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IUMDI
VOL. 40, NO. 6
THURSDAY, OCTOBER 30, 1969
DULUTH, MINNESOTA
JAR kingdom seized
ASPIRING young despot JP (left) relieves King Henderson of his divine
duties.
Advisement given
on draft problems
BUCKING THE SYSTEM can
be a very difficult maneuver,
especially if it happens to be your
local draft board that you are up
against. Who can give you proper
legal counsel at a time like this?
Evan Ferber runs the Duluth
Draft Information Center, at 25
West Fourth Street, in an attempt
to
correct
misconceptions
concerning draft problems. For
example, if a person is classified
I-A, making him eligible to be
·drafted, and he wishes to contest
the classification ruling, Ferber
will inform him of his rights to
appeal and what his alternatives to
induction
are,
and
the
consequences of the actions which
he chooses.
There are at least two parts to
the appeal process. If, after
receiving the first classification
card ,
the
status
proves
the right to
unsatisfactory,
request, in writing, a personal
appearance before the local board
is open to the appealee. The local
board will review the case and
send out a new classification
notice ..after the appearance. If this
classification is unchanged or still
unsatisfactory, one has another
thirty days in which to appeal, in
writing
again,
the
second
classification to the local board.
They will send all case data to the
state board where the case will
again be reviewed and judged. The
appeals system is outside ordinary
court procedures.
BOTH THE LOCAL and state
boards serve as executive and
judicial arms of the Selective
Service System. Selective Service
regulations are set either by
presidential order or by the
national director's order's, not by
Congress.
The system of appeals, besides
having no separation of powers,
also precludes "due process." The
only way you may obtain judicial
review is to refuse induction and
thereby break the law, which is
set by Congress. In this instance
the case will be taken to federal .
district court where the draftee
will be tried and either convicted
or acquitted. In Minnesota few
resisters are sent to ·prison and the
indictment usually takes about a
year.
It is due to the fact that there is
lack of "due process," that there
are many opponents to the
present draft system.
" Revolution" was the cry that
went up as a rebel activist
organization, JAR , crowned JP
new king, Tuesday.
The group of dissenters
gathered to protest the "rule" of
King Robert Henderson. King
Robert was present for a portion
of the meeting and vowed ;
undying opposition to "This new
usurptation of holy ordained
power."
Security force personale
estimated the size of the
boisterous multitude as being
between 15 and 7 5 persons.
The group formed after hearing
rumors that the King had been
planning a purge of "irreverant
and sacreligious elements in the
realm."
The internal insurgents
instituted
a
new
"JAR
Bundestag" with some holdovers
the
old
government.
from
Replacing JP in the position of
Archbishop and spiritual leader
was
Rev.
Mark
Cromwell
Hendershot of the powerful
Universal Life Church Coalition.
Hendershot formally resigned .
When asked why police interest
in the bookstore was so high,
Peter Getman, manager of
Discount Books and Magazines
explained "that municipal laws are
rather vague concerning the
definitions of obscenity. Thus
police are allowed a wide latitude
in determining what is obscene.
The police feel that they are acting
in the public's mterest. However, a
difficulty arises in defining who is
the public." Getman stated that,
"approximately 300 to 400
citizens visit the store daily." If
the public interest is supposed to
mean the aggregate interests of
Duluth's citizens, then clearly this
PAGE TWO
interest is being violated ."
"Another error by the police,"
said Getman, "is their failure to
distinguish between the store and .
its materials. Sure our store
contains sex-oriented material,
but this does not include
hard-core pornography. And in
addition we sell other types of
literature which are definitely not
pornographic."
"WHY SHOULD the store tie
prosecuted when Granada News,
which sells the same material, is
not being prosecuted?", asked
Getman. "The only difference
between the stores is the
percentage of sex-oriented
material and advertising. We have
a larger percentage and we do
more advertising. "
Recently Discount Books and
Magazines has been taken to
court. Last Thursday the store
was found guilty of selling
obscene literature. The police
testified that neither the
magazine's pictures nor articles by
themselves were pornographic,
but that together the magazine
was pornographic . On Friday the
Self proclaimed "Queen 80"
was stopped in her efforts to
introduce a petition of 300 names
proclaiming her "post-humous
Queen of JAR." She was granted,
by the new King the position of
Minister of Propaganda.
Pope Jeeps was given the
additional position of Chief
Ambassador -to the Faculty and
Administration.
Jeanie Keefe, V.V., was given
the position of Minister of the
Royal Acadamy of Arts, replacing
John-of-the-red-beard.
Elections and appointments
were
often
interrupted
by
demands from the populace to
immediately declare the death of
Robert Retarde I officially dead.
Then the masses fell silent as
Henderson, accompanied by a
platoon of brown shirts, stormed
into the meeting.
" This is an outage! I am King!
God Darland annointed me with
soul power to rule! All you
irrelevent Roundheads will be
ruthlessly dealt with," he
screamed, adding various gestures
to lend support to his vicious
assault.
"Sorry, but you are officially
dead," replied calm King JP .
Cheers of devotion leaped from
the crowd as JP denounced the
threats
of
"revolution
and
bloodshed" by Henderson and his
reactionary cronies.
Once law and order was
restored,
the
meeting
was
resumed. A voice vote declared
Unit 4 of Vermilion Hall the new
royal headquarters of JAR. Thus
the JAR returns to its historic
birthplace and the ancestral home
of Saint Graff.
Immediately
following
the
meeting JAR members surged into
Kirby Student Center proclaiming
the divine right of the new King
JAR officers secretly left th6i
room by the windows to avoidl
meeting reporters.
SED fights pollution
THE SECOND MEETING of
the newly organized Students for
Environmental Defense (SED) was
held Monday with Ralph W.
Marsden of the UMD Geology
department as the guest speaker.
He _presented a short history of the
process used in the iron mining
industry of Minnesota, and its
relevancy to the Reserve Mining
Co. 's Silver Bay taconite plant.
.According to Dr. Marsden, the
reserve mining plant at Silver Bay
Discount Books plans to win
case concerning pornography
MR. ROBERT 0. CARLSON,
owner of Duluth's Discount
Books and Magazines, opened his
store in June, 1969. On opening
day he was arrested twice by the
police for selling pornography.
Since then Carlson and the store
employees have faced continuous
police harassment. During the first
months of operation, arrests were
averaging three to five times a
week.
from his position as head of the
new Robertian calendar because
as he stated the position in the
ULCC "conflicts religiously and
ethically with the Kihgs repressive
religious policies."
dumps 60,000 tons of taconite
waste a day into Lake Superior.
Most of these filings are very fine
particles and do not settle
immediately to the bottom but
float as far as nine miles daily.
BESIDES KILLING PLANT
and fish life in the general
vicinity,
these
tailings
are
the
lake's
detracting
from
appearance for both tourists and
local residents, Marsden pointed
out. He said SED must learn the
technicalities of the problem
before it becomes effective. It is
possible that the reserve plant
believes it isn't causing a drastic
problem.
But SED thinks otherwise.
Sever.al proposals to eliminate the
trouble were made at the meeting.
One was that the ore tailings be
disposed of somewhere on land.
Another was that the finer
particles be sorted out and
recirculated through the plant,
emptying only the larger chunks
into the lake. But the major
drawback to any of the proposed
alternatives is the money that
would be required by the plant to
curb its operations.
-·--· ·~ ·
store was again found guilty of
selling an obscene magazine which
is currently being sent legally
through the mails.
The owner, Robert Carlson, is
planning to appeal the cases. He
has done so before in defending
his Wabasha Bookstore in St. Paul.
Each time Carlson has won. The
cases in Duluth are similar to the
cases against him in St. Paul.
Carlson expects similar judical
action.
"PORNOGRAPHY IN ITSELF
is not socially harmful," said
Getman. Citing a University of
Chicago survey of psychologists
and psychiatrists in which 80%
rejected the idea that
pornography tends to incite
people to sex crimes or other
antisocial sexual behavior, and in
which a majority felt that
censorship was more harmful than
helpful, Getman objected to
police interference in the rights of
citizens. "In Denmark the state
has legalized pornography. The
result has been a 34% drop in sex
crimes."
OCTOBER 30, 1969
PbL1'Ca1'm
Campus news briefs ~--
Practice to be held
for prospective cheerers
CANDIDATES FOR HOCKEY
cheerleaders and mascots are
asked to come to practices on
Thursday, Oct. 30, and Monday,
Nov. 3, at 7 p.m. These practices
will include the learning of the
rouser and a cheer to be used in
try-outs. An ice practice and
'lr"1l, lBljl! l
1
:
··.·.·. ·.·.·.·.·.·.·.·.··
DROPPING COURSES
Friday, Nov. 7 is the last day to
cancel a course . After this day
permission to cancel without failure
wi II be granted only with adviser
approval and on petition to and with
the consent of the Scholastic
Committee. During the last two weeks
before the beginning of final
examinations cancellation of back
work will not be granted except in
cases of emergency .
GRADUATING SERIORS
All seniors who plan to graduate in
June 1970, are urged to have their
applications on file no later than the
close of fall quarter, 1969.
INCOMPLETES TO " F"
In completes recorded for spring
quarter, 1969 and both summer
sessions will be changed to " F" after
Friday , Nov. 7, the end of the sixth
week of the current quarter. unless
arrangements have been made with the
instructor for an extension of the time
permitted to make up work and have a
grade recorded . If an "incomplete" is
changed to "F" and a grade change is
submitted at a later date, the student
will be charged $5 special examination
fee as is required and outlined on page
29 of the UMD 1968·70 Bulletin .
The following students shoold be
excused in order to attend the A .C.U .I.
regional conference in Minneapolis on
October 29 , 30, and 31: Scott Shields,
Craig Nippet, Ann Hellerstedt, Tom
Buranen , Dawn Hyde, Eric Hammer,
Peggy Shaw.
THE GRADUATE RECORD
Examination will be given December
13 on the UMD Campus. The
registration deadline for same is
November 18, 1969. Applications may
be obtained from the Counseling
Office, Kirby 150.
To Juniors in Elementary Education
Mathematics . Prof icie n c y
examination will be held this quarter
on Wednesday, Nov. 19, at 3:30 to
4 :30 p .m . in H .E. 70 .
Passing
of
this
examination
is
tryouts (on ice) will be held next
week on Nov. 4 and 6
respectively. The exact time is not
yet known. More information will
be posted on the bulletin board
across from the women's physical
education office.
Candidates will be expected to
do the rouser, one cheer and any
stu nts or jumps of their choice.
They will be judged on eye
contact, smile, e nthusi asm,
general appearance, confidence,
coordination and extra stunts.
Extra-ordinary skating ability is
not necessary, but the candidate
must demonstrate confidence on
the ice.
Responsibilities of the squad,
when chosen, wi ll include:
maintaining a 2.0 grade point
average, attending all home games
and practicing regularly.
Seniors must attend
class meeting
THERE WI LL BE A Senior
Class Meeting at 3:30 p.m.,
31, in Ed90.
Friday, Oct.
Attendance is required for Seniors
graduating in Spring 1970. Gerald
Allen and Dr. John Ness will
speak on graduation requirements.
ROTC applications
now being accepted
APPLICATIONS FOR
ADMISSION to the two-year Air
Force ROTC program at the
University of Minnesota, Duluth
will be accepte d during
November, according to Lt. Col.
Richard E. Snyder, professor of
aerospace studies.
To qualify, for the two-year
program, Snyder said candidates
must pass th e Air Force Officer
Qualification Test, pass a physical
examination and atte nd a six
week field trai ning course during
the su mmer of 1970.
The officer qualification test
will be administered at 8: 30 a.m .
Nov. I, and Nov. 29, in the UMD
ROTC Building. The physical
examinations are given at the
IF YOU HAVE any used
athletic equipment around the
house, plan to contribute it to the
"Box for Benje" next week (Nov.
3-8) at the UMD Physical
Education Department or Kirby
Student Center.
Former UMD hockey star Benje
Wolfe is serving in the Peace Corps
in Bartica, Guiana in South
America.
He is in charge of setting up a
physical education program for
high schools there but he finds
they are sadly lacking rn
equipment.
Wolfe needs such items as
volley balls, soccerballs, nets,
badminton rackets, birds for
badminton, softballs, bats, gloves,
gym shorts and T-shirts - almost
anything for use in high school
athletics.
THE "BOX FOR BENJE" drive
is being sponsored by the Physical
Education Majors and Minors
(PEMMS) group at UMD with
Gary Doty, Duluth, as chairman.
'-;~~.. "-fJ' IWTO
~e!ovt{NOWN!
TH~ UN
ZAP COMICS
,
UNDERGROUND
NEWSPAPERS
Bus driver
congratulated
SIGMA IOTA EPSILON UMD
industrial fraternity, wishes to
congratulate Mr. C. E. Simo nson,
campus bus driver, upon winning
the RCA television set raffled off
last week in co njunction with the
Gordon Voss Scholarship Fund .
Also , thank you to all who
pure hased tickets. Better luck
next year.
Best in Adult Reading
Discount Books
123 E. SUPERIOR ST.
Chess club will meet
Downtown
727-8551
Free delivery
THE UMD CHESS Club will
meet from 7 to 9 p.m. in Kirby
Fine Arts lounge on Monday,
Nov . 3, All people interested in
joining are invited to atte nd .
with orders
West Duluth
624-1802
of six or
more pizzas
Lakeside
525-5000
Criminology film feature
UMD
CRIMINOLOGY
Instructor Romine R. (Dick)
Deming will present a film lecture
and
discussion
describing a
number of new criminology
courses being added to the
sociology curriculum here at
UMD. This informative discussion
will be presented at the Nov. 4
meeti ng of Sociology Club at 7:30
p. m. in SS 110. All interested
sociology majors and minors are
urged to atend .
Unless I gave Him a Sammy's Pizza! He said he would
hold his breath!
SAMMY'S
PIZZA PA-LACES
You've Tried The Rest -
Now Eat The Best
TUE., NOV. 4
~
DULUTH AUDITORIUM
"Polyphiloprogentive':_
Tickets at
T.S. Eliot
UMD, AUDITORIUM,
or charge them at
GOLDFINE'S
or GLASS BLOCK
$6.50, $5.00, $3.50
·'HOW SHE GO BOYS!"
a
pre-requ isite for students planning on
enrolling in Ed 61 Curriculum and
Methods in Elementary Education .
Those planning on taking the test are
asked to report to the Education
Office , Ed 221, before Nov . 10.
Students who wish to "brush up" on
some math skills may do so by
attending a brush up session on
Wednesday, Nov . 12 from 3 to 4 : 30
p . m. in Ed108 . If you wish to
participate in this study session, please
indicate this at the time you sign up
for the test.
Duluth Air Base dispensary at no
cost to the applicants.
DURING THEIR JUNIOR and
senior years at UMD, cadets enroll
in upper division Air Force ROTC
courses for which they receive 18
to 21 academic credits that may
be applied toward the bachelor of
arts degree. Upon completion of
th e university's degree
requirements, they receive an Air
Force Commission.
Young men at UMD and area
junior colleges who are interested
in the two-year program may
contact the UMD Department of
Aerospace Studies for additional
information .
Phy-Ed equipment drive planned
"AND GIRLS TOOi"
DAVE
LAST CHANCE
BRUBECK
LIQUOR STORE
WE
TRIO
DELIVER
619 E. 4th ST.
WITH GUEST
ARTIST GERRY MULLIGAN
727-6825
SPECIAL PURCHASE
Used Paperback Sale
50%
off list
~. ..'...:.f...L-
Opening
SOCIAL CHAIRMAN
ON Kl RBY PROGRAM
BOARD
Apply
Now!
THE STATESMAN
• All sales final
U.MD BOOKSTORE
University Owned
University operated
FRANK C. TOMARS
Sales Representative
New York Life Insurance Co.
Savings nnd Protection for
the College Student
722-2651 Bus.
727-3290 Res.
PAGE THREE
EDITORIAL PAGE
Views expressed in the STATESMAN'S unsigned editorials
represent those of the paper. Signed columns, reviews and
letters to the editor. represent the personal views of the
writers. In neither case is the opinion necessarily that of the
University administrators, faculty, staff or other students.
Contradictions Evident
LETTERS TO THE EDITOR
Facts are told . . .
TO THE EDITOR:
A letter published in the
Statesman last week reflected a
position against the immediate
withdrawal of troops in Viet Nam
and was by-lined uthe UMD
Veterans Association." This is a
very dogmatic position which I
feel must be tempered by some
facts.
The possibility that an
organization could function
without any dissent among its
members is dubious but that is
what the article infers and this is a
little a larming . During the
discussion of the proposed plan to
have an article printed in the
Statesman taking a stand against
immediate withdrawal of troops
in the war, I asked that a mention
be made somewhere in the article
of an element in the club which
disagreed with this policy. This
proposal was refused and
th ere fore I voted against the
publication of the letter, being in
the large majority of those who
IT WAS REPORTED by the national media this week that
a 90 minute gun ba ttle was fought in Youngstown, Ohio at
the Republic Steel plant when some 400 wildcat Teamsters
and sympathetic Steel Hauler's Union members clashed with
a large group of non-striking Teamsters. One man was killed
and several were wounded after more than 100 gunshots,
various knifings, and clubings were exchanged.
It can be remembered that Youngstown was the
community that closed its high schools last year because the
people voted down several school bonds. It would seem from
these scanty facts that Youngstown is a community that puts
money over education and human life. Gaining that end is
seemingly justified by violence. It can also be remembered
that Youngstown is in the heart of what was known as
"Nixon and/or Wallace country."
BEING A TEAMSTER myself (Minneapolis Local 970) , I
_can remember reading many interesting articles in my union
newspaper. Such articles announced strikes and told which
merchants to boycott because they didn't use Teamster
labor. Also , in the same paper, there were articles decrying
student activists for disturbing the normal patterns of life
wi£h such methods as consumer boycotts, strikes and
violence. Such things are un-American and there should be
laws against them. They went so far as to warn against
admitting SDS members into the unions because they "plan
to make friends - wih workers, encourage them to air their
complaints, and possibly incite strikes." Contradiction?
"Don't make waves unless -you get cash" seems to be the
mumble of the silent. Are they "down on" young radicals
because they value human lives and life quality over
individual property? Do the ideas of the young pose a threat
to personal wealth? No war, no slums, no poverty equals no
money for the power structure in our country.
PRESERVATION OF PROPERTY has precedence over
"life, liberty, and the pursuit of hap'piness" for all people.
The Declaration of Independence states that wrong doing and
unresponsive governments should be replaced by systems
more responsive to the needs of people. Youth today are
judging our society by principles taught by that society. The
· principles are not necessarily adhered to by that society but
they are taught. We as youth are being indicted by our elders
for being naive enough to believe them along with the
teaching of equality and the value of human rights.
BY J.P. POWERS
0-ur culture's emphasis on property must be redirected to
THE VAST MAJORITY of people today willingly submit themselves
personal rights for all, or the nation will never be at peace.
to the heel of authority without too much energy expended by the
Change always comes but it must come faster than it has.
tlw Divin~ E'r"1'u~rs
n ~rals
voted to take a stand on the war. I
think it is imperative that those
dissenting on the policy be
recognized, hence my writing of
this article.
So that there will be no
misconc e ption of last week 's
article in question, I will bring up
another pertinent fact. Statesman
readers could be led to believe ( 1)
That there is unanimous approval
of the stated policy by the UMD
Veterans Club. (This I have just
refuted.) (2) That the policy is
endorsed b y all UMD
Veterans.
THE TRUTH IS THAT only
about
twenty
percent
of
approximately three hundred*
UMD
Veterans
are
actual
members of the club. Therefore
the Vets Club is only speaking for
about one-fifth of the UMD
veteran population.
At the risk of wasting
non-veteran readers time, excuse
me, but I feel obliged to make a
sales pitch. Gentlemen of the
other four-fifths : The Vets Club
needs you as members right now
no matter what your opinions are.
Schedules of meetings are given in
the Statesman and are posted in
the halls . . *Figure supplied by
UMD Vets Club President
PETER JOHN THOMAS
MEMBER UMD
VETERANS ASSOC.
Schofield censured
TO THE EDITOR:
While perusing the Oct. 1 7
Statesman during a break in a
busy attempt to justify my fee
expenditure this quarter, my
attention was drawn to a certain
headline bordered by thick, black
lines which read : "Non-involvement due to off-campus activities"
by R . Scott Schofield. Mr.
Schofield, as I am sure we all
know; is this year's senior class
president (for that illustrious
body which speaks for itself and
not for its constituents - S.A.)
and while his article did not
surprise me, it stimulated my
digestive tract in such a
particularly marvelous manner as
authoritarian. None is needed anymore; the people have been to make me wretchedly ill! Now,
brainwashed throughout time to accept whatever authority there is and in defense of the UMD student
to follow the dictates of that authority . Little dissent, little who doesn't fit the description of
disagreement with the Man ; man thinking becomes thinking man.
a r e clusive, non-thinking,
Education systems have become one of the major _per:petrators of the computer-programmed worm that
~b_Jllissive attitude to authority and the power figure .
Mr. Schofield would have us
Our national _government, too, accepts the all-knowing role we allow believe we are, I present the
it to take. In the name of patriotism, anti-communism, God and mother following rebuttal.
we agree with our government, disagree with its enemies, and submit our
THE THEME OF Schofield's
individualities to its life-channeling desires. This pervasive acceptance of article can be summed in the topic
any ruling government by the people can dearly be seen in nations sentence of the fourth paragraph
where invasions have occurred and the people have accepted the new which reads ; " Simply stated, a
rules.
busy student is a non-involved
This trend cannot be allowed to continue. We must now begin to student." By this, he inferred that
question the edicts of our government, of our schools or of any other UMD students, being the studious,
authoritarian . Our natural discontent spurred on by learning in free industrious people they are,
schools and motivated by the many injustices in our world must be should be allowed to skip out on
expressed. We can no longer be quiet in order to prevent rocking the the world, to close their ears,
boat. We must no longer accept what we are told as right or wrong, but eyes, mouths, and minds with the
instead, we must inquire for ourselves what the truth is.
intention of packing enough
If our country takes up an unjust or immoral cause (Vietnam), we knowledge in their heads so to be
must disagree with that policy and use all nonviolent means possible to good citizens in a world
end our nation's participation in that effort. If our nation is not THEY 'VE IGNORED!
involved in a needed situation or practice (medical and food aid to
It is apparent from only a
Biafra, fighting urban decay, restructuring education-stifling school cursory glance at history that
systems, preventing pollution, etc.), we must again use our natural those people who have been the
rights as human beings to promote these causes and work for them.
most non-involved have been the
As a parting note I would like to reiterate the new foreign policy of most ensla v ed , the most
the leftist Japanese groups. They correctly maintain that no invasion of ex ploit e d , the most
one nation by another nation (such as Japan by Red China) will be miserable - witness the people of
successful if the people do not accept the rule of the invaders. Nazi German y who without
Nonacceptance doesn't necessarily mean violent resistance ; it means the questioning their government's
people will not submit themselves and their wills to the new lead ers allowed themselves to
authoritarians.
become accomp lices in one of the
Czechoslavakia is a case in point of this philsophy : the Russians have most inglorious slaughters of all
tanks and men in that country and they have undermined the history . Non-involved people are
government, but the people have not been sold. Nor must any nation the fodder for aspiring dictators,
submit to invaders. Give the invaders the land, they can 't do anything despots, and opportunists of all
with it anyway-the ultimate strength of any government is an aroused kinds who can gain their positions
conscious people supporting it. Without that support no government of power, not through using the
can rule, although one may rule with a subservient people who pose no non-active segments of the
challenge to the government,
(continued on page 5)
Question Edicts
1::.:s~
VOL 40, NO. 6, DULUTH, MINN. THURS., OCT. 30, 1969
Official student newspaper of the University of Minnesota,
Duluth, Minnesota. Published each Thursday during the college
year excepting holidays and examination weeks. Editorial and
business offices in Room 5, Home Ee. Bldg. Second class postage
paid at Duluth, Minn.
All changes of address notices, undeliverable copies, orders for
subscriptions, and other mail items are to be sent to UMD
Statesman, University of Minn . Duluth, HE5.
Printed at Midland Cooperatives, Inc., 2206 Winter, Superior,
Wis. Subscriptions rates: $1 per quarter or $3 per year mailed
upon request. Telephone: 726-7112.
EDITOR
b. d. nelson
PR"SS
NEWS EDITOR . . ... . . .... . .... . . ... . . . ... Karen Hanson
ASSISTANT NEWS EDITOR .. . ... .. . . . . . . . . . Larry Sillanpa
FINE ARTS EDITOR ... . . .. . . . . . . . .... . .. .... Jon Rikala
SPORTS EDITOR . .... . . ........ . . ... .. ... . .. . Greg Oien
ARTS EDITOR .. .. . . . .... .. ... . .. . .. .. .. Gary Eckenberg
COPY EDITOR . ..... . . .. .. . . . ... .... . .. .... . Kathy Vick
PHOTO EDITOR .. . . . . . . .... .. . .. . . ...... . . Gord Burley
BUSINESS MANAGER . . . .. ... . . . . . . . .. .... Nancy Wenzel
ADVERTISING MANAGER . . . .. .... . . . . ... Sean Stevenson
CIRCULATION MANAGER .. .... .. . . . .. . ... M. L. Hibbard
STAFF - Bob Abrahamson , Brian Bangs, Pat Serini, Russ Brown,
Gary Dunning, Dan .OHQRZ Mike Hatch , Russ Kuchta, Margie
Mara, Janice Muckala, J.P.Powers, Mary Schleicher, Randle Segal,
Scott Schofield, Jack Shipley, Cindy Stratton, Mary Vitcenda.
PAGE FOUR
OCTOBER 30, 1969
Letters . . .
Skeptics denounced
Greeks defended
• • • • • • • • by R. Scott Schofield • • • • • • • •
A GREAT SPORT this year seems to be the art of knocking Greeks.
Perhaps some criticism is justified but it should be tempered with
reflections on the usefulness of those who associate behind foreign
letters.
What other group of students have the time to organize and
administer the major social events of the year? If it weren't for the
Greeks, lexicologists would have to develop new words to describe the
degree of placidity existant on this campus.
Too much criticism of the sour grapes nature is leveled at the Greeks.
Some say they dominate our petty school politically and socially with
the "you vote for our candidate if we vote for yours" method. These
people say it is too hard for an "independent" to get elected. If these
same people would stop stomping on their sour grapes and observe that
if independents show an aptitude for work and a desire to accomplish a
task, they have a better than equal chance in getting nominated or
elected to any post they desire.
AL THOUGH THE GREEKS are not cliques, they observe the same
social laws obeyed by any other select group of people. Obviously,
when students form an organization of like minded individuals, they do
it with the intent by their association they may enjoy mutual benefits.
Why criticize them for observing a perfectly natural social theorem?
Those who believe that the final triumph and glory of life rests in
good grades and who dislike the apparent advantage the Greeks have in
their supposedly vast test files, should either join the Greeks or get lazy
professors to change their tests occasionally. I might add that any
students who knows his material well can beat any test-file educated
Greek, kegs and all.
While others may censure the Greeks, this non-Greek praises them,
for without the Greeks who could CHUG mock?
SO MUCH FOR a valuable asset of UMD . Let us look now to the
potpourri of trivia pouring forth from a motley collection of students
and non-students, some of whom are just plain losers, who are critical
of the University and the type of education one receives here.
They claim the university provides no relevance to the real world or
that it doesn't offer courses on how to get along with your fellow man.
If they could retrieve their heads from the clouds and remove their.
imitation roseate sunglasses, they may find that the university does
indeed dispense relevance in that this institution will give students the
training and education necessary to become a productive element in our
environment. And from this springboard of knowledge, we may
exercise our conscience in changing the wrongs of the world.
It is a curious fact that these students, indeed those ·who pass out
literature which has undefinable terms such as "positive" and
"establishment" and other words of a jargon of disoriented fantasy,
who criticize the university, view it from the outside. As Sonny and
Cher put is succinctly, "-they are on the outside, looking in."
THESE FORMER UMD STUDENTS are members of a sect which
has magnified justifiable faults in our higher educational institutions to
a level which disintends rationality and defeats its agreeable points of
criticism.
I was talking to one of these students the other day and was
commenting to him on how much students can contribute to the
university. An example can be service on the student-faculty
committees. He remarked casually that the student members of the S-F
Committees are inured to the real meaning of student life and are in fact
members of the establishment.
Are any of those critical individuals in any responsible position on
.this campus-or were they ever? No! They simply don't know what they
are talking about.
Productive members of the community have an obligation and right
to change that which is wrong. Aren't those former UMD students, who
are looking in from the outside, just trying to make excuses for their
own failure to become productive citizens. They are critical but never
constructive.
HANGOUT OF THE WEEK: This week the Statesman is beginning a
series for freshmen that they may choose the group and area they want
to hang with, thus eliminating much time wasting research .
(continued from page 4)
population, but by by-passing
them altogether and capitalizing
on the situation whereby the
population is vulnerable through
lack of unity (if not united by
mutual apathy) .
THOSE WHO CR I ED out
against last week's moratorium
represent those who would rather
sit and watch their government
rot from within than move their
asses off the TV room easy chair
to do anything about it. They
scream that the march was an
afront against the troops and the
president when, in fact, the
marchers supported the
troops - we want them home and
alive! It was not aimed at the
president as an insult or a threat,
but was a dramatic means of
airing grievances - an effort to
steer
our
country
toward
righteousness. This is a right
denied our brothers in the Soviet
Union, Cuba, Red China, and
their allies; we know how
righteous leaders of these
countries can be and what the
people are allowed to do to
remedy the erroneous courses
pursued by their leaders (ask any
Hungarian. Polish, or Czeck
freedom fighter about
"non-involvement").
Yet
the
"non-involved" segment of our
student body still jeered at the
march and were, in effect, jeering
the so-called "American Way"
which includes the right to involve
ourselves in affairs of state.
I will not go as far as to term
these pseudopatriots
"unAmerican" as many must have
tagged the marchers, but I wQuld
chastise them for being
disgustingly poor citizens for
condemning people who dare to
exercise their constitutional rights
for the purpose of introducing
America to mo.rality (dirty
communist word that it is) .
AS MR. SCHOFIELD stated so
lucidly, however, our mass
student apathy has brought us an
end to the English proficiency
exam and "status" on the
Student-Faculty committee. For
this we should all be proud and
content to turn our myopic eyes
back to our texts to learn how the
people of 18th century England
butchered their pigs, the proper
method of writing in the style of
our composition teacher, and the
precise titration of an acid.
Can our dist in g u is he d
accomplishments clean up the
pollution in Lake Superior; can
they end the slaughter in Asia?
Should we go rejoicing to the
ghetto and proclaim to the
starving child in the basement
rat-hole he calls home, that he
should be happy that we're free
from the shackles of the nasty ol'
English Pro? Will our
represent at io n on the
Student-Faculty committee end
the hipocrisy and corruption in
our government bodies; will it end
organized crime; will it feed a
child in Biafra or set a political
prisoner free in Greece? Mr.
Schofield claimed we at UMD
don't give a damn about anybody
but ourselves. Are we to be proud
of that image? Was Schofield
describing you?
IF WE AT UMD are "just a
bunch of industrious, hard
working students that have
enough responsibilities of (our)
own rather than become involved
in the tempests in the student
activists' tea cup" then I would
offer the following closing
commentary: Self-centeredness
will be repaid. Change is as
inevitable as it is presently active,
and if the students at this
institution are too preoccupied
(and I pray they are not) with
themselves to grab hold of the
future, the future will most
certainly pass by sheading no tears
for those who chose not to ride.
JOHN L. BERKLEY
realizing that this can only spell
our doom. ls it any better to
interpret gross national product
and "development" as a measure
of man's progress?
ROLF 0. PETERSON
•
Treetrimmer tells all
TO THE EDITOR:
It was with a great sense of
shock that I read about the
misinterpretation of my aesthetic
act. I particularly resent a
reference to my being a "pig" in a
letter by a rather emotional
correspondent in your newspaper.
An an artist, I am hardly
concerned with my outward
appearance. In fact to the
little-minded commoner I might
even
appear
"dirty" - but
"pig" - I
am
a
sensitive,
artistically conditioned human
being!
For the gross, unartistic type, it
would be difficult to conceive my
shock when I saw a large group of
people planting a tree in the midst
of the beartiful blankness of the
UMD Mall. Usually, my artistic
temperment keeps quite aloof
DULUTH
from mundane affairs, but this
wanton destruction of the Mall's
.
W hat constitutes progress marvelous emptiness simply
TO THE EDITOR:
enraged me! Upon inquiry into
R.C. SCHOFIELD'S Oct. 23 this hideously unaesthetic act, I
article was disturbing for many found that there was some sort·of
reasons. In attempting to criticize conflict going on. This profaning.
opposition to nuclear power tree was to be some sort of
plants, he failed to mention one memorial to the dead of that
very
large
aspect
of the conflict. (It is strange, just before
problem, - that of thermal I started my most recent mural, I
pollution. Before we bow down in distinctly thought the conflict had
gratitude to "America's scientific ended at Iwo Jimo, or some other
and engineering genius" for outlandish place.)
To make a long story short,
delivering us from the smog and
fossil fueled plants, let us make once I heard this tree was to be a
sure that we are not merely memorial, I immediately
substituting one form of pollution conceived a brilliant idea. Since
for another. It is perhaps true that the beautiful blankness of your
it is more difficult for J.Q. Public Mall is a constant source of
to see thermal pollution than coal inspiration to me for the
smoke, but this does not make it completion of my mural, and
less dangerous.
since I am without doubt, the
Mr.
Schofield
criticizes .' world 's greatest living artist
objectors of nuclear power plants (unrecognized, of course), the
for being nearsighted and not offending tree would have to go.
looking into the future while he But I am a reasonable man. I
hails the power companies for realize that lesser minds would
being advanced and building probably
have
a tribalistic
"facilities to meet the needs of emotional attachment to this
monster.
the future." Let me ask him this : blankness - profaning
Were the water and power Therefore, after surgical removal,
concerns that managed to flood I attached my suggestion to the
Glen Canyon or the Colorado stump
of
that
totally
River thinking very far into the unacceptable tree. I assumed that
future? Or consider the power even a lesser mind would
interests that are building huge, understand, but it is quite
outdated hydroelectric projects in apparent that the phase of my
what were priceless wilderness plan failed. Therefore, lesser
areas in Canada, such as the Peace minds, my suggestion will have to
and Canoe Rivers in British be spelled out. A small, low (very
Columbia, and the Nelson River in low) plaque with the words I
Manitoba.
ls
this
really suggested in place of that
farsightedness? I think not.
abominable tree. If this idea is
PERHAPS WHAT is needed is a followed, the aesthetic beauty of
your great, empty mall will
remain.
For
the
sake of
art - plant plaques, not plants!
meant
7U\JYLH7UHHWULPHU
"'Jk£
/t.
THE STATESMAN
_
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PAGE FIVE
rr~
Strings gather ~l
F I V E N U M B E R S BY a
120-piece student orchestra and
two numbers by a special baroque
orchestra will make up a concert
to be held at 7 :30 p.m. Friday,
Oct. 31 in the UMD Kirby
Student Center Ballroom.
Comprising the orchestra will
be junior and senior high school
students from 15 schools in
Duluth and the outlying area.
They will be at UMD all day
Friday for the ninth annual String
Clinic sponsored by the Music
department.
Dr. Marvin Rabin, professor of
music at the University of
Wisconsin at Madison, will be the
guest clinician and conductor for
the evening program.
In the concert program are the
f o 11 o w i n g n u m b e r s :
"Divertimento for Strings" by
Verrall; "Aria in Classic Style" by
Grandjany; "Theme in Ecursions"
by Benson ; "Tiz Darab" by
Bartok; "Virtuous Wife Overture "
by Purcell; "Chanson Trist" by
Tchaikowsky and "String Suite
no. 3" by Bach.
Seating and tuning for the
clinic begins at 8:45 a.m. Friday.
The high schoolers will pursue a
FOR SALE
2 yr. old pair of Koflach lace
ski boots, size 11. Asking $18
or best offer. Come to Statesman office or call 726-7112.
rigorous schedule in preparing for
the concert on Friday. Under
clinician Rabin, they will rehearse
from 9 a.m. to noon, from 1 p.m.
to 3 p.m. and from 3:30 p.m. to
4 :30 p .m.
The students have been selected
from their respective schools to
attend the clinic.
Directors and schools from
which the students will come are :
Ralph E . Anderson, Duluth
Central; Aldo Frillici, Gilbert;
R e y n o I d Leiva, Du 1u th
Washington Junior; Bernard
Niemi, International Falls; John
Downs, Two Harbors; Donald
Niemi, Cloquet ; Henri Kalinowski,
Chisholm ; Edward Skwierawski,
D u I u t h D e n f e Id ; H a z e I
McEldowney, Duluth Ordean
Junior; Donald Wergert, Duluth
West Junior; Vic Buller, Duluth
Lincoln Junior; Harold V. Peleski,
Duluth Woodland Junior ; B.
Pettigrew, Duluth East ; Mary
Wright , Proctor and James
Colosimo, Eveleth.
French film
to be shown
The
film
"Umbrellas
of
Cherbourg" will be shown tonight
in Ed90 at 6: 30 and 8: 30 p.m.
This French movie with English
subtitles is sponsored by the
French Club. Admission is $.75.
DAN'S SKYLINE
BARBER SHOP
8th AVE . E. & 9th ST.
Featuring Razor Shaping
& Styling
Two Barbers
DAN ,& AL
Ample parking space
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THE DAVE BRUBECK TRIO with Gerry Mulligan will be appearing
Nov. 4 for the first Artist Series concert.
Jazz artists here
this Tuesday
WHEN DAVE BRUBECK i l
piano, Jack Six on bass, Alan
Dawson on vibraharp and drums,
and Gerry Mulligan on baritone
saxaphone appear at the Duluth
Auditorium at 8:30 p.m. Tuesday,
Nov. 4, concert-goers are going to
hear four 'of the top musicians in
the nation.
The appearance of the Dave
Brubeck Trio with guest artist
Mulligan opens the second
University Series sponsored by
UMD, with cooperation from the
College of St. Scholastica and
Wisconsin State University at
Superior.
·
Brubeck has announced his
group will play selections from
two new albums, themes from his
oratorio "Light in the Wilderness"
which was premiered 18 months
ago in Cincinnati to critical
acclaim, plus jazz standards such
as "Take Five" which was the first
single jazz record to sell more
than a million copies.
The original Dave Brubeck Trio
was formed in 1951 and for 16
years was known as the most
successful ensemble in the history
of jazz. In 1967, Brubeck turned
to his early training in the classics
and composed his now famous
oratorio, a cantata and a ballet.
Brubeck is still composing, but his
newly formed trio is making
limited tours to cities and college
campuses. Together they
represent the best in
contemporary jazz skills.
TICKETS FOR THE Brubeck
concert are on sale at the Glass
Block and Goldfines, where they
can be charged to accounts, the
Duluth Auditorium, and Kirby
Student Center, where UMD
students can still get a 20%
discount on tickets.
REH EAR SA LS ARE already
well under way for UMD
Theater ' s fall production of
Shakespeare's The Taming of the
Shrew.
The play has a long list of
characters which includes:
Petruchio (Gary Jader), who
attempts to tame the shrewish
Katherine (Barbara Laine) ,
Katherine's sister Bianca (Pat
McMahon), Bianca's three suitors :
Lucentio (Mike Slygh), Hortensio
(Michael Brenna), and old Gremio
(Steve Dietz), Katherine's and
Bianca's father Baptista (Dave
Sergeant),
Lucentioii servants
Tran io (Don Wiesen) and
Biondello (Donald Watson), a
Pedant (Robert Maas), Lucentio's
father Vincentio (Gary
Kru chowski), Petruchio's body
guard Grumio (Janet Meeker),
Petruchio ' s cook Curtis (Lin
Griffin), and his servants (Donna
Carlson, Peter Johnson, Kathy
Leeman , and Brian Thiry),
Baprista's servant (Debbie Quade),
the widow (Nellie Johnson) , a
tailor (Don Gilleland), a
haberdasher (Nick Burger), the
chorus girls (Jill Alquist, Michele
Fleck, Cathy Sheets, Barbara
Rossi, and Sara Tuomala), and the
card girl (Laura Johnson) .
Director of the play is Fred
Ollerman, instructor of speech.
Assistant director is Donna
Carlson.
Austen play
tonight
MORGAN PARK High School
will present Austen's Pride and
Prejudice tonight, Oct. 30, at 8:00
p.m . in the High School
Auditorium. Central opens with
Euripides' Medea on Nov. 6, and
on that same date Denfeld opens
with If a Man Answers. East will
present My Three Angles Nov.
7-8.
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PAGE SIX
OCTOBER 30, 1969
!For what it's worth
by Greg Oien
sportseditor
DON'T LET LAST week's
football score against Hamline
mislead you. UMD put forth one
of the finest efforts I've seen since
I've been here. The Bulldogs drove
hard throughout the game and to
us on the sidelines it seemed like
UMD just got tougher after every
Piper score.
The
Bulldog defense was
spearheaded by senior linebacker
Al Decker and junior safety
"Slats"
Fairbanks.
Another
standout was Todd Anderson who
recovered a Piper fumble in his
first start of the y_ear. They had to
Fairbanks
Daly
contain
twice
ALL-MIAC
quarterbak Larry Hegerle and his
compl'ement to Terry Larsen. Jed
Knutilla, and Daren lntresne. All
run the 100 yard dash under 10
seconds.
Dan
Daly
and
Fairbanks
quarterbacked the Bulldogs and
each threw a TD pass. However,
Daly had 3 out of 8 passes
intercepted and Fairbanks
replaced him for most of the
second half. Bob Froehle led
UMD's rushing attack with 68
yds. in 15 carries for a 4.5
average.
THE BULLDOGS preformed
much better than expected against
Chairman needed
for Kirby
KIRBY PROGRAM Board is in
a bind . It seems that they have
run out of chairmen for social
· committee and are now accepting
applications for this position. If
you are interested please apply at
the Kirby Program Board next to
the Kirby Information desk.
Ski team meeting
The ski team for this year will
begin with a meeting Nov. 1 7 at
4:00. It will be held in the Phy Ed
building. All people interested in
racing - alpine, slalom, jumping
and cross country are urged to
attend.
To this date, there are thirteen
tentative meets scheduled.
Want the happy answer to
gift hang-ups? Ask us about
an exciting tele·gift.
Ann Obermiller
727-9356
Jean Wark
Carol Hanlon
Board of Trade
Barber Shop
I Pipers stop Bulldogs, 32-12
probably the top team offensively
in the MIAC. Coach Jim Malasky
had two words to say abo ut the
Pipers' speed, "They hustle."
Malsoky also said that "We had
to play errorless ball to stay even
with them and we just made too
many mistakes."
Next week the Bulldogs face
the Cobbers from Concordia and
it looks like another drubbing for
the Bulldogs as Malasky told the
STATESMAN that "We don't
think they're (Hamline) as good
an Concordia." Following that
line of thought the "For What It's
Worth" prediction is Concordia
36 - UMD-6.
Anderson
Froehle
BY. RUSS BROWN
DOWN 19-6 at the half, the
UMD Bulldogs couldn't come
back and dropped their second
straight MIAC tilt losing 31-12 to
the Hamline Pipers last Saturday
afternoon.
Sparkplug for the Pipers was
quarterback Larry Hegerle as he
threw for three touchdowns and
ran for another. Hegerle's total
through the air came to 194 yards
with connections o n 6 of 13
attempts.
Halfback Terry Larsen tallied
first for the Pipers as he caught
the first of Hegerle's TD tosses
and completed the 79 yard
scoring play. Ace booter Ted
Fleener kicked the extra point
and Hamline was on its way.
I-Iamline scored again later in
the quarter when Rick Anderson
bulled in from the four to put the
game out of reach of the
struggling
Bulldogs.
FIRST TO make a mark in the
second period were the Bulldogs
as they were able to break
~
ALL SCHOOL ORGANIZATIONS
ARE WELCOME TO INQUIRE
ABOUT OUR FREE MEETING
FACILITIES; ACADEMIC, FRATERNAL, OR
OTHERWISE.
~
JUST ASK ANY MEMBER
OF THE GEOGRAPHY CLUB
WHAT IT'S LIKE!
:PJZZ4
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1918 LONDON RD.
CENTRAL LIFE
"ONE OF THE BEST"
As a college student
you can afford
tomorrows insurance
program TODAY!
Roger Hanson
Office- 728-4171
If you have signed up for interviews, please be sure to pick up the
brochures apropos to your interview. We also have available for you a
pamphlet, MAKING THE MOST OF YOUR JOB INTERVIEWS, which
contains many valuable tips and hints.
MONDAY, NOV. 3, 1969
BUCYRUS - ERIE Company - South Milwaukee, Wisconsin
Accounting, Production, Business Administration, Production
Mr. M. Koons will interview.
TUESDAY , NOV . 4, 1969
PARKER-HANN IFIN Corporation - Des Plaines, Illinois
Accounting, Sales, Business Trainees, Management Training
Program, Economics, and Production for Illinois, Ohio, California,
New York, Kentucky and Michigan.
Messrs. D. V. Knudson and A. M. Meske, Jr. will interview.
SPEED QUEEN (Division of McGraw-Edison Company) - Ripon,
Wisconsin
Sales Trainee, Accountants, Manufacturing Management Trainee,
and Management Trainees.
Mr. G. Jones will interview.
WEDNESDAY, NOV. 5, 1969
STATE FARM INSURANCE Company - Bloomington, Illinois
Any college degree.
Mr. James B. Davis will interview.
EVANSTON, ILLINOIS PUBLIC SCHOOLS (1 :00 p.m . · 3:00
p.m. )
Secondary positions in all subjects.
Mr. Jean F. Emmons will interview.
GENERAL Ml LLS, INC. - Minneapolis, Minnesota
Accounting, Finance, Mathematics, Sales, Business Trainees,
Management Training Program, Statistics, Computer Science, and
Economics.
Mr. Larry Dettman will interview.
THURSDAY, NOV. 6, 1969
GENERAL MILLS, INC. - Minneapolis, Minnesota (See
November 5th)
XEROX Corporation - Bloomington, Minnesota
Sales
Mr. John C. Munro will interview.
MEET YOUR FRIENDS AT THE
EVERY WEDNESDAY NIGHT -
9:00 P.M.
PAUL BUNYAN BAR
Saturday, Nov. 1
DANCE TO THE
W.C. FIELDS, BUSTER KEATON, LAUREL &
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HARDY, 3 STOOGES, ETC.
Sock it to 'em Bulldogs
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Continental Ski Shop
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most of the second half was Slats
Fairbanks who was able to put
three of his five passes through
the Piper defense for completions
including the six pointer to Pete
Furo in the fourth period to give
the Bullies their second score.
The biggest factor in the game
had to be the speed of Hamline as
they were able to succesfully stifle
the passing of Daly and run from
the defense when it was Hamline's
turn with the ball.
OLD TIME MOVIES
(across from the new YMCA)
Call 727-6939
through the rough Piper defense
and to go in on a 25 yard Daly to
Martinsen pass. Following up on
their previous attacks the Pipers
went on another drive that ended
with Hegerle diving in from the
one to end the scoring for the
half.
In the second half Hamline
piled up two more TD's to the
Bulldog's one to end up a lopsided
winner.
Commanding .the Bulldogs for
~l:"p:i
·~\.,
3 Barbers -
RON - MARK - TOM
THE STATESMAN
PAGE SEVEN
WREP mermaids ready
UMD faces Concordia next
BY BOB ABRAHAMSON
OUR UMD BULLDOGS close
out their MIAC schedule this
weekend as they take on the
powerful Concordia Cobbers in
Moorhead . Last week the
Cobbers, who lead the MIAC,
were ranked seventh by the
National Association of
Intercollegiate Athletics.
For the Bulldogs it will have
been like an NFL team meeting
the Baltimore Colts and the Green
Bay Packers on successive
CC team finishes sixth
BY DAN KLENOW
UMD'S CROSS-COUNTRY
TEAM placed sixth out of a seven
team field in the MIAC cross
country meet on Saturday at the
St. Cloud Country Club. St.
John's successfully retained the
team title as they · swept the first
four places.
John Cragg, an All-American in
track, took the individual title
with an outstanding 24 : 33
clocking. UMD 's co-captain Urho
Rahkala was the first Bulldog
harrier to cross the finish. Rocky
finished 17th with a time of
26 :35. Rounding out UMD 's score
was Kerry . Louks, 27th; Dion
Chilberg, 31st ; Greg Warren, 33rd,
and Jim Nowak, 37th.
THE TIMES WERE unusually
fast, which points to the quality
of cross-country running in the
MIAC lately. Teams such as St.
John ' s and Macalester have
athletes of national caliber and
should do well at the NCAA meet
held in November.
UMD will close out the season a
week from Saturday. r
FREE APPLE PIE
Buy a di nnerburger (any of the 36 kinds) and top the meal
with a free piece of apple pie! Just present thi s ad with UMD
student, staff or faculty I.D. (Valid through Nov. 7th) to the
cashier . . .
weekends. Last week Hamline ran
past UMD 3 2-12 and Concordia is
to be even better.
The Cobbers with a victory
over UMD Saturday will win the
Minnesota Intercollegiate Athletic
Conference crown. A loss will
mean a tie for the crown with
once-beaten Hamline.
AS WAS THE CASE last
Saturday, the Bulldogs will be
facing another excellent
quarterback in Paul Linde, a 6
foot, 175 lb. senior from Beaver
Dam, Wisconsin. Linde 's prime
target will be split end Chuck
Olson.
THE COBBERS had a close
contest with Gustavus last week,
finally winning 28-26. UMD is by
no means out of this Sauturday's
contest, but they 're going to have
to play heads-up football to
squeak out a victory. A win for
the Bulldogs will give Concordia
its only loss this year.
FREE
_
"WE'RE NOT BIG, but we're
mighty!" This was the comment
made by Miss Mary Mullen, coach
of the women's extramural swim
team . After three weeks of
practice, only thirteen of the
forty girls who tried out are left.
The swim team has become an
important part of the .. Women's
Recreational and Extramural
Program after only three years of
its existence. Four meets have
been scheduled for this year
including the State Meet on
December 6 at the main campus.
Nov. 4 will mark the beginning
of the season with a dual meet
with Bemidji State College at
Bemidji. A triangular meet here
with the University of North
Dakota and the University of
Minnesota will open up the home
stand on Nov. 15 and will be
followed by another triangular
with Beinidji State and Mankato
State Colleges on the 22nd of the
month.
The
W.R.E.P.
mermaids
practice 4 :30-6 p.m. on Mondays
and Wednesdays, 6-7 p.m. on
Thursdays and with the men on
Fridays at 4: 30 p.m.
PACKAGE
SPECIAL
INSTRUCTOR
APPROVED
SKI OUTFIT
s449s
1
•
OMEGA
lam inated skis,
inle id plastic top,
edges polymic~,
racing bue
BUSTO
PIZZA PARLOR
•
~ sHl"I"
PIZZA
rABLDB &
.. I iJ Y€
PUBLIC hOUS€
TOMIC POLES
•
WED. & THUR. NITES
Leave
8 p.m.
9 p.m.
10 p.m.
11 p.m.
somEIH9El:f
f.lc:Jl:JSE
WHERE EATING IS FUN!
Mt. Royal Shopping Center off Woodland Ave. riear UMD.
ASK ANYONE ABOUT SOMEBODY!
Call 728-4701 for carryout too!
ll•culu Sl2.TI
With Besco Step-in
Bindings Mounted
~
Lower
Campus
Ill
SAFETY STRAPS
Upper
Campus
Leave
Shakey's
8:15
9 :15
10: 15
11 : 15
8 :45 p.m.
9:45 p.m.
10:45 p.m.
11 :45 p.m.
p.m.
p.m.
p.m.
p.m.
Old Time Movies - Player Piano
SHIKlfS
on Haines Road between
Arrowhead & Miller Trunk
•
SKI CLIPS
cb:~
-.
SKI SH()li
Open Wttkdays 9:30 · 9:ot
SalurdCl'(S 9:30 • 5:00 P.M.
1305 E. Superior St.-nl-4446
UMD THEATER PRESENTS
The Taming of the Shrew
by William Shakespeare
Fri., Nov. 14 & 21 at 8:00 p.m.
Sat., Nov. 15 & 22 at 7:00 p.m. & 10 p.m.
at
,Old Main Theater-23rd Ave. E. & 5th St.
Beginning Nov. 4, tickets will be available Monday through Friday between 8:30
and 4:30 by calling 726-8285 or in Kirby
{:Orridor. On performance nights, tickets
will be available at Old Main Box Office.
All seats are reserved . Reservations will
be held until fifteen minutes before the
performance.
You know, I think' het likes mel
General Admission
Students ___________ _
PAGE EIGHT
But, I only cam• h•r• to buy a pair of shOC1$I
$1.50
.so
UMD Students ----------------------------·--·-------------------------------reserved tickets with presentation of an activity card
Free
OCTOBER 30, 1969