College
News Charles Wi berg today.
For an earlier look, see
page 2.
North Park College, Chicago, Illinois Friday, January 29, 1982 Volume 62, Number 12
Students rally
"Dear Senators: Don't cut our aid!"
"Have you written your congressman
yet? Stop and write a letter that could
save your financial aid. Did you know
that North Park stands to lose funds
that allow 80% of the students to get
financial aid? Stop and write that letter,
we have the address."
The steady stream of talking came
from students in the Carlson Tower
lobby, and people listened. All day
Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday
North Parkers took a minute to sit
down and tell their representatives
what they thought of federal aid being
reduced.
"This is a vital issue right now, just
before elections," said sophomore Chris
Thorpe, one of the organizers of the
letter-writing drive. She and sophomore
Sue Kosko got the idea when they
attended a meeting of the Federation of
Independent Illinois Colleges and
Universities Student Advisory Commit-tee
January 9. Both Thorpe and Kosko
work in the Financial Aid Office on
campus, and were interested when
Director of Financial Aid Charles Olson
mentioned the conference.
"We learned a lot at the meetings,"
said Thorpe. "They had a lot of bad
stuff to say about cuts and aid. It
seems we've been in the golden age for
grants and such, but that age is
ending."
What can we do, though? They found
out at the meetings that the average
senator receives only a couple of letters
from anyone on most issues, maybe 12
letters a year. "They said the student
voice in America is almost dead. We
can very easily double the number of
letters most of these senators get, and
more. That makes a difference."
Apparently, North Park students
The Chicago Baroque Ensemble, which will perform at North
Park Monday.
Monday's convocation
goes for Baroque
The Chicago Baroque Ensemble
directed by Victor Hildner will perform
for North Park's all-school convocation
Monday, February 1 at 10:10 a.m. in
the gym.
The program "The Many Faces of
Baroque," will include works by Bach,
Handel, Monteverdi and Telemann.
Two North Park students, Yvonne Toll
on trumpet and Kathy Edin on timpani,
will be the soloists for Handel's
"Worthy is the Lamb."
Monroe Olson, Professor of Music
and a long time member of the Baroque
Ensemble, will be heard in a solo by
Henry Purcell, "Wondrous Machine,"
which is written for harpsichord,
continuo, two oboes and voice.
The Chicago Baroque Ensemble, the
area's oldest early music group, gave
its first concert in 1962. Now in its 21st
season, it has performed more than 200
compositions drawn from a wide
spectrum of forms and styles.
A number of instruments in wide use
during the baroque era will be used in
the performance. They will include
harpsichord, recorder, and baroque
trumpet. In addition, the usual
complement of strings, oboe and flute
will be used.
Chris Thorpe, left, looks on as students write letters urging their
senators not to cut financial aid funding.
believed that the letters could make a
difference. Over 70 letters were written
at the Carlson table each day of the
campaign. Postage, envelopes and
paper were provided, as were the names
and addresses of officials from all
states. Sample letters were posted on
the wall, but students were urged to
write their own, adding personal
sentiments and mentioning what these
cuts would mean to their own
education.
"The girls really came back from the
meetings fired up," Charles Olson said.
"They found out about these national
financial aid days, and how other
colleges and universities are making a
plea to keep funding. It's a national
thrust."
Thanks to a little initiative and a few
minutes of letter-writing, the student
voice in America got just a bit louder.
Winter One Acts
are next week
By Margot Johnson
North Park's annual Winter One-
Acts will be p,:xto.ined next Thursday
and Friday, February 4-5, at 8:15 p.m.
in the LHA.
"The Feast", a play by Daniel
Wright, is a comedy about a young
man who comes to realize that he can't
expect much out of his life unless he
makes something of it. The play will
feature the acting talents of Quinton
Blair, Gregory Sager and Russ
Kuzuhara, under the direction of senior
Deb Reckowsky.
Gian Carlo Menotti's one-act opera,
"The Telephone," will be presented
in song by Chris Fench and Joy
Graham. Directed by Graham with the
assistance of Linda Rodriguez, and
accompanied by Deb Reckowsky, the
opera depicts the circumstantial frus-tration
of an amorous couple constantly
interrupted by a ringing telephone.
Interpretations of scenes from Ten-nessee
Williams' plays will open the
evening, and will be performed by Pat
Cook, Shelli Hanson, Kris R. Johnson,
Russ Kuzuhara, and Nancy Pifer. These
scenes will be directed by Deb
Reckowsky.
No admission will be charged for the
performance.
MY,
Festival of
Faith Schedule
TODAY — FRIDAY, JANUARY 29
10:15 a.m. — Hunting the Hidden
Treasures, with Dr. Haddon Klingberg.
LHA.
8 p.m. — Chicago's "Night Lite
Players," comedy team of Christian
entertainers. LHA.
SATURDAY, JANUARY 30
9 a.m.-noon — Workshop on
suffering: a perspective on personal
suffering and how to approach and stay
near one who suffers. Cranny.
SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 1
8 p.m. — "Celebrating in the Midst
of Global Suffering," an Agape
communion service led by Tim
Heintzelman and Greg Athnos. Isaac-son
chapel.
Opinion
FROM OUR FILES: Dr. Charles E. Wiberg, left, Professor of History,
as he dressed in his college days.
Covenant Family
not everyone feels a part of it
Last Saturday, my friend Dale Reed
and I took and RTA train to Wheaton.
His parents are Covenant missionaries
but stayed with a family in Wheaton
during their furlough, and I was invited
to go to Wheaton to see the basketball
game and to meet Dale's mom before
she returned to Mexico.
It was early afternoon when Mrs.
Reed picked us up at the station and we
drove to "the Mansion," a one-time
summer cottage of a Chicago business-man,
now owned by the Filkin family
(with whom the Reeds were staying).
"The Mansion" is far superior to the
apartment complexes and house I grew
up in. It has been remodeled and has a
pool and tennis court. The Reeds were
staying on the 3rd floor. As many as 22
people visited that weekend and,
College
News
Published at least seven times a term
during the school year by the students
of North Park College, 5125 N. Spaulding
Ave., Chicago, IL 60625. Telephone
(312) 583-2700, ext. 246.
Opinions which may be contained in
columns and bylined material do not
necessarily reflect those of the editor
or of North Park College. Letters to
the editor must be signed and sent
or brought to the Campus Center desk
by the Monday of the week to be pub-blished.
They must contain the writer's
address and telephone number. The
editor reserves the right to edit for
length and clarity, but the content will
never be altered.
EDITOR: Sandra Goplin
ASSOCIATE EDITOR: Jim Erickson
SPORTS EDITOR: Gary Eanes
LAYOUT EDITOR: Karen Sebastian.
BUSINESS MANAGER: Mark Hankins
Assistant: Vicki Porter
HEAD PHOTOGRAPHER: Kirk John-son
Photographers: Mark Fechner, Roger
Strom
COPY READER: Dave Olfelt
TYPIST: Pat Cook
DRIVERS: Carol Goplin, Linda Rod-riguez,
Julie Swanberg
STAFF: Tim Adell, Kevin B. Anderson,
Pam Bigelow, Quinton Blair, Paul
Finch, Tom Frederickson, Evelyn
Fricke, Carol Goplin, Marilee Hanstad,
Margot Johnson, Bruce Lange, Tim
Larson, Eric Lundberg, Paul Lund-quist,
Mary Mezzano, Kari Nielsen,
Dave Olfelt, Ray Ogren, Linda Rod-riguez,
Gregory Sager, Brian Wapole,
Julie Wessel
FACULTY ADVISOR: Eric Lund
needless to say, they went away with
sharp memories of the sights and the
phrase "the Mansion," in thetir minds.
Dale's sister Kathy had come up the
night before with her friends Kippy and
Linda. Kippy, Linda and Dale spent the
day shopping while Kathy and I
studied. Later in the day three families
visited. A conversation started up
about the upcoming game, and one of
the men asked me if I was on the
basketball team. I've been asked this
question many times in three years at
North Park, most of them since I've
joined the Covenant. People seem to
assume that black males at North Park
play basketball.
This was a normal day, except for the
gatherings of people, which all had two
things in common — North Park and
the Covenant. From the conversations,
you would think that the Covenant is
one big "clique" and that all Covenant
churches send their high school seniors
to North Park.
Many students, off campus and on,
have expressed resentment about the
Covenanter's mannerisms, mode of
thinking and apparel. In my two years
of going to Covenant churches on both
the north and south sides of the city
(and one in New York), I've learned to
take the Covenant ways with a grain of
salt. The Covenant "clique" is good
because everyone knows everyone —
they are much closer than my Catholic
congregation was. But on the bad side,
not all Covenant churches are included
in the "clique" when it comes to
support or acknowledgement from
Covenant Headquarters or the Cove-nant
Companion (only churches that
can afford the advertising in the back of
the magazine).
It seems that the middle-to-upper-class
and predominantly white Cove-nant
churches have a stronghold over
who they send to North Park, while
middle-to-lower-class and predominant-ly
black churches don't want to or
simply don't care enough to encourage
their adolescents to consider North
Park.
The Covenant may know they have
an interracial church in the Bronx or a
small 70-member church in Brooklyn,
but that's all. They could do a much
better job of encouraging seniors from
these and other little-known Covenant
churches to come to North Park.
In January, North Park sent 7,000
letters to prospective Illinois State
Scholars. It could have also sent letters
to prospective students in the Covenant
churches nationwide.
If Covenant North Park is one big,
happy family, and Covenant churches
are married to it, then there are some
churches that are separated from this
union.
Quinton Blair
Truth dr
Innuendo
Wheaton. The very word causes the
hackles to rise on the neck, the eyes to
gleam with anger. Wheaton. Say the
word to a North Park athlete and watch
him glower with hatred; say it to an
Admissions counselor and watch him
scowl with frustration; say it to the
average North Parker and watch him
launch into a bad religious joke.
Wheaton. Even the name sounds
obscene in an ironic sort of way (I hope
that they didn't name the town after
somebody with living relatives). It
lacks the pleasing cadence of Glen
Ellyn, Palatine, or even Decatur.
Wheaton. It's so short, so sharp, and
just plain unpleasant. If the Angles and
Saxons had invented the word, it would
probably cause modern mothers to
wash their children's mouth out with
soap at its utterance. Say it. Wheaton.
It sounds ugly.
It is the name of a Chicago suburb of
about 30,000 people, home to the
Belushi brothers, two high schools
renowned for their football teams, and a
small Christian liberal arts college of
2000 students. Since basketball was but
a gleam in Dr. Naismith's eye, it has
been North Park's arch-rival. Not just
rival, mind you. In our manically
competitive society, no institution of
learning is complete without an
arch-rival athletic or otherwise, the
mere mention of which makes an alum's
blood boil, makes you want to stand up
and sing your school song (if you know
it), etc. Archie and Jughead's Riverdale
High had Crosstown High, Dean
Martin and Jerry Lewis had "State
U.", Army has Navy, and we have
Wheaton.
Why Wheaton? Elmhurst is closer,
Northeastern is closer still, Illinois
Wesleyan and Millikin have better
athletic programs, and Augustana is
not only a Swedish Lutheran school
(which is like being an American
Communist to a Coyle), they also stole
our nickname.
Part of the reason lies in Wheaton's
notoriety. In evangelical circles, Whea-ton
is universally recognized from coast
to coast as a kind of substrata Harvard
for Christians, a collegiate mecca where
faith and learning really got it together.
Good school or not, that reputation is
partially undeserved. Wheaton, Ill., is
sometimes called the "Protestant
Vatican" because of all the prominent
evangelical magazines and organiza-tions
in the town and nearby Carol
Stream, and Wheaton alumni pull a lot
of strings in these circles. Hence the
national reputation, Billy Graham
aside.
In contrast, North Park is a hole in
the wall, a tiny school with an
overblown self-image, yet totally un-known
to John Q. Public and Chicago
sportswriters. With the exception of
Mike Harper, our alums keep a low
profile, and our contribution to
evangelical circles is minimal, unless
the names P.P. Waldenstrom and A.L.
Skoog mean something to you. North
Park is a bit jealous of Wheaton's
stature, and Wheatonites respond by
claiming ignorance of North Park's
existence.
This, of course, is baloney. Even if
you don't know a cupola from a
cucumber patch, Division III schools
are aware of North Park because of
basketball. Considering the way the
Crusader players were celebrating after
the roundball fiasco described in gory
detail in this issue, it's safe to say that
the arch-rivalry goes two ways.
Another explanation for our mutual
antipathy lies in the relative sconserva-tism
of Wheaton as opposed to the
corresponding liberalism of North Park,
in terms of dogma and codes of
behavior (if you freewheeling local
types thought that North Park was
"strict", you've got a lot to learn about
Christian schools). While far removed
from the Hitler Youth-with-Bibles
tendencies of a Bob Jones University,
Wheaton still requires its students to
sign pledges waiving their rights to
smoke, drink, swear, or attend certain
movies, whether on or off campus.
Without passing judgment on somebo-dy
else's idea of conduct and
deportment, it is safe to say that North
Park's lifting of such restrictions 13
years ago hasn't made it the blonde
Babylon many were convinced it would
become.
I'm not really sure what Wheaton's
conception of our social code is; all I
know is that a decade of North Park
students are grateful to the "Wheatie"
system of dress and deportment for
giving them something solid to
lampoon at sporting events (I find Joel
Wilson's wild-eyed evangelist imitation
a particularly chilling bit of satire),
provided that the enterprising Viking
has the necessary short hair, tie clasp,
flood pants, King James Bible, and
calculator belt attachment.
Going to Wheaton for the game
Saturday night was an interesting
experience for me. Few people know,
and fewer would suspect, that I
actually applied to Wheaton during my
senior year at high school. Even though
I went to a Covenant church, all of the
adults in my church that took an
interest in me (you know the type —
the people who read Greek so that they
can double-check Bible translations and
who argue till two in the morning about
millenialism and then pray about it
together) gave me a big Wheaton pitch
and later recoiled in horror when they
heard that I was going to North Park,
which they saw as a kind of senile uncle
that you're not really sure you want to
own up to being related to. Does North
Park have the C.S. Lewis manuscript
collection? Does North Park have a
cathedral-class pipe organ? Does North
Park have anybody on the staff of
Christianity Today? Does North Park
have a genuine revolving mastodon in
its science building?
As I watched the Wheaton ROTC
Honor Guard (all of whom reminded me
of Doug Niedermeier from Animal
House, right down to the polished silver
helmets) raise the flag before the game,
I couldn't help but think that I had
made the best choice possible. Despite
the loss, I cheered with unusual gusto
that night, and I'm sure that I offended
a few Wheatie geezers (all of their fans
over 30 reminded me of Sunday School
teachers) when I yelled "Billy Graham
says your check is in the mail" at the
refs, whose ineptitude leaned in
Wheaton's favor frequently throughout
the game. Besides, as Vern Wett,ersten
is quick to point out, anyone who goes
to a school nicknamed the Crusaders
should have his head examined.
While we were there, a fellow North
Parker told me that someone had
written "Don't just sit there, pray!" on
a stall in the gym men's room. That
might be my only regret in missing an
education at Wheaton College. Who can
resist a school with a direct pipeline to
God?
Gregory Sager
Quotable•
•
"The College News . . . is written
by a bunch of people who've had
classes with Claerbaut and Wi-berg
— it could all be compressed
into two or three columns."
— William Melberg
Through the years
Festival of Faith: A tradition that touches
By Tom Fredrickson
North Park's first Festival of Faith
arrived with the spirit of activism at
the end of January, 1968. The Festival
replaced such previous spiritual carni-vals
as "Christian Emphasis Week"
and "The College of Christian Experi-ence,"
which had established the late
January time slot as tradition.
These forerunners of the Festivallhad
themes like "God's Free Man," "The
Kingdom of Heaven Is at Hand . . .
Repent" (including the opening mes-sage
"Eschatology and U.S."), and
"Cry of the Lonely Crowd." Local
speakers and a wholly religious
emphasis were earmarks for these
pre-Festival fetes, that received profuse
praise from the College News.
But by 1968, a change was
apparently deemed necessary and was
lauded, so much so that the College
News was printed on orange paper and
changed its name to "The New World."
Incarnation was the theme of the week,
and there was a sense of liveliness in
the events.
Much student and faculty planning
went into revising the concept, and for
the first time semi-secular events crept
into the week. Films, music and art
combined with big name speakers like
Martin Marty, and conceptual events
like encouraged graffiti cast a new mold
for Nibrth Park.
The formula didn't last into 1969.
The expansive schedule lacked the
variety of the original "Festival of
Faith," a title which was criticized in
the College News as untrue. "It not
only falls short of being a festival, zó
also falls short of being Christian."
This year the College News wasn't
printed on orange paper.
Yet the jolt the first Festival put into
the tradition had its lasting effects. An
attempt to put freshness into the
conventional events followed the Festi-
Members of the Chicago Symphony
second from left.
r
with Elizabeth Buccheri,
Chicago Symphony members
join Buccheri for concert
Four members of the Chicago
Symphony Orchestra will join North
Park's Elizabeth Buccheri in a chamber
music concert at 8:15 p.m. Friday,
February 12, in the Lecture Hall
Auditorium.
The concert is the second in a series,
Chamber Music at North Park,
organized by Buccheri, Associate
Professor of Music and regular pianist
for the Chicago Symphony Chorus.
Joining her for the concert will be
Michael Henoch, assistant principal
oboe with the symphony; Larry Combs,
principal clarinet; Gail Williams,
French horn, and Willard Elliot,
principal bassoon.
The program will include Schumann's
Adagio and Allegro, Opus 70, for Horn
and Piano; Poulenc's Trio for Oboe,
Bassoon and Piano; Lutoslawski's
Dance Preludes for Clarinet and Piano,
and Mozart's Quintet, K. 452, for Piano
and Winds.
The first concert in the series on Oct.
6 featured Buccheri, Combs and Marc
Johnson, a member of the Vermeer
Quartet.
Buccheri, a member of the North
Park music faculty since 1969, is a
native of South Carolina with a
Performer's Certificate in Piano and
Doctor of Music Arts degree from the
Eastman School of Music.
She has performed as soloist with the
Chicago Symphony, Carlo Maria Giuli-ni
conducting, and has recorded for
both CRI and Spectrum.
Her second recording for Spectrum,
Songs of Les Six, with soprano Maria
Lagios, will be released this fall.
Willard Elliot has been a member of
the Chicago Symphony since 1964. He
is a composer as well as performer, and
his Concerto for Bassoon and Orchestra
has been performed by the symphony
both in Orchestra Hall and at Ravinia.
In 1961, he was co-winner of the
Koussevitzky Foundation Award for
Composition for his Elegy for Orches-tra.
Michael Henoch was appointed
assistant principal oboist of the
symphony by Sir Georg Solti in 1972
when he was only 23 and still a student
in the Northwestern University School
of Music. He is a member of the
Chicago Symphony Chamber Players
and has performed at both the
Marlboro Music Festival and Carmel
Bach Festival as well as at Ravinia.
Larry Combs has been principal
clarinet of the symphony since 1978,
following appointments with the Mon-treal
and New Orleans Symphonies and
the Santa Fe Opera. He participated in
the Marlboro Festival for four seasons.
He also is a composer as well as
performer, and his Duo for Horn and
Clarinet was performed by the Chicago
Symphony in 1979.
Gail Williams joined the Chicago
Symphony in 1979. Before that she was
principal horn with Chicago's Lyric
Opera. Like Michael Henoch, she
attended Northwestern and in 1974-5
was principal horn with the Civic
Orchestra of Chicago. She has also been
principal horn with the Grant Park
Orchestra. She is married to Larry
Combs.
Tickets for the concert are $3, $2 for
students with I.D.
val of Faith to continue unhindered, if
not universally appreciated and praised.
North Park saw a succession of early
70's concerns dealt with each January.
Covenant and non-Covenant speakers
spoke on racial pressures, community
outreach, and sex.
A minor scandal arose in 1972 when
Don Williams and his tribe of
evangelists swooped onto campus and
led half of the campus in an
emotion-charged week — and left the
other half dismayed at the shallow tears
shed. The enthusiasm called for three
years earlier found its way into the
Festival of Faith as a dubious
emotionalism. If the College News was
editorially confused in the turmoil (they
had originally praised the week
extensively), one picture caption put it
well: "Festival of Faith week's
emotionalism made a lot of people cry
from joy; others sobbed from disgust."
Contrary to this note of seeming
campus-wide concern, the one consis-tent
note of Festival of Faith is
disappointment with its reception. The
Festival's themselves have been even-keeled
since '72, following a similar
format: theme, speakers, fun event.
One variation, which is not really even
a variation, came when campus Pasto-
Pick of
the Pops
ABBA/THE VISITORS (Atlantic) —
The corporate Swedes strike out on
this dull album. They are trying to be
Scandinavian social commentators
when they should remain true to their
roots and stay the pop pillaging
Norsemen that conquered Europe. If
you want to find out why this
bland-looking quartet is the best selling
group in the world, find K-Tel's Magic
of Abba in which rocks two most
notorious names combined in a
memorable collection. TF
THE ROYAL PHILHARMONIC
ORCHESTRA/HOOKED ON
CLASSICS (RCA) —
K-Tel International, arch anthologiz-er
of pop, has expanded its horizons
with this outing — a sort of "Western
Civilization's Greatest Hits." One
hundred and six snippets from the
classical repertoire are crammed onto
this record, from "The 1812 Overture"
(sans cannons) to Bach (sans canons).
Happily, a scorecard is provided. Oh
yes, drums, bass and even guitar have
been added, making the beat the only
cohesive element on the album. Melody
and beat are all there are to this record,
and it stands or falls on that fact. There
is one slow number, "Hooked on
Romance" and single composer selec-tions,
but I like the straight "Hooked
on Classics" where I can listen to man's
greatest achievements go flurrying by
— five centuries spanned in every
minute, Tchaicovsky swirling into
Bach, Gershwin into Sibelius, Handel
into Mussorgsky, tempo shunned for
The Beat. Guaranteed to shorten your
attention span to about fifteen seconds.
TF.
AC/DC/FOR THOSE ABOUT TO
ROCK WE SALUTE YOU (Atlantic)
— If I didn't know any better, I'd say
that when Angus Young and Brian
Johnson recorded About to Rock they
were listening to the Cars, the Ramones
(bow your head and face east) and Led
Zeppelin, as well as reading Mein
Bob Hjelm organized a "home-grown"
Festival in which no outside speakers
were brought in.
Festival of Faith remains, as it
consistently has been, a tradition that
can touch. The disappointment and
discontent seem to stem from the fact
that "North Park is a school, not a
Church," as Karl Olsson once said. One
cannot expect the enthusiasm of a
church at a school, but one can expect a
lot and still be satisfied.
Dr. Haddon Klingberg opens
Festival of Faith with Wednes-day's
chapel.
Kampf and watching the Exorcist on
their new Videomax machine.
This album has no redeeming
qualities. In the past AC/DC was a
monotonous, misogynic metalhead off-spring
of Led Zeppelin (Page be
praised), but they had a sort of
garage-band charm. But like every band
that has become a supergroup, their
innocence has gone the way of all flesh.
The title is self-explanatory. AC/DC
has spent an entire record almost
rocking. This album is for those about
to rock because those who are rocking
are having too good a time to listen to
it. BW
GENESIS/ABACAB (Atlantic) — No-thing
stymies the public image of a
"progressive" musician more than a
successful pop album. Phil Collins,
Genesis' drummer/vocalist and leader,
is such a musician. His Top 20 solo
album, Face Values, might lead a
dyed-in-the-wool Genesis fan to believe
that Collins sees more to life than
bottoming the mix to keyboardist Tony
Banks' Mormon Tabernacle Ooze.
Abacab intensifies the confusion in the
Genesis camp. About half of the album
is the same old stuff, Duke II if you
will, and rialf is something else entirely.
"Keep It Dark" is a rumbling dirge
more in the manner of ex-Genesis leader
Peter Gabriel's solo work, "Who
Dunnit?" is a clever bit of quasi-Ant-music
foolishness, and the mood and
depth of "Another Record" is as
unlikely to appear on a Genesis record
as a cover of "Anarchy in the U.K."
The horns on "No Reply At All"
(courtesy Earth, Wind & Fire) and
Collins' vocal delivery on "Like It Or
Not" give away the solution to the
riddle of Abacab, something which Face
Values also points to; Phil Collins
wants Genesis to be the 80's Motown,
and he wants to play Berry Gordy.
More power to him. GS
Albums courtesy of The Flip Side
3314 W. Foster Ave.
Page 4 THE COLLEGE NEWS Friday, January 29, 1982
Anderson resigns as Sem dean
Dr. Glenn P. Anderson, dean of
North Park Theological Seminary since
1968, has resigned effective August 31
to return to full-time teaching as
professor of church history.
President William R. Hausman of
North Park College and Theological
Seminary called Dr. Anderson's step-ping
down "a genuine loss."
"After 14 years of seminary admini-stration,"
Dean Anderson said, "I feel
the need for a new challenge, which I
hope to find in my return to the
classroom here at North Park.
"These have been very busy but
enjoyable years in the deanship,
working with a wonderful group of
students and an understanding and
supportive faculty. Because we are a
servant of the church, the ties that have
been strengthened with the Evangelical
Covenant Church of American bode
Well for our future.
"My hope is to continue my contacts
with Covenant pastors and laity by way
of preaching and teaching opportuni-ties.'•
During Dr. Anderson's 14 years as
dean and vice-president for the
seminary, seminary enrollment has
more than doubled and the faculty and
staff have been almost totally rebuilt.
Dr. Anderson joined the seminary
faculty in 1964 after serving Covenant
churches in Malden and Attleboro, MA.
He is a graduate of the University of
California at Berkeley, North Park
Work-for-credit
starts this spring
By Greg Catalano
A new campus-wide Internship Field
Experience program will be available to
juniors and seniors beginning Spring
term.
At their January 18 meeting, the
faculty approved the program, present-ed
by Neale Murray, Associate
Professor of Art and chairman of the
Educational Policies Committee.
The idea behind the program is for a
student to be employed in a field that is
related to the participant's academic
major and receive class credit for the
hours participated.
The internships will vary in length
depending on the decision of the
department concerned. The experience
will last at least one term. Tuition will
be paid by the student according to the
number of credit hours.
A student may become involved in
the program by contacting their
divisional coordinator: Jayne Sorenson
of the Art Department, Lee Burswald
of the Music Department, Craig
Stewart of Humanities, and Carson Cox
of Social Sciences.
Each student participating in the
experience will be required to keep a
daily log of activities, ideas, and
observations. Appropriate readings will
be required before and/or after the
experience and a paper will be due at
the end of the experience.
Students will be required to write
evaluations of the experiences, the
agency and the supervisors.
A brochure explaining the program
will be available by the end of
February.
Editor's Note: Greg Catalano is a
student representative on the faculty's
Internship Committee.
Loan default crackdown
In a crackdown on colleges whose
students don't pay back their National
Direct Student Loans, the Department
of Education has proposed to stop
institutions with high loan default rates
from receiving any additional funding
under their program.
About 800 of the 3,200 institutions in
the NDSL program have a current
default rate of over 25%, according to
the January 13 issue of The Chronicle
of Higher Education. Over one-fourth of
loan recipients at those institutions
simply don't repay the loan money.
Classified
Still STRUGGLING with math or
Fortran? Don't wait until it's too
late? Expert tutoring is available now
from North Star Services, 278-7755.
Ed: The check is in the mail!
Wettersten
MISSING — Slides from Orientation
Week. Whoever used them, please re
turn them to the Campus Center desk.
Several New Student Orientation
workers STILL haven't picked up the
socks they loaned for the mixer. Pick
them up in the College News. office
of the Campus Center this week or
they're gone.
North Park will probably not be
affected at all by the decision,
according to Charles Olson, Director of
Placement and Financial Aid. "Our
default rate isn't nearly that high," he
said Tuesday. "Our last rate I'm sure
of was under 7%."
That 7% default rate places North
Park well above the average school in
terms of loan repayment. The nation-wide
default rate for the direct loan
program is 16.3%.
"NDSL defaults represent more than
$834 million that could have been
Theological Seminary and Andover
Newton Theological School.
He did graduate work at Brown
University and received his Ph.D. from
Boston University in 1971. He is the
editor of "Covenant Roots," published
in 1980, and the author of numerous
articles.
A search committee headed by the
Rev. Timothy C. Ek of the North Park
Board of Directors has been formed to
seek a new dean. A candidate is
expected to be recommended to the
Covenant annual meeting in June.
Dr. Milton B. Engebretson, president
of the Covenant and President Haus-man
are ex-officio members of the
search committee.
Dr. Glenn P. Anderson
North Park students leave to tutor prisoners in the Social Services
PACE program. The students tutor prisoners at the Cook County
Correctional Institution every Wednesday.
Spring
NP not hurt Play is
Antigone helping thousands of needy students if
schools and former borrowers had acted
responsibly," said Education Secretary
Terrel H. Bell.
The National Direct Student Loan
program provides low-interest loans
based on need. The loans are handled
by school officials, and are made with
money repaid by past borrowers. With
no new loan capital, schools with high
default rates will find themselves able
to give fewer and fewer loans, in a time
when students are needing them more.
CLASSIFIED ADS AND
PERSONALS— 10c a word
Turn in this form with payment to the
College News office or mailbox in the
Campus Center.
Name:
Phone:
Ad:
By Kari Nielsen
"The central issue is the meaning of
life itself and the impossibility of
maintaining one's purity in a world that
demands and imposes compromise."
This is one scholar's reaction to Jean
Anouilh's version of Antigone, Doy
Steele's choice for this year's Spring
Play. Steele, a Speech/Communication
instructor, will direct the play, which is
based on the original script by
Sophocles.
Steele said that Anouilh wrote his
version as a protest against the Nazi
occupation of France. She chose the
play because it is contemporary, and
because she sees parallels between the
decisions Antigone and Creon make in
the play and those which Christians
must make today.
The play is well-balanced in its ratio
of male to female and lead to minor
roles.
"There are opportunities for those
who just want to get their feet wet as
well as some real showcase parts for
both men and women," according to
Steele.
Auditions for Antigone will be held
March 10 and 11, after spring break.
Steele emphasizes that auditions are
open to anyone who wants to try out.
No experience is necessary.
The play will be presented May 6, 7,
and 8.
Friday, January 29,1982
Bulletin Board
THE COLLEGE NEWS
The Chicago Baroque Ensemble will be featured in Monday's all-school
convocation in the gym. Monday, February 1 10:10 a.m.
Aatention all seniors — Register NOW for your UAP Field Test. If you do
not register, there will be no field test ordered for you. Some majors require
this test to satisfy the comprehensive requirements for graduation. More
details soon.
Registration for spring term begins Monday, February 1 and continues
through February 12. Students registering or changing their schedules later
than that will be charge a late fee of $10.
A June 1, 1982, deadline has been set for students receiving Illinois State aid
to turn in their applications. Financial aid forms are available in the
Placement Office, third floor of Caroline Hall.
A Sohlberg sponsored "Policemen's Ball" will be held in the Cranny
tomorrow at 9:30 p.m. All students are invited to attend this free dance.
Page 5
$50 top prize in RMA Pool Tourney
By Tim Larson
Chalk up your cuesticks, pool sharks
— the Resident Men's Association will
sponsor their second annual pool
tournament Saturday, February 6, at
10 a.m.
Even if you aren't the best hustler on
the North Side, the RMA strongly
encourages you to come out and maybe
win a few bucks. Over $100 will be
awarded to the top eight players, with
$50 going to the winner. Chances are
pretty good, therefore, that your $2
entry fee could return you much more.
Randy "Gar" Johnson, originator of
last year's tournament and director of
this year's, is very optimistic. "It will
be lots of fun for everyone," he
promises, "and something enjoyable to
do for those who don't go to forums and
other school activities." The game of
the day will be eight-ball, best of three
games. The tourney will be single
Illinois artists show works at NP
Thirty-five paintings by 12 Chicago-area
artists will be on display in the
Carlson Tower Gallery February 1-26.
The exhibit is one of three in the
Illinois Arts Council's current touring
program, Illinois Painters III.
Painters represented include Lisa C.
Allen, Bill Benway, JoAnne Carson,
Stephen Luecking, Owen McHugh,
Dale E. Mills and James S. Rousonelos
of Chicago.
Others are Jacquelyn Ruttinger,
Crete; Joanna Pinsky, Evanston;
Stephen Lowery, North Aurora; Craig
Anderson, Palatine, and Sandra J.
Perlow, Wilmette.
Illinois Painters III, consisting of 95
paintings by 33 artists, took a year to
assemble under the direction of Walter
Thompson of Bradley University.
The North Park exhibit was arranged
by Gayle Bradley-Johnson, Assistant
Professor of Art.
elimination up to a point (determined
by the number of competitors), then go
to double elimination. To avoid any
controversy, seeding will be done
entirely at random.
John Hieber, the reigning champion,
says, "It will be better than last year,
since there will be more people and
you'll need to call your shots — no
'slop.' Whoever wins has got to know
what they're doing." Nevertheless, the
odds are pretty good that you may win
something if you join in the fun.
The rules for the tournament are
posted in Burghatory (in the basement
of Burgh Hall), the site of the matches.
Members of the RMA council will be
the judges. To enter the competition,
simply get your money (only $2 for
some good pool) to "the Gar" in Burgh,
room 321 by Friday, February 5. Of
course, spectators are welcome — free
admission.
"Doorway Sleeper," one of the paintings going on display
in the Carlson Gallery Monday.
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Beautiful Floral Arrangements For all Oc-casions.
104 discount for North Park Stu-dents
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Summer 1982
Jobs in Chrietian
Camping with
National
C enant Camps
See, hear, and find out about camp-ing
ministry opportunities across
the United States Thursday, Feb-ruary
4, 1982, 4pm thru 5:30pm,
7pm thru 10pm Campus Center
Lounge.
FREE MUNCHIES
FOR THE MOST
BEAUTIFUL BRIDE
EXCLUSIVE
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FROM
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A keepsake which can be treasured for generations.
Eight distinctive styles from which to select.
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The crown pictured is in Gold, it is set with pearls, and
has gold Faith, Hope, and Charity Dangles. The Crown
measures 2Ve inches at the base and is 3 inches high.
N EWOffer from the
Oldest and
Largest truly internation-al
bookclub "A better way
to buy books".
The Academic Book Club
has expanded the idea of
a traditional book club
into a completely new
and unique concept.
Save 20-40 %
ON ANY BOOK IN PRINT
on selected titles
— NO GIMMICKS
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Just low, low prices every-day
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choice of books; and fast,
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on every order.
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Canada: 105 Wellington St., Kingston,
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Europe: Postbus 1891, 1005 AP Am-sterdam,
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Asia: 78, First Cross Street, Colom-bo
II, Sri Lanka
Africa: PO Box 159, !taro, Ogun State,
Nigeria
Dear ABC,
Please tell me, without any ob-ligation
on my part, how I can order
for myself and for my friends any-where
in the world any book in print,
from any publisher, from any country,
in almost any language.
Tell me in addition how I can save
20-40% on these books joining the
ACADEMIC BOOK CLUB and paying
a membership fee as low as 1.80
daily ($6.50annually).
I understands that one of the fea-tures
of the club is that I am not
now, nor will I ever be, under any
obligation whatsoever to buy any
particular book or quantity of books
from Academic Book Club.
PLEASE PRINT:
Circle appropriate abbreviation(s): Dr.
Prof. Rev. Mr. Mrs. Miss Ms.
Name
Address
P. Code
Note
Page 6 THE COLLEGE NEWS
Alica Iverson, Professor of Mathematics, is taken to lunch by
Denise Thorpe in Tuesday's SA -sponsored "Take-A-Prof-To-Lunch."
Harth to teach
Internationally known violinist Sid-ney
Harth will conduct a master class
at North Park Saturday, February 13.
Harth will work with selected
students from area schools chosen on
the basis of auditions.
The class, from 3 to 5 p.m. in the
Lecture Hall Auditorium, will be open
to all interested persons. Admission is
$1.
Harth served as concertmaster of the
Chicago Symphony Orchestra under
Fritz Reiner and of the Los Angeles
violin in LHA
and New York Philharmonic orchestras
under Zubin Mehta. He also has been
associate conductor of the Louisville
Symphony and Los Angeles Philhar-monic.
He records for Vanguard and
other labels.
The New York Times called him
"clearly one of the finest violinists this
country has produced." In Russia he
was hailed as "a great master."
The master class will be broadcast
live by radio station WBEZ.
1/Clejr1/ gi/YI Ce v
THIN, THICK P
or STUFFED
call 539-586011
For prompt oven-hot delivery
SPECIAL
WITH PURCHASE OF A
Golden Crust Football
Pizza (14"x28") FREE
Pitcher of your favorite
beverage — Dining Room only
OPEN 7 DAYS
Monday thru Thursday— 4 PM to 1 AM
Friday and Saturday — 4 PM to 2 AM
Sunday — 2 PM to Midnight
4620 N. KEDZIE AVENUE
Newsbriefs
Compiled by Cindy Nelson
American Weapons
in Libya
President Reagan expelled Libyan
ambassadors from the U.S. last fall,
and the U.S. later shot down Libyan
warplanes flying over the Gulf of Sidra.
Yet it has recently been discovered that
as late as last year, American firms sold
Libya weapons and materials worth $53
million. These weapons and materials,
none of which were sold illegally,
included military cargo planes, weapon-sighting
devices, guided missile corn.
pounds, artillery parts, ammunition,
uniforms and jet turbine engines.
Equipment which was not sold for
military use has also been converted
and incorporated into Libyan's milita-ry.
Four years ago, the United States
approved the sale of 400 heavy-duty
trucks, by the OshKosh Truck Corp., to
Libya for agricultural purposes. The
State Department has reported that all
of these trucks are now hauling
Soviet-made tanks.
Egypt's Renewed
Relations with Moscow
Egypt's President Mubarak has
requested that 66 Soviet industrial
experts visit the country. Through this
action, President Mubarak is breaking
the policies set by former President
Anwar Sadat. In 1972, Sadat expelled
17,000 Soviet military advisors from
• Egypt. Last September he expelled 700
Soviet experts, along with ambassador
Vladimire Polyakov and six diplomats.
Friday, January 29, 1982
Wayne Williams
Trial in Atlanta
In Atlanta, Wayne Williams is being
tried for the murders of two young men
on the long list of Atlanta victims last
summer. Last Friday, state prosecutor
Lewis Slaton asked the court to allow
him to introduce evidence connecting
Williams with 10 other murders. This
evidence is circumstantial and consists
of more matched fabric fibers and blopd
stains. The prosecution wishes to use
this evidence as an "evidentiary aid" in
convincing the jury that Williams
murdered the other two victims, Cater
and Payne.
The High Cost of
Former Presidents
Supporting former United States
presidents costs taxpayers $25 million
each year. Each president is initially
given a sum of money to help in his
transition out of office. Former
presidents Jimmy Carter and Gerald
Ford were each given $1 million, and
former president Richard Nixon was
given $100,000. Each year taxpayers
provide money for secret service
protection, office subsidies, postage,
travel expenses and operating funds for
presidential libraries and museums for
these three men. Gerald Ford has two
libraries, each a 40,000-square-foot
building. One is at the University of
Michigan in Ann Arbor and the other in
Ford's hometown of Grand Rapids. The
operating costs of each of these libraries
amounts to $1.5 million per year.
igeggoeri
OWTS FROM SCANDINAVIA
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Mon. & Thurs. til 9 p in-.. •
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Enter . . .
1982 Miss
Illinois-USA
Pageant
Kim Seelbrede TO BE TELEVISED LIVE
Miss USA 1981 APRIL 3RD
If you. are a single female between the ages of
17-24, a resident of Illinois or attending an Illinois
College or University, you are eligible to enter.
MISS ILLINOIS WILL WIN:
• All-expense-paid trip to Italy
(Salerno's Windsor Restaurant, Berwyn)
* $3,000 full-length fur coat
(York Furrier, Elmhurst)
• 8-days, 7-nights in the Bahamas
(A Thomson vacation)
* $500 Cash Award from Maybelline
* Plus ... a 14-day all-expense paid trip to the national
pageant for an opportunity to become Miss USA 1982
and win over $100,000 in prizes.
FOR AN ENTRY FORM AND/OR ADDITION INFORMATION
WRITE: MISS ILLINOIS-USA
PAGEANT PRODUCTIONS
434 W. DOWNER PLACE
AURORA, ILLINOIS 60506
(312) 896-9838 OR PHONE:
IWELCOME COLLEGIANS!
to
NORTH PARK COVENANT
. CHURCH
Sunday Worship
•
• 830am & 1 lam
•
• with
•
•• College-ate •
• 9:48arn
• •
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Ii FUN & FELLOWSHIP EVENTS
THROUGH THE WEEK
"YOUR CHURCH HOME
AWAY FROM HOME"
Foster Kimball
Ace Hardware
3340 Foster Ave.
463-4380
("RICARDO NELSON
TRAVil. BUREAU. INC.
We II be happy IP arrange
to,your travel needs
domestic or toreigin
Call 561-2435
5245 North Clark Street
Chicag, Illinois 60640
Friday, January 29, 1982 THE COLLEGE NEWS Page 7
North Park's 1981-82 version of the wrestling team. Standing:
Asst. Coach Joe Frank, Scott Malouf, Greg Oletski. Kneeling:
Coach Tony Quinn, Chris Baer, Greg Howard. Not pictured: Tom
Scholle, Jim Johnstone. Scott Malouf was named Outstanding
Wrestler at the North Central Invitational. He won his weight class
by defeating three opponents.
Lady Vikes cremate Aurora
By Evelyn Fricke
The Lady Vikings basketball team
played well defensively and offensively
against Aurora College Tuesday. North
Park beat the Aurora Spartans 75-46.
The Lady Vikings played well right
from the start. Less than 5 minutes into
the game North Park was ahead 10-2.
The Spartans tried to catch up but the
Lady Vikings kept hitting the boards
and controlled the tempo.
Coach Gregg Gierke commented, "In
this game, when we got the lead we
stayed there and then pulled ahead."
WANTED:
Someone interested in work-ing
with the layout and paste-up
of the College News. Most-ly
Wednesday night work. Any-one
who might be interested
in the position of layout editor
for next year should consider
this.
If interested, contact Sandy
Goplin, Karen Sebastian or
Jim Erickson. College News
office: extension 246.
Restaurant
and Ice
Cream Parlor
Open Seven Days
A Week
Sunday-Thursday 6 a.m.-12 mid-night
Friday, Saturday 6 a.m.-1 a.m.
3224W. Foster Ave. 478-7707
In the second half, the Lady Vikings
were ahead by 20 doints, forcing
Aurora to play catch-up ball, creating
turnovers of which North Park took
advantage.
Sophomore forward Jackie Groot led
the Lady Vikings with 20 points.
Sophomore center Karen Hansen had a
good game, contributing 12 points and
8 rebounds.
Tonight the Lady Viking will play
George Williams College at home at 7
p.m.
North park's cheerleaders keep up the spirit at Wednesday's
basketball game.
Basketball (men) This Week
GAMES THIS WEEK
1/25 — Wheaton at Wesleyan
1/26 — Augustana at North Central
Carroll at Milton
1/27— CARTHAGE AT NORTH PARK
Elmhurst at Lake Forest
3232 W. Foster Ave.
Open 7 days a week
Mon.— Thurs. 6 A.M.-12 Midnight
Fri.—Sat. 6 A.M.-1 A.M.
Sunday? A.M.-12 Midnight
Tel. 583-4978
Visit Covenant Press for all your school
supplies. . . .
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1/29 —
1/30 —
Millilcin at Quincy
Colorado C. at Wesleyan
WESLEYAN AT NORTH PARK
Carroll at Augustana
Elmhurst at North Central
Wheaton at Millikin
LASTING
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CHICAGO. ILLINOIS 60640
312-275-2010
S orts
Wheaton, Wesleyan stomp NP
Vikings lose 2 away games
By Gary Eanes
Augustana College climbed atop the
CCIW basketball pile after a week in
which North Park lost to Illinois
Wesleyan and Wheaton, both away
games.
The forward tandem of Bugaj ski and
Yess combined for 38 points at
Bloomington to lead the Wesleyan
Titans 72-54 over North Park. North
Park managed to stay within striking
distance and was down by 5 points at
halftime. In the final eight minutes the
Titans outscored North Park 17-3.
North Park was unable to play with the
Titans and inaccuracy at the foul line
contributed to North Park's loss.
Wheaton whipped North Park Satur-day
with a degree of ease which most
North Park fans found humiliating.
North Park was close at half time and
went up by one, 51-50, with 12:50
remaining in the game. Wheaton's
coach, Dick Helm, made the smart
Fred Kruse looks for a pass in Wednesday's
Carthage. North Park beat the Redmen 64-59. Kruse was
scorer for the Vikings, inking 24 points.
game against
the high
CCIW Standings (as of 1-25-82)
W L Pct. Pts. Opp. W L Pts. Opp.
Augustana 6 1 .857 490 404 13 4 1160 975
Ill. Wesleyan 5 2 .714 524 453 9 5 981 950
Millikin 4 2 .667 387 366 8 6 950 902
NORTH PARK 5 3 .625 537 528 11 6 1186 1132
Carroll 5 3 .625 545 536 9 8 1241 1218
Wheaton 3 2 .600 317 282 7 7 892 847
North Central 3 6 .333 610 674 5 10 1038 1131
Carthage I 6 .143 479 541 6 10 1115 1211
Elmhurst 1 8 .111 557 662 3 14 1093 1224
Sports Quiz Results
Here it is folks, the answers to
our sports quiz. Our Winner was
Greg Oletski — here he is. We
hope he enjoys the pizza.
Honorable mention goes to Barry
Benduha and Robert Loftus, Carl
Wistrom and Stanley (I never
knew a dog that was such a
sports fan).
1. The conference North Park
belonged to before the CCIW was
the College Conference of Illinois
(CCI).
2. The Wrestling team was the
last North Park team (other than
basketball) to win a CCIW title.
That was in 1973.
3. The head basketball coach
before Dan McCarrell was "Roy"
Greene.
4. Ed Tankersley was the
running back who transferred
from North Park to Arkansas
State and back to North Park all
in one year.
5. On May 1 and 2, 1981, the
tennis, track; and golf teams all
finished last in the CCIW at
Millikin University.
6. North Park's three helmet
styles: blue with white stripes,
blue adorned with Viking horns
and in 1969 a helmet with a
football and 100 commemorating
the 100th anniversary of football.
7. The year was 1978 (not 1979,
as printed) that North Park
registered a 29-2 record. San
Francisco State and Illinois
Wesleyan whipped NPC. (Because
of the discrepancy we disqualified
this question.)
8. Again we made a bit of an
error; fortunately Jerry Baker
holds both the oldest school
record (long jump dating back to
Greg Oletski
1959) and the oldest CCIW
record, as the question should
have read, in the javelin dating to
1962. Curiously, Baker's javelin
record has been bettered several
times but never at a CCIW meet
and consequently. cannot be
considered a conference record.
9. Dave Moon mistakenly lined
up behind the guard instead of
the center.
10. Harper, Greer, May, Tho-mas
and Florentine were the five
starters for first NCAA Champi-onship
team.
11. Roger Wood was North
Park's starting center before
Harper.
12. Ted Hedstrand belongs to
the IHSA Basketball Coaches
Hall of Fame.
13. The athletes named as All
Americans were Darryl May,
Michael Thomas, and Randy Ross
(Fred Battaglia and Jim Clausen
were Academic All-Americans).
Thanks for participating and be
looking for another quiz.
move at this point and took a time out,
effectively taking the momentum away
from North Park.
Wheaton went on to take control of
the game from here with inspired play
from Brian Baird and Dan Fiddler, who
each netted 16 points. North Park was
led by Jim Schultz, who put in 18
points and grabbed 12 rebounds.
North Park's leaky defense and poor
foul shooting, and Wheaton's good
shooting from the field and line were
the major factors in the 79-62 loss to
the Crusaders.
This pair of losses pushed North
Park into fourth place with Carroll. It's
obvious that the CCIW is up for grabs
and anyone could come out on top,
although Augustana is currently in
control with only one conference loss.
North Park faces a 4-game homestand,
starting with Carthage on January 27,
and including Illinois Wesleyan, Carroll
and Makin.
North park's women's swim team closed out the season Wednes-day
at the University of Chicago. North Park, outmanned by more
than two to one, went down to the U. of C. swimmers 72-55.
Highlights were Linda Anderson's and Val Fisk's first and second
finish in the 50 yard backstroke, Susie Thorngren's 1:04 in the 100
yard freestyle and Laura Dazzo's 1:20 in the 100 yard breast stroke.
Dazzo's time set a new school record, eclipsing the old record,
which she set a week earlier at a duel meet against DuPage
College. Sandy Kershner, Judy Ausciutto and Lida Bond also
contributed heavily to the team's success over the course of the
season.
Indoor track opens
at North Central
By Gary Eanes
North Park opened the winter indoor
track and field season at North Central
College on Friday, January 22. The
indoor season is more of a time prepara-tion
for outdoor track than a time of
keen competition. However, some good
performances were turned even though
it is early in the season.
In the field events, Kelvin Nelson
long jumped 21' 3" and high jumped to
a height of 5'10". Junior Quinn Blair
putted the shot out to a distance of
41'7", an indoor best. Pole vaulter Dave
Loomos vaulted up to 11'6".
In the running events, Darryl May
ran well in the mile, posting a 4:33.5 in
his first indoor meet ever. Steve Lewis
clocked well in the mile with a 4:51.4.
Freshman sprinter Doug Niznik led the
Viking sprint squad in the 50 yard dash
in 5.75 with Russ Kuzuhara in 5.91 and
Ed Diaz in 5.92. In the high hurdles,
Freshman Steve Gerencser clocked a
7.5 in his first college competition.
Don Hodgkinson was 3 seconds off a
school record in the 600 yard run in
1:18.3, and Ed Diaz ran the 300 in 36.2.
The mile relay team of Scott Swanberg,
Hodgkinson, May and Nelson showed
promise clocking in at 3:45.5.
The trackmen have four meets
scheduled for the remainder of the
indoor season. Tomorrow the traclunen
will be at Illinois Benedictine for an
afternoon meet.
Correction:
A caption in the January 22 issue
of the College News stated that
the ITK defeated Physical Thera-py
in men's IM basketball. It was
Physical Therapy which won the
game, with a score of 44-33.