of these re-fugees
meet each Sunday at the
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Storefront for a Bible study pro-gram
led by Tom Kelly and Mike
Voight. All participants have
been well-acquainted with Tom
and each other for over a year.
Students Work with Elderly
(Continued from page 2)
world of dreams and hallucina-tions.
She needs me to keep her
in contact with the real world.
All she needs to make her happy
is to know someone cares, and
this is the only thing which
keeps her going from week to
week. The visits help me to
realize more vividly how much I
have."
There is a Christain aspect to
these visits to the elderly. The
girls use each visit as an oppor-tunity
to show their Christian
love. As Sue Black says, "We try
to leave them with something
that will help them when they
are alone."
More volunteers are needed.
As Lisa Bringerud said, "We
girls charge you, as Christians, to
take a little responsibility. Un-less
you go out of your way to
help others, you are doing no
more than you are expected to
do. How much of your life are
you willing to give to Christ's
service?"
Jim Swanson aids a man in learning English.
Student Services Fact Box
—50 students are tutoring children through the store front.
—15 students are counseling as big brothers and sisters
through the North River Commission.
—20 are serving as tutors and teacher's aids at Oak
Theraputic School.
—12 to 15 are working at Chapin Hall tutoring children.
—20 to 25 are teaching English in the Laubach Literacy
program.
—A student led drive obtained 95 boxes of clothing for
Navaho Indians and 130 dollars for toys for Navaho
children.
—242 fasted during a Sunday dinner for Pakistan refugees.
— 201 fasted at a Wednesday night dinner for Pakistan
refugees.
Protest is our way of life for today's student.
But students at North Park are not protesting with
placards. They are saying no to ignorance, poverty,
brokenness, despair, viciousness — by serving and
witnessing in the great sprawling metropolis of Chicago.
They are tutoring, instructing, guiding, befriending people
— particularly children. They are learning from him who is
gentle and lowly in heart.
Karl A. Olsson
Page 4 THE COLLEGE NEWS Wednesday, January 19, 1972
Editorial
Let's Get Together
Why are you at North Park? What will the time you spend here
mean to your life?
Beware! This Friday will begin a week of events that could
provoke some honest consideration of these questions. Friday and
Saturday, the Board of Directors will be on campus to meet with
students and Dunday, the Festival of Faith will begin.
Often, planned events such as these fail because of lack of student
participation. Students get tired of others asking serious questions
for them, seeking to lead their thoughts to pre-designed conclusions.
This time, though, the initiative is up to you.
The Board is coming to listen to students. They would like to
hear your thoughts during six open discussion sessions on Friday.
(See story on page one). Go there and talk about what you really
want to talk about. Board members will also be available at meals.
Seek them out and tell them what you really think of North Park.
The danger is not that students won't be heard, but that no one will
have anything to say.
The Festival of Faith will bring ten guests to the campus for a
week. Chaplain Mike Ha!leen says they are not here to preach, or
practice a hard speak evangelism. They are here to be a part of our
community and with students. Talk to these men. They are here to
discuss what you think is important, what you want to discuss.
Don't have preconceived ideas about them. Find out how they feel.
They may have an interesting perspective.
More important, the coming week gives us a needed opportunity
to talk to each other. Why a needed opportunity? Too often,
student split into self-contained factions with little inter-communication
between them. We have Covies, freaks, Blacks, jocks,
and kids who are none of these on campus, all of whom move far
too infrequently outside the confines of their own groups. In
addition, we have several hundred off-campus students who seldom
mix with the on-campus students, and a faculty and administration
group.
Too often, these groups talk about each other, look down their
noses at each other, and laugh up their sleeves at each other. They
enforce their common ideas, and their slanted world view without
the possibility of challenge to often narrow perspectives.
If North Park's heterogeneity is to be an advantage, we need to
learn from and educate each other. Many of us have built walls
which prevent us from learning from other groups. Only we can tear
them down, but it requires an effort.
John Hunt
Director Discusses Wind Ensemble
by Stuart Uggen
Director, North Park Wind
Ensemble
The quest for relevance in
instrumental music education
made significant strides with the
inception, 20 years ago this year,
of the Wind Ensemble at the
University of Rochester's East-man
School of Music. This quest
has made its way onto the North
Park campus and has as its ob-jective
the finding and imple-menting
of that same relevance.
Fortune has it, for better or for
worse, that the search should be
carried on here by a person
bearing a "second generation"
relationship to the "inceptor".
Consequently, the "perceived
spirit" remains virile and the
motivation clear.
Your part in the operation is
simple. Open your mind to the
possibility that there is real "life
substance" in what we are cur-rently
calling the Wind En-semble.
Don't let yourself be
"lock-stepped" into a way of
thinking which makes you say "I
never have had much interest in
that sort of thing". There is a
very danger in ignoring the study
of ANYTHING that another
man enjoys.
The Wind Ensemble Concept
(reprinted from Spring Tour
1971)
"The North Park College
Wind Ensemble, although still in
the developmental stages in its
interior organization, is the prin-cipal
instrumental performing
group in the North Park Music
Department. It is patterned after
Ivy-covered Wilson Hall dominates not only a section of the campus but the memory of an architectural critic.
Charm of Wilson Hall Praised
Sometimes, I think about
what a San Francisco architect
said once concerning old build-ings.
Tearing down all the old
buildings, he said, and erecting
all new structures is like killing
all of the older people and allow-ing
only the young to live. It is
destroying a piece of history.
The old and the new should
stand side by side.
When I look at you, Wilson
Hall, I think of what he said. I
have been told by some people
that you are doomed. No one
wants you, no one cares. I feel a
sense of injustice, and I also get
the feeling that people are too
busy to stop and enjoy a work
of art. I sit in front of you and I
wonder how in the world any-one
could destroy you, how
anyone could write you off an
impossible mess. Your beauty
and grace have never failed to awe
me. The ivy, your gables, so
perfectly propertioned, the curv-ing
staircase, the arch above the
door. If anything was moved
closer, father apart, if anything
was smaller, larger, your glow of
elegance would be lost.
Wilson Hall, you are a
wonder. What would I do with-out
you? How could I stand to
face that architectural disaster,
Caroline Hall, complete with
turquoise paint, or the monstro-sity
of Ohlson, and not have you
waiting for me in all your fine-ness
to revive my faith in brick?
If you die, part of me will die
with you. And some of the
beauty that I have known at
North Park will be gone.
I have something to confess.
Wilson Hall — I love you.
Anonymous
the first Wind Ensemble in this
country, that was organized by
Frederick Fennell in 1952 at the
Eastman School of Music.
"Essentials of a Wind En-semble,
sometimes called a
Symphonic Wind Ensemble, in-clude:
an instrumentation of
40-50 players which may be
augmented or diminished as the
need arises, a flexible interior
organization (i.e., functioning
brass and woodwind quintets as
well as other small wind or
percussion ensembles), and a re-pertoire
similar to that of the
larger concert band but which is
not confined to the somewhat
bulky instrumentation called for
by the concert band. The most
distinctive characteristic is the
small number of players on each
part."
A frequently asked question
since the Wind Ensemble arrived
on campus is "What is the dif-ference
between a band and a
wind ensemble?" Within the
limits described above, the wind
ensemble is a smaller variety of
concert band. Although the term
"wind ensemble" is preferable,
"band" is correct.
Listening to a Wind Ensemble
play in live performance is one
of the best ways to develop a
meaningful relationship with it.
An increased number of on-campus
listening opportunities
has come into being for that
purpose. The November 14,
1971 concert marked the first
time in at least a decade that a
large instrumental group had
presented a pre-Christmas con-cert.
With an increase in on-campus
activity our continuing
desire for quality performance
will be intensified.
More players are being sought
among prospective students with
the hope of increasing small en -
semble activity, particularly in
woodwinds, and replenishing
losses in reed and percussion
instrument players. It is hoped
that currently enrolled students
will consider auditioning when
interests and/or schedules per-mit.
Performance scholarships
are available to qualified stu-dents.
The next concert by the Wind
Ensemble will be Sunday, Feb-ruary
13, at 3:30 p.m. in the
Lecture Hall-Auditorium. The
program will be varied with the
featured number being a
symphony for band by Per-sichetti.
Other compositions to
be heard include Copland's
"Fanfare for the Common
Man," "Ballad for Band" bY
Morton Gould, "Burlesque" bY
Clare Grundman, "Symphonic
Dance No. 3" by Clifton Wil-liams,
"Trauersinfonie" (Funeral
Music on themes from Euryan•
the by C. M. von Weber) bY
Richard Wagner, and "Spec-trum,"
a composition for band
and tape recorder by Herbert
Bielewa.
Would Interim Work?
One of the hottest issues on campus, at least among the faculty, ii
the idea of some type of interim period during the year. ManY
schools are on a schedule called 4-1-4, which means that they havee
break in the middle of the year. This break usually lasts about one
month, and allows students to follow their fancy in intensified
classes. These classes are taken under the guidance of a regular
faculty member and may meet almost anywhere in the world.
Another way to describe the interim would be to say it is an
expanded "Outward Bound."
The idea is probably intriguing to most students, even if it onlY
means a time for a month-long drinking fest. An interim period
means more than this. It is a period for serious learning. An even
more important question is "Can the faculty be creative enough t°
come up with worthwhile ideas for this time?" If sufficient student
interest can be generated and enough valuable topics found, I would
be for an interim period. Otherwise it could be a waste of time for
everybody.
Alan G. Mueller
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: John Hunt, Alan G. Mueller
BUSINESS MANAGER: Glenn Baldwin
NEWS EDITOR: Steve Carr
COPY EDITOR: Kris Ness
REPORTERS: Chris Aramin, Lisa Bringerud, Scott Henderson, Don
Holmertz, Al Ingst, Darryl Johnson, Keith Johnson, John Liljegren,
Bruce Lundblad, Steven Maxe, Kris Ness, Calvin Swanson, Linda
Walker, Owen Youngman
SPORTS EDITOR: Walter Macuda
SPORTS COLUMNIST: Jim Oberg
SPORTS REPORTERS: Larry Swanson
TYPISTS: Chris Aramin, Ellen Solie
HEAD PHOTOGRAPHER: Al Bjorkman
ASSISTANT PHOTOGRAPHERS: Steve Elde, Keith Gustafson, Rick
Landon, Paul Willy
PROOFREADER: Jim Swanson
CARTOONIST: Maudlin
FACULTY ADVISOR: Vernon Wettersten
Printed by SON'S TYPOGRAPHIC SERVICE, 1542 West Edge-water
Avenue, Chicago, Illinois 60660,13121 275-6557.
Wednesday, January 19, 1972 THE COLLEGE NEWS Page 5
Junior Girl Is Success
In Loop Singing Debut
by Steve Carr
Most college students find a
Pleasurable way of passing
Christmas vacation. Some of us
can afford trips; others work;
most simply return home. But
Christine Aramin, an on-campus
Junior, had a demanding
schedule of singing and guitar-
Playing.
Chris appeared nightly for
two weeks at Cafe Angelo's in
the Oxford House Hotel at
Wabash and Wacker. Angelo's is
an informal, friendly place, with
a maximum seating capacity of
about 100. It is particularly
known for Italian food.
Chris did 40 minute sets with
20 minute breaks from 6:30 to
9:30. Her repertoire accents the
r omantic with songs by
Bacharach, Carole Krng, and the
Carpenters.
Vox Populi
She discussed her nervousness
during the first performance,
and how having relatives in the
audience was a calming in-fluence.
"If it wasn't for the
friends, I don't know what I
would have done." But the ner-vousness
disappeared as the job
became routine. "By the end of
the second week I was almost
tired of it."
One night a Channel 7 news
team appeared to cover a benefit
taking place at the restaurant,
and Chris was photographed and
taped while singing. She was also
interviewed by Les Brownley.
But the film was never telecast
because two producers became
locked in a debate over the
newsworthiness of the benefit.
"There was dissension over me
at Channel 7 for about a week,"
Chris said.
Festival of Faith.•
Catalyst For Action?
Dear Sirs:
As we await the upcoming
Pestival of Faith, I ask what the
actual and not the hoped-for,
results will be. Hopefully, after
this experience, at least some of
Us will have a stronger basis for
O ur Christian faith. However, I
Wonder what its real effect will
be even a month thereafter. Will
It be like camp where we are "on
fire for Christ" for a week,
lu kewarm the next week, and
stone cold the third? I hope not.
I feel that not only we our-selves
are to benefit from this
Festival, but that we should also
Share
our Christian love with
Others. Many of those who at-tend
the meetings, I believe,
have already experienced the
message which will be brought
here, and this will simply serve
to reaffirm their faith. However,
after this experience, I genuinely
question if the "blessed" Chris-tians
will also have a stronger
Christian concern for their fel-low
man in our society. Will
these people respond to the cry-ing
need of the people even
within our immediate neighbor-hood?
All of us, whether freak
or straight, can talk all we want
about being Christians, and our
Christian love, but it is action
that speaks louder than words.
After attending the meetings,
sitting on the rap sessions, and
hopefully being united, I still
wonder how many people will
be adequately challenged to
actively show their Christian
concern for their fellow man. I
hope that my pessimism will be
disproved. March onward, Chris-tian
soldiers.
Glenn Baldwin
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Chris, who is an English
major, has played guitar for over
a year and is now taking lessons.
When she is not performing, she
may be found in one of Chica-go's
numerous coffeehouses,
listening to others. In the future,
however, time for that may de-crease
since she and a friend who
plays electric guitar might sign a
six-week contract to play week-ends
at Angelo's.
Frosty the Snowman pays a visit
to the North Park campus. Frosty
was later dismembered by vandals.
Jim Oberg
the way I see it
from where I sit
Almost everyone recognizes that there are drugs in the dorms.
But what can the individual do to combat these vices if he chooses
not to participate?
The Administration says it won't act upon the problem of drugs
until the SR&F Committee (Student Rights and Freedoms) prepares
a position. But that takes time. What can be done now, between the
time of awareness of the problem by the Administration, and its
action?
Plenty, but it is up to the individual. After the Drug Seminar, I
had the privilege of eating lunch with President Ahlem. I asked him
specific questions concerning what can be done about drugs on
campus and he gave the answers I desired.
I asked him, "What can I do about the stench of marijuana that is
present in the hallways?" He said that all that is needed is a
complaint to the Administration. He said that smoke or smell
coming from a room into the hallway is sufficient reason for the
Administration to enter a room. He assured me that action would be
taken against the charged party.
I asked him if a written complaint is sufficient evidence for a
charge. He said it would be considered as evidence at a hearing. (I
urge complainers to have several signatures and state that at the same
time and at the same place there is the smell of marijuana coming
from a certain room.)
President Ahlem said that two convictions of marijuana would
result in dismissal of the guilty party, but also admitted that a
person who complains runs the risk of retaliation by that party.
(This is why I urge complaints to contain several signatures.)
President Ahlem said that a case of retaliation against a person or his
possessions would constitute immediate dismissal for the assailant.
Criminal charges may also be pressed.
I hope that students will not go out and hunt offenders. I am not
asking for this. What a person does in his room is none of anyone
else's business because it is his privacy. However, when I am forced
to put up with an illegal action in a public place (such as marijuana
stench in a hallway or vomit from intoxication in the washroom that
is not in the toilet), I feel that my rights of privacy are violated.
I do not want North Park to be known for its vigilantes but I do
not want anarchy either. My only hope is that the Administration
will not back down from its standards.
Resident Men's Group Meets,
Seeks Dorm Rule Changes
The Resident Men's Associa- Peterson about the refrigerators as to their views on increased
tion discussed proposed dorm and smoking lounges. He re- visitation rights. The suggested
rule changes last Monday night, ported that the no-smoking rule hours were: Friday 6:00 P.M. —
January 10. was a matter of policy, and that 2:00 A.M.; Saturday 12:00 noon
After finishing some needed it had nothing to do with fire — 2:00 A.M.; Sunday 12:00
business, they discussed estab- hazards or increased fire in- noon — 6:00 P.M.
lishing smoking lounges in Burgh surance rates. Nothing was de- The R.M.A. called a second
and Sohlberg Halls, the use of cided on the smoking lounges, meeting for Monday the 17th to
refrigerators by dorm residents, discuss the results of their poll-and
the possible extension of Last week, the R.M.A. re- ing and possibly to make pro-open
dorms. presentatives casually polled the posa I s to the appropriate
Dave Danielson, R.M.A. pres- residents of Sohlberg and Burgh authorities.
ident, has already talked to Dean
•
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Jim Hjelm, Dave Palmer, Tim Paulson, and Dave Danielson, officers of
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PLANS CHANGE?
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JOBS
SPECIAL PROGRAMS
FOR COLLEGE STUDENTS
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5840 N. Lincoln Ave., Chicago, Ill. 60645
Phone 334-7212
Page 6 THE COLLEGE NEWS Wednesday, January 19, 1972 11
News Briefs Drama Shows How Man Acts
SA President Joyce Nelson
has expressed her concern to
North Park's administration
about the tentative budget for
the coming year. Last year, the
Lecture-Artist series was dis-continued,
and funds for library
facilities were decreased con-siderably.
Our SA President
would like to see the Lecture-
Artist series restored, and also an
improvement in the facilities at
Wallgren.
%363‘16110VICSICIC3iiiVIMIZSi3‘3006%
It has been noted that a great
deal of theft has been reported
around the parking area of
Burgh Hall. In the past, students
using these parking facilities
have complained of repeated in-stances
of stolen cars. The ad-ministration
has explained that
there is not enough money in
the budge to finance a fence
around the parking area. But
S.A. President Joyce Nelson has
proposed a challenge-offer to the
administration in which half of
the costs would be financed by
the Student Association itself if
the administration will meet the
costs of the other half.
IlitiCligNMIC11611063‘3000‘
Christian Emphasis Week be-gins
this Sunday night, and Dr.
Don Williams and his associates
will be the guest speakers at
North Park throughout the
week. Dr. Williams will be the
chief speaker at events Monday
through Friday evenings at 8:15
in Nyvall Hall. ("Salting the
Earth") At 10 p.m. each night,
he and the members of his group
will be in the dorm lounges for
informal discussions. Through-out
the week, prayer breakfasts
will be held at 7 a.m, in the
Campus Center. ("Salt for
Breakfast") Dr. Williams will
also speak at the 9:15 chapel
hour for the Seminary on Mon-day,
and for the College and
Seminary on Wednesday and Fri-day
of Christian Emphasis Week.
The film series now in progress
will continue that week, with
presentations at 3:05 and 6:15
P.M. on Tuesday, Wednesday,
and Thursday, and discussions
following each film.
by Calvin Swanson
This past weekend, the col-lege
Speech-Drama Department
presented three one-act plays.
Two were written by Craig
Stewart and one by Lawrence
Ferlingetti.
The first play was entitled
Muff and Jett, and was directed
by Janice Meurer. It was a come-dy
with a few added touches of
antipathy towards gimmick -
grabbing opportunists. Taking
into consideration though, that
it was a college production, I
think that it was carried off
fairly well.
The second play was also a
comedy. It was entitled Tickle
My Fancy, and was directed by
Rich Dianovsky. It too had feel-ings
of antipathy directed to-wards
a certain group. A group
whose members lived solely for
coffee-breaks, indifference, hot
air and money. This, together
Rich Dianovsky and Barbara Gibbs tickled the audience's funny-bone in
Tickle My Fancy, by Craig Stewart.
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with some light comedy tossed
in, made the performance some-what
of a success.
The third and final play was
the one by Lawrence Ferlingetti,
and was directed by Dave Carl-son.
It concerned itself with the
typical theme of "perveted
government vs. the pure, ideal-istic,
unheard young of Ameri-ca."
The government was por-trayed
by four speakers situated
on top of four individual podi-ums,
which were spread out
evenly on stage. Spokesmen for
both the young and old were
seated throughout the audience.
Every so often, one particular
youth would stand up and at-tempt
to show his ardent dis-approval
of the policies pre-sented
by the government. EverY
time he attempted to speak he
was violently accosted by the
more conservative members in
the audience. The play con-cluded
when he was finally re-moved
from the audience be-cause
of his continuing accusa -
tions made against the govern-ment.
The audience was then
told to leave in peace.
The play was interesting in
theory, but it did have its weak
points. But due to the stunning
performance, given by the speak -
er (the one on the far left
podium), the play did finish
with its head above water.
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•••••
tr
Wednesday, January 19, 1972 THE COLLEGE NEWS Page 7
Vikes Hold Off Crusaders 86-84
You had to like the way the
game ended. A missed 40 foot
shot, and Coach McCarrell run-ning
out on the floor to hug his
players after a tremendously ex-citing
86-84 upset win at
Wheaton. A win which proved
that winning C.C.I.W. basketball
is back on campus.
Keith McDonald's 25 point
performance may have been the
individual scoring story of the
game, but the real answer to the
Vikings recent success can be
summed up in one word: unity.
Saturday night it was evident as
Russ Hylen and Earl Dorsey
came off the bench to each hit
three of five shots and protect
the Viking lead. It was evident in
that the Vikings, victimized by
having its entire front wall in
foul trouble, was still able to
play outstanding defense against
what must be considered one of
the best offensive teams in Il-linois.
McDonald scored 15 points in
the first half as the Vikes built
up a 45-38 half-time edge. The
little guy hit on six of seven first
half attempts and ten of thirteen
for the game. With Jim Campbell
subduing big Steve Clum, the
Vikings were able to keep the
Crusaders off of the offensive
boards. But in the second half
both Campbell, then Profit and
then Geist drew their fourth
fouls. In stepped Hylen and Dor-sey
to keep the Viking lead
around ten.
Then the Vikes went back to
their old ways.
As has been their custom, the
Vikings forgot how to shoot
freethrows. From a 68-53 lead
with seven minutes left, the Vik-ings
made only 2 of their last 12
free throw attempts. Little Ran-dy
Pfund started shooting the
eyes out of the bucket and with
three seconds left the Crusaders
New Proposal For General Education
Just a reminder that indoor
track begins its season January 28.
pcom G a mes
Jan. 19
Jan. 21
Jan. 25
Jen. 29
Jan. 31
Feb. 3
Feb. 5
Feb. 10
Feb. 12
Feb. 16
Feb. 19
Feb. 26
at Illinois Tech
Millikin
at Augustana
Carroll
at North Central
Elmhurst
Illinois Wesleyan
at Elmhurst
at Carthage
at Carroll
Wheaton
North Central
'Patronize
(Sr
4duertioer43
(Continued from page 1)
Education Committee is Dr. Mel-burn
Sonson. Also included on
the Committee are two students,
plus a faculty member from each
division.
Dr. Soneson explained that
his committee had not yet been
approached concerning any pro-posals,
but he said, "We have
had a few inquiries from stu-dents
who wanted to 'weasel'
out of a certain requirement."
He went on to explain what the
committee would be looking for
in the student's proposals. "The
student should ask himself what
his aim in general education is,
and how his alternative program
would fit those aims." A student
could, for instance, set up a GE
program different from the stat-ed
requirement designed to pre-pare
him for a specific major.
Since no one has tried to
change his own G.E. require-ments,
no procedure or pre-cedent
has been set up as of
now. However, Dean Edgren sug-gested
that the student should
start by seeing his faculty ad-visor.
He stated that the advisor
could help in writing a proposal
to put before the G.E. com-mittee.
Dr. Soneson said that in-formation
concerning the matter
would be given at the upcoming
convocation. Both he and Dean
Edgren were a little surprised
that no one had yet taken ad-vantage
of the opportunity.
However, until precedence is
set, there will be a few questions
left unanswered as to what will
be approved and what won't.
This is a rare opportunity for
North Parkers, and it will be
interesting to see what happens
once the program gets going.
Do not suppose that abuses are eliminated by destroying the
object which is abused. Men can go wrong with wine and women.
Shall we then prohibit wine and abolish women? The sun, the moon,
and stars have been worshiped. Shall we then pluck them out of the
sky? Such haste and violence betray a lack of confidence in God. See
how much he has been able to accomplish through me, . . . Had I
wished I might have started a conflagration at Worms. But while I sat
and drank beer with Philip and Amsdorf, God dealt the papacy a
mighty blow.
by Martin Luther
What is Harvey King's picture doing in the paper during the basketball
season? See Linda Walker's story on page 8.
were minus one. Gene Profit's
free throws made it 86-84,
where it stood when Cook
missed and the Wheaton time-keeper
finally ran the clock out.
REBOUNDS: The Titans
from I.W.U. lead the C.C.I.W
with an unblemished 6-0 mark
ISSL Projects
Recieve Aid
(Continued from page 2)
BIG BROTHERS HELP
In addition, North Parkers
lend a guiding hand to otherwise
trouble-bound youngsters. Stu-dents
work with grade schoolers
and young adolescents who are
having problems with school of-ficials,
truant officers or the
police, or who run away from
home. Youngsters who have
been in trouble are often re-ferred
to the North River Com-mission
by local police precincts.
North Parkers act as big brothers
or sisters, befriending the young-sters.
To these children, most of
whom come from broken
homes, North Parkers are
m odels, and friends. Big
brothers and sisters, organized
on campus by Joey Eckberg, go
through a training session of
seminars sponsored by the North
River Commission at which
court officers, psychologists, and
social workers speak.
For the most Beautiful Bride
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PROBLEM CHILDREN
HELPED AT CHAPIN HALL
About fifteen students are
working at Chapin Hall, a home
for emotionally disturbed child-ren
across California Avenue
from Swedish Covenant
Hospital. Students here are
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• 14K and 18K Wedding Bands
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14K and 18K
Daily 9-5:45
Thurs. 9-9
The Park is second, one and a
half games back but two full
games over third place Elmhurst.
I-M Standings
W L
Speed Kills 6 0
Supporters 6 0
Gutter Rats 5 1
Psychological Dis. 5 1
Covenant Press 4 2
Flots 4 2
12 O'Clock High 3 3
Zero and Five 3 3
Seminary Saints 3 3
Flu Men 2 4
MM Marauders 2 4
Righteous Bros. 2 4
Ephabus 2 4
Bench Warmers 1 5
Apple Corps 0 6
Gross Natl. Prod. 0 6
tutoring in school subjects and
teaching guitar. This work takes
much patience, according to
Lauren Olson who organized this
project, because these children
are difficult to motivate. This
tutoring is demanding, too. The
children need stability because
of their emotional problems. "If
a tutor does not show up, or
fails to notify Chapin Hall that
he has stopped tutoring, he can,
indirectly, do severe damage to
the child. This has happened and
is happening," says Nancy K.
Larson, who was a summer coun-selor
there this year. "If you can
establish a good relationship,
sometimes the kid can make a
breakthrough in the subject he is
being tutored in. Without volun-teer
work, Chapin Hall could not
be as effective, because a one-to-
one relationship is extremely
important, and volunteering is
almost the only way to achieve
this."
DR. WALTER J. ZINN
OPTOMETRIST
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Page 8 THE COLLEGE NEWS Wednesday, January 19, 1972
Profit, Campbell Pace
Vikes Over Augie 67-60
by Owen Youngman
North Park's Vikings over-came
an inconsistent first half
Jan. 11 by putting on a pyro-technic
shooting display after
intermission, as Gene Profit
paced them to a 67-60 victory
over Augustana.
Profit hit on an incredible 12
of 14 shots from the field in
scoring his game-high 26 points.
But a pair of other Park cagers
also played an important role
in the upset victory, which rais-ed
the Vikes' CCIW record to
3-1.
Jim Campbell did an out-standing
job covering Augie's
6-10 John Laing, keeping the big
man out of the middle for the
greater part of the game and
shutting him out in the second
half. Keith McDonald, mean-while,
assumed control of the
game from his backcourt position
in the second half, controlling
the pace of North Park's play
and almost singlehandedly forc-ing
Augie to abandon an attempt
to beat the hot-shooting home
team with a zone defense.
The game opened with both
teams suffering through long
field goal droughts due mainly
to what appeared to be a lack of
discipline on either side. Turn-overs
and bad percentage shots
were not uncommon occur-rences.
The visitors, in fact, went for
more than six minutes without
hitting a shot from the field, but
flawless foul shooting allowed
them to grab a one-point lead
with 12 minutes remaining in
the half.
It didn't last, though, as Park
rebounders consistently cleared
the defensive boards to allow
Augie few second and third at-tempts
from underneath. And,
with Laing effectively blocked
out of the lane, Augustana was
often forced to gun from long
range. A 12-foot jumper by
Profit and a 25-footer by Mc-
Donald just before the buzzer
gave the Park a 31-27 halftime
edge after the score had been
knotted twice.
A 13-of-26 performance from
the floor in the first 20 minutes
helped coach Dan McCarrell's
charges compensate for their of-ten
loose ballhandling and miser-able
foul shooting. But the
Vikes' lead had to be more than
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partially attributed to the facts
that their rivals from Rock Is-land
had found the mark on
only 9 of 35 field goal attempts,
and that big gun Chuck Menzer
had been limited to just a pair of
free throws.
Menzer finally got on the
board as the second half opened
to bring Augie within two, but a
pair of unanswered buckets by
Profit started a seven-point
string that opened the lead up to
nine points, 38-29.
After calling a timeout to
regroup, Augustana began to
whittle away at that North Park
lead. When it was reduced to
three points, the visitors switch-ed
to a zone defense, hoping to
shut off the Park attack in gen-eral
(and the red-hot Profit in
particular).
Keith McDonald was not
about to let that happen. He
keyed a deliberate, systematic
attack on the zone, as the Vikes
worked the ball around for al-most
two minutes at one point
while waiting for the good shot.
When Bob Geist took one from
eight feet and made it, the visit-ors
aborted their zone attempt
as useless.
The Park's edge reached as
many as 10 points with 10:29 to
play, but soon after things start-ed
happening. Augie's Menzer
started swishing 18- and
20-footers with regularity, and
his teammates took advantage of
it by feeding him the ball. The
lead was soon down to 48-45.
Menzer exchanged baskets
with the home team for the next
five minutes; his 20-footer made
the score 61-59 with 1:37 to go.
It was his 11th field goal of the
half.
Profit then put the finishing
touches on a great game for
North Park. He broke through
the Augie defense for a layup
and a four-point edge, and then
pulled down a carom from the
defensive boards—his 10th of the
game—to effectively slam the
door on the visitors with 55
seconds left.
North Park hit an amazing 64
per cent of its shots from the
floor in the second half (14 of
22) in leaving favored Augie
behind. For the game, they shot
56 per cent and grabbed 41
rebounds.
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See the player. See the ball the
player has. See the player shoot the
ball. See the ball drop through the
basket. See two points for the Vik-ings.
See Coach McCarrell smile.
Standings
W L
Ill. Wesleyan 6 0
NORTH PARK 4 1
Elmhurst 2 1
Augustana 3 2
Wheaton 3 2
North Central 1 1
Carthage 2 3
Millikin 2 6
Carroll 0 7
Losing
Eschewed
Once again NP's wrestlers are
on the winning track. In the
space of one week they defeated
Illinois Wesleyan in a dual meet
and Concordia, Kalamazoo and
Lake Forest in a quadrangular
tournament.
In the most recent meet, held
on Saturday, the grapplers got a
tournament win which greatlY
added to their stature and self-esteem.
In the meet, hosted bY
Concordia, the Vikings were vic-torious
over Kalamazoo, Corr
cordia and Lake Forest in that
order. Four North Parkers finish-ed
in first places. They were Bob
Davis, Tom Mietus, Bill Fassel
and Ed Kress.
Last Wednesday, the Vikings
clobbered the Titans of Illinois
Wesleyan 27-15. The route Was
even stronger than the score
indicated because NP had to give
up two forfeits, worth six points
each, before the meet started.
Winners in this meet were CarY
Peters, Tom Mietus, Ed KreSS
and Paul Tasch.
This weekend the wrestlers
travel to Jacksonville, Illinois,
for their first major tournament,
the MacMurray Invitational'
They will be looking to improve
their fourth place finish of a
year ago in the eight team meet
The Master
Viking Is.
Linda Walker here, with on-the-
spot coverage of the Master
Viking Contest ...
The ballots are in—we're
waiting for the final count. The
audience is almost as tense and
excited as the contestants. The
band is playing a frenzied ver-sion
of "You Gotta Have Heart"
. . . excitement oozes out of
every pore . . now the band
warms up on the tune "Miss
America" . . . excitement builds
to an unbelievable height. A
cheer raises from the crowd as
The Envelope is brought to the
Mistress of Ceremonies. Sud-denly,
all is quiet as the envelope
is opened and the announcement
is made: "And the Master Viking
of North Park College is ... Mr.
HARVEY KING!!"
Pandemonium reigns for
many minutes. Then Harvey
King, this year's Master Viking,
makes his way to the mike. "I
am very proud and happy to be
chosen the Master Viking."
There is a pause as he tilts his
head and wipes away a tear of
happiness. He is asked to what
he attributes his ability to win.
Harvey replies "Living a healthy
and wholesome life, aided by
eating Wonder bread which built
my body 12 ways, and a good
accompanying crop of female
dancers. Thanks to one and all."
Let me tell you, bicep-freaks,
there was not a dry eye in the
room!
Harvey was selected Master
Viking from 21 football player
contestants on the basis of his
physical stature (5'8", 165
pounds, biceps measuring 141/2"
and a chest of 391/2") and the
talent he displayed in the talent
show. Harvey performed "The,
Breakdown" and "The Penguin
on the tightwire and was also the
lead "dangler" in the play "Dan'
gle Your Lunch and Eat your
Feet" that was put on by all
contestants.
After the initial excitement
died down, I got to talk to Hanle
and find out about the back'
ground that made him the star
he is today.
Our Master Viking inherited
his father's gymnastic abilities
and his mother's dancing talents'
Put this together with all the
excercise he got from running at
6:00 every morning, baling NY
and carrying milk and water
pails, and pretty soon Harv
had a great looking body
was known as the smoothest anu
best dancer wherever he went. i rl
high school, Harvey got inter-ested
in religion. Every year the
church would hold a varietY
show, where he would walk on a
tightrope, and a talent shoW'
where he would dance. These
two small talents merged t°
form a big talent when someorte
put a record on while Harve Wa,5
on the tightwire, and he natura'l
ly started to dance. When tl,ie
Master Viking started to cleric;
on the tightrope, he brough
"The Penguin" and "The Break'
down" to an all-time high. TheYo
are now the rage, and fame WI
come to North Park for havIrig
the foresight to recogoll
Harvey King's talent.
POST SCRIPT FOR r
ANDERSON'S PUBLIC
LAT IONS MAN (WOMAN:,
Good try—but a technicalitY
fouled you up.