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St u dent Pu b I i ca t i on

VOL. XXUI, Number 11

Friday, October 15, 1976

esearch overwhelms Farrelly

ook depicts D~yton's history Barbu Mackey

according to Farrelly.

poem, a book and a bicenten1 project have brought UD glish professor James P. relly "into the involvement of ,yton." rrelly and the Junior League ayton, have compiled a book itled, "Dayton: A History in tographs."

of putting this book together became overwhelming," Farrelly said. "Though the book was researched well (the League collected approximately 1,000 photographs for use in the book), it had no direction. This was in April, 1976."

ctually I got involved in the ting through my wife bara," Farrelly said. "She is a ber of the Junior League, a -profit women's organiza." The preparation of the k, which was to be the Junior guc's Bicentennial project, ted in September of 1975,

Farrelly explained that his wife became heavily involved with the book's production at this time and it was her idea to use a river as the theme.

"THE TECHNICALITIES

"I wrote a poem, 'Riverchild', outlining the history of Dayton, as an introduction to the book," he said. "Then I got involved in

writing copy for the rest of the book. Diane DeWall (chairwoman of the book's research and copy committee), Barbara and I did most of the copy writing." "Dayton: A History in Photographs" is 150 pages long containing over 300 photographs with captions and historical information. Ten thousand copies were printed and put on sale in Dayton bookstores earlier this month. AS FAR AS I know," Farrelly said, "9,200 of the 10,000 copies have been bought or given away as complimentary gifts to Dayton's libraries and schools. I don't know if they will print any more."

ail order swindle explored: ly 'company' makes profit ill Higgins

caption reads, "Make $250 stuffing 1,000 envelopes. $1 for details." legitimacy of this state-

ment is quest.ionable for it is nothing more than a chain letter, passed from one unsuspecting dupe to the next. One student gave credible

yground art?

ulpture appears all, pyramid-like sculpture ed on the library lawn the Performing and Visual building about a week ago. me, this sculpture might ble a science-fiction spaceo others, it might be a piece odern playground equipHowever, the work was ly placed there by Terry f the Fine Arts dept. Regulenski, presently an ecture student at Ohio University, constructed sign in 1973 for a class t by Roger Sayre at the iving Arts Center. Hitt, ·as connected with the used the sculpture ard for displays and as a for drawing exercises. R THE sculpture had d its teaching uses, Hitt to relocate the piece on •n instead of throwing it

design and space and possesses an inner intent and order. He added that the viewer first notices the triangular planes, pyramid shape and strong diagonal upward movement of the sculpture. The viewer is then awakened to the space around the object, and feels its strong sense of weight, like that of a pyramid, he said. Hitt hopes the students and staff at UD will benefit aesthetically from the sculpture's presence. He has, however, another motive for displaying the sculpture outdoors. HIS INTERESTS lie in seeing if the work will survive, and be respected for its aesthetic qualities, or be painted and defaced. If the object is treated well and respected for its own merits, maybe there will be an opportunity for more impromptu art appearances, Hitt said.

account of her correspondence with the "company" and showed what she received in the mail for her money. PART OF THE swindle occurs when a person mails in $1 expecting envelopes to stuff by return mail. Or she might be led to believe she will receive a list of companies to write to which offers this employment. Actually a Jetter is exchanged for the $1 sent in, but still there are no envelopes to stuff. Instead, there is another request for money. The returned letter does nothing more than to reiterate the offer, only this time it offers a "business manual" for the price (Continued on page 3)

JAMES FARRELLY

•tw- ..._.,.,........,.

New mini-courses to begin soon mink....- which 1taort1,. IOOII 1. Clvhtlan vai... and ,..,,llyUf9 OneCreclt....,. 10/19 2. Psy,ct-,.lyslsandPerson,lltyT'-'f OneCreclt ....... 10/21 3. Swahlll I One Creclt ..... 10/1' 4. You In the Univ.shy '/, Creclt ...... 10/:IO For,,_.. Info. 11w1lo,, on tt.ae , _ off9rtngo, 11ap 1,y ICU :1116. the mink- ofllcar call 229-2347,

Four -

Security report There was an attempted rape on Alberta Street, Oct. 11 at about 10:40 p.m., according to Gary Scheckelhoff, assistant director of Campus Security. The male reportedly tried to force a woman into the Frank Z car dealership parking lot. The female screamed, and the male then fled, Scheckelhoff said. In another incident, bicycles were stolen from the Stuart Hall bike racks early in Sept., according to Campus Security reports. The two victims of the theft told a reporter that they did not report the theft until they discovered a Security report was needed for insurance purposes.

One bike, stolen Sept. 3 or 4, was a blue 10-speed St'hwinn, valued at $90. The 9ther, a 10speed AMF, was stolen at about the same time, Schecklehoff sairl. In another theft report, books and a brief case, worth $152, were stolen from the KU dining room's book rack, Scheckelhoff said. Scheckelhoff will be elevated to acting Campus Security Chief on Oct. 25, when the present chief, Timothy Fenlon, officially re signs to take a similar post in Florida. While there is no word on a permanent chief, Scheck!'!· hoff expects to remain in the temporary post at least through January.

Kepone destroyed safely

Scientists research poison By Barbara Fraser

Two scientists at the UD Research Institute have developed a laboratory process for destroying Kepone, a widely publicized, toxic pesticide. Don Duvall, a chemist, and Wayne A. Rubey, an engineer, have been researching the problem of the safe destruction of pesticides for a year and a half, funded by a grant from the Federal Environment Protection Agency (EPA). The successful destruction of the poison under carefully controlled laboratory conditions is intended to lead to the development of a large-scale technique for destroying Kepone. THE TWO YEAR grant from EPA was to fund ~an objective look at pesticides to determine bow they can be des royed," according to Duvall He explained that. through the yars, the use of pesticides has beco:ne more wide_pread. but many people neither recognized their dangers nor were concerned about proper destruction

of the toxic materials. As a result, large amounts of various pesticides, especially DDT, are in storage now, until a way is found to destroy them without harming human health or the environment. The task which he and Rubey faced, Duvall said, was to "develop a laboratory technique to thermally destroy pesticides." ~ITIALLY, THEY HAD not planned to concentrate on Kepone in the study, which included DDT and Mirex, a pesticide widely used in the south to control fire ants. But several months after they began the research, a Kepone problem broke out in Hopewell, Va. Kepone, an ingredient in poisons for banana and potato pests, like ants and roaches, was manufactured by Allied Chemical Corporation and a suocontractor. Life -cience Products Co:npany, in Hopewell Va. Toe production of the c ,emical was topped ii:; July. 19'i5, after abou Lile Spence employees developed oenous d" ders

symptomatic of Kepom: p week, the UD occ •r t am worhd on funda mental uch as pos1t1onal play, trapping and pa ing. Th • Fly r lo t to Brockport tatc la t W dne day, 4-J, and r •boundl•d to hut out Wittenhng, 2 O. on Tur. day. Dayton is portrn, a 2 rcl'ord, having lost to two nationally-ranked teams. But thi i what Richard son con'lidl'r a passing grade. "W,•'r,• too complace nt," said Hichardson. "Wp're not getting u p, wc' r • playi ng without enthu· fa rn . W,• wa it for t hings to happl'n to u , wc•' re not making thPrn h,t pJH' n for us." I Jon't gPt t he wrong impression. Hirh nrd on is pleased with his tPa rn ,ind proud of its accomplt hrru·n ts to date. "We've got n 1•x 1·1·l1Pnt ball cl ub," he said. "I'm j ust look ing for more perf1•1·t ion ," '1'111· ar1•a tha t Richardson wants mostly to JH'rfoct is execution. "I ,•an rna r h them all week," he

T he same de fe nse t hat was lackin g in t he Brockport game was "superb" against Witte nber g, according to Richardson. J oe Ruffo lo scored on a pass from Tom Wonje, and Rohrbach scor ed t he second goal on an indir ect kick which was the "result of proper execution and excellent posit ional play." Richardson a t tributes Dayton's inconsistency to the team's problems in switching from offense to defense. UD plays a slow, passive, short-passing, Poor execution on defens e 'support the ball' type of offense, allowed t hree late first half goals and a hustling, body-cracking in the Brockpor t game. The style of defense. The player s contest was scoreless for t he first have been having troubl e making 39 minutes, but BSU scored t he Dr. Jekyll-Mr. Hyde type of three ti mes in t he last six transition . minutes of t he first half. "Only hard work in practice will The fi rst t wo goals came on help us in that area," said cor ner kicks. A defensi ve break- Richardson. And that is what t he dow n allowed an open man to Flyers have been doing all week. head a corner kick towards t he Whether or not it pays off will net. It was part ially stopped, but show when Dayton takes on rolled just over t he line, at 38:54. much improved Cincinnati at Poor marking on t he nest corner 2:00 tomor row afternoon at kick made it 2-0 Brockport at Baujan Stadium. 40:35. Wit h just t hree seconds left in t he hall , a Dayton defen seman fa nned on a clearing attempt, a nd t he ball bounced off the goal post a nd went in. Dayton played BSU even Today is t h.e deadline to sign up during t he second half, Jerry for men's and women's racquetPett r egistering a UD's only goal ball. The organization meeting is on a n assist from Bob Rohrbach. Tuesday at 4 p.m. in the PAC Bu t t he Flyers never recovered classroom. fr om t heir six minute lapse in the Entries are being accepted for first half.

aid, "but when game ti me comes I can't go out and kick t he balls for them. I can't make t heir runs for them; we'r e just not executing prope rly ." The last two games wer e a good example of why Richardson emAgains t pha izes execution. Brockport, due to poor execution, Dayton scored only once. But executing well on t he exact same plays and sit ua tions, Dayton scored t wice against Witten ber g, a nd won t he game.

Zips Zap UD, 27-6; Flyers take