• Clock Tower Vol. XLIV Union College, Lincoln, Nebr., February 6, 1970 No. 14 February fund raising drive begins; $10,000 to be raised for new center President R. W. Fowler hands ASB President Jerry Pogue a copy of the proclamation designating February as "New Student Center Month." contest deadline next Friday The temperance club has an- nounced February 13 as the deadline for entries to be sub- mitted for the various temper- ance contests. First prizes of $40 for the oration contest, $30 for the poster contest, $30 for the radio spots contest, and $20 for the car sticker contest will be presented to winners in each cat- egory. Car sticker and poster entries will be displayed in the student center February 16. Students will be allowed to judge these con- tests. Elder Jim Harris is to judge the oration contest and Mr. Arthur Hauck is to judge the radio spot contest. All entries are required to be original and they must be on the Senate recommends Student senate, meeting Tues- day, voted to recommend to the student affairs committee that open-seating in the cafeteria be instituted on a trial basis for one month. The measure was pro- posed by Roy Orr. The senators in discussion ex- plained that open seating would give each student complete free- dom to sit where he wished dur- ing all meals in the cafeteria. The proposal grew from a de- bate of the possible causes and cures of carry-out littering. Bennett Chilson, food service director, had pointed out to the senate that the present plan of allowing students to carry out full meals on paper plates has apparently been the major con- tributing factor in the accumu- lation of post-mealtime litter in the cafeteria lounge. Walter Schram, custodial de- partment manager, told the sen- ate that the two student center rooms were similarly affected by students' habits of carrying out. William Goble, grounds depart- ment manager, discouraged some students' practice of leaving food outside for dogs, cats and squir- subject of alcohol, tobacco, nar- cotics, or physical fitness. All orations must take from 5 to 8 minutes in presentation, and the use of visual aids is acceptable. Suggested size for posters is 22 x 28 inches and the use of raised lettering, cutouts and il- lustrations is acceptable. The radio spot should be 60 seconds long (approximately 120- 160,'wordsj and may have back- ground music or sound effects. Four to eight words is the sug- gested length of the car sticker entries and all stickers should at- tract attention and promote thought, according to the contest regulations. open seating plan rels. It also attracts rats, he said. It was suggested that discon- tinuing the paper-plate portion of the carry-out privileges might solve this litter problem. The present seating system was cited as a factor which en- couraged students to carry out; hence the open-seating proposal. Earlier in the senate session, Orrie Bell was elected to replace Tom Rasmussen as one of the student members on the curric- ulum committee. Both faculty and students voiced praise for Tom's work on the committee during first semester. He was forced to resign because a second semester class appointment con- flicted with the time of the com- mittee meeting. Senators discussed what Sab- bath activities could be initiated which would attract a larger number of students than pres- ently participate. A number of suggestions were made and the matter was referred to the re- ligious life committee. Senators also changed the sec- ond semester senate meeting time from 7:30 p.m. Wednesday to 6:30 p.m. Tuesday. President Fowler has declared February "New Student Center Month" at Union College. A fund raising campaign will be carried out during the "month, and if the goal of $10,000 is reached by March 5, an extra day of spring vacation will be provided. Vaca- tion would then begin on Tues- day, March 24, rather than Wed- nesday, March 25. Even before the official start of the fund raising drive, the Clock Tower has donated $700 to the new student center fund. Ed- itor Darrell Holtz said that the surplus in the paper's budget made the donation possible with- out affecting the printing quality BULLETIN President R. W. Fowler, Ph.D., yesterday afternoon announced his retirement as president of Union Col- lege, effective in June. Dr. Fowler, a 1929 grad- uate of Union College, has been employed by the Sev- enth-day Adventist Church for 41 years. Seventeen of those years have been spent at Union, the last six as president. More details in next week's Clock Tower. Gerst chosen as missionary The choice of Connie Jo Gerst as Union's second student mis- sionary for 1970-71 was announc- ed last week at MV meeting. The sophomore biology major from North Platte, Nebraska, describ- ed her initial reaction at being chosen as that of unbelief. Connie Jo said she became In- terested in the student mission- ary program after receiving sev- eral letters last summer from Ruthita Jensen telling Connie Jo about her activities and about the great needs she saw every day in Saigon. Connie Jo is in charge of tem- perance activities this year at Union. As leader of American Youth for Better Living during her senior year at Platte Valley Academy, she led out in activities that enabled the school to win the National Temperance Tro- phy in competition with all the other academies in the United States. Just where Connie Jo will serve during her year as student missionary will not be determin- ed for several weeks. Connie said her preference is Central or South America. Because of her knowledge of Spanish she feels she is best qualified to serve there. She will leave for her as- signment In June. Connie's main interest is music, especially guitar, which she hopes to take with her, piano, and organ. She also enjoys water sports and mountain climbing. of the campus publication. He added that the money could do more good when applied to the construction of the new center than when sitting unused in the Clock Tower budget. The campaign will formally begin in convocation this morn- ing. Each student is being urged to bring a pen, an address book, and a two-dollar donation to the convocation, says Roy Orr, chair- man of the fund raising drive. Leaders in the campaign are hoping that the two-dollar stu- Insight is the name chosen for the new Adventist youth mag- azine. The name was chosen for more than 3400 entries, accord- ing to a telegram sent to the Clock Tower to announce the christening of the new publica- tion. Kit Watts, a 1966 graduate of Union College, submitted the winning name. As winner of the contest to name the magazine, she will receive $100. The second prize of $50 was awarded to Mike Foxworth, while John Eggenberger won the $25 third prize. Foxworth and Eggen- dent donations will give the cam- paign an immediate balance of $1800 with which to begin work. The first individual to raise $500 for the center and the three persons who bring in the most contributions will receive prizes. The individual raising $500 dol- lars first will receive an AM-FM radio, according to present plans, and the top three fund raisers wil receive a portable black-and- white television set, a cassette tape recorder, and an AM-FM radio respectively. berger are both students at Southern Missionary College. According to Don Yost, editor of Insight, a nine-member com- mittee went through the 3400 names submitted in the contest and selected the twelve best en- tries. The top twelve names were then tested on nearly 500 acad- emy and college students before Insight was chosen as the new magazine's name. The new magazine will replace The Youth's Instructor as the denominational publication for young people. The first issue of Insight is scheduled to be pub- lished on May 5. Connie Jo Gerst, chosen as Union's second student missionary for the 1970-71 school year, ponders the missionary tradition symbolized by the Cock tower. FEB 11 1970 youth magazine is tabbed INSIGHT; UC graduate Watts wins contest UNCOLN, NEBRASKA 2 THE CLOCK TOWER Februory 6, 1970 editorials right, by chance? "Even o fool must now and then be right, by chance."—Cowper cold weather opposed Last Monday, February 2, the state of Nebraska returned to cold and windy weather conditions. Whereas on the previous day the temperature had reached a high of 51 degrees, developments during the night kept temperatures on that day and subsequently well under the freezing point. The Clock Tower is unequivocally opposed to this return to cold weather. It is detrimental to the operation of a successful college program in a number of ways. First, the cold weather is likely to cause an increase in the num- ber of students who are ill. Students leaving overheated rooms and walking out into the teeth of a wintry gale are apt to contract any number of dire pulmonary and respiratory ailments. This, in turn, could overburden the Student Health office and require the employ- ment of additional medical personnel, thus raising the tuition at the college. Second, the cold weather causes automobile engines to stall. If this becomes a serious problem among village students, the number of tardinesses and absences could rise sharply. This, coupled with the number of tardinesses and absences caused by illness, might re- quire the hiring of more workers to keep track of tardinesses and absences, further adding to the students' financial load. It should be pointed out, in the interest of fairness, that It Is equally possible that teachers' cars will stall as often as students' cars, reducing the number of classes from which absences can be re- ported. This factor could reduce the magnitude of the problem of absences. Third, the cold weather can disrupt orderly classroom procedure by forcing students to wear heavy wraps into the classroom. The subsequent taking off and putting back on of these bulky winter gar- ments, ranging from faded denim jackets to full-length fur coats, can greatly detract from the pedagogical effectiveness of a teacher's lecture. Fourth, the windy conditions reduce the attractiveness of the campus population by turning many of the most carefully wrought hairdos into disheveled messes. Although a few fortunate persons emerge from a severe gust of wind looking wild and carefree, most of us tend to come out of a passing breeze looking merely wild. Finally, the cold weather severely reduces the quota of good- will among the members of the college community. This aspect of the problem is particularly evident on the sidewalks, where the scurrying students huddled inside their coats seldom pause to ex- change a friendly greeting, much less to engage in an amiable con- versation. Of course, it should be recognized that some of the good- will is merely transferred from the sidewalks to the Student Center, and at certain hours of the day many students can be seen exchang- ing friendly greetings in the center. As this editorial is written, the forecast indicates that Friday, February 6, our publication date, will be warmer than Monday was. Since our problems will obviously disappear with the advent of warmer weather, we hope that we will see no further lapses into cold conditions. An early spring would do wonders for student spirits. DH we stand to gain The student senate recently suggested that the cafeteria offer students a completely unregimented seating plan for one month, after faculty members outlined to the senate the undesirable con- ditions apparently resulting in part from the carry-out privilege (see page 3). The open-seating proposal aims to make "eating-in" more en- joyable and convenient. Hopefully, fewer students carrying out will mean less litter. Assuming the Student Affairs committee accepts the senate rec- ommendation, the point is this: if the littering problem is not at least considerably diminished, carry-out privileges will almost cer- tainly be sharply curtailed, if not revoked. And furthermore, if students do not show the freer seating sys- tem to be a practical innovation, the administration will doubtless revert to the more restrictive previous arrangement. Union College students stand to gain considerably by being just a little more responsibility during second semester. JM -FEBRUARY- New Student Center Month DO YOUR PART It oil depends on YOU! "lucky" guys with high draft numbers may not be left out of draft after all Ed. Note: The story below is re- printed from the Andrews Uni- versity Student Movement of January 15, 1970. President Nixon accompanied the unveiling of the draft lottery with an announcement that those whose birthdays fell in the first third drawn (1-122) stood a "high probability" of being draft- ed In 1970, those in the second third (122-244) stood an "average probability," and those in the last third (244-366) stood a rel- atively low probability." Today, little more than a month after the dates were pick- ed in capsules from a bowl before a national television audience, even the National Selective Serv- ice Headquarters concedes Nix- on's forecast was mistaken. "I doubt anyone with a 1-A classification is safe," says one national officer." 1-A men not drafted by December, stand a good chance of not being drafted at all, but the possibilities are very slim that they can escape (from having their number come up.)" Selective Service directors in seven states have flatly predicted they will reach all 366 numbers during the course of the year. Col. Arthur Holmes in Michigan says his office has been scraping the bottom of the 1-A barrel for the past five years to meet induc- tion quotas, and since the antic- ipated 1970 Michigan quota Is 15,000—the same as past years— he sees little chance that any with 1-A classifications will es- cape the draft. Holmes says of students who plan to drop out of school to take their chances in this year's pool: "We'll welcome them into the pool. And we'll probably in- duct 'em. Col. Byron Meaderx of New York State's Selective Service es- timates that "If our draft calls are at the levels of the last three years, we expect to exhaust all numbers from one to 366 ... by May or June." Massachusetts, New Jersey, Ok- lahoma, and North Dakota also predict they will use up all lot- tery numbers during 1970. In addition, spokesmen for eight other states and the District of Columbia told an Associated Press survey that those with high lottery numbers are defin- itely not safe from conscription. 29 states said it was too early to make projections. State spokesmen in only four states—Alaska, Colorado, Kansas and Utah—says those with high lottery numbers are unlikely to be called. The variance in the projected manpower needs of different states raises questions as to the methods employed by the Na- tional Selective Service Head- quarters to meet the national draft quotas According to Capt. William Pascoe, chief information officer for the Selective Service, each month each local board compiles a "report of availability" that gives the number of physically and mentally qualified 1-A men in its jurisdiction. The report is sent to the state office, which formulates a state report. The national office receives all the state reports, and assigns a percentage to each of the 50 states plus Washington, D.C., Guam, the Canal Zone, Puerto Rico, the Virgin Islands and New York City. The percentage rep- resents the number of qualified 1-A men living in that state as opposed to the national total. The state and local quotas are established as follows, explains Pascoe: "Say for a particular month Maryland has 1.9 percent of the 1-A's and the national call that month was for 20,000 men. 1.9 percent of 20,000 Is 392, so that number of inductees would have to come from Mary- land. Maryland has 66 local boards. Say board 10 has 2.83 percent of all the 1-A's; then it would be called upon to supply 2.83 percent of 392." There are over 4,000 local boards, each of them in an area with a different socio-economic make-up, he says, and a board in an affluent area might be calling high numbers ahead of most other boards because many youths who otherwise might be drafted are able to afford college. A state director, he says, is empowered to maintain evenness in the calling of lottery numbers by with holding the assignment of a quota to a board that is us- ing up the numbers faster than other boards. In North Dakota, one local board was found to have 294 as the lowest lottery number. Those states, along with Utah and Cal- ifornia, are reported to have de- cided tentatively on systems of Inside-Out Utopia... But could be? evening out the calling of num- bers. If those with low numbers en- list in the Navy, Air Force, Ma- rines, National Guard or Coast Guard to "make the best of their military experience," Pascoe says, the higher lottery numbers will be reached sooner. Pascoe says that in light of the variables, students shouldn't drop out of school to gain entrance to this year's pool. A recent Selec- tive Service decision makes It mandatory for a full-time stu- dent to be classified 2-S, so it is necessary for a student to drop out of school to receive a 1-A classification. There are other "variables." The re-enlistment rate in all services is down, and the ab- sence-without-leave rate, deser- tion rate, number of people leav- ing for Canada and number of people going to prison for refus- ing inductions are up. Draft resistence is currently the fourth largest crime in the U.S. Nearly 10 percent of all fed- eral court cases involve the Se- lective Service. All this dimin- ishes the possibility that a per- son with a high lottery number will avoid the draft. by Jim Crane Couldn't afford the payments. Clock Tower H FOUNDED 1927 Associate editor Jerry Moon Copy editor Virginia Schilt Secretary Louise Men row Photographer Glen Wintermeyer Editor-in-chief Darrell Holtz News editor* Connie Phillips Writers Jim Chilson Mike Conditt Maria Kelly Randi Malone Sharon Williams Larry Zuchowski Layout editor Vicki Christensen Sports editor Richard Hill Business manager Lanny Stout Advisor* E. D. Nesmith C. G. Davenport Opinions expressed in thli publicotion ore those of the writers ond ore not to be construed as the opinion! of the Associated Student Body or of Union College. The CLOCK TOWER ii published weekly during the school ye«r by the Associated Student Body of Union College, 3800 S. 48th., Lincoln, Neb. 68506. except holidays, registration periods and examination weeks. Subscription rate: $2.75 per year. Second-class postage paid at Lincoln, Nebraska. February 6, 1970 THE 'CLOCK TOWER 3 perhaps-ing around "I'll discuss anything. I like to go perhaps-ing around on oil subjects."—Frost This section of the Clock Tower is intended to deal primarily with subjects of on-compus interest. Opinions expressed are always those of the writer; they do not necessarily represent those of Union College, the Associated Student Body or the editorial staff. "if you can't explain It, just tongue it anyway." There is a pathology in man's knowing that might well be clas- sified as the epistemological lisp. In speech pathology we speak of the interdental lisp as the sub- stitution of the linguadental fricative for the lingua-aleveolar fricative. In other words, instead of saying "lisp" the lisper says "lthp" with the tip of the tongue dropping from the gum ridge to the tip of the upper front teeth. In man's knowing, when he Is confronted by an inexplicable mystery he often continues to wag his agile tongue against his teeth. In the consequent episte- mological lisp, "mystery" be- comes "mythery." Or as we as- serted in the introductory quip, "If you can't explain it, just tongue it anyway." It is no small wonder that many of the Biblical writers ex- pressed such concern over the use and misuse of the tongue, be- cause it is this lithe little member that shapes our ideas into sounds, our sounds into speech, our speech into language, and our language into myths. (Or would you believe Cassirer: "The question of the origin of lan- guage is indissolubly interwoven with that of the origin of myth; that one can be raised only in relation to the other.") Man is an incessant namer whose labels provide the requisite symbolic handles for gripping and manip- ulating reality. Ever since his dramatic Edenic debut, not only has man sought to bring every "living creature" within his ver- bal grasp, he has repeatedly at- tempted to chart his very hopes and aspirations. The charts men draw with their limber tongues, as they peer so unknowingly unknowing through the dim dusty windows of their senses are most often only pro- jections of their inner feelings rather than adequate or accurate verbal sketches of the really real. These tongue-twisted distortions and obliterations of reality are frequently marketed as authentic maps of man's tomorrows into which others are fervently ad- monished to move, only to dis- cover that they had been prompted by a myth to seek a territory which did not exist other than in the "myther's" own head. In no other realm is language so continuously pressed into maps of tomorrow; no other realm is so fraught with mystery or so fertile with myths as man's religions. (Or would you again believe Cassirer: "In the devel- opment of human culture we cannot fix a point where myth ends or religion begins. In the whole course of man's history, religion remains indissolubly connected and penetrated with mythical elements.") Mythery impregnated by mystery gives birth to man's gods. We often turn to nature, the silent wordless world, for the locus of our theological argu- ments, for clues of the great In- visible, for analogies of the be- yond nature—the supernatural. It comes as a shock to many to discover that we have no words for the supernatural. All of the words for the discussion of this realm are necessarily borrowed by analogy from our words with referents in nature, in the socio- political realm, or in the realm of the symbolics—words about words. Any theologian who professes to talk to man about God must be wary of taking his analogies too literally and his meanings too lightly. He must carry his search for meanings to the limits, push- ing to the borders of the inef- fable, scrutinizing the anthro- Karen Johnson, sophomore secretarial science major, will be permitted to sit up within two weeks, said doctors at the St. Francis Hospital in Wichita, Kansas. Karen's back was broken in a car accident during Christmas vacation. Attending physicians were elated over her latest x- rays, on which they based the rapid progress report. Bessie Hardcastle, also injured slightly in the accident, returned to Union the first week in Jan- uary. Bessie's mother, who was driv- ing at the time of the accident, is recovering well at the home of Bessie's sister in Winfield, Kan- sas. Mrs. Hardcastle had received severe head lacerations. Karen, the most seriously in- jured of the three, was para- lyzed from the waist down as a result of the back injury. pomorphic contraband which is so frequently freighted, through the vehicles of language, into the realm of the supernatural, there to be moulded into gods that bear the unmistakable image of man. History's graveyards are crowded with man-made gods. In the myriad contemporary voices that call themselves religious can be heard the clang of human cargo ascending to the nimbic regions where new gods are ever in the making. Much Biblical cosmology and theology is metaphoric and al- ways lurking around the meta- phor is the haunting spector of the myth. (Or would you believe Muller: "Whenever any word, that was first used metaphoric- ally, is used without a clear con- ception of the steps that led from its original to its metaphorical meaning, there is danger of mythology." Tenuous indeed is the reach toward the supernat- ural when a Biblical metaphor is used analogically. In this verbal Although she now experiences occasional sharp leg pains, she has not regained movement or significant feeling in her legs as yet. Her friends say Karen is in "excellent spirits" and has "a lot of faith that God will heal her." Karen expressed her apprecia- tion for prayers offered in her behalf, and for the cards, pack- ages, and flowers she has re- ceived. She would greatly enjoy hear- ing from her Lincoln friends, says Bob Wills, her fiance, since she will be confined to the hos- pital for at least three more months. girls out until 9:30 on Friday evenings As a result of the revised Fri- day evening program schedule, the Student Affairs Committee voted on January 16 to permit Rees Hall girls to be out of the dorm until 9:30 p.m. on Friday evenings. Miss Hilda Fern Remley, dean of women, announced the regula- tion on February 3, explaining that girls who attend Sabbath School teachers meetings, For- eign Missions Band, or other evening meetings should plan to have their activities over by 9:30. Although her statement im- plied that only girls attending the meetings mentioned may be out until 9:30, the action taken by the Student Affairs Commit- tee permits all girls to be out of the dorm until 9:30 on Friday nights. ministerial banquet tomorrow night The Ministerial Club banquet will be held Saturday evening, February 7, in the Rees Hall club room. The banquet is open to all religion and theology majors and their dates. For further informa- tion, contact either Ron Doss or Grant Nelson, president and vice-president, respectively, of the Ministerial Club. tower of babel, built analogy atop analogy, the trite is elevated as the true and worshipped as the ultimate. In the authentic encounter with God we must part company with words in a radical amaze- ment that evokes an inner re- sponse of awe and reverence— mysterium tremendum. We lisp when we should be listening to the silent soundless mystery which accords transcedent mas- tery over the savant's sonorous myths. (Or would you believe we know so much about God we don't so much as even know God; we talk so much about God that God can't so much as even talk to us; we hear so little that is so and say so much that is not, that so much of our gospel is just so much gossip?). Arthur Hauck, Chairman, Communications Department For the purists. . .7,000 ft. Terry Peak in the beautiful Black Hills. Modern chair lifts, complete ski rental, deep snows November to April, beginner to expert slopes. For the swingers. . . great after-ski fun in historic Lead and Deadwood. New condominiums at Mpta I Travel Director C-ie J I SOUTH DAKOTA HIGHWAYS J ' Pierre, South Dakota 57501 | Send ski and travel information | I ,0 I I NAME I | ADDRESS | | CITY | ! STATE ZIP students help with clinic The Union College Temperance Club, Evangelism class, and Lin- coln's SDA churches are sponsor- ing a stop-smoking clinic for fac- ulty and students at the Univer- sity of Nebraska. The clinic will be held February 8-12 from 7-9 pjn. in the Love Memorial Li- brary on the university campus. Faculty and students partic- ipating from Union are Elder Bill Jamerson, coordinator; Mr. Ced- ric Ward, Temperance Club spon- sor; Becky Jones, designer of the stop-smoking handbill used at the university; Debbie Baugher, Connie Jo Gerst, Beckie Jones, Joy Young, Linda Welch, Marcia Franklin, and Julie Blom, host- esses, and Ervin Furne, host. Pastor Dennis Meyers, from the Piedmont Park SDA church, who is in charge of public relations, is a participating member of the clinic. Elder Ed Christian, from Porter Memorial Hospital in Den- ver, will lead out in the program. Interest for the stop-smoking clinic was expressed following a demonstration given at the uni- versity by Ervin Furne with Smoking Sam and an article about Furne in the newspaper. A committee was then organized to plan a stop-smoking clinic in the interest of those who had in- quired. "STAIRCASE" AUDITIONS — Dick Barron, properties and staging manager, confers with director Mike Con- ditt during Tuesday night's auditions for the play "Up the Down Staircase." The play is tentatively scheduled to be performed on April 25. Conditt estimates that 35 people took part in the auditions. girl hurt in accident making rapid progress 6 THE CLOCK TOWER February 13, 1970 Sheridan Conoco Pickup ond Delivery Firestone Tires — Botteries 33rd ond Sheridan 488-9943 Kedrick's Body & Paint Kedrick (Kenny) Young 4820 Rent-Worth Drive 1 Block So. Hiway 2 on So. 48th Lincoln, Nebraska Clemenson leads Coy to 58-52 "A" league win In last week's only "A" League action Phil Coy's team topped Kerr 58-52. Balanced scoring and strong defensive rebounding by John Clemenson and John Thomson were the key factors as Coy evened his record at 2 wins and 2 losses. Clemenson also led the winners in scoring with 18 points, while Brodersen rally stops Leonhardt Brodersen's team came back in the closing minutes to drop Leonhardt 48-46 in "B" League play last week. It was Brodersen's second win over Leonhardt's team, which has not lost to any other league opponent. Captain Gary Brodersen sparked his team offensively with an 11-point performance, while sharp-shooting Steve Staf- ford added 10 points to a bal- anced offensive effort. Ron Prowant had the hot hand for Leonhardt's team, shooting in 20 points to lead the attack. Gary Roberts was the only other man to reach double figures, as he garnered 10 points. Leonhardt held an eight-point lead with two and a half minutes to play, but fell apart in the clos- ing moments in the face of a strong Brodersen rally. The loss dropped Leonhardt to 3-2 for the season, while Brodersen's team reached the .500 mark at 2-2. Dave Demchuk added 11. Every member of the team scored at least once during the game, as an outstanding team effort com- pensated for captain Phil Coy's absence. Kerr's team was hurt by cold shooting and a lack of depth. The team only had five men in action, as the starters went all the way. Kerr led his team in scoring, putting 17 points on the board, and Larry Skinner was able to shoot in 12 tallies. The loss kept Kerr in the "A" League cellar, as his team now stands 0-3. Larson pulls into tie for"(" league lead Bob Larson's team avenged an earlier defeat last week by knocking off Randy Hieb's "C" League squad 43-38. It was Hieb's first loss of the season, and drop- ped them into a tie with Larson for the league leadership. Larson's team got a fast start, and at one point led by 11 points. Hieb refused to quit, but could never make up the difference. Captain Bob Larson scored 21 points to lead his team to the victory James Aulick, with 15 points, led Hieb's attack in a losing cause. Hieb was unable to gen- erate a consistent offensive thrust, and found his team plagued with foul trouble. students coming for band clinic next week One hundred academy stu- dents will arrive on campus Feb- ruary 12 for the biennial Band Clinic Festival. During their three-day stay participants will attend intensive rehearsal ses- sions and will perform twice. The clinics will be directed as follows: Low brass, Mr. Archie Devitt of Campion Academy; high brass, Mr. William Baker of Platte Valley Academy; wood- wind, Mr. Dan Shultz of Union College. Three Union College stu- dents will direct the percussion clinic. They are Carla Hanson, Bill Chunestudy, and Sam Cole. In addition to a short sacred concert at the Friday evening vesper service, the Festival Band will play a full concert on Satur- day evening featuring the Un- ionaires. This is the eleventh year of al- ternating band and choral clin- ics. The participating students are first nominated by the acad- emy music directors. Mr. Shultz then makes the final selections from the nominees. Academies with an enrollment of less than 150 students are allowed eight participants; those with an en- rollment of over 150 students are allowed a maximum of fifteen. According to Mr. Shultz, "The purpose of the clinic is to chal- lenge and inspire talented stu- dents in each of the academies served by Union College." WANTED Youth Tolent for Recording Socred Music for CHAPEL RECORDS Groups • Trios • Soloists Instrumentol • Original music New sounds Send in an audition tape with 4 songs to CHAPEL RECORDS 1350 Villa Street, Mountain View, Cali- fornia 94040. Here is an opportun- ity to earn $$$ to further your ed- ucation. We ore interested in music FOR young people BY young people. If you are accepted, CHAPEL REC- ORDS takes care of all recording costs. Send us your tape scon! 144 £ I varieties I ^^ of pastries s^sS • World's Best Coffee WiSter DorujuL" OPEN 24 HOURS A DAY 7 DAYS A WEEK 488-9926 5121 '0' STREET Flowers for "HER" For Valentine's Day Come in and see the many Valentine suggestions we have Burton's Flowers 3903 So. 48th 488-2487 JOHNSON'S APC0 APCO Come in and get acquainted with us See us for your Winter needs: Snow Tires — Apco Anti-Freeie as low as $1.50 per gallon. JOHNSON'S APCO OIL CO. Phone 488-9994 2510 So. 48th HELP WANTED Wanted: Experienced of inexperienced workers — Students, Faculty, Staff, Friends, Insiders, Outsiders, or just Anyone. Only Qualification: Must have ambition to see project completed. SEE: Bob Rosenthal, Rich Barron, Don James, Gail Page, or Becky Jones for additional information. HELP! HELP! | STANDINGS | "A" LEAGUE W L GB Lockert 2 0 - Flemmer 2 1 y2 Coy 2 2 i Kerr 0 3 2 y2 Score Coy 58, Kerr 52 Schedule Feb. 9—Coy vs. Flemmer 10—Faculty vs. Kerr 11—Kerr vs. Lockert «B" LEAGUE W L GB Burishkin 2 1 Leonhardt 3 2 Brodersen 2 2 y2 Chinchurreta 0 2 11/2 Score Brodersen 48, Leonhardt 46 Schedule Feb. 8—Brodersen vs. Chinch'ta 12—Leonhardt vs. Burishkin "C" LEAGUE W L GB R. Hieb 2 1 Larson 2 1 B. Hieb 1 2 1 Wills 0 1 1 Score Larson 43, R. Hieb 38 Schedule Feb. 8—R. Hieb vs. Wills 12—Larson vs. Wills Phil Smith hits o crucial left-hand layup in the closing minutes of Wed- nesday night's "A" league game. Gordon Gates waits to be sure the shot goes in. "For Your Snacks" Pop Corn—Pop Corn BalU Cheese Corn—Caramel Corn Caramel Applef lea Cream—Cold Drinks CLIFTON'S CORN CRIB 1150 No. 48th St. MORLEY'S Across from Campus Fabrics Notions — Hose Greeting Cards Ready-to-Wear Footwear Open Sunday and Evenings Are you ready for the winter months ahead? If not, we offer guaranteed protection till May 20th, 1970, Flush entire cool- ing system, check hoses and themostat and fill with ATLAS Permaguard Anti Freeze. Reece Standard Service 48th & Colvert Phone 488-9877