T H E * ■ NORTH PARK college VOLUME 54, NUMBER 14, tTuHiU iRd So Di mAi Yu , JANUARY 24, 1974 CHICAGO, ILLINOIS
Senate Writes
Letter Ever wonder what your Student Senate is going?
Last week; the Senate passed, with some dissension, a bill
uring the impeachment o f President Nixon.
But some people still had misgiving, or thought the student
body should be informed more fully o f the letter, so we reprint
it here in full.
January 21, 1974
Dear Congressman:
On the fifteenth of January, nineteen-seventy-four, the
Senate of the North Park College Student Association adopted
— with but four dissenting votes — North Park Senate
Legislation 7319 which called for the impeachment of
President Richard M. Nixon.
The resolution listed five particulars for which we believe the
return of a bill of impeachment, by your committee, is made
necessary.
I. On July 23, 1970, the President personally approved the
"Huston plan” for political surveillance which involved
concededly illegal acts against domestic radicals.
II. In 1971, the President established within the White
House a personal secret police ("the plumbers") operating
outside the restraints of the law, and engaging in burglary,
illegal wiretapes, espionage and perjury.
III. While Daniel Ellsberg was facing trial, his psychiatric
records were burglarized by White House aides and, at the
direction of the President, a White House aide discussed the
directorship of the Federal Bureau of Investigation with the
judge presiding over Ellsberg's trial.
IV. In 1973, the President bombed Cambodia, a neutral
country, without the authorization of Congress. He deliberately
concealed his actions from Congress and when the deception
was discovered, the President said he would do the same thing
again under similar circumstances.
V. President Nixon's campaign was financed, in part, by
illegal contributions from corporations which gave the money
after beng pressured into doing so by aides and friends of the
President.
John Locke, in his classic essay Concerning Civil
Government, penned the follwoing statement:
Great mistakes in the ruling part, many wrong and
inconvenient laws, and all the slips o f human frailty will be
borne by the people without mutiny or murmur. But i f a long
rain o f abuses, prevarications and artifices, all tending the
same way, make the design visible to the people — and they
cannot but feel what they He under, and see whither they are
going — it is n o t to be wondered that they should rouse
themselves and endeavor to p u t the rule into such hands
which may secure to them the ends for which the government
was at first erected.
The train of abuses perpetrated upon the people by this
administration has made the design of President Nixon clear;
he has functioned above the law and apparently intends to
continue to do so. This usurpation of power by the executive
and disregard for the law cannot remain unchallenged.
Impeachment is the prescribed Constitutional method for
dealing with the present situation. Impeachment is not the
means by which one destroys a government. Historically,
impeachment has been the chief institution for the
preservation of the government.
It is for the preservation of the government and the
reestablishment of the integrity of the office of the presidency
that we now call for the impeachment of President Richard
Nixon. No other means can restore the confidence of the
people in their government.
Sincerely yours,
David Pearson
President
Michael Voigt
Vice. President
F^eter Sandström
Co-author Senate
Legislation 7319
Senate Passes
Impeachment Bill
by Carol Ness
Pocketbooks and politics
— even the Senate has to
worry about them once in
awhile. And the entire
Senate, with the exception of
Senator Chuck Hoppe, was
there to worry last Tuesday
night. Two bills were passed
that night, one authored by
Dave Pearson, the other by
Mike Voigt and Peter Sandstrom.
Pearson's bill was the one
concerned with the pocket-book
— the SA's pocketbook
to be more specific. A certain
percentage of the Acitvity fee
we pay goes to the SA, and
that percentage is its sole
source of income. Therefore,
when the enrollment goes
down, so does the money.
The bill proposed that the
Activity fee be increased by
$1.00 per student per term,
the increase being used only
to supplement to SA appropriation.
Compared to the $95
we're already paying, that's a
drop in the bucket for us. But
it would add a badly needed
$3,000 to the SA general
fund. A roll call vote was
taken, and the bill passed 8-4
with 4 abstaining. It now will
go to the Administration and
the Board of Directors for
approval.
Faith Notes
Tonight at 8:30, in the
College Chapel, Dr. Oswald
Hoffmann, will speak at the
Worship Service. The College
Chorus will sing during the
service, which is one of the
planned activities for the
Festival of Faith Week.
AT 10:00, in the Coffy
House the Bob Marlowe
Band w ill perform and
everyone is inv ite d. On
Friday, the last day of the
Festival of Faith Week, there
will be a Chapel Service at
9:15 in the College Chapel
during which the College
Choir w ill sing and Dr.
Hoffmann will speak. A t
10:00 in the Gym Lounge
there will be a discussion
with Dr. Hoffmann where
coffee will be served. On
Friday evening, the Minnetonka
Drama Team w ill
present "The Serpent: A
Ceremony" by Jean-Claude
van Itallie in the Lecture Hall.
Concluding the activities of
Festival of Faith Weqk the
Bob Marlowe Band will again
perform with other campus
musicians.
Ah, yes. Then we move on
to politics. The Sandström
V o ig t bill concerns the
impeachment of the President.
(Nixon, not Ahleml)
The last paragraph reads: Let
it be known that the NPC
Student Association affirms
this impeachment procedure
but does n o t do so in the
spirit o f being " out to get the
P re s id e n t.” We have no
interest in attacking persons.
What we seek is the truty —
for we feel we have been
deceived. We are acting out
o f a concern for our country
and without malicious intent.
This concern now requires
that we demand the truth.
Im pe achm e n t p ro cee din g s
being the means by which we
can obtain the knowledge we
desire,let it be resolved that
communications be sent from
this student association to all
members o f the House
Judiciary Committee relaying
the desire that the matter o f
im p e a chm e n t be handled
expeditiously, in order that
the integrity o f the office o f
the Presidency may be
reestablished and used the
those ends for which the
government was first created.
The bill is not without
basis. For three days there
was a table set up in the
dining hall area. Out of
approximately 500 students
eating at the Campus Center,
200 signatures of support
were received. (But it hadn't
been made available to the
off-campus students.)
Senator Tim Jo hnson
raised the question of interfe
rin g with judicial processes
by sending letters to the
House Committee. Senator
Jo hn Liljegren and Vice
President Voigt responded by
saying that the Committee is
not precisely analogous to a
grand jury. It merely will
recommend to the House
that they do or do not hand
own a bill of Impeachment.
The House and Senate must
handle the actual proceedings.
Voigt and Sandstrom said
repeatedly that they want the
truth sought out and the
integrity of the office restored.
. . but added that they felt
impeachme nt proceedings
the only means by which this
could be achieved.
The question was called,
and the vote taken by show
of hands. It passed, 11 in
favor, only 4 against.
The SA Nominating Convention
will be held Wednesday,
January 30. Applications
fo r candidacy should be
turned in by Monday, January
28.
Dr. Oswald Hoffman will speak tonight in the College Chapel.
Page 2 THE COLLEGE NEWS Thursday, January 24, 1974
Join
THIFr>r>
A weekly series of discussions,
beginning this Friday
and c o n tin u in g on su b sequent
Fridays, will concentrate
on the national and
international events of the
preceding week. The political
science department of the
college is sponsoring the
discussions as a part of its
o ng oing “ T H IF '' —Thank
Heavens its Friday-program.
The discussions will be held
in the Seminar Room —
which is located in the
basement of the library —
and will commence at two
o'clock in the afternoon.
The discussion program is
being initiated in response to
a felt need for the opportunity
to sit down and compare
observations on important
co n tem p o ra ry issues w ith
fellow students and faculty
members.
Everyone is encouraged to
attend as a lively discussion
depends upon the presence
of people with diverse points
of view. The setting will be
informal and coffee will be
served.
Recycle cans,
bottles and paper.
GIVE A HOOT DON'T POLLUTE
The Loyola U n ive rs ity
Rome Center will have Miss
Cladys Saavedra representing
it at North Park on Wednes-
Ku r t ’s Beauty Salon «.
7 uesday-Saturday 9 -5
Friday evening nil 7 HM
3 2 4 4 IP. F o s te r Chicago 5 ^ 9 - 9 4 0 0
1 m m N o r t h Park college news
Published at least seven times a term during the school year at North Park
College, Foster and Kedzie, Chicago, Illinois 60625. Telephone numbers
588 7926 or 583 2750, ext. 3.
Signed articles indicate the opinions of their authors and do not
necessarily reflect the opinions of THE COLLEGE NEWS or North Park
College.
EDITORS: Steve Carr, Kris Ness
BUSINESS MANAGER: Dave Johnson
REPORTERS: Betty Apelian, Scott Baltic, Kathy Bunze, Nancy Even, Maria
Gekas, Nancy Kumro, Ron Mattson, Dick Mortenson, Doug Nelson, Carol
Ness, Kurt Peterson, Linda Stenström
ILLUSTRATOR: MarShelle Peterson
SPORTS EDITOR: Owen Youngman
SPORTS STAFF: Gordon Edes, Dan Gustafson, Dave Larson, Kurt
Peterson, Carl Wistrom, Randy Youngman
CHIEF PHOTOGRAPHERS: Harry Christensen, Keith Gustafson
PHOTOGRAPHY STAFF: Chuck Adair, Ann Anderson, Bob Anderson,
Dennis Anderson, Pete Bundgard, Tim Carlson, Bart Dahlstrom, Jan Earle!
John Fredrickson, John Hjelm, Don Holmertz, Howard Jarvis, Dan
Johnson, Darryl Johnson, Don B. Johnson, Don N. Johnson, Mark E.
Johnson, Roger Johnson, Jon Roen, Peter Sandstrom, Mark Sullivan,
Ginny VanDerMeid, Owen Youngman
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60053, (3121 966 4111 ’
day, February 6, 1974, from
10:00 a.m. to 1:00 p.m. in the
main lobby of Carlson Tower.
All interested students are
invited to stop by and find
out more about living and
studying in Rome this coming
fall.
Town House
f o r Rent
with options
5 rooms, 2Vi baths, Air Cond., Gas
heat, Disposal, Dishwasher, Washer,
Dryer, Carpeting, semifurnished.
MR. BLEIMAN
call af ter 6 :3 0 p.m. 267-081 1
North Park
Cleaners
3246 W. Foster 478-249?
Slacks $ .80
Men’s and Women's
Two Piece Suits $ 1.65
Skirts & Sweaters $1.00
Dresses $1.65
M- F 7 a.m.-7 p.m.
Sat. 7:30-6 p m.
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No Extra Charge
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Bill Singer -
Street Music
Get Ready For
Convention Time
Meet Your Senators
Attention A ll Students!!! Every Monday morning from 9:15
a.m.-10:10 a.m., senators are now available to you in the gym
lounge. The purpose of this is so you can know who your
senators are, ask questons, and give suggestions. In turn, they
will be able to represent you better at the senate meetings.
This is a good time to express your opinions on senate issues
and sharing ideas for any changes you would like to see.
Please support your senators.
Live In Rome
by Steve Carr
"Hi. I'm Bill Singer, and I
want to be mayor.”
Specifically, the 32-year-old
alderman wants to be
mayor of Chicago. To do that
in the mayoral election in
1975, he will have to unseat
in a primary his fe llow
Democrat and the current
mayor of the city, Richard J.
Daley.
So, like numerous other
underdogs in recent years, he
is starting his campaign early
and starting it strong.
His announcement speech
h it at c o rru p tio n , poor
schools, the demoralization in
the police department.
" I t is time to recognize that
this great city is decaying.
Our n eighborhoods and
schools are falling apart. Our
streets are dangerous and
ridden with crime. Our tax
base is crumbling."
However you feel about
liberal Democrats, politicians
in general, or Singer in
particular, you must admit he
is clear-sighted.
Some people scoff when
they hear Chicago called "A
great city." They don't know
the city's history (its writers,
like the literary group called
the L ittle Room) or its
a rc h ite c tu re (diverse and
beautiful as well as ugly) or
its present opportunities for
experience.
"I love Chicago. I was born
and raised in its neighborhoods.
I attended its public
schools. I have worked in its
stores. I have had the honor
of serving in its City Council.
But I am deeply concerned
about its future."
Here at North Park, we
tend to be removed from any
sense of crisis. The round of
church-going or party-going
or class-going absorbs our
time. We forget there is a life
of the streets, of the ghettoes
and the working-class neighborhoods.
There the day might begin
at seven a.m. and end at
twelve midnight. The streets
are unsafe. People who can
leave, leave.
It's too bad. I don't like to
see it, and I have only been in
Chicago four years. (There is
the possibility of more.)
I am apolitical, true, but I
get the idea Bill Singer knows
what I am feeling. Maybe
other people have that same
idea. Maybe Bill Singer
deserves watching.
Seniors! Jobs?
In te rv iew s fo r position s
from business managers to
nursing will be held soon for
seniors interested in pursuing
careers. This is done now to
avoid job placement problems
during the summer.
A variety of companies will
be represented including IBM
Corporation, Continental
Bank, State Farm Insurance,
Upjohn Company, Alberto
Culver, Xerox Corporation,
various hospitals, and others.
The interviews will be held
in the Placement Office on
the third floor of Caroline Hall
th ro u g h o u t January, February,
March, and A p ril.
Senior interested should consult
the schedule available at
the Placement Office and
make an appointment with
Mr. Söderström.
^ P a t r o n i z e
O u r
v e r t i ô e r ô
What's Up, Doc? a comedy
featuring Ryan O'Neal and
Barbara Streisand, will be
shown at the lecture hall on
Jan. 26 and 27. The Saturday
night showings are at 7 and
9:15; the movie will also play
Sunday at 2:30 in the
afternoon.
Z u r e d e n S h o p
33 1 3 F oster Ave.
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Other days 9:30-6
clogs, clogs, clogs
Shafer Florists
Corner
Bryn Mawr & Kimball
478 6276
10% discount to all North
Park Students and Faculty
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WE SERVE COMPLETE B R E A K F A S T LUNCH D lN N E R S
Thursday, January 24, 1974 THE COLLEGE NEWS Page 3
Wrestlers 5th a t MacMurray
by Dave Larson
JACKSONVILLE, IL L -
As North Park's grappling
team took to MacMurray
College's invitational meet
here last Friday and Saturday,
the other teams were
glad the Vikes weren't the
same team they were last
year, when they won the
CCIW title.
But after the meet, some
of the teams weren't quite so
happy.
Although North Park was
fifth among the eight teams,
the Viking big men cleaned
up. 190-pounder Ed Kress
and h e a v yw e igh t Mark
Ba umgartner w on th e ir
weight classes.
Kress moved his season
record to 12-0 in taking first
place, and team pin leader
Baumgartner is now 8-2 and
looking strong enough to
fo llo w Steve Cerese as
conference champ among
the biggest boys.
Ted Kronberg (150) and
Bruce Spycala (158) each
won their first match and
ZWICK’S
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CAR RY OUTS
A N D DEL IV ERIES
wound up fourth in the
tourney. The fates of Mike
Watanabe, Steve Powenski,
and Gene Zaja were not as
favorable.
It's possible that injured
Walt Hurt and Jan Jensen
may yet make it back to the
mat before the conference
tourney next month, as both
have been working their way
back into form.
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Inferno Stays Unbeaten;
Blues, Twigs Keep Winning
The '50s Musical Comedy isi
CHICAGO'S BIGGEST HIT!
seven to back up Latt.
Earlier in the week, the girls
tasted defeat for the firs time
th is season. Northeastern
knocked o f the Vike tte s
46-33, jumping out to a 14-6
lead in the first period and
never being threatened after
that.
Latt had 16 Nancy Olson 7
points to pace North Park.
Johnson's rebound put 'em
up by four.
Six points from deadly-accurate
Rick Lund gave
Birdlime a 25-23 lead that
Claude Adair nullified with a
jumper from the corner as the
first half ended. Pete Erickson
gave Birdlime a two-point
edge after intermission, but
then came a fire-and-brim-stone
streak th a t made
Inferno impossible to catch.
Standings through
day:
Mon-
RED DIVISION w L
Inferno 6 0
Birdlime 6 1
Surf City Squirrels 5 1
Larson's Parsons 4 1
Demons and Wizards 4 3
Stillborn 2 4
Steamrollers 2 4
Pugwash 1 4
Malcolm X 1 7
Waldenstrom's Raiders 0 6
BLUE DIVISION w L
Tree's Twigs 8 0
Sunny's Blues 7 0
Fun, Inc. 5 2
Hilltrotters 5 2
Faculty-Staff 4 3
Gunners 4 3
Ghetto Gunners 4 4
Swedish Air Guard 3 5
Cat's Pajamas 2 6
Corpuscles 2 6
Utah Stars 1 7
Saffron-Robed Monks 0 7
MISSNER & SONS DRUGS
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John Kamikawa churns to a third-place finish in the 50-yard freestyle last
Friday night. (Photo by Harry Christensen)
Tankers Lose Twice
by Dan Gustafson
The atmosphere inside the swimming pool at Northeastern
Illinois University last Friday night was hot and humid — very
dismal. And despite some of the year's best time by Viking
swimmers, North Park's shwoing in a dual meet with UNI
wasn't much better, as they lost 77-36.
The only first recorded by a member of Bill Anderson's
13-man squad was John Hjelm's :23.4 performance in the
50-yard freestyle, his best shwoing of the season. In the same
event, John Kamikawa was third in :23.9.
The medley relay team of Greg Bodin on the backstroke,
Tim Hjelm on the breaststroke, John Hjelm on the butterfly,
and Bruce Johnson in the freestyle turned in their best time of
the season, 4:06.2. Tim Hjelm, younger of the team's brother
combination, was second in both the 200 freestyle and 100
free.
Brother John showed her versatility in claiming a second
place in the 200 butterfly. Bodin was third in the backstroke
and Johnson second in the breaststroke.
It was only the second loss all season for Johnson in his
specialty. The first had come the night before, as the team lost
to Rockford College 70-43.
The squad mustered three firsts at Rockford — John Hjelm
in the 50 free, Tim in the 100 free, and the 400 individual
medley relay (both Hjelms, Bodin, and Wes Carlson). Rockford
stacked its power in the early events and coasted to victory.
The brothers Hjelm, averaging about 10 points a meet,
currently pace the team in scoring. After a short breather this
week, the tankers travel to Chicago Circle next Wednesday to
begin a gruelling pre-conference meet schedule.
by Owen Youngman
It's not as easy to catch
hell as you might think.
Ask Birdlime. They fell
behind by 10 points and
never could catch up last
Monday, as Inferno won the
battle of unbeatens in the
Red Division of NPC intramural
basketball by a 53-51
count.
Inferno now rules the roost
with a 6-0 record, thanks to a
balanced scoring attack (13
points from Norris Anderson
and 12 each by Mark Kelly
and Tom Nelson) and some
clutch last-second ballhandling.
But three teams —
B irdlime , the S u rf City
Squirrels, and Larson's Parsons
— have just one loss in
Gir l Cagers
North Park's girls' basketball
team is still imitating the
varsity.
After scoring the same
number of points as the guys
a week ago, coach Karen
Gmeiner's charges duplicated
their opposite numbers' overtime
victory over Carthage.
The girls scored 12 points in
an extra session to beat the
Redwomen, 47-37.
Barb Latt, the game's high
scorer with 15 points, canned
four points in overtime, as did
Elaine Danielson. The game
was tight all the way — tied
at 20 at the half — with
Carthage rallying to send into
extra innings.
Becky Florence had 11
points and Sandi Lambert
Red competition.
Over in the Blue league,
defending IM champ Sunny's
Blues (7-0) and Tree's Twigs
(8-0) are pointing for a
confrontation a week from
today. They stayed unbeaten
Monday with easy victories
over the Cat's Pajamas and
the Utah Stars, respectively.
Birdlime threatened to run
away and hide in the opening
minutes of its showdown
w ith In fe rn o. Eight early
points from Russ Persson
paced them to a 15-6 lead
with 10 minutes gone in the
game.
But Inferno battled back to
tie on Nelson's jumper from
the baseline, and a fastbreak
bucket by Anderson and Yak
Split Pair
Page 4 THE COLLEGE NEWS Thursday, January 24, 1974
Yawn! Vikings Lose to Elmhurst by 10
by Randy Youngman
"A picture is worth. . .
The frowning young woman
in the sixth row sat
motionles, poring over the
monotonous passages in her
social science textbook. The
visiting Elmhurst basketball
squad had just scored 12
straight points to run up a
convincing 25-12 lead over
North Park en route to a
71-61 CCIW triumph last
Saturday.
By the expression on this
North Park cage "fa n 's " face,
there seemed to be no
question on this particular
night as to whether reading a
book by Redfield or watching
the Vikings play basketball
was a more c a p tiva tin g
experience.
It had to be a choice of the
lesser of two evils. A t any
rate, she co n tin u e d her
pained reading as coach Dan
McCarrell's Vikings stumbled
to their 10th setback of the
season at the hands of the
precision-perfect Bluejays.
The defeat dropped North
park to a dismal 5-10
seasonal record (2-5 in
conference play), thus equalling
last year's loss total with
10 contests still remaining in
the current campaign.
The disappointment from
the latest loss was compounded
by the fact that the
Vikings were coming off a
strong showing against Milll-kin
a week earlier and an
88-86, double-overtime win
on the road Wednesday
against Carthage.
Whatever consistency the
Vikings may have had on
offense and defense seemed
CCIW Standings, Results
Thru Jan. 21
CCIW RESULTS
Millikin 87, Wesleyan 82 Augustana 82, Carthage 68
NORTH PARK 88, Carthage 86 (20T) Carroll 91, Wheaton 78
Wheaton 78, Wesleyan 76 Elmhurst 71, NORTH PARK 61
Millikin 78, Elmhurst 74 Millikin 97, North Central 72
Augustana 82, Carthage 68
to have disappeared from the
lineup in the Elmhurst contest
(with the exception of the
fine all-around play of Mike
Groot). As a result, North
Park still hasn't won a home
game.
Spearheaded by the
phenomenal outside shooting
of Bill Simpson and 6-6 Wally
Dettloff, Elmhurst controlled
the tempo of the game fro
the outset. In short, the
Bluejays played their kind of
game. They executed.
Groot kept the Vikes close
CCIW STANDINGS W L ALL GAMES W L
Augustana 8 0 Augustana 13 2
Millikin 5 0 Millikin 11 2
Elmhurst 3 3 Carroll 6 9
Wheaton 3 3 Elmhurst 5 8
Carroll 2 3 III. Wesleyan 4 8
III. Wesleyan 2 3 Carthage 5 10
Carthage 2 4 NORTH PARK 5 10
NORTH PARK 2 5 Wheaton 4 9
North Central 0 6 North Central 2 10
Earl Dorsey tosses up a ujmper
over Bill Simpson of Elmhurst during
the Vikings’ 71-61 loss. (Photo by
John Fredrickson)
in the first 10 minutes of the
fray, accounting for 10 of the
home team's first 12 markers,
but then the Jays blew it
open w ith th e ir 12-point
surge.
Constantly setting picks to
free Simpson and Dettloff for
the percentage jumpers, the
Bluejays rolled to a 35-27
halftime advantage.
During the second half,
Elmhurst continued to use
the-work-for-the-good shot"
offense and the Vikings
got only as close as five
points, 43-38 at the 15:30
mark.
North Park co-captains
Russ Hylen and Earl Dorsey
teamed with Groot to try to
ignite a comeback, but their
foes' tactics (comparable to
Woody Hayes' grind-it-out,
time-consuming, uninteresting,
but perennially successful
grid strategy) prevented
anything of the sort from
happening.
With the Park trailing 63-51
with just over three minutes
left on the clock, a Notre
Dame miracle seemed the
only possible way out.
However, the luck of the
Irish and coach Digger Phelps
(which had earlier on the
same day helped N.D. end
U.C.L.A.'s record 88-game
w in n in g streak) did not
materialize for the Vikings
and Dan McCarrell — or for
th a t less -th a n -e n th u s ia s tlc
female follower.
Three players from each
team broke Into double
figures in the contest. Groot
led the losing cause with 22
points, followed by temmates
Dorsey and Hylen, w ho
canned 14 and 13 markers,
respectively.
Simpson matched Groot's
game-high 22 p oints In
pacing Elmhurst to a 56 per
cent shooting performance
from the floor (32 for 60).
Dettloff added 16 and Bruce
Cowman 11 for the victors,
now 5-8 on the season and
3-3 In CCIW action.
In the Wednesday win over
Carthage, Hylen scored the
winning bucket in the second
overtime to avenge an earlier
one-point loss to the Redmen.
Russ hit 9 of 11 shots
on the night, as he, Dorsey,
and Groot all had 20 points.
Carthage had rallied to tie
the game at 76-all at the
close of re g u la tion and
cuaght up three times in the
first overtime, which ended
82-82. The home club then
got out to an 86-84 lead in
the second extra session on
Brian Scheunemann's layup
with 3:04 left.
Groot tied it shortly thereafter,
and the teams traded
possession of the ball until
the Park got control with 35
seconds to go. Dorsey's
inbounds pass to Frank Dace
with seven seconds left gave
Frank the chance to feed
Hylen for a winning 8-foot
jumper.
N orth Park travels to
Augustana this Saturday and
plays at Elmhurst next
Thursday night.
Indoor Track Gets Rolling
The North Park track team
began its indoor seasn with a
dou ble-d u a l meet against
DePaul and the University of
Chicago. The U. of C.
whizzed by coach Ted
Hedstrand's Vikes, 66-36, but
the cindermen knocked off
DePaul 50-43.
A pair of school indoor
records were set in the
process. Ed T ankersley's
winning time of :06.2 in the
60-yard dash was a new
mark, and Jim Hoskinson
tossed the shot 41 feet, six
inches for the other.
Jeff Nelson, who set an
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NPC record in the 70-yard
low hurdles during an open
meet in December (his time
was :08.4), placed in both the
high and low barriers with
times of :09.7 and :08.6. Jon
Christenson scored with a
5-10 leap in the high jump;
Bob Faetz went 18-10 1/2 in
the long jump.
Even though three top
performers from last year's
team — distance runners
Larry Swanson and Niles
Batdorf and sprinter Harvey
King — are gone, Hedstrand
sees his squad as one his
strongest ever. Tankersley
was once Chicago c ity
champ in the 100-yard dash,
and several c ro s s -co u n try
alumni will give strength to
the distance events.
The Vikes' next meet is
Tuesday against Northern
Illinois.
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