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59th Year, No. 12 . WASHINGTON. D.C. Friday, December 1, 1978

"",\>,.." GUPS Officer Charged ,OJ ", jJ¢J,,1I'" In Auto Assault case By Greg Kitsock & Mary Cowhey taken into custody with bail set at unable to speak or walk because of his A Georgetown University security $2,000. After posting bond, he was re­ injuries. She said she felt it was unfair '/','" ,,' ; ,:;'~,' officer has been charged with auto leased. that Brown should be suspended when ~"', ''l:.' assault for allegedly trying to run down Both guards involved in the incident he was the victim of the crime, and was one of his subordinates after the two ~, have been suspended from their duties, worried how he would surport his ,- had gotten into a work-related argu­ and fired after completion of a ten day family when he has no other ~ourcc of ment. "intensive" GUPS investigation, stated income. According to the report filed with the Security Director Charles Lamb lII. Lamb. however, termed the incident Metro Police, the incident took place at The Metro police report gave the "an open and shut. comrleted case" in 3:10 pm November 18. in the parking lot following account of the incident. At which "guilt wa, found on hot h sides." outside O·Gara. 3:00 p.m. on November 18. the two Cleora Gilchrist, the guard recently The injured guard, identified as guards got into a fight inside the O'Gara fired from G UPS for reasons she terms Anthony Brown, suffered mouth, leg building and had to be separated by co­ unfair (see story below), told The and neck injuries and was taken to workers. HOYA she had worked as Longshore\ Georgetown University Hospital, treat­ The defendant then went outside and partner and described him as a "vcry ed and released. His condition was list­ got in his car, a blue 1970 Mercury nasty man who tried to belittle ed in the police report as "not serious," Cougar. When the complainant everyone." The alleged assailant's name was not emerged from the building, he stepped Other sccurity guards remembered given in the report, but he was identi­ on the accelerator, squealed his tires and Longshore as a "cool guy" and ,aid they fied by Security employees as Sgt. were surprised by the incident. Lamb Lloyd Longshore, a GUPS employee said that Longshore was "fairly de­ for the past eight years. Longshore was pendable" and had no record of quar­ reling with other guards. Longshore could not be contacted by . Security officials report Intercultural Center Construction Proposed for 1979 that he has decided to make no com­ by Michelle McCarthy modern with a lot of light and space, it the international nature of the school." time is to create housing for its stu­ ments on the incident at the advice or his The proposed starting date for con­ should fit in quite nicley with the rest of The building, which will have a total dents, so rather than sell East Campus. attorney. struction of the GU Intercultural Cen­ the campus," he continued. of six stories-four above ground, one Nevils will be converted into a dormi­ The auto a~,ault mark~ the fourth ter has been targetted for late next sum­ In addition, the building will be com­ ground level, and one below-will tory when the move is completed," time in rcccnt vcars tha t (j U Security mer with completion hoped for the fall pletely solar heated in an effort to keep encompass 150,000 square feet and Krogh concluded. employee, hav~ hecn implicated in ~er;- of 1981, according to Intercultural Cen­ maintenance costs to a minimum. include faculty and administrative GUS enmc. ter Planning Committee (ICCPC) Dean Krogh claims that the Intercul­ offices, classrooms, and multi-purpose Rumors that a "North-South Center" In JaTluarv 1973. a Pinkerton 1!lIard Chairman and School of Foreign Ser­ tural Center will fill two important rooms designed for the arts. As Dean dividing cultures into hemispherical fatally ,hot hi~ \upcrvi,or after th'c two vice Dean Peter Krogh. voids at Georgetown: the necessity of Krogh commented, "There is a general segments will be part of the proposed had gotten intll an a rgu mcnt olcr The Center, slated to be built on the intertwining the international aspects of agreement that this is a building that's Intercultural Center are completely ~chedulillg. hillside and parking lot between the University, and the desperate need needed by the neediest-the occupants unfounded. Charles Lamb In Ja nuary. 1974. (j U PS Officer .J ohn Copley and Reiss Science Building, will for spacce by students and faculty alike. of Nevils." headed in Brown's direction, striking M. Myrick wa, chargcd with grand cost an estimated fourteen to fifteen "Georgetown's campus is really down Besides housing the SFS and School "I've heard talk about the North­ him with the left front fender. larceny for allcgedly ,tcaling articles million dollars. Approximately eight at the heels with regard to its campus of Languages & Linguistics, the ICC South Center, but at the present time it's A third guard, identified by GUPS from various campu, locatinns. million dollars of this will be in the form facilities when compared with the uni- will include space for the Graduate not a reality for Georgetown," Krogh sources as Officer Gregory Garret, and In October, 1974. two security of Federal grants, while another four School, the Office of International Pro­ explained. "We have a firm program several students were on hand as wit­ guard~ - Sgt. Fletcher Palmer and million will be covered by Federal grams, the School of Summer and Con­ designed for the ICC, and any other nesses. Officer J uhnny Mile,· were charged loans. The remaining amount will be ~ tinuing Education, the Government, occupants will have to bring their own When contacted bv The HOY A, with arson for allegedly ,citing off two privately raised from individuals who' .g History, and Economics departments, brick and mortar money." - Brown's wife Maxine ~aid he was ,till Molotol- cocktails in :\cw South. "want to associate themselves with the ~. the Interdisciplinary Graduate Pro­ construction of this building," said ~ grams, the language departments, the Krogh. a American Language Institute, the Ex-GUPS Guard Charges Discrimination The ICCPC has been working ~ English as A Foreign Language Pro­ steadily on the plans for the project gram, and a Humanities department. By Greg Kitsock & Mary Cowhey checking up was never donc with male her complaint. Gilchri,t alleges. since last April in an effort to have the There will also be a language lab, stu­ A female Georgetown security guard employees on probation. The ex-guard said one factor in her final plan ready for presentation to the dent and faculty lounges, a 400 seat has alleged she was unfairly fired by G U According to Gilchrist, associate firing may have hecn an incident at Board of Directors this January. auditorium, and the Vice President for Protective Services during her sixty day Director of Protective Serviccs Law­ Catholic Univer,ity two years ago. in "!t's going to be an exciting build­ Academics Affairs and Provost's office. probation period and says she is con­ rence Lorch said GUPS was unhappy which she ,ued her former cmpl(}yer~ ing," Krogh declared. It's designed to Peter Krogh In addition, the builders also plan to sidering taking legal action against that she had given a bad check to the there for ,ex di~crirnination. She later nestle into the hillside and follow the versities with which it wants to com­ take advantage of a natural amphi­ GUPS. University'S traffic dep't. droprcd the ,uit after seektng employ­ natural contours of the land, so it will pete," Krogh explained. "Our greatest theater present in that part of the hill­ Christine Benagh, the guard's legal The check, for $10, was used ro ment elsewhere. slope like a pyramid. It will pick up cer­ constraint in the development of pro­ side and construct terraced seating that representative, said that if an accom­ purchase a parking decal. Gilchri,t said Lamb claims he never knew about tain architectural aspects from Healy grams is the lack of space-of attrac­ would make the area suitable for out­ modation cannot be worked out with that shortly afterward, she told an Gilchri~t\ law~uit. a, it wa~ not men­ and Copley, as well as the colors and tive space, and we feel that this building door entertainment. Security, she would file a sex discrimi­ employee in the traffic department the tioned in the reference Catholic Uni­ general thrust of the buildings around will make the most attractive use "It is generally believed that George­ nation complaint with the DC Office of check might bounce and gave her S10 in versity Security DIrector William i\:ork it, so that even though it will be very possible of that land while it upgrades town's best investment at the present Human Rights. cash. When after three weeks the check gav!, her. Lamb added. however. that he Security officials claimed the guard, had not returned, Gilchrist asked for would have thought twice about hiring Cleora Gilchrist, was fired because she her money back, but told the traffic Gilchrist If he'd known about the law­ GU COpeS With Sky-Rocketing was undependable and "her perfor­ department employee to contact her if suit. Added Lorch: "You don't go mance was just not what we wanted." there should be any trouble with the looking for trouble." They denied any racial or sex discrimi­ check. Gilchrist, was hired bv GUPS in mid­ nation was involved. Said Security According to Gilchrist, the check October, although Lan;b said she only Malpractice Insurance Rates Director Charles Lamb: "I'd give no came bad 'In Thursday, Nov. 16 or the worked seven full dav" said she was in buying the excess insurance. George "Another reason for high premiums credence to anything she says." next day, and she was informed of her told bv securitv offi~ials thev didn't by Celeste Walsh Washington University Hospital is ex- is that the courts and jurors are more Gilchrist was dismissed Friday, dismissal on the evening of the seven­ have t~ gIve he~ an official re;son for While the sky-rocketing cost of mal­ pected to enter into the trust soon. liberal, in the size of awards. Million November 17 after failing to show up teenth. her termination because she was still on practice leaves many private physicians Patients are charged an extra $30 per dollar settlements were unheard of for work for the day. She claims she Lorch said that if she had any diffi­ probation. and medical institutions reeling, day to help defray the cost of this "self- before the '70's; insurance companies phoned GUPS the night before to tell culty paying the SIO, she could have It is a GUPS policy that new Georgetown University Hospital has re­ insurance." Said O'Brien, "We get no just didn't project anticipated losses like them she would not be in because of an gone to him and arranged for the employees be paired with experienced cently installed a program of "self-in­ funds from the University. We have to those they were slapped with. The com­ appointment with her doctor. She amount to be deducted from her first guards for a 60 day probation period. surance" that reduces this cost and pro­ meet all expenses from income received panies were caught short: losses ex­ showed The HOYA a statement from paycheck. GUPS decides whether to hire the guard vides better coverage for hospital from the patients. The change to self- cceded premiums. They increased rates her doctor (Dr. Roscoe Young of Gilchrist said she protested her firing permanently on the basis of his or her employees, in the opinion of Charles M. protection was in the best interest of the 300-400% as a result," O'Brien said. Howard University), which she says to Security Chief Charles Lamb, who performance during this period. O'Brien, Hospital administrator. hospital and the patients. We share and Faced with the high premium prob- Security officials refused to accept. was "very nasty" and said she "wasn't Benagh said, however, that sex dis­ ,; "We're betting on ourselves to con­ GUPS officials told Gilchrist they going to get her job back." VP for crimination is forbidden as earlv as the ,'. they share in the benefits from it." lem of national proportion." the hospi- tinue our good record of care," he said, The cost of professional liability in- tal opted for this alternative insurance had phoned her during the day and she Planning and Physical Plant William hiring process. ~ explaining the hospital's new offensive. sura nee sky-rocketed in the early 1970's, policy last August. was not in. Gilchrist's la wyer alleges this Miller, Lamb's superior, refused to hear Continued on page 3 "Instead of using a commercial insur­ according to O'Brien. ance company, we now protect our own "The leader in the change of rates was losses from law suits and fund that California. While in some areas the amount ourselves. This primary trust is premiums rose quite fast, in California Pres. Healy Speaks About 'His' GU Students about $5 million. We use commercial major companies just pulled out; companies for the excess insurance doctors couldn't buy coverage even if Editor's note: Among the many, HOYA: What is the quality of the writ­ HEALY: Well, I haven't made the medi­ Then, there is a problem that every­ need." they could afford to. The increase in professors from whom Georgetown ing that you've seen? cal students write. But the major differ­ body has, medical students and under­ O'Brien added that to get extra pro­ rates hit D.C. in '76; our rate changed students had to choose this semester HEALY: It varies. It goes all the way ence between medical students and graduates alike, and that is the referen­ tection, G.U. Hospital and Howard from $400,000 a year to $3 million, and was a new name: University President from several students who are in the B+ undergraduates is that medical stu­ tial problem: the classics are not being University Hospital formed ajoint trust it was higher in '77." Timothy S. Healy, SJ. This week. to A range all the time to a couple who dents as a body really have no gears in used as much anvmore. In one of the HO YA Editor-in-chief Alan Fogg inter­ are in the D to F range. The basic faults their heads. I mean there is no first or poems I used the~e was the phrase 'the viewed Father Healy, who is teaching in writing are more overwriting than second or third gear; it's either on or it's hollow ships', which is straight out of poets John Donne and T.S. Eliot to a anything else: there are too many adjec­ off. When it's off it's limp and relaxed, Homer. I though everybody would Nevils As Dorm Soon group of undergraduates. Herewith are tives, too many abstract terms and and when its on it's on full. What I think recognize it, but nobody, literally .. : 'of some of this comments concerning initially, although this goes away very By Ivan Held analysis will start right away. Georgetown. and the English language. quickly, the use of mixed metaphors. A $3,43-million loan to convert the A master plan for the whole East HOYA: How did you decide to begin You know, you get phrases like h,,· Nevils Building from its present offices Campus has been formulated Price teaching again in addition to keeping 'someone set out to undermine his con­ .. ,.~ ,.,'". ',. "'. ('\ot and classrooms into a residential facil­ stated. This plan will be broken up into your administrative duties? cepts'. Well, the question is, how do you , • .i.!..' ity, has been "tacitlY" approved by the phases and executed as money becomes undermine a concept? How do you HEALY: I wanted to do it. I wanted to ' Department of Housing and Urban available, he continued. wait awhile, until I got some idea of the draw a sketch of a concept being under­ .""'--_ ..... Development, according to University Price stated that the University is cur~ impact of the job and the schedule. mined? Well, that stops pretty fast. But r Architect Dean Price. rently seeking funds to make up the dif­ Scheduling is a problem ... that's an easy fault, and most people can Work on the building cannot begin ference between the grant money and HOYA: How much time does it take up? catch if it if someone helps them. until all of the offices are out of it and the total amount needed. As to the total HEAL Y: Well, it takes two hours or so Overwriting is the big thing. The ' relocated in the Intercultural Center or cost of the project, he stated, "r would for the class, then usually about that or great example is' the puffery of writing, . r~ other new locations thus probably rather not give an estimate until a struc­ a little more to prepare the texts, and which you have around you and, by the delaying construction until May of tural survey is done and preliminary then the correcting takes a lot of time. way, is not the student's fault. The 1981, said Price. design is completed." That's the big one. I squeeze that in educational jargon, the TV jargon ... Price explained that "tacit" approval during dull periods; you know, The example I always like to cite is that means that HUD has approved the The actual changes in the building, frequently appointments will be when I was a student, in the pocket of loan, but because ofa backup in paper­ noted Price, include turning from an scheduled for one half-hour and only the airplane seat you'd see a bag and it work, it has not yet sent any official institutional appearance toward a resi­ run 10 or 15 minutes and I'll pull one or read 'vomit bag'. Well, it was very clear documentation of the loan approval. dential appearance. The exteriOF will be two out and correct them then. Which what that bag was for, but it then In addition, a portion of an $883,000 preserved; however the outside will be accounts for the rather brusque com­ became an air sickness bag and now it's energy grant loan awarded to GU from enhanced by the installation of new win­ ments, by the way. a motion discomfort receptacle. HUD can also be applied to the Nevils dows, cleaning up of the outside, and HOYA: What do you do about office Frankly, anybody who prints 'motion they have done through the undergrad­ nobody. recognized it. Maybe that was Building. additional lighting for security and hours? Do you ask them to make an discomfort receptacle' on a vomit bag uate years they've dropped the lower my mistake, but one of the real prob­ On the progress of the project, Price mood. appointment? deserves to go on everybody's fecal gears, which may not be a good thing. lems if you're talking about literature is reported: "We're about to hire a con­ "The Nevils Building will be a qual­ HEAL Y: That's right. I think anybody roster. . The undergrads are more varied; they having a common base from which to sultant to give us a survey on prelim­ ity facility when done, and a sophisti­ who wanted to see me has gotten to. The HOYA: Have you found a difference come from a wider set of backgrounds, proceed. In former days, you could at inary feasability analysis for the cated energy conservation project," ,ones that I have said 'come see me' have between the under grads and, say, the are more relaxed with the literary topic least count on the classics. approach to the project." He stated that stated Price. come. medical students you taught last year? and tend to do better with it. Page 2 The HOYA Friday, December 1, 1978 Newsbriefs. Med School Aids ·DC Studen~ By Greg Kitsock to gain access to the transcripts is ties, is to "share the holiday spirit; to schools and set up interviews. The first This year 11 new applicants were Four Jesuits Celebrate Graduate School Dean Donald bring the Georgetown community District of Columbia minority stu­ year the program was in operation, 70% accepted. Herzberg. Herzgerg told The HOYA together. dents motivated to become physicians, of the enrollees eventually got admitted Most GEMS students have partici­ Silver Jubilee last semester he was "confident the Gottfried explains that there are but lacking the science and math back­ into med schools across the country, pated in the Health Careers Program ground normally needed to get into the Four Georgetown Jesuits courts will uphold us in case of an "two exciting parts": one is a Middleton claimed. (the Med School would prefer that they celebrated their Silver Jubilees with appeal." planned surprise; the other is a tree Medical School, are being helped by Some graduates of the Health all do so, according to Middleton). a special ceremony in Dahlgren Kissinger had ordered the decorating contest. Various student two Georgetown University programs. Careers Program apply to GU undedhe Their performance in the program The first, the GU-DC Medical Den­ Chapel November 19. The Jesuit transcripts made for use by his groups are asked to decorate trees, GEMS program. GEMS students take determines to a large extent whether tal Health Careers Program, helps Community honored the combined immediate staff. Claiming the notes supplied by the Student Activities a reduced course load their first year, they will be admitted to GEMS. undergraduates from the District of 100 years of priesthood by Univer­ were his personal property, in 1976 Office," in any way they would like, consisting of a single basic science Although GEMS was set up Columbia prepare for MCAT's and course (biochemistry), community sity president Rev. Timothy he donated them to the Library of whatever is suitable, to that group," primarily to help DC residents, the Med s. apply to Med Schools. medicine and electives. Healy, S.J., Rev. John E. Bennett, Congress on the condition they be Gottfried continued. The trees will School has accepted applicants from The second, the Georgetown Experi­ If they pass their first year courses, Georgetown University Chaplain; withheld from the general public for then be judged and prizes will be other areas, including three Hispanics mental Medical Studies (GEMS) they are admitted as regular medical Rev. Richard A. McCormick of the 25 years or until five years after his awarded. from Puerto Rico. Most GEMS stu­ program, allows students with inade­ students. They matriculate in five years Kennedy Institute of Bioethics, and death. US District .Judge Lewis Music for the occassion will be dents are black, but this year one white quate math and science preparation to instead of four. Rev. Leo P. Monthan, the Medical Smith ruled last December 8 that the provided by various Georgetown was admitted to the program. take an extra year to complete the first Because of their special status the first School Chaplain. transcripts are official records of the musical groups performing Christ­ Despite efforts to attract more non­ Department of State and Kissinger mas carols. Refreshments wilI be two years of Med School at George­ year, GEMS students are ineligible for whites, minority enrollment at GU Med town. Majority of Class of 78 had no authority to remove them. provided by the International Stu­ many sources of financial aid other stu­ School has declined since it reached a dent Organization. Members of that The programs are helping George­ dents rely on. According to Middleton, peak of 69 in 74-75. According to a Eyes Job Market Entry Poll Reveals 85% Favor club will bake the traditional Christ­ town's Med School to attract more stu­ most manage 00 pay their $6,250 tui­ recent Medical School Bulletin, there Results of a survey of the Class of Elderly Aid Plan mas foods of their home countries. de~ts from a .minority applicant pool, tion (halfwhat a normal freshman pays) were 64 minority enrollees in 75-76 '78 reveal that 54% of that class which accordmg to Community Medi­ by taking out loans. They are also (comprising 8% of the total enroll­ intend to enter the job market on a The overwhelming majority (84.'%) Student Bill of Rights cine Research Assistant Ernie Middle­ eligible froln the start for the Physician ment), 63 in 76-77 (again, 8%), and 54 in full-time basis within one year of of the student respondents to a Student ton, is shrinking despite efforts to coun­ Shortage Area Scholarship program 77-78 (7%). ter the trend. graduation. A similar survey of last Government Communications survey GU offers. Middleton said this was a nation­ '''substantially support" a proposal to A student bilI of rights has been The Health Careers Program, begun This is the GEMS program's second wide trend and blamed it primarily on year's class cited a48% figure for this drafted by the Student Government same response. allow the elderly to audit Georgetown in 1975, accepts 30 undergrads (mostly year. Eight students were admitted in the lack of government funding for University classes. under the direction of Vice Presi­ juniors, and from the University of the 1977, all but one of whom are still here. minority programs. Director of the Center for Career dent of the Student Government, Planning and Placement, James 1. Results released this week reveal that District of Columbia) who take sum­ 341 of the 402 students polled thought Janet Torsney. mer courses in anatomy, biochemistry Briggs, attributes the change to an The document "defines the rights improvement in the job market, a the proposal introduced by student sen­ and other basic science courses. Fre­ ator Andrea Smith was desirable. and responsibilities of the student quent quizzes and review sessions are greater need to work full-time to here at Georgetown," said Torsney. finance later graduate study, plus an Twelve percent of the respondents said coupled with instruction in reading and that they thought a fee to cover The Bill deals with such issues as the stud y skills. increasing conviction by students stUdent's freedom of expression, that some full-time work experience bookkeeping costs should be charged to Most minority students applying to freedom from discril;nination, med school, Middleton noted, come is valuable before graduate study. the senior citizen students. A general trend towards agreement disciplinary procedures, and the from public schools not as well­ "Although the number of seniors rights and responsibilities of stu­ who eventually plan to go to grad­ on the benefits of the proposed program equipped as the ones white middle- and dent pUblications and media. upper-class applicants attend. As a uate or professional sc school is very lead to such favorable comments citing "interaction between senior citizens and Although past efforts to adopt a result, minorities score an average of 5 high (95.4%), more of them are post­ student Bill of Rights have failed, poning their plans for advanced students" and "sharing of perspectives" or 6 (out of a possible 15) on MCAT's, Torsney is optimistic that this draft while whites average an 8. study and looking for full-time as results of the program. will pass before the Student Senate. The community medicine employment," Briggs explained. The proposal, if accepted by the Uni­ versity, will allow elderly students to She stated, "It is not reactionary. administrator commented, however, Kissinger to Appeal audit unfull courses with the profes­ That has been a problem in the past. "There is no correlation between per­ sor's permission provided that they do We are looking for input and sup­ formance in basic sciences and per­ Transcript Ruling not constitute more than 10% of the port from the student body." formance as a physician. If you read University Professor of class's makeup. Under the current pro­ The statement will probably be well, if.you have a logical mind, you can Diplomacy Henry Kissinger will posal provisions these older students presented to the Student Life Policy get through Med Schoo!." + appeal a 1977 District Court ruling would not be charged for their partici­ Committee for approval December In addition to the summer courses that transcripts of phone calls he pation in the audited classes. 4, according to Torsney. and MCAT preparation, the program made while Secretary of State must also helps students apply to medical be turned over to the government, Christmas reported last Dance Marathon --JOHN SEXTON'S week. Student Activities A 24-hour Dance Marathon ex­ Kissinger attorney David Celebration Planned pected to net approximately $10,000 Spiraling medical costs have forced the medical center to institute its own mal­ Ginsburg was quoted as saying an is currently being planned by the LSA.T practice insurance policy. appeal will probably be made to the "Christmas Celebration" spon­ Community Action Coalition Supreme Court before the end of this sored by the Student Activities (CAC) for the weekend of March 30- GNA.T year. In the meantime, he will seek a Office, the Student Activities Com­ 31 of next spring. PREPARATION CENTER court order to prevent the State mittee, and University Center will The purpose of the marathon, ac­ for free brochure Help Wanted: Full or Part Time Department from screening the take place next Thursday at noon in cording to Mary Ann Halford, CAC and class schedule Apply in person: transcripts to determine which must Healy Basement. president, "is to provide the base for Lord & Taylor see Doug Kempf FEMALE Store Detectives be made public under the Freedom The purpose of this Christmas a scholarship which will benefit a 5255 Western Ave. of Information Act. party according to Debbie Gott­ Room 237 Copley needy District of Columbia Washington, D.C .. Among the parties who filed suit fried, Director of Student Activi- student." or call Experience Not Necessary 800-431 -1 038 toll free

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3328 M Street, N.W. 338·3472 OPEN 10-5 Monday-Friday It seems some Located on the 6th floor people will do anything of the Kober-Cogan Building to get out of paying for a call these days. They'll use someone "I really enjoy my life as an Army else's phone number. Someone Nurse. And the salary is super." else's credit card number. Even electronic devices. -CAPTAIN JOANNE HOPKINS . Sure, they may think it's just a little harmless fun. A "I think I have a lot more to men and women under the opportunity to take a leader­ , age of33, with BSN degrees. :prank. A way to beat the system. ship position here. I feel Every Army Nurse is an But, what it really is, is special being in the military." officer. Your pay is excellent, a crime. Stealing. If you'd and you like to join get 30 days . And that's serious enough Joanne Hop­ paid vacation . to le~d t~ an arrest. A stiff fine. A jail sentence kins in the each year. and cnminal record. Army Nurse And your Corps, here initial tour is The irony is, they still have to pay for all the are a few three years­ calls they made. . facts you just enough . So if you know people who are doing this, should know. I to try the \ please ask them. to stop. Or if you're one of them, Army nurs­ job on for ing is open size. please stop yourself. Because paying for your call now is a whole l~t easier than paying for it later. For more information about opportunities for Registered Nurses in the Army Nurse Corps, write Army Nurse Opportunities, HQ NERRC, Fort Meade, MD 20755. Or phone collect to 301-677-4891. @ C&P Telephone The Army Nurse Corps Friday, December 1,1978 THE HOYA Page 3 Blackout Darkens GU Campus CCNV to Reinstitute. Trinity Fast by Mary Cowhey explanation at 12:00 a.m. Saturday; darkened rooms. He estimated that by Mary Cowhey and intelligence-in your own nar­ members of Synder's backing met A power outage which left all build­ leaving herself and other Harbin resi­ only 5! of the students were on campus The pledge to begin a total fast. row self-serving interests." "Your with representatives of the Depart­ ings on Georgetown's central campus dents without electricity or heat until over the weekend. taking neither food nor water was decision is unacceptable to us. It is so ment of Interior and the Depart­ without electrical power for up to Saturday evening. "I was angry and Liberatore said that all campus Resi­ made by members of the Commun­ unacceptable that one or more of us ment of Human Resources this past twenty hours caught many students tried calling Security, Pepco, and Tom dence Hall Offices were notified on ity for Creative Non-Violence, is prepared to add our own bodies to Tuesday to make final announce­ staying over the holiday unawares this Ritz-no one knew why the power was Wednesday with "hand-delivered" (CCNY) Sunday, in an attempt to your list of victims." ment of the group's plans to occupy past Saturday. being turned off. If I had known of it, I deatils on the hours each building bring pressure to bear on Holy The letter concluded that "the fast the National YisitorCenterat Union would have found somewhere else to would be without power. However, at Trinity Parish (36th and 0 Streets) will continue until you modify your Station and operate a shelter for up Although Planning and Physical least one Resident Assistant who was Plant Director of Operations Ed stay." to alter the use of a $400,000 build­ plans in a way that reflects the reality to two to five thousand "street surprized by the power outage said that ing renovation fund. of human suffering and need and the people" during the colder winter Liberatore refer'red to the power failure Director of Residence Life Thomas she was unable to locate any message as a "scheduled outage" and stated that Ritz stated that the blackout caused "an A sub-group of the CCNY dictates of Christian responsibility." months on those premises. regarding the blackout when she announced their intention to follow One CCNY supporter of Synder, Fr. McSorley emphasized that the Residence Life Office had been embarassing situation, but it was not checked her RHO on Saturday morn­ under our control." Ritz said that he member Mitch Snyder in a total fast Michael Meehan, referred to fasting "We (the CCNY) are an arachistic informed at least one week prior to the ing. Thanksgiving vacation, several stu­ had heard November 17 of the sched­ beginning December 24, Christmas as "a very purifying experience, group. We have no unity, no organ­ The outage was necessary to com­ Eve. Synder had previously led more dents report that they received no not­ uled outage, but that he "didn't know which I don't connect with suicide." ization. All the members may use plete an agree-ment with an electrical than a dozen persons in a 40-day fast He added that the people of Holy our letterhead as they please," when ice of the outage until after the campus the day and time until the Wednesday contractor, according to Liberatore. was blacked out. before Thanksgiving." and vigil outside Holy Trinity Trinity "can keep him (Synder) from questioned as to the solidity of During the power shut off a third feeder Church whiCh ended September 26 fasting to the point where he dies." Synder's support in the Commun­ Zvenka Yojkavich reported that she Although Ritz said he is "sure it got was installed which "increased the elec- of this year. 1n separate, but related incidents, ity. was upset to learn Friday evening that pretty cool-but he didn't know of any- trical capacity at the South end of cam- The announcement of the fast sig­ power would be turned off with no one having to move out" of their pus by 50%. nals the development of a serious break between members of the Com­ munity concerning the moral issue of SLL Suspends Two . Pr()grams a total fast. Georgetown University by Jay Yogel The School of Languages and Lm- apphcatIOns agam With as short of a Professor Rev. Richard McSorley guistics Dean James E. Alatis wiII an- delay as pOSSible." S.l., another CCNY member and The decision to suspend admissions nounce the decision before the Council Students who are currently enrolled former roommate of Synder's has to the French and Russian doctorate next week. This action follows a meet- in French and Russian doctorate pro- informed Synder that unless he programs will be announced to the ing of University deans this Wednes- grams will be allowed to complete their retracts his threat of suicide, he will Georgetown Executive Council De­ day. programs of study at Georgetown. Re- publicly oppose Synder's stand. He cember 7, the HOYA learned yester­ While SLL officials refused to dis- portedly, all other language programs at one point compared Synder's day. close details regarding the action, Dean will contin.u~ as before. personality with that of Peoples Alatis confirmed that the French and The deCISIOn to suspend the French Temple cult leader Jim lones of Russian departments will not accept and Rll;ssi~n programs followed upon Guyana-"a charismatic, hypnotic any more PhD. applicants. !he explra~IOn ?f a o~e y~ar grace per- personality. " Sunday's announcement fol­ Robbery In James E. La Follette, Chairman of IOd on Umverslty action III the matter. the French Department, repeatedly ex- According to La Follette, the decline in lowed only weeks after a CCNY pressed the hope that the suspension the number of progra,nl participants statement addressed to the parish will be temporary when questioned by brought about the deCISIon. although which said, "You have chosen to use Members of the Community for Creative Non-Violence are once again protesting Henleville the HO Y A. "We hope to accomplish accreditors reports have cited deficien- your material resources-just as you the Holy Trinity parish's plans to renovate the Church and say they will begin the necessary changes in the program cies in several of the language and have chosen to use your time, energy, another fast on Christmas Eve. A female Georgetown student liv­ which will allow us to begin accepting linguistics doctoral programs in the ing in Henleville was the victim of a bizarre burglary that occurred at 7:00 Wednesday evening. The student lost a pocketbook containing $10 in cash. her room key Group Urg~; S. Africa Divestment IGliard Makes Charges I and ID cards. The burglar gained Contmued from page 1 Douglas Maxfield, was satisfied with entry to her ground-floor Henleville by John Brian Nilson divestment, our main goal; second, to The Coalition intends to concentrate Denying sex bias. Lamb said GUPS her work. apartment by smashing the bed­ educate the campus community as to its efforts in the spring semester, when it was definitely looking for female appli- . . room window and climbing inside, A petition urging the severance of issues in South Africa, and third, to will promote South African Liberation cants (there are only two women guards She also said that III the time she where the pocketbook lay on a desk. United States diplomatic ties with provide a forum for different groups Week, February 5-12, with films and on active duty at present). but said secu- ~orked ~ere, she was never gIVen any The victim told the HOY A that South Africa is currently being circu­ and individuals working on related speakers, possibly including Comedian rity is a tough field for women. They try mformatlOn on how to make an arre.st. when her roommate went upstairs to lated on campus by the Georgetown topics to exchange information and Dick Gregory and exiled South African to avoid evening and night shifts and what rules of conduct GU secunty investigate, she saw a man climbing Chapter of the National Coalition to help each other out." newspaper editor Donald Woods. The create scheduling problems. he claimed. !luards. are supposed to ?be~, a~d what out the window; she then screamed Support African Liberation, according This semester, the group has initiated chapter also plans to publicize the Gilchrist claims that prior to Novem- mfractIOns could result III dismissal. and ran back down. The girls called . to Jean Rogers, chapter president. a petition drive on campus, urging the South African connections of some cor­ ber 17, shc had never missed or been late Asked about training, Gilchrist Campus Security, which they said re­ The chapter, which was founded severance of U.S. diplomatic ties with porations which recruit G U students on for work. replied, "What training? You apply- sponded in less than five minutes. By November 1 this year, has been South Africa. For Thursday, Dec. 7, the campus. She added that her supervisor, Sgt. you get interviewed-·you get hired." that time, however, the burglar had conducting several drives aimed at en­ Coalition has invited Michael Morgan, fled. couraging the divestment of George­ a white South African army deserter, to The ,intruder, wasdescribedl as town University holdings in companies speak on atrocities committed by the a white male with dark hair and which do business in South Africa. Rev. white regime. He will appear at 5 pm in beard, wearing tan pants. He left be­ Richard McSorley S.]. has spoken Maguire IOlB. hind a sleeping bag outside the girls' before the group, and is soliciting window. faculty support for a letter to Pres. LOST: Puppy "Woofer", 5 mo. old. male SAXA "The scariest part about it is that it Timothy Healy S.J. urging such divest­ Springer Spaniel dog, brown and white, happened during the day, while we ment. Dr. Torn Ricks of the History wearing flea collar and choke collar. Friday, December 1 were in the room," the victim com­ Department has also endorsed the Please call 331-0186 or 452-1200 ext. 360. mented. "We're very aware of secur­ Coalition, said. Rogers. Tracy Hollingsworth SEC: Straw Dogs, 8 PM, LA-S. ity matters, and didn't do anything According to Rogers, "The GU 2271 Prospect St.. N.W. Washington, D.C. 20007 wrong, like leaving the door open." chapter has three goals: first, to push for Saturday, December 2 SEC: Straw Dogs, 8 PM, LA-6

"Musical Melee", an international disco sponsored by GU Intercultural Coalition. Beer and punch will be served. See you there! Marty's, New South.

Sunday, December 3 International Folk Dancing: 7-11 PM, in the Hall of Nations. Instruction for beginners from 7-8 PM. College Academic Council: Meeting, 7:30 PM, First floor lounge, New South Hall.

Tuesday, December 5 Ron Dellumns, Congressman from California will be lectur­ ing 8 PM in 103 Reiss Science. A wine and cheese reception preceding the lecture will be held at 7 PM, at the BSA House at 3619 0 Street, N.W. All are invited. CP&P: Informal discussion with counselors from CP&P about job hunting, career concerns, etc. Bring questions and brown bag! A Photographer will be at the Study Abroad Center to take passport photographs and machine sized photos from 1-5 PM December 4. Two color passport photos for $5.00. Four vending machine size black and white photos for $4.00.

Wednesday, December 6 CP&P: Models, singers, and actors and actresses: Half-hour interviews for interested students from 9-5 PM. Students ..... must sign up in advance for appointments with Mr. Joe Keat­ ing. Call x4071 or stop by 3rd Maguire . .. ..". Catholic Information Series: 5 PM in 220 Old North. All are welcome. Mid Day Arts Series: MULTIPLE RECITAL - A recital by pianists, vocalists instrumentalists who weren't able to fit into our other programs. 12:15 PM, Copley Formal Lounge. Wit's End: Coffeehouse, featuring Mary Blankemeir, 8:45-12 midnight. Program Room.

Thursday, .December 7 Messiah sing along with Paul Hill, Director of the George­ town University Chorus and other artists from the are. Singers and Instruments are welcome. Dahlgren Chapel, 4 PM. For information, call 625-3351. Page 4 The HOYA Friday, December 1,1978 editorials

\ 1Ce.~ .Founded January 14, 1920 .In-security Ad-Infinitum GU Protective Services is under fire from a properly. number of sources, including its own employees, and with good reason. This semes­ • GUPS' staff is overwhelmingly male, and ter we have witnessed the following to date: a female security guard was. recently fired under circumstances which warrant further • Ten rooms in New South were investigation. burglarized the second week in September. Part of the blame must go to the residents for • One guard was recently arrested for run­ leaving their doors unlocked. However, stu­ ning down another. We don't have enough dent security guards allowed the intruder to information to say who was in the right and enter without showing a valid ID, though sup­ who wasn't. However, an eight year veteran of posedly they are trained to demand identifica­ GUPS who has risen to the rank of seargent tion. hardly strikes us as the type of person who would commit auto assault on the spur of the • On September 20, a female Georgetown moment. ~ither the folks in charge of hiring student was accosted in a New North bath­ and promotion are remarkably bad judges of room, the first of two assaults to take place in character, or reports of constant bickering and the building in broad daylight. Unfortunate as quarreling within O'Gara are not without the incident was, it was compounded when basis in fact. Security Chief Charles Lamb refused to Lamb has criticized The HOYA for relying divulge exact information on the nature of the crime. Metro Police said a sexual assault was on anonymous sources for information. However, it's kind of hard to get sources to go reported. Security's official report contained. on the record when word has gotten around no such information. Lamb refused to let a HOYA reporter double check the blotter for that the boss will.fire anyone caught divulg­ ing information to the student press. that day, then blatantly lied to a different \\ reporter this past week when he claimed he had Individual student guards and officers have, never denied anyone access to the blotter. sometimes been pointed out as incompetent, but the ultimate blame for in-security at • A HOYA investigation last month Georgetown must rest squarely on the revealed that an outsider could easily obtain a shoulders of Lamb and his assistants. Palestinian Students' Allegations of /srae6 false GU ID with another student's name and I Two years ago, when a flurry of complaints social security number. GUPS now requires proof of identity. erupted against Residence Life, the Student Atrocities ·Answered by Jewish Student Life Policy Committee conducted a Univer­ sity-wide forum to examine the problem. The To the Editor: occupied territories of educational and its policies in the occupied lands are not • Associate Director Lawrence Lorch told Some thoughts after viewing the ta ble cultural opportunities." When a team of as horrendous as the Arabs want us to The HOYA a few weeks ago that all guards time has now come to do the same for George­ in front of Lauinger Library two weeks experts was finally sent to the West believe. here must undergo a mandatory forty hours town Security. We urge those in charge of ago, where students were pamphleteer­ Bank last year and made a report, it Everybody has agreed, there are no classroom training. Several security employees· GUPS, VP for Planning and Physical Plant ing for the rights of Palestinians: "seems to have substantially cleared easy solutions, but the attack on Israel To the Jewish mind, the idea of Israel of the charges again!lt it" For as the sole perpertrator of these injus­ have told The HOYA this is untrue. There are William Miller and VP for Administrative Ser­ oppression and injustice against any whatever dubious purposes, UNESCO tices is entirely without basis. In fact it guards at Georgetown who have not gone vices Daniel Altobello, to take note. people is a serious transgression of the General Director Amadou Mahtar indicates something which, as a Jew, I through the program, and are so ill-trained divine Commandments. Such acts in no M'Bow will not make the report public. shudder to think of. You know, someone could really get hun way reflect the aims of Zionism; indeed Apparently the report, while not Avraham ben-Shlomo they don't know how to make an arrest around here. they are in direct contradiction to the entirely vindicating Israel, shows that spiritual basis of the two thousand year old Zionist movement. Jews and Israelis regret deeply any injustices done to any people in the confusion and struggle for Hoyette Flies Off The Handle survival in the hostile environment Israel finds itself. Some students work­ At Airline Suitcase "Screw-up" ing at the table were quick to bring up In the Dark the "massacre" at Deir Yassin in 1948. Whatever really happened there, it has To the Editor: disadvantages, in my OpInIOn, is the been deeply mourned by Israelis. It has Without wishing to turn THE H OYA incredible inefficiency present. And the best time because so few people are on cam­ also been the subject of an in depth into an armchair travelogue journal, I although sloppiness is acceptable, if not Being "left in the dark" has never been any investigation by the Israeli Ministry of would like to make some comments on quaint, in family run organizations, fun, and for the students who stayed in their pus. Nevertheless, there are students who, Foreign Affairs, and they have South American travelling for any of ineptitude in corporations­ dorm rooms over the Thansgiving holiday the because of homework or because they live too attempted to bring the gUilty parties to you lucky souls who have passport in monopolies at that-is completely frus· unpublicized blackout affecting most areas of far away to go home, have to stay during the justice. the one hand, travellers checks in the trating. Students at the table said a other. One of the worst such offenders is the campus was no exception. shorter breaks. And if they had planned to "psychological reaction"· was the South America isafine place. Not yet Avianca Airlines, a private Colombian study or eat on campus on Saturday, they explanation for terrorist acts carried completely spoiled by tourism, every monopoly which has managed to screw Almost everybody has come to expect the would have been out of luck. out by the PLO. This frustration and country still has plenty of native cul­ me over twice in the short time I've been inconveniences, such as an overhaul or repair reaction, they claim, was the cause of ture, friendly people, gorgeous vistas, here. Anyone who has had two suit­ of facilities, that come with a complex electri­ In a sense, those students who were fortun­ the murder of 27 tourists, 21 of them and cheap prices. But one of its all time cases to last him/her through an entire ate enough to leave for the weekend were also Puerto Rican pilgrims, at Lod Airport year will understand what it is like to cal network. However, nobody should have to (May 1972); for the deaths of 52 school lose one of them before one even arrives expect the poor treatment that students were slighted as any food they may have left in children and 100 more wounded at at one's destination. And then, after six given over the weekend. It was a classic case of refrigerators could have spoiled. Kir'yat Shmona, Ma'alot, Nahir and Prof Wants weeks of hassle, to receive less than Y4 of Only one solution is possible for a problem, Shamir (1974); for the murder of 11 the claimed value (which in my case the left hand-in this case the Office of Resi­ Olympic athletes and 2 Germans in covered the suitcase itself and my film, dence Life-not knowing what the right such as this one, where two departments Munich (1970); of 7 elderly Jews in an Honor Code nothing more). Or to be 500 miles away hand-the Office of Physical Plant and Plan­ obviously lack the coordination to let people old people's home in Munich (1970); of from homebase, to spend all your know what they are doing, and that solution is the fatal attack on a tourist bus in Haifa Equality money to pay the outrageous hotel bill, ning-was doing, but it was the residents who just last year ... to go to the airport to catch the return were given the squeeze. communication.·If Residence Life or Physical Sorrowfully, the list goes on. These flight, and to discover that it has been Plant had let people know what was to happen acts have been applauded, called To the Editor: cancelled and that all of Avianca's Granted, work of this nature has to be done Saturday, the weekend would have been more "brave" and "courageous" by many I find the discussion of an honor code offices are closed. So you scrape sometime, and during a holiday is probably enjoyable for all. Arab leaders. I, among many Jews and for students at this University amus­ together the change to stay one more Israelis, prefer to see these as acts of the ing--to say the least. The recent indig­ night, get receipts for everything, return PLO and not of the Palestinian people. nity visited on the faculty that estab­ home and find that Avianca will But there is a contradiction here: those lishes regulations for administering reimburse none of your money. Now Board of Editors students working at the table condemn student evaluations implies about as that stinks. And being's as how Colom­ all violations of human rights and in the much trust in them (as a group) as bia has no Better Business Bureau or Alan Fogg, Editor-in-Chiej same breath justify terrorist activity would be implied by a requirement that Ralph Nader, good luck in complain- Val Reitmlln, Managing Editor against innocent people on a theor­ students be monitored in restrooms ing. , etical psychological factor. during examinations. (I have it from For my sake, for the sake of all the In respect to the charges against student members of the committee other screwed over Avianca travellers in Mary Cowhey, News Editor Chris Blake, Production Manager Miles O'Brien, Features Editor Israel in the Palestinian material distri­ involved in the decision to implement the world, and mostly for your own Joel Szahat, Sports Editor Mark McAdams, Associate Editor Mary Flaherty, Photo Editor buted on this campus, I would refer all those rules that a matter of trust was sake, Boycott A vianca. There are plenty Mary Sharegian, Copy Editor Greg Kitsock, Associate Editor John Gilvar, Asst. Photo Editor concerned to the editorial published in involved.) It would seem that a degree of alternate airlines, and you'll be a lot Forest Ralph, Business Manager Rev. Edward Bodnar, S.J., Moderator Bill Henry, Arts Editor the November 12 Washington Post. The of mutual respect is in order before the better off using them. essential facts presented were that in discussion concerning an honor code So come to South America and enjoy ConlribUling Editors 1974 UNESCO, upon Arab complaint, goes any further. the 12 cent beer prices! Mary Lou H_artman, Miles O'Brien. Mike Lindquis.t, .Ed O'Neill, Chris McDonough, Bill Henry "formally condemned Israel for Frank Giarratani Anne Markward allegedly depriving Arabs in the Assistant Professor Bogota. Colombia NEWS STAFF: Chris Blake. John Held. Linda Lou,",n. PHOTO STAFF: Joe AtenCIO, Check Bayless. Marty Michelle McCanhy. Many Mi.ehell. Dave Nadelhaft. Hollinger, Barb Boris. Zac Casey, Julia DernicheHs. Bran­ John Nilson, John Orrico. Gloria Quinn~ Celeste Walsh. den Dencke. Leigh Faden. Laura Fla., DaVid Nadelhaft, MIke Walsh. Sue Walsh, Carol Wmter. Pat Wblte. Jay Tani Pachts. Philip Pecoraro. Rick Pecte~ Mary Quinn. Vogel Jeff Jaffee. LIZ Taylor. Greg MaggiO. Steve Leech Bob Schmit, Stephane Simcnauer~ Scott Schoern, Pam Storm. Sheila Tennourian Record "Rip-Off" Rattles WGTB Reviewer SPORTS STAFF: Dawn Drury. Andrew 1.5. Giaccla. Patti McKenna. Sal Nigrelli, Gaf)' Adam Sherman, Maureen To the Editor, are a little more important than merely me through a neutral third party like the Sullivan Last Monday (the 20th) I went to serving to fill my dorm room with noise. Security Office's Lost and Found, Riggs to deposit a hard-won paycheck. J need those records for a music show where they will assume you found them, I had left two new records (in a box) which I do at WGTB-FM. I already no questions asked. If your roommate on the steps by mistake, and when I endanger my financial stability by pur­ has suddenly acquired Relics by Pink The HOYA is published each week of the academic year (with the exception of holiday and examination periods). Subscription rate: $7.50 returned to retrieve them, the box was chasing records and am very careful to Floyd and Even in the Quietest Mument per year. Address all correspondence to The HOYA, Georgetown University, Washington, D.C. 20057, telephone (202) 625-4554. The there, minus the records. buy selectively. Therefore, each record by Supertramp, and looks smug or HOYA is printed at the Northern Virginia Sun, Arlington, Virginia. First of all, I felt that this was a pretty had a purpose behind it as far as my pro­ guilty, do me a favor, steal them back cheap trick to sneak off with them so gramming needs go. I realize that the for me. I have previously felt that this The writing, articles, layout, pictures and format are the responsibility of the Board of Editors and do not necessarily represent the views of fast. Most people will wait a few person who stole these thinks he/she is campus was fairly scrupulous and I the Administration, Faculty and Students of the University unless specifically stated. Signed columns represent the opinions of the minutes to see if anyone will return for very clever for having saved $13, but's would like to continue thinking so. authors and do not necessarily reflect the editorial position of this newspaper. The University subscribes to the principle of responsible -Diane Chu freedom of expl,;,sion for student editors. some object found lying around, then money out of my limited pocket. If this take it home as abandoned. But I was person has any conscience, he/she may CAS '82 only gone for one minutel These records do the decent thing and return them to Friday, December 1,1978 The HOYA Page 5 viewpoint GUPS Under the Glm .",.- , .. Sometimes I think I should change my name. freezers. Or how about providing a storage service for stu­ Anyone who has read this newspaper recently has dents' valuables over the Christmas break-GUPS used to undoubtedly stumbled across the name of Mr. Charles do this but then curtailed the effort. '.amb, the Director of Georgetown University Protective Secondly, a more critical and thorough evaluation of per­ Services (GUPS) and the prime interviewee in anyone of a sonnel and job applicants is needed. A starting GUPS offi­ number of security-related stories. cer can easily make around $11 ,SOO a year, and though cer­ We are not related. tainly no grandiose sum, it is not a bad figure,for these Granted, this similarity has provided a few laughs in the individuals, most of whom are part-time students here or five-semester period I have worked as a student security elsewhere. Yet Georgetown has no formal recruitment pro­ cess; literally anyone can walk off the street, fill out an guard, and perhaps has resulted in preferential treatment '. by suspicious rookie uniformed officers. But of late, com­ application, and get hired. There is no written test, there is ments made by well-meaning students such as, "Hey Nick, I no formalized interview process other than a talk with Mr. saw your name in that rape story in The HOYA!" have over­ Lamb, and most frightening, there is no official training shadowed any advantages that may hav!'= resulted from my procedure. Certainly Georgetown is not in the heart of the surname. ghetto, and yet this can be a detriment as students as well as These comments have got to stop. guards are easily lulled into a relaxed complacency that is For who can blame me personally or any of my fellow easily exploited by offenders running the gamut from student guards in general who want to separate themselves pranksters to rapists. Though not wishing to scare anyone, < from a program that has allegedly misrepresented and I feel it important that our guards receive training that " covered up information about campus assaults, has been meets standards available for big city security systems. Yet duped by student reporters into issuing false ID's, has been our officers are not even taught the basics of First Aid, they receive only on-the-job training, they have less of a proba­ tion period than the normal University employee (60 as opposed to 90 days), and they need have no education other than a high school diploma (as opposed to many similar forces who require college degrees or at least junior college Does Anybody Really Care? Nick Lamb work). The point is a simp Ie one: if the University is going to go students. Hence, Georgetown is caught growth in a different, un-Hoya world. to the trouble to have a force of Commissioned Special About six weeks ago a homeless bum victimized by a rash of brazen burglaries, and has been dis­ wandered into Healy basement and fell in a quagmire of hypocrisy, for its pro­ Perhaps the most disturbing aspect of tinguished by one of its sergeants, no less, reportedly Police Officers, having the same power to deprive you or fessed aims conflict with its actions, and the Georgetown experience is the per­ me of my liberties that any DC Police officer has, then this asleep on one of the couches outside running over one of his colleagues intentionally (certainly Vital Vittles. I could not help but notice its identity is likewise stranded between version of education itself. The classi­ ineffective discipline, according to any child psychologist)? force should not be a sham. If the University is going to the two. Furthermore, I would be naive cal educational maxim, "Know thyself," spend close to a million dollars on a security system, they the striking difference between this But my point is not to jump on the anti-Security band­ unshaven pauper, wrapped in a tat­ to label Catholicism as the only impetus has been violated by that omnipresent shouldn't cut corners so that the only vehicle they have wagon. That just wouldn't be fair. Many of the GUPS tered coat, and the modestly well­ for a realization of social justice on this desire for a higher QPI. I think that it is wouldn't pass inspection if it had to (ask anyone who's rid­ officers are extremely capable; several are my friends. A dressed Hoyas that walked past him. I campus, for the concept itself is univer­ evident that this intense desire for vast minority is responsible for most of the problems, and den to the Emergency Room in that "car"). GUPS should sal and non-denominational. However, grades will eventually evolve into a lust not be a force that claims, in all the University brochures, to momentarily discontinued my journey yet all are touched by the screw-ups of a few, and the good to the Center Cafe in order to observe this predicament does not say a lot for for power and money-which will protect the life and property of the students, and yet is officers tend to question their place in a system that allows the reactions of the students to this most Georgetown's "safe" brand of undoubtedly result in "happiness." It these inadequacies to continue. But rather than list a litany allowed to preserve the status quo until, God forbid, Catholicism. has been said that education should enough people get robbed or hurt so that something has to uncommon sight. Some passed the man of GUPS' inadequaciesI hope fully I can provide some con­ oblivious to his presence, while most In all fairness, I cannot cast the bulk essentially the conquest of passions by structive criticism; positive suggestions are needed rather change before the news gets home to Mom and Dad, of the blame on the Jesuits, for the reason, thereby freeing the will. Instead, "where the wallet is." Rather, preventive medicine is the smirked in amusement at his depraved than ambiguous cries for change. The first area GUPS condition. This scene solidified many majority of the University community Georgetown seems to promote the pas­ prescription here, and the cure of GUPS' diseases can only should tackle, if its not too late, is pu blie relations. I think thoughts that' had been swimming consists of students. Indeed, many stu­ sions of power and money with little it's not too strong a statement to say that the campus opin­ come when enough external pressure is applied to force the dents seem complacent enough within regard for social conscience which rea­ ion of the average GUPS officer is a useless buffoon at University, perhaps in the person of Dan Altobello, to con­ son should develop. Georgetowners worst and harmless at best. So assuming these activities duct an all-encompassing review of the program including somehow justify their passions by a per­ don't interfere with an officer's routine tasks, opportun­ an analysis of the daily security blotters, a study and publi­ Rostrum/ Jack O'Hara verted recurrence of Darwinian logic, ities for improving relations with students are vast; an cation of the crime-frequency statistics on campus, and a devoid of any sound social conscience review of all personnel involved, including the officers, example is as close as this past weekend-a reminder from through my head, and I came to the their lives to let the growth possibilities or sense of Christian responsibility to staff, and the Director himself. GUPS that the power in most dorms would be off for an inescapable conclusion that the world of Washington, DC go unchallenged. affect change. We have seen the result of If only to preserve my family name. extended period on Saturday would have incurred the of Georgetown University is a great leap Every student has to accept the rigor­ this type of materialist thought Nick Lamb, SFS '80, is afive-semester student security thanks of many who instead returned from the holiday to from the reality of this bum's existence; ous academic requirements presented throughout the seventies, as the Eil­ find pools of water on their floors that used to be in their veteran. and in fact a majority of the campus by the University. and some students bergs, Haldemanns, and Agnews, our population has isolated themselves con­ must also struggle through the finan­ leaders, pollute the ethical environ­ sciously or unconsciously from the cial end of- attending Georgetown. ment of the country. world of day to day survival so vivid to These challenges, though. foster an A senior named Jim Ryan wrote an this nameless man. interpersonal growth through self­ article in the October 10th Voice that Fleeced Again I realize that college life is inherently discipline that does not affect others in upbraided this same type of attitude '-- free of great adversity or responsibility; the community. I think that most stu­ that I have attempted to describe. Des­ As we corne to the end ofanother memo rate the fact that the new dorm Don't rush down, however. in essence, the college life is more a dents, due to the effects of narrow pite a harsh, critical analysis of George­ semester leI us pause to reflecl lipan I might not be ready until October, because they're out of baloney. And preparation period for the problems of minded wealth. have developed a cal­ town'5 wealth and its stifling influence, those who have enriched our fives 1919 leaving 500 students to seek lettuce. And tomatoes. And bread. the "real" or "post-graduate" world. lous attitude to the exterior challenge of only one Hoya raised his pen in protest. with more than a fair share of rip­ temporary lodging in tents, trees, Not to mention cheese, hambur­ National Lampoom's hit movie, Ani­ reaching out and understanding the dis- This brings to mind further questions: offs, lhieveries and bureaucratic lean-tos and soup kitchens. Hope­ gers, turkey, roast beef, soda, coffee, mal House, provides an excellent por­ foul-ups. In this vein The HOYA fully the dorm will be ready before paper cups, straws, change for adol­ trayal of this same attitude of carefree would like 10 present the nomina­ Harbin collapses and Ritz converts lar, salt, pepper, and bread. As soon independence. Although indicative of '"This luxury of taking money for tions for the second annual Golden the Quad to office space. as they get anything in, they're rais­ most college campuses, this condition is ing prices. magnified greatly at Georgetown be­ Fleece awards. Pat Cleary. Pat showed his well­ granted sets Georgetown apart Riggs Bank. This year Riggs cause of the concentration of wealth Charles Lamb. Our first and ordered sense of priorities last installed a 24-hour teller. It's worked found within the student body; and the foremost Fleece goes fittingly month when he entertained the gas enough to Charles Lamb for trying to a total of 24 hours since they administration seems to provide at least from the rest of the world­ man, leaving GTB supporters in the installed it. Meanwhile students a tacit approval of this attitude of opu­ pull the wool over the campus' eyes lurch outside the Board of Directors inside are held up by a Riggs policy lence and all its negative effects. about serious crime at Georgetown. meeting. GTB sympathizers are now to its own disadvantage." So far this semester two assaults that requires the teller to phone the Because of this peculiar dichotomy. planning to present their petition to main branch to find out whether have occurred in broad daylight, the the Board at its first meeting next Georgetown is facing a tremendous each check is good (in keeping with advantaged of the city. The Office of Does anybody really care? and worse incidence of dorm theft has sky­ semester. Meanwhile, GU admin­ identity crisis. The University Under­ rocketed, and one guard recently Riggs' belief that the customer is a graduate Bulletin states that George­ Admissions will proudly prese.nt all yet: Does anyone even realize there is a istrators are trying to decide whose deadbeat until proven otherwise). types of statistics about the diversity of problem in the first place? I feel quite settled a dispute with a classic turn it will be to dress up as the gas town "is committed to a view that example of hit-and-run diplomacy Post Office. Do you know it takes people that attend this institution; but a fortunate to have discovered people man and detain Cleary next time. reflects Catholic and Jesuit influences (he creamed his fellow officer with a letter longer to get across the Dis­ ... It sees its own function as being the good portion of "those accepted here here who have attitudes similar to my his Mercury Cougar). Dean Krogh. What can we say trict than from here to Hawaii? If service of humankind ... " The Jesuits seem to hold the homogeneous attitude own, and I have found these associa­ Tom Ritz. Tom is on a profound about Dean Krogh that hasn't been you had that check from home certainly fulfill the roles of educator and that money is the essence of existence. tions to be quite fruitful. This small core losing streak. His mental juices must said already'? Krogh's hobbies delayed a month, here's how to get scholar on this campus, but that beau­ This luxury of taking money for grar-ted Gf ;;ie;;~~ ~!cwly grows with time, and it have gone flat for him to attempt to include tennis and burdening SFS even. Mail yourself home for the tiful phrase, "men for others," has been, sets Georgetown apart from the rest of is certainly encouraging to know that ban beer kegs from the dorms. In students with unnecessary require­ holidays. Just put the mailing for the most part, conspicuously and at the world-to its own disadvantage. I other people do care. case you've forgotten, Ritz canned ments. However, his only require­ address where the return address times proudly neglected by the uncon­ find this whole pattern of thought very Robert Kennedy once stated: "For the ban but stipulated that the SEC ment for prospective donors is that should be, and vice versa. Leave off scientious. Father Timothy Healy may inhibiting to education. social growth, the fortunate among us there is tempta­ must be present at parties to "insti­ they pay him in unmarked bills. the postage, and guess where they'll find it well within his time and effort to and honesty. tion to follow the easy and familiar tute spillage control." (One wonders Recently Iraq made him an offer he send you. Start wrappingyourselfup sign petitions for the human rights of I remember an article printed in The paths of personal ambition and finan­ how they are going to do this: lie COUldn't refuse. Much to the dean's now if you intend to be home for Soviet dissidents Dr fly off to Panama to HOY A (the name of the author escapes cial success so grandly spread before underneath the taps with their chagrin, Healy sent his hard-earned Christmas 1979. administer the Canal Treaty plebiscite; me) during my freshman year that com­ those who enjoy the priviJedge ofeduca­ mouths open?) petrodollars back to the desert dic­ The Golden Fleece awards were but his primary responsibility as the pared Georgetown to a white, country­ tion. But this is not the road history has That's some cracker! tatorship from whence they came. conc.eived, produced and directed by Jesuit leader of this University has to be side estate in predominantly black marked for us. Like it or not, we live in Dept. of Planning (?) and Physical The Center Cafe. The Center Cafe Mark McAdams. Greg Kitsock had in providing some conception of human Rhodesia. The relevance of this paral­ times of danger and uncertainty. But Plant. A distinguished service award is having a special this week on nothing to do with this article-well, rights or social justice at 37th and "0". lel is astonishing to me. The city of they are also more open to the creative goes to University planners to com- Aquilino subs. very little. With the exception of the Community Washington is replete with various energy of man than any other time." Action Coalition and other similar people, from the rich bureaucrat to the Can Georgetown, as a unit. produce efforts. I cannot detect more than a slum dweller, living in all types of cir­ Kennedy's "creative energy" and be an minuscule amount of "men for others" cumstances. This school, more often active force in the realm of justice? from the Jesuit community, let alone the than not, ignore5 an opportunity for I dearly hope so. ATTENTION ALL HOYA Staff Members: You are cordially invited to the HOYA-Voice Christmas Party, Friday December 8, 1978, at 9 p.m. in Harbin Formal Lounge.

REMINDER TO ALL EDITORIAL BOARD MEMBERS: WITH THIS ISSUE, THE HOYA Elections and important meeting, CONCLUDES PUBLICATION FOR THE FALL, 1978 SEMESTER. PUBLICATION WILL BE RESUMED IN MID-JANUARY. Sunday might at December 3rd, 8 p.m. THE HOYA WOULD -LIKE TO WISH EVERYONE in Copley Dungeon. GOOD LUCK ON FINAL EXAMS, A WONDERFUL HOLIDAY SEASON You are cordially invited; AND A PLEASANT VACATION. however your attendance is required. Page 6_The HOVA Friday, December 1,1978 viewpoint

'I knowingly broke the law • • • Now 1 am in Jail!' Georgetown University has granted of activity we've come to realize how made since that action. Dun's Review, a me a one year leave of absence. I'd like much power the utilities have. The big Wall Street business magazine, says to share with people how I am spending oil companies which control the uran­ that the financial community is waiting my time. ium industry, General Electric and to see what happens at Seabroook I am in jail near Seabrook, New Westinghouse, which make the plants before they invest even more money Hampshire, where a nuclear power ... they all have tremendous influence into nuclear energy. If the industry can plant is under construction. My charge over the government. build a power plant in the face of such is "criminal trespass," because I know­ In Seabrook, the town voted against widespread opposition. then Wall ingly broke the law and entered the the nuke. yet it continues to be built. Street will back it up financially. If we property where the power plant is being It is at this point that stronger action stop the nuke at Seabrook, then nuclear ''/ went from Yale to jail built. For this act of non-violent civil must be taken-in the form of non-vio­ power is dead. I will not have to worry disobedience, I was arrested. lent civil disobedience. For the past about the Montague nuke. ~---U L'----- Nuclear power poses the greatest two-and-a-half years, the people of So, our campaign increases. We've public health hazard ever. This is no Seabrook, with the help of people all been conducting a series of small non­ exaggeration. The radioactive by-pro­ over New England, have waged a non­ violent actions at the Seabrook plant. ducts from nuclear power plants cause violent campaign to stop the nuke, This On November II th I was arrested with a cancer, leukemia and genetic birth campaign has continued all the forms of group of western Massachusetts people. defects. This has been proven in studies legal opposition, while adding a new Again, we are showing our serious com­ of cancer and birth rates in the areas tactic-civil disobedience. mitment to stop that power plant, and where nuclear plants have been built. Sometimes, to break the law is the all nuclear development. Our trial will Perhaps the most frightening thing only proper response to a given situa­ be in court on December 20th. 1 will be and learned a hell of a lot more in jail!" about "nukes" is their permanence. The tion. If you see a child in the middle of here in jail at least until then, probably radioactive wastes they produce will the street, in a busy intersection, a bout longer. The jail sentences are getting stay radioactive. and thus cancer-caus­ to be hit by a car, should you wait for the stricter each time people get arrested. ing, for hundreds of thousands of years. light to turn green before you run out I am not ashamed to be in jail. I won't Each of the 67 nukes operating in the and save him? Of course not. Nuclear say that I enjoy being here, but I am United States generates tons of this power threatens our lives. We can't wait surviving fine. I think that I am surviv­ '--, '--, material, and there is no way to store it for the government, or the industry, or ing because of my strong belief in my - -' .-- for that long. anyone else to stop it for us. We have to actions. I've done what was right, for Storage of radioactive waste is just take action outselves. me. That keeps me going each day. I am one of many problems with nuclear In the spring of 1977, thousands of in here with bank robbers, child moles­ power. Safety problems, terrorism, high people walked onto the site of the Sea- ters, burglars and attempted murderes. II II IJ Needless to say, I am learning a lot. II II These men are no different froIll me. or other Georgetown students. We all do "Sometimes, to break the law is the only proper things that are good and things that are A Problem of Human Rights· bad, but we are all members of the same family. Perhaps this is what Jesus meant Recently, 'the other paper' ran a contribute just as much to all the varied Fear is a blinding thing. On this when he said to "love one another as we special on the Georgetown student and elements which constitute the multi­ campus, fear and sexuality seem to go love ourselves." human rights. The coverage provided faceted aspects of university life, they hand in hand. Perhaps the biggest response to a given situation. " It is out of love for myself, and for all some good insights but it also brought are, at the bottom line, second class obstacle with which the gay students life, that I am here behind bars. 1 feel to mind the old adage about the cob­ members of this community. wi\) have to deal is this irrational fear of bad that, in our democracy, people must bler's children having no shoes. I think Gay students do not generally see open, warm caring and sexual com­ be locked up for doing what is right­ that it is fine to discuss and to work for their perspective shared and exper­ munication. Relegating gay sex to the costs, nuclear proliferation .•. The list brook nuclear plant. We stayed over­ yet, if I built a nuclear power plant, I the human rights of those who live out­ ienced in the classroom, they are not outer reaches of ignorance only serves seems endless. With me, the issue hits night and were there the entire next day. would make a lot of money. Oh well, my side of our community but do we not free to express the normal natural affec­ the purpose ofintimidation and oppres­ home because I live in an area where a The public service company and body may be imprisoned but my soul is often step over those at our very door­ tions which one sees as one walks across sion. The images and myths about gay nuclear plant is proposed. I've been liv­ Governor Meldrim Thompson figured free. step in our rush to affirm these rights. It the campus and they could hardly sexuality serve not only to foster ing in a mostly rural area of western that we would pack up and leave once Dave Dellinger, a non-violent activist, straight fears but also gay self-oppres­ Massachusetts and hope to eventually we'd "had our fun." It soon became evi­ once said; "I went from Yale to jail, and sion. The supposed knowledge about settle there, If a nuke is built in dent that we were prepared to stay until learned a helluva lot more in jail!" A Rostrum Bob Hummel gay sexuality which exists on this cam­ Montague, one of the towns in the area, the nuke is irrevocably canceled. When funny play on words, but true in many / pus and which is avajlable to students my hopes are shattered. How can I, out they realized the seriousness of our ways. I probably won't return to is the curse of academia to conSider expect humane treatment from many in may be compared to the hallowed of any respect for myself, live near such intent, they began to arrest us. Over Georgetown, at least until this struggle theory at the eJCpense of practice. We the Georgetown community. The Catholic traditions that masturbation a plant? How can I, out of any respect fourteen-hundred of us were arrested, is over. I hope that other Georgetown can become blinded by our own billiant overall college experience which should causes warts or that patent leather shoes for my children, allow such a plant to be and the majority stayed in jail for two students will write me here in jail and theorizing to the extent that we create a be a time of healthy exploration of can lead to a loss of virginity. All of built? weeks-until bail was dropped for snare your thoughts on these issues. world which appears beautiful and ideas, and persons is fragmented and these deserve rejection by intelligent We have worked very hard through everyone. I am happy here. I receive letters sugary sweet but if we had to deal with the Georgetown gay is relegated by the people. legal channels to stop nuclear power. What did we prove? Well, for the first almost every day from people who have this world realistically it would put us university to the status of being a prob­ Denial of recognition to the gay Even when I was in high school, in New time, our plight was paid attention to. decided to join in this movement. There all into the state of a diabetic coma. lem which the administration wishes group can only happen if the..students, York. I. saw and worked with people The press, the industry and the govern­ are so many ways that we can change All of that is to say that not only is would go away or at least not be too . both gay and straight, permit it,to hap­ who'd been fighting the Indian Point ment had not listened to us until we things for the better, if we'd only put our there a problem in River City but there visible. . pen. I am amazed that so many straight nuke for 10 years. We are doing this were willing to take this personal sacri­ hearts and minds to it. also is a problem here at Georgetown. It Many of these issues will soon be students who have themselves come to still. We lobby and collect petition fice. Nuclear power became a major I ask for your prayers. is a problem of human rights. If you are demonstrated by a case in point. The the realization that much of what has signatures, we challenge nuclear plants national issue. Since then, the anti­ a gay person here at Georgetown you do Gay People of Georgetown have been communicated to them about in the courts and regulatory agencies, nuclear movement has grown in every With love, not have all the rights of a student. Des­ recently drawn up a constitution and sexuality and relationships is so much we run candidates for public office, we part of the country, and in much of the AI Gioroano pite the fact that gay students pay the obtained the necessary signatures which rubbage will turn around and attempt hand out literature and hold rallies and world. c/o Rockingham County Jail same tuition, work just as hard on uni­ will enable them to request recognition to place that same rubbage upon others. marches. Meanwhile, the industry con­ Most significantly, only one new Box 427 versity committees, play on the same as an organized student group. Judging The issue of recognition is an issue for tinues to build nukes. Through this kind order for a nuclear power plant has been Epping, N.H. 03042 teams as other students and in general from the past experiences of other all of us because it involves basic human attempts by gay students, they will have rights. Imagine if you will, what this , many obstacles to overcome. There will campus would be like if heterosex.ual be appeals to very dubious interpreta­ social groups were forbidden recogni­ tions of a very dubious tradition (at tion. if heterosexual dances were for­ Does Georgetown Really Mean Liberal Arts? least with regards to homosexuals) and bidden, if groups dealing with hetero­ an emotional reaction on the part of sexual relationships were disbanded, if I've been writing columns for the it remains to be fully developed exactly The liberal university does not neces­ A heftier serving of math and natural many who actually fear that gay people all women's interest groups, or black campus press for two years now and I what this concept entails. Liberal basic­ sarily produce doctors and and science should be given to those who are may become an accepted and healthy groups, or political groups were judged would like to clearly define an idea ally means free. Therefore education corporate VPs (although the ones pro­ expected to deal with the age in which element of university life. Any appeal to to be at odds with a so called tradition. which I have written about many times. should be free in the sense of offering duced ought to be good ones). What we live. Some background in history, the Christian tradition, if it is at all hon­ Welcome to the world of the gay I don't presume to believe that anyone the maximum opportunity to study the kind of men and women should such a government, psychology and eco­ est, must recognize the bigotry and cul­ Georgetowner!!! ! (except my mother) remembers much of greatest possible variety of disciplines. system produce? We might have to dig nomics should be mandated, not re­ tural prejudice which infect that tradi­ The primary obligation of the uni­ my prose dealing with academic life at The best contrast for this idea is the into antiquity to find the ideas of the duced to two semesters of "social tion. Even apart from the scholarly versity community is to insure that each Georgetown, but the concept which I directed or technical education of career "well-rounded" man, "classical" man, sciences." differences of interpretation, the gos­ student has the opportunity to grow as a or Cardinal Newman's "gentleman." In pels should never be used to alienate healthy individual. This means provid­ And what about the arts? Imagine our age of Pre-med and Pre-law, what individuals from themselves. Recogni­ ing honest and open opportunities for that if a studio arts course were tion of a student group does not entail reflection in the academic, social and Sublimating Greg Zak possible service could one of these types required, then this university woul9 serve? I daresay, we might make these approval of all aspects of gay life (no spiritual areas of personal and public / have to open its pockets to that over­ gay person accepts alI aspects of the gay lives. All students are entitled to no less am expanding on is that of a "liberal training institutions. Scho()ls which well-rounded people, rather than the looked department. It is time to review culture) and to presume that beca use and that includes gay students. education." produce packaged professionals are narrow specialists, into the doctors, academic priorities and realize that lib­ people are meeting and working I would hope that when the Gay While I would assert and many would lawyers and accountants of the future, probably not the ones offering a truly eral education does not include prepro­ together for greater understanding of People of Georgetown apply for recog­ as a matter of course agree that this is but who wants to be stoned for blas­ liberal education, but rather act as farm fessional training, it supercedes that. themselves, they are necessarily sleep­ nition they will receive support from all the goal of our tenure at the university, teams for the real world job markets. phemy? Not I; there are better reasons to be stoned. With any restructuring the likes of ing together is perhaps more of a com­ members of the community including Nevertheless, I think American edu­ which I have suggested, the preprofes­ mentary on the illustrator than on the staff, ; administration. the student cation (including the Hilltop) has sional sub-schools would become su­ illustrated. government. and the alumni (an inter­ missed the boat on preparing students perfluous. The entire concept of an aca­ The Christian traditjon demands jus­ esting development is the recent forma­ for life in the big city. Ours is an era of demic major might not necessarily be tice and love above all. That tradition tion of a Georgetown Gay Alumni mere and hollow technicians, profi­ essential for every student; concentra­ cannot be bound by fear and prejUdice. Association). Gay people are not going cient but limited, overwhelmed by the tion and diversity would each have One often wonders how often our tradi­ to accept any less and they can give this many-faceted experience of living. The some place. tionappeals can be translated into econ­ community much more. solution to many of the strains of tech­ I suppose the principle objection to omics and politics. Is (hal worthy of the Rev. Robert Hummel is the Resident nical twentieth century life begins right these ideas, which are by no means new, Christian tradition? Director of Harbin Hafl. here at the level of the undergraduate and, by no means best expressed by this university. writer, is that opportunities for grad­ A diverse program of required areas uate schools and immediate jobs would SKYDIVING " ... Liberal basically means free. Therefore edu­ cation should be free in the sense of offering the • JUMP SAME DAY • PROFESSIONAL FIRST maximum opportunity to study the greatest possible ~~ JUMP COURSE variety of disciplines." • BEST RATES tN Southern Cross BALTJWASHtNGTON AREAS! Parachute Center of study has become essential to insure a not be open to the classical man. That is P.O. Box 366 (301) 223·7541 Williamsport, Md. 21795 measure of well-roundedness, but there only true in the context of things as we are too many ways around the struc­ see them now. If the goals were shifted tures, too many paths to "turking-out." to education from career training, If a student is not interested in a broad future professionals would not only be educational program which insists on a trained in their professions, but in the sampling of many different fields, then complex and careful art of living. technical schools ought to be provided. Basically, this is what I have long MEDICAL AND VETERINARY For those in a "coIlege of arts and referred to as a "liberal education." I sciences" there ought to be more expo­ think that the concept is important and SCHOOL sure to the diversity of man's arts and steps ought to be thought out so as to sciences, not drudgery requirements open the door to this perspective on VACANCIES IN which serve as 0 bstacles to finally get­ learning. It takes some radical rethink­ W.H.O.-ACCREDITED ting down to preparing for one's pro­ ing of the very foundations of our uni­ fessional schools. versity goals, collective and individual. UNIVERSITIES IN CHILE For those who really seek a liberal We, as an institution and as students, education, who are concerned first with ought to give serious consideration, not FOR INFORMATION WRITE being fully human and then with job lip service, to the choices of being well AIRMA.IL prospects, there must be some changes educated or being well trained. In the made or at least thought about in our long run, I think I know where we'll be O'CONNOR'S MEDICAL SCHOOL present structures. better off. Think about it. PLACEMENT, First. the requirements for arts and CASILLA 24, PUCON, CHILE sciences students should be broadened. Greg Zak is a junior in the College. Friday, December 1,1978 The HOYA Page 7 features

CHRISTMAS!! !" "Oh really .•. I •.. " "Hello, IN THE BOOK, YOU'LL FIND MANY The Hoyawitz Christmas Catalogue INTERESTING IDEAS AND FACTS Mrs. Doe!?" WHICH WILL DO NOTHING SHORT OF TOTALLY MEZMOR­ by Miles O'Brien Christmas has, for most every retail IZING YOU!! FOR Features Editor store in the world, to be the biggest EXAMPLE MRS. DOE, DID YOU Lately, ultra extravagant bonanza of the year. Every company Chrsitmas gifts from fancy mail KNOW THAT JESUS WAS PRE­ does its best to take advantage of (and MATURE AND HAD TO REMAIN order catalogs have become the tres sometimes create) the seasonal buying chic way to impress that person who IN AN INCUBATOR FOR A FULL spree. Christmas has gradually been WEEK AFTER HIS GLORIOUS has everything. The nouveau riche debased to a giant Madison Avenue have found a way to out-impress ARRIVAL ON OUR HUMBLE brand advertising hype. Probably the PLANET!?" each other with unique and heavy most annoying aspect of this supersell is "Why ... no .. , I ... " price tagged items from the likes of the basic telephone solicitation. "YES, MRS. DOE, IT'S TRUE, Sakowitz and Neiman-Marcus (both ,.. * ,.. ,.. ,.. JESUS CHRIST BARELY MADE IT sporting a Texas return address Jane Doe is in her mid thirties, is mar­ THROUGH HIS FIRST WAKING where the oil bloodedpoddnas think ried, has a high school diploma, has 2.4 MOMENTS! BUT AS YOU WELL and spend BIG). Included among children, and lives in a midd1e class sub­ KNOW, MRS. DOE, HE PULLED this year's gift menu are his and hers urb outside Anywhere, U.S.A. Today. THROUGH ... AND THE REST IS camels, windmills, and submarines; and most other days for that matter, HISTORY!! MRS. DOE, YOU and a dinner with a host of cele- Jane is alone in her three bedroom KNOW I COULD GO ON AND ON . brities from Walter Cronkite 10 horne ensconsed in a host of soap TELLING YOU MORE ABOUT Mohammed Ali ($90.000). operas, her hair in curlers ... THIS MEMORABLY GLORIOUS Not to be out of it, we thought The phone rings. we'd bring you the Hilltop's "HELLO MRS. DOE!!!???" bellows Christmas catalog edition (for the the faceless voice. Off the Cuff Hoya wh9 has everything): Here are "Ahhh _.. I guess ... " ,a few excerpts from The Hoyawitz "HI. MY NAME IS HERMAN Christmas Catalogue: HARDSELL, AND I'M CALLING Miles O'Brien A. Your ears will be buzzingfrom LONG DISTANCE FROM THE BOOK SPECTACULAR, BUT I the exciting conversation for a week NEW YORK OFFICES OF CRIME­ DON'T WANT TO TAKE UP ANY after this special evening we've STRIFE LIBRARIES. HOW ARE MOREOFYOUR TIME ... SOOOO plannedfor you. Invited will be the YOU ON THIS FINE AND DANDY THE PLAIN HONEST FOLKS AT gamut of Georgetown's superstar DAY?!!?!! CRIME-STRIFE WOULD LIKE TO celebrities. Henry the K: Pearly Mae "O.K .... I think ... " LET THIS EXCELLENT BOOK Bailey, Le Grande Tim Healy, "MAGNIFICANT! SPEAK FOR ITSELF." Hydraulic smile Krogh, Aloyious STUPENDOUS! THAT'S PEACHY "Oh??? It talks too? ... " Call-Me-AI Kelley, Balance Sheet KEEN! MRS. DOE, YOU'VE TAKEN MRS. DOE, THE BOOK IS Houston, Pebbles, Fat Contract SOME OF OUR BOOKS BEFORE_ REALL Y THE MOST SUPERLA­ Thompson, The entire Board of An aerial view of the perfect gift for the man who has everything. MAY I HUMBLY ASK HOW YOU TIVE BOOK EVER PUBLISHED IN Directors, all alumni published in HA VE ENJOYED THEM?!?!?" THE HISTORY OF MANKIND AND Who's Who in America, Tokyo reputable Gorge-About-Town Dry ing large parcels of land? If so, then continental U.S.) $6.95 "They were alright. I guess, but I I KNOW THAT A NICE PERSON Rose, and a host of other notable cleaning Service, a big time wheeler Hoyawitz has the perfect gift for that E. Every Hoya wants to be really don't have the ti ... " SUCH AS YOURSELF WILL COM­ guest stars will be in attendance at deeler (by his own acclaim), the real estate mogul who has .every­ remembered once he/she cops that "FANTASTIC! GREAT! SUPER PLETEL Y AND TOTALLY AGREE this gala affair. Hoyawitz spared no greatest guy to ever cross those thing: The entire Georgetown Uni­ elusive sheepskin and ventures out DUPER! MRS. DOE, I'M SOOOO WITH ME!! SOOOO, MRS. DOE, cost in hiring the Marriott de Healy Gates (also by his own versity campus (with all its beautiful into the real world. You'll be remem­ EXTREMELY GLAD TO HEAR I'LL GET A COPY ON ITS WAY Potomac catering service in the acclaim), one of the richest men this buildings,) located at 37th and 0 bered for ever with this special THAT YOU HAVE ENJOYED THE THIS VERY MINUTE SO YOUR exclusive New South Faculty side of Howard Hughes (you guessed N.W. in fashionably exclusive Hoyawitz gift. For a price that will BOOKS SO MUCH! WE FOLKS AT ENTIRE FAMILY WILL BE ABLE Lounge Club. You'll feast on a spe­ it). But, most importantly, the owner Georgetown, D.C., can be yours. pleasantly surprise you, a bronze CRIME-STRIFE REALLY APPRE­ TO ENJOY THIS STUPENDOUS cial ethnic dinner prepared by the of his own multi-million dollar University president Tim Healy was statue reflecting your favorite Hoyas CIATE YOUR PAST PURCHASES, BOOK OVER CHRISTMAS!! WHEN chefs of Marriott. Your choice of island. And out ofthe kindness of his cajoled by Hoyawitz to make the countenance can be erected right in AND HIGHLY VALUE SATISFIED IT ARRIVES, MRS. DOE, TAKE Mexican (tacos) Hawaiian (pine­ heart and in the Yuletide spirit. Art acreage available for some lucky the middle of Healy Circle (where CUSTOMERS AS YOURSELF, TWO HOURS TO LOOK IT OVER apple quicke), German (sauerkraut) has offered to give away the parcel if fella. Healy, at a press conference that old goat John Carroll is now MRS. DOE! I'M SURE YOU'LL CAREFULLY. AND WHEN YOU or Guyanan (grape Kool-aid stew) you dare to trust your $75 designer announcing the sale, stated "Every residing for posterity). It seems the WANT TO KNOW THAT CRIME­ DECIDE THAT IT WILL BE AN cuisine beautifully complemented polyester shirt (Polynesian print) to man has his price, and Hoyawitz J.c. is pretty tired of the job. "My STRIFE BOOKS HAS PRODUCED ESSENTIAL AND OVERLY with a keg of watered-down Pabst the clutches of his laundry sen'ice, came up with it in unmarked tens legs and 'arms have been asleep for 25 A BEAUTIFULLY EXCITING IN­ VALUABLE ADDITION TO YOUR Blue Ribbon is in the offing for this So what iCyou have to mingle with and twenties. How could 1, in good years" he told Hoyawitz. "1 want FORMATIVE BOOK SERIES ON HOME LIBRARY, GO RIGHT night you'll remember for the rest of the European jetset on your ultra­ conscience, turn them down? out. Now." The incription on your THE LIFE OF JESUS CHRIST!! AHEAD AND BUY IT." O.K.????!!!! your days. exclusive island without wearing Besides. I was kinda getting sick of likeness will include your full name THE FIRST VOLUME IN THIS "No," was her reply as she quickly Price: only a full year of force fed your favorite piece of Johnny Miller heing surrounded by these non-cele­ and I.D. number (not necessarily in COLORFUL LIBRARY IS CALLED hung up the phone. Marriott meals (all 19 per week). (At Menswear? Social acceptance will hrity college co-cds. My agent that order) so you will always be JESUS' WONDER-BREAD YEARS She couldn't stay on for another min­ that price, the conversation better be come in time. ad\ i,ed me to move on." remembered beyond those Healy AND WE'RE MAKING IT ute. Santa Clause was sledding down a good). . D. Gals, do you have some Price for the campus: S I hillion gates. AVAILABLE TO A HANDFUL OF mountain on a Norelco shaver, and that C. Art Cuarez-Sohen, for those of special guy who'd love to own some Withollt '-;cw South and S1. Price: Only $100,000 CRIME-STRIFE CUSTOMERS ON has alwavs been her favorite Christmas you who don't know, is Chairman of of the best real estate in the D.C \lar~ \. ~I 5 hillion With patented Hoyawitz pidgeon­ A SPECIAL TWO HOUR TRIAL commer;ial in this great 01' land of hype the . board of that extremely area? Is your hubby's hobby snatch- Shipping & Handling (in the proofing: SIOO,050 BASIS JUST IN TIME FOR 'n' glory.

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o 0 () o Page 8 The HOYA Friday, December 1.1978 arts & entertainment Looking jor Something to do Over the Break? King of Hearts: From The Screen to Stage Today, it is commonplace to find a full range of qualities attributable to movie made from a popular theatrical what is in front of them and not to the work, although the film's success is screenplay before it. never assured by its predecessor's The most conspicuous alterations for appeal. Seldom is the reverse seen, but the screen are music and dance. These "King of Hearts" is just such a produc­ also develop slowly as they do not tion. Now, Phillipe De Broca's cult film enthrall from the start, but rather from the late '60's has been turned into a seduce the audience in stages. The pro­ Broadway musical, and, in this case, it duction numbers are good but for one succeeds on its own merits. exception that is really remarkable. In the movie, the soldier and king Demosthenes (Gary Morgan) has the were Scottish, but here the king is an All show stopper even though he does not American Boy: Private Johnny Perkins have a good singing voice-he is a mute (Donald Scardino). Scardino has a and he sings in mime. He is an interest­ good voice, but without a dynamic ing character not from the film: a mute quality; he is not a gn;at singer and with a Greek name who knows the truth seems left out of some production num­ about a secret, it may have been done bers. Still. he gives a very good per­ before, but it works. formance, along with everyolle else, One major change from film to stage especially La Makame (Millicent Mar­ is a shift in focus. The movie rases the tin) and La Jeune Fille (Pamela Blair). question of who is really sane. The Martin is known as a singer and Blair as musical follows its title as its theme is Want to see a flick during Christmas a dancer. Both are quite good in these love. An important song is UN othing, Break? Here are some possibles (clockwise functions. Only Love." In dealing with this theme from upper left). George C. Scott in Hard­ The musical begins a little unevenly the musical is a little heavy handed. But core; Barbara Bach in Force 10 From Nav­ with a collage of situations that is more musicals are not subtle. They try to hit arone, which also stars the late Robert film technique than stage convention. you over the head with energy. Shaw; Peter Falk and/riends in The Brinks The problem with this causes confus­ "King of Hearts" surely has energy Robbery; Candice Bergen and Ryan O'Neal ion with the story line, unless the along with some charm. Half the in Oliver's Story; Jane Fonda at 40 in Cali­ audience saw the movie first, but the inmates are there because their love is fornia Suite; Christopher Reeves as Super­ crowd is not left out in the cold for long. misconstrued. This musical also only man; Donald Sutherland in Invasion of the The show gets rolling when it starts to asks to be loved. For anyone in New Body Snatchers; John Cassavetes and So­ adapt the story to its own medium, even York over the Christmas vacation, phia Loren in Brass Target; Robert DeNiro though it takes most of the first act. Yet "King of Hearts" is worth their time and as The Deer Hunter. by the intermission, the audience is con­ energy. It is playing at the Minskoff -Bill Henry vinced it is watching a musical with a Theatre. -'-Brian MacMullen • The Cat lS Warm and Hilarious James Kirwood's P.S. Your Cat is when first Kate (Jimmy's girlfriend) give Kate dnd her new boyfriend a hard Dead, playing at the Circle in the then Jimmy arrive home. Vito over­ time (she has come over because she was Square Theater, the Greenwich Villiage hears that Jimmy's cat is dead, then concerned about the strange yells she Have YOU Checked Your section of , provides an when Jimmy comes in, some arguing heard when she called Jimmy.) After she extremely entertaining evening of about personal things in Kate's and leaves, Jimmy lets Vito up and they laughter. The play is about an actor Jimmy's life together. Jimmy has just acknowleeedge a friendship in spite of whose life takes a turn for the worst and lost two acting roles, Kate is leaving Vito's two previous burglaries on MAIL Lately? of how he releases his frustrations on him, and he has been robbed twice, the Jimmy, Vito ends up spending the night another person. Set on New Year's Eve latest robbery taking a book which he and Jimmy stumbles on to a new idea sometime in the evening, the play was writing. After Kate is gone Jimmy for a book. The play ends as they go to develops a warm freindship between the catches Vito and ties him to the kitchen sleep, two lonely people finding friend­ All REGISTERED Clubs NOW Have two main characters, Jimmy the actor counter. Jimmy lets his frustrations out ship, if under odd circumstances. and Vito the burglar that Jimmy has on Vito by many witty, but cutting This play combines highly witty dia­ caught. , remarks. logue with a very human condition: , As the play opens, Vito In the course of the evening depression. Jimmy's depression results A Mailbox in th~ Student ActiVities starts to rob Jimmy's they trade stories about from his feeling that the entire world has , ~, apartment but has to hide themselves. Together they turned against him. The situation in which this theme is presented makes the comedy more profound. The fact that Jimmy is behaving in a crazy way makes Office, Healy G 16 for a hilarious line through the play. The actors do a good job of charac­ terizing their roles. The role of Vito, played by Vasili Bogazianos, is the most captivating of all. He is a person who knows his way around and makes com­ ments in a very funny way. He also reveals both a tough and a sensitive side. Jimmy, played by David Deardoff, is a man who hasn't taken time to find what Hoyette Enters Miss Metro Pageant he is and what he really wants. He does a The Miss Metro Pageant announces the nomination of 'Marty Helen Donnellan. good job of depicting a man who has Miss Donnellan, a freshman in Georgetown's College of Arts and Sciences, said, had it with life and just wants to be left "I am thrilled to possibly have the chance to represent Washington in the Miss alone by everyone. J.1. Kinersly as Kate and Ray Lloyd as Fred her new boy­ USA contest. It is really exciting! There are only a few obstacles that might hinder friend, do a nice job but their roles were my future successes, but I am sure that I can give up and . 1 would not very deeply characterized in the especially like to thank my two buddies in Loyola and Old North for urging me on." play. IBID! -Amanda Clarke Th.e Jewish Student Association would like to invite you Drink the beer to a very special Friday Night theydrink themselves. Service and Dinner at Europe's # 1 bottled beer is here. ___ ,H'"" 6:30 tonight Kronenbourg. Now you can enjoy the in New South beer more Europeans would rather have Faculty than any other bottled beer. Kronenbourg Lounge. has had a renowned brewing tradition for over 300 years. Now you can be a CHAOS UNLIMITED part of that European tradition. USED: SCIENCE FICTION & MYSTERY BOOKS Drink Kronenbourg beer, the beer 3809 McKINLEY ST. N.W. 244-2710 ON CONN. AVE JUST BELOW CHEVY CHASE CIRCLE they drink themselves. Kronenbourg. 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TEACH OVERSEASI Eu~ope's # 1 bottled beer is here For details. send self-addressed long. stamped envelope to: Friends of World Teaching. P.O. Box 707. Needles, CA 92363. Friday, December 1,1978 The HOVA Page 9 arts & entertainment Kinks' Misfits: A Self-Evaluation Alternative Theatre at Georgetown If the Kinks had ever received half of latest work with the Stones. your easy chairs, we've gota lot to do the popular acclaim they deserved, they The album begins with the title track out there." by Bill Henry The first production of the group Bauble) this semester and that is would be starring in the latest Robert in which Ray explores how hard it is to Misfits begins with Ray Davies A new group has joined the ranks will be Bruce Friedman's very pop­ really what I want to do. I would Stigwood production, have a violent be an individual and wonders if maybe wondering whether his style of life is of Georgetown theatre-which now ular play, Steambath. The best like to see a number of theatre death in the group already, and lead sin­ he should conform to mass standards worth living anymore and ends with consists primarily of Mask & Bau­ known version of this play was done groups succeed at Georgetown." ger Ray Davies would be running after all, as he sings ... cheering little men like himself to keep ble, and Classical Theatre-to pro­ for the Public Broadcasting System In addition to Banno and Yaffe, around the world with Margaret "You're a misfit: doing the same old thing in a brand new vide an "alternative." and starred Bill Bixby and Valerie lTG's Board of Directors includes Trudeau; but then they would not be the Afraid of yourself so you run away way. In doing so, he has redeemed his In the words of Executive Pro­ Perrine. [n the play, the steambath Jim Moran. Charles Groppe, and Kinks. and hide determination to be first and foremost ducer and Chairman of the Board of is a heavenly way station and God is Tom Keily. ITG is funded through The big question then is how can one You've been a misfit all your life, himself-even if it means being eclipsed Directors Peter Yaffe, "Our pur­ a Puerto Rican attendant deciding the Student Activities Commission of the three remaining "British So why don't you join the crowd most of the time on the charts by pint­ pose is to offer a theater group ex­ where to ship the new arrivals. The from a special fund set aside for Invasion" groups (with the Who and the and come inside" sized talents like Andy Gibb and Barry clusively for the students of George­ play will be directed by Joe Banno other theatre groups. Part of its Stones) still produce music which will However, before he can join the ranks of Manilow. It must be very frustrating; town and in doing so provide an (who recently directed one act in the funding is set aside to pay Mask and live up to their integrity while being able the common man, Dave's screaming when I saw the Kinks this summer, the alternative to the Ma~k and Bauble. Mask and Bauble's Woody Allen Bauble $50.00 a week for the use of to sell as many records as possible with­ guitar interrupts his thought and six foot, rail thin lead singer appeared to Our hope is to get people with theat­ trilogy), and tryouts will be held in Stage 3 at Poulton. The Mask and out becoming "pop." insures his continued non-conformism. be somehow fragile and alone on the rical experience and aLI other inter­ January. Banno gave as his reasons Bauble has adopted some of the In the mid-sixties they did it with "Hay Fever" follows, beginning as stage until he flashed his giveaway ested people to come forth and par­ for joining the new group, "I will changes instituted by the new "You Really Got Me" and four other another reflective weeper, but quickly schoolboy grin. The Kinks and Ray ticpate." not be directing (for Mask and group, especially in its hierarchy. top hits in America until they were kicking in as a pure spoof, "1 can't make Davies are here to stay. banned from touring this country until love when I can't hardly breathe, We -Don Hubbard 1969. During this time they still topped start to dance and my nose starts to the British charts with "Waterloo Sun­ bleed." The next track "Live Life" is set," "Death of a Clown" and their most uncompromising rocker in "Victoria," but could not crack the years and has supplied them with both American market until they made it into an encore for concerts and their latest Blatty's Ninth Configuration: Too Short the seventies with their classic "Lola." single. The best song on this album, Although the Kinks have been playing "Rock and Roll Fantasy" begins with a for 15 years together, they nonetheless chorus of strings and Ray saying ... GU alumnus William Peter Blatty, of the universe. Interesting, but this after midterms.) But this discussion also trollable rage." He is also less educated were expected to prove that they could "Hello you, hello me, hello people author of The Exorcist, has written his metaphysical discussion (ala' Teilhard seems to be a tangent which is only than the inmates (he pronounces the"J" make to two more years to the Golden we used to be first book in five years. After reading de Chardin) seems to be only vaguely loosely connected to the action of the in Jung), and insensitive to their prob­ Plateau of the '80s. Isn't it strange, we never changed The Nineth Configuration you may connected to the rest of the story. book. lem. Rather than inciting a tension with With Misfits. their latest album, they We've been through it !tIl yet we're wonder why he did not spend a little Blatty also diagnoses the cause of the The characters themselves are the inmates involve him in almost comic have not only insured theirsurv,ival, but still the same" more time on the book. insanity among the inamtes. They are sketchy and predictable. Major Groper shouting matches. also recorded their greatest work to Self doubts plague him throughout the The book's plot and setting are intrig­ unconsciously "pretending to be crazy, is a good example. He is the stereo­ Several humorous scenes do make date. With perhaps the most painfully song-maybe he should "break up the uing enough. Twenty-seven combat because acting nutty is a safety valve. a typical career officer and war hawk: the book entertaining. honest collection recorded since John band, start a new life, be a new man"­ officers and one astronaut, all of whom way to let off steam, and the crazier they violent, easily duped, and excitable. He "Lieutenant Reno," Fell explained, Lennon's Plastic Dno Band. Ray yet as soon as he looks out his apart­ had panicked in the line of duty, despite act the healthier they get." (An interest­ never seems to appear without "roar­ "is adapting Shakespeare's plays for Davies has analyzed his career in the ment window and sees a person putting long lists of honors for each, are con­ ing thing for anyone who was in the pub ing" an order, or "quivering with uncon- dogs." music industry and has concluded that records on the stereo, he realizes he has fined to an eerie Pacific Northwest "What are you rehearsing?" life can not be resolved. The idea occurs a purpose in life. His continued liveli­ Gothic mansion. A skelton staff of mar­ "We're doing that gripping scene in to him that maybe it is time to quit and hood in music has also been aided by ines, including a "brilliant and empathe­ Julius Ceasar where this noble look­ live like the very day person does, yet this cut entering the American twenty tic" psychiatrist, oversee the top secret ing Dalmation wraps his toga around because he has sunk too much time and recently. The first side ends with the tale installation and attempt to discover the him-thusly ... And then he says: 'Et effort into his world already, and as of another misfit, a tax exile "In a causes and find the cure of these seem­ tu, White Fang." there is still a crowd to play for, this Foreign Land." ingly related breakdowns. Is it a com­ Unfortunately these scenes become notion just can not be considered. What Side two opens with "Permanent munist plot (most of the action takes fewer and fewer as the tone of the book would an over thirty, eternal schoolboy Waves" where a man's sex life picks up place during the Vietnam War), or is the becomes more serious and as Blatty do today anyways-, docor or after undergoing a permanent-yet his devil and his forces of evil behind these tries to build a tension. banker-no, Ray Davies and his Kinks "neurosis returns" when a torrential mental disturbances? That tension is never reached. The are irretrievably lost in a "Rock n' Roll rainstorm flattens his artificial look. Unfortunately, Biatty also attempts blame must lie with Blatty's under­ Fantasy." "Black Messiah" and "Out of the to cram metaphysics, a critique of the developed characters. sketchy meta­ Musically, the melodies and lyrics are Wardrobe" explores a self-made conditions which caused these men to physical undertones, and failure to ade­ collectively the best offering Davies has prophet and a heterosexual transves­ go crazy, and the development of over quately link these either into the plot or ever delivered. Gone for the most part is tite respectively. The latter was initially 30 characters, all within 135 pages. The setting. Blatty offers all the ingredients the vacuous horn section of the Muswell criticized as being a cheap remake of book is a fragment and never achieves for a stimulating novel, but does not Hillbillies period, to be replaced by "Lola," but on a closer inspection it is the tension which it implies and which it give these ingredients time to mix and synthesizers so well integrated into the more of a conclusion to it as it encour­ is capable of achieving. boil into the arcane thriller it could be. songs that one may not be conscious of ages people to be honest about their For instance, Colonel Hudson Kane, -Jim Toomey hearing them. Most importantly, both lives. The following song, "Trust Your the newly assigned psychiatrist with old Kinks fans and new listeners will Heart" was written and sung by Dave; something to hide, argues for the exis­ appreciate the return of the manit.... gui­ . originally recorded as an eight minute tence of God, and discusses man's grad­ tar playing style brother Dave Davies tune (it was pared in half in order to ual alienation from Him (a kind of de­ first exhibited in the group's initial make the album), it begins as a love evolutionization process). He bases his single, "Long Tall Sally." The rhythm ballad and ends with a Little Richard claim on the improbability of just the section is bolsted by drummer Mick howling chorus. The last track returns right configuration of protein mole­ Avory who lays down the same fat Ray to sing a "song for all the little cules (the ninth configuration) for the sound so prominent in Charlie Watts men," encouraging them to "get up off emergence of life, and the finite nature REBELYELL WILL GET You IN IDE Interested In SPIRIT OF IDINGS. SPECIAL INTEREST HOUSING?

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An Interview with the Lord ofthe Rings: For Middle Earthlings Only

J.R.R. Tolkien's Lord of the Rings is and anger come across in the faces of the at times, such as when he is contrite Riders are dreadfully stretched out Director of the Rings a trilogy that is surely something more nine companions more believably than after attempting to seize the ring. (though the view, through Frodo's eyes than "a children's fantasy that has got­ many highly-priced actors could man­ The battle scenes aren't very well after he has put on the ring, is done ten out of hand," (E. Wilson), and age. The look on Frodo's face when done, and no matter what Bakshi says well), and so on, and so on. But-if you Perhaps one of the toughest classics funds because Bakshi makes money something less than the major literary Gollum paws and grovels at his feet is a the Orcs and Riders of Rohan are too like the trilogy you owe it to yourself to of literature to bring to the silver screen and producer Saul Zaentz had just fin­ masterpiece of modern times that many priceless portrait of disgust. real looking to be totally animated, and see the movie. is J.R.R. Tolkien's Lord of the Rings. ished One Flew Over the Cukoo's Nest, ardent "Middle Earth" advocates would And the character's movements and the confrontations with the Black -Joel Szabat The biggest reason is because the film it also helped to have the large cult fol­ have us believe. So too is the movie. interactions also deserve praise. has to be animated and it can not be lowing that Tolkien's works wnjoy. First off, the film was made, in the Through a painstaking process known standard animation because the battle Director Bakshi claims that the words of Director/ Animator Ralph. as 'Rotoscoping' a team of animators scenes would make this impossible to toughest prob-lem with the film was the Bakshi, "solely for those who have managed to convey a fluidity and con­ fact that most of Tolkien's fans had already read the Lord of The Rings." tinuity of motion hitherto unknown already formed their own mental pic­ True enough, as the uninitiated would with such a large field of cartoon fig­ ture of the character and characteriza­ soon be lost in the unending parade of ures. Only Gandalf comes across as a bit tion that we have to break through. Gandalfs, Legolases, Orcs, and Riders erratic in his movements; but, that's the The method of animation used in the of Rohan, et. aI., that journey across the way wizards are. The smallest details, film is called rotoscoping. This method, screen. including handshakes and raised eye­ although invented by Max Fleischer But for those who know and love brows, are given attention. (the creator of Popeye) in the '20's, Tolkien, the film should not be missed. And the dialogue, though stilted at hadn't been used widely until now. Be forewarned; there will be disappoint­ times, is generally believable. When the Rotoscoping in this case meant com­ ments. No film, however long, can cap­ company must part, and Sam says he is pletely shooting a live-action using ture the vivid imagination of a man who going with "Master Frodo," Aragorn's actors in costume and then painting created, not only a world, but a history, resigned "1 know, Sam" says more over it. Bakshi claims that there were no matter what its length. about the plucky hobbit's character no matte shots and each moving pait­ Although the film is 2 hours, 16 than novels of description could. ing was done individually. minutes, it covers only the first half of I ndeed, several scenes such as that make Bakshi went on to say, "The film is the trilogy, up through the conclusion of Samwise the most interesting, and .... an illustration not a cartoon. It is to real the battle of Helm's Deep. Much as enjoyable character of the film. Only Ralph Bakshi, Director Lord of the life as a painting is to a photograph." been left to be inferred or has been Boromir has trouble sounding credible One of the creations of J.R.R. Tolkien Rings Bakshi also claims that the film is deleted or abridged. Fans of Tom for Tolkien fans only. "I could have sim­ Bombadil, Eomer, Faramir, and var­ accomplish. Now Lord of the Rings has plified the film, but it would not have ious and sundry other characters will been brought to the screen by United been as good a film. Look, if you want tend to be displeased. Artists. It is directed and animated by to see it pick up the book and read it But for all of its weaknesses the film Ralph Bakshi, whose previous credits yourself. I'm not going to deprive you of has one overriding, redeeming distinc­ include Fritz the Cat, Coonskin. and the fun I had while reading it. tion; it remains true to Tolkien and so Wizards. There will be a second part because captures the essence of the trilogy, and The film was two and one-half years no one film could contain the entire captures it in breathtaking animation. in the making and was only finished five trilogy. This part is at least two and one­ Not because the characters look life-like days before it was released, although, half years from release. You can be sure (they don't ... they look like cartoon one company had the rights for ten that it will be waited for rabidly by the characters) but because they act life­ years without making a move on it. The fans of Middle Earth. like. Only Treebeard constitutes an film cost eight million dollars to make. -Bill Henry exception and is done quite poorly. It was not especially difficult getting the Expressions of horror, joy, surprise,

GNAT --JOHN SEXTON'S- PREPARATION CENTER for free brochure and class schedule LSAT see Doug Kempf Room 237 Copley or cal! GNAT Out there in the Atlantic Ocean on a sunshine beach there's going to be an 800-431-1 038 toll free PREPARATION CENTER outbreak of revelry this vacation break. And after the sun goes down ... for free brochure well, you know the effect that moonlight has on a celebration. We can only and class schedule hope it won't be a full moon. STOP SMOKING, see Doug Kempf LOSE WEIGHT Room 237 Copley Because from Jan. - April we're opening the Bahamas/Paradise Island to a THROUGH HYPNOSIS. or call wave of American college students. We have reason to believe that wave FOR INFORMATION 800-431-1038 toll free may reach tidal proportions. Probably because of th,e\ price: $309 includinQ . CALL 656-3220 air fare and 7 nights hotel. So there it is, young America. We guarantee you the best of dancing on the beach, water sports and a roaring party. Beyond that, you're InviteCl to Improvise. AnCl since you're talent for good­ timing is legendary, we've made preparations for you. We're going to be The Student Activities Commission and ready. The University Center I nvites you to With open arms.

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To RESERVE Your Tree-RSVP by Monday, Dec. 4 in BAHAMAS/PARADISE 15. 1 the Student Activities Office, Healy, G 16 COllEGE WEEK. Friday, December 1, 1978 The HOYA Page 11 arts & entertainment Slow. Dancing: The Magic: The Promising Spell Doesn't Work Syrup Flows Slowly A serious film exploring the relation­ start of the film) have to do with Fats? Is apart by conflicting demands and speciality is thrillers (such as Omen2, ship between a ventrioloquist and his Fats real and Corky the dummy? Are we thoughts. Perhaps the best part of the (apricorn One, The Swarm, and The One or two bad reviews won't hurt a Ditchburn, a Canadian ballet star) who dummy should make for a fine film, the dummies for caring? film is Ann Margaret's performance, Boys From Brazil) for which he writes film financially because it is usually meet and fall in love, The dancer leaves Add the possibility of the dummy being Hopkins and Meredith are both mis­ She comes off perfectly as the not-too­ nerve-racking music that grabs your word of mouth that sells a film. But her "sugar daddy", who does not under­ a supernatural being and it should only cast in their roles but manage to pull bright former cheerleader who is now attention. This film is no exception. when all the reviews condemn a film, it stand her, and moves into Sorvino's get better. Magic, directed by Richard through with credible performances, enthralled with Corky after marrying Magic is effective, make no doubt keeps away the film buffs that usually apartment building, where he is smitten Attenborough, although this thriller This is due mainly to their sizable tal­ the class jock. about it, but it is not a good film. Due spread the word. In John G. Alvidson's with true love at first sight. On their way keeps you on the edge of your seat it ents. Hopkins is particularly good when jerry Goldsmith is as prolific as Bill mainly to script sketchiness, the film Slow Dancing in the Big City (his fitst to finding true love, he tries to save a fails to deliver the punch it promises. he has to portray Corky being torn Conti (see other review) except that his does not pack the punch it promises. film since the Award winning, Rocky), ghetto kid and she finds out that she is Brought to the screen by the gang that -Bill Henr the people are staying in droves, This on her last legs. In a true Rockyesque gave us A Bridge Too Far (Same direc­ film, although flawed, is not that bad. ending, she makes it to the final bell and tor, producer Joseph E. Levine; and Its major faults include a screenplay collapses into her ugly-duckling lover's screenplay author William Goldman), that borders on idiotic soap opera and arms, the film is adapted from the novel by the lack of a major, identifiable star. The story comes off as sentimental Goldman. The film tells the story of a Another reason for the bad reviews is pap which is a shame because it masks magician named Corky (played by because the film celebrates New York some fine acting and many a scene is Anthony Hopkins) whose act is a flap City. Films like that rarely get reviewed ruined by dopey dialogue, In an Italian until he brings in an X-rated dummy fairly outside New York, restaurant, after hearing that Ditch­ nam~d Fats (voice also done by The biggest hindrance is the screen­ burn is a ballerina, a little girl asks her Hopkins). Corky's act skyrockets so play by Barra Grant. It combines Rocky grandmother if she too can be a baller­ that he becomes the darling of his agent and The Turning Point, unfortunately, ina. In true movie cliche fashion the (Burgess Meredith) and is offered a T.V. taking the worst parts of each. The story grandmother answers (while cooking a show contract. But when he finds out he is about a Jimmy Breslin-type writer for pot of pasta. no less) "This is America; has to take a physical, Corky freaks out the Dai(v News, played by Paul you can be whatever you want." Right, and goes to his old home town to try and Sorvino, and a ballet dancer (Anne try to be the head of the Teamsters, little see Peggy Ann Snow (Ann Margaret) girls. the cheerleader he had a crush on in The acting by Sorvino is good even if high school. Then starts a senseless he does tend to go a little overboard, He string of murders which were never certainly is believable as the I-Love­ really needed except to give Corky New-York reporter, Anne Ditchburn something to do. Campus does a much better job than most of the The several unexplained sequences other dancers-turned-actresses of late. detract strongly from the film. Why Her lithe, winsome determination is won't Corky submit to the exam? Did perfectly suited to the roles. The little Fats kill Peggy Ann's husband? What Cinema ghetto kids are little more than foul­ does Corky's mentor (see briefly at the mouthed sterotypes and pretty poor Fri., Sat. 8PM, LA-6 ones at that. Spring Quarter in The Wilderness Straw Dogs (R) Bill Conti seems to be trying to set a 63 days- Colo, UtahiAriz. record for most sound tracks done in Skiing, Mountaineering. RockClimbing Okay, all you violence freaks, out one year, Since January, hc has done IF YOU think you are preg­ 15 hours credit avai lable of the closet and into LA-6, because excellent jobs for the films FIST, An nant and don't know what to do Challenge/D iscovery that is where Sam Peckinpaugh's Unmarried Woman, The Big Fix, Para­ next, but think you might want Straw Dogs is. If your idea of a fun dise Alley, Slow Dancing in the Big to keep your baby. give BIRTH­ International Wilderness Center P,O. Box 229 film cncludes women brutalized, City. and Moment by Moment, The RIGHT a chance to help you, Crested Butte Colo. 81224 houses destroyed, and a foot being music is a great deal like the slower OUR VOLUNTEERS can ad­ 303·349·5432 blown away by a shotgun, then this tempo sections of Rocky and accen­ vise you in confidence, provide film is for you (so is a visit to your tuated by an original ballet also written pregnancy testing. and find psychiatrist's office). The film stars by Conti. help for you and your baby. Typing Service: Dissertation, Dustin Hoffman and Susan George Slow Dancing in Ihe Big Cily has Day or night. call Theses, Papers. in the story of a man who leaves been for the most part, misjudged. It is Professionally typed by society behind for a place in the better than quite a few films of late, but 526-3333 The Johnson Word Processing country, but finds himselfterrorized not that much better. If you like soap­ Center, Inc, by a local gang, He accepts it for operaish love stories and enjoy your 301 "G" Street S.w. aWhile and then finally fights back. maple syrup by the gallon, this fiolm is 488-0756 -Bill Henry for you. -Bill Henry .AppLI CAT!0r6 ret. fi1E)1~)ij /P . t~ ALflfA~?'tfMA Nu (T~ JeSUIT .-IO*'I\ SOCIETY) A~ NatJ AVAI~ l~ ALL DEAN OfFICE) *f~ JUNloR5~SE~I~ O~lV

J)e\puNE lOf\ AfPltCAlioNS 15 ))EcEJ1B~ lOot !

Santa's First Stop -"Georgetown is for Lovers" T-Shirts KRIS KRINGLES -G. U. Campus Guide T-Shirts & Totes -stationery, posters & prints (under $4.50) -candles, stuffed animals -Japanese paper wallets Metal edge 31" x 42" Pickell table. Inter-Royal • drafting stool and luxo Crown light lamp, Aegu- ,_ -LOTS and LOTS of -keychains larly$153,95. NSWili S95 ~ beautiful JEWELRY! -sterling & gold-filled earrings -sachets and soaps -skinny rings & chain bracelets Entire Stock STAEDTLER MARS LUXO CROWN LITE -nature's nail files PRODUCTS-20% OFF! Reg_ $24.95 -baskets and planters Now Only., _ $1899 Except Sale It~ms I -barrettes & bobby pins ~ USE YOUR CONVENIENT -=- ~ BANKAMERICARD wt" y. -hug coupons FRIENDSHIP and much more! BRACELETS VlWAlL ~ YES-we have Xmas cards Genuine stones, including tiger's eye, & decorations malachite, turquoise, jade & pearl on (ALSO: stockin,gs & ~~rr:iMS liquid sterling silver and 12 kt. gold-filled. ROCKVILLE, MD. WASHINGTON, D.C, wrapping paper) 1596 ROCKVILLE PIKE Across Flam 1727 EYE ST., N.W. Also: 14 kt. gold, 12 kt. gold -filled, and CO"9"''';01181 Plaza 35th & N Sts. (across from Loyola) 331-7090 sterling chain braclets. 965-1943 Page 12 The HOYA Friday, December 1,1978 features Hammering Home: Georgetown Construction

by Liz Taylor penalty fines if they go past the comple­ As the functional capacity of the Uni­ tion date [$500-700 per day], they are versity's older structures declines, four eager to finish the project. They are major construction .projects on the already working overtime at their own Georgetown University campus are cost. Moreover, the University scheduled for completion in 1979. These obviOUsly does not want the money include the recreation complex, the stu­ from the fines, we want to see the stu­ dent apartment complex. the fluidiz:ed dents occupying their apartments for bed boiler system, and an addition to the fall semester." the Georgetown University Hospital. The fluidiz:ed bed boiler, also to be The $7.5 million recration complex, completed in Spring '79, will be the first which was begun in August, 1977, is of its exact kind in the United States. running a few months behind schedule The building is an addition to the exist­ and is due for completion in Spring, ing University boiler plant and is being 1979. It will include 12 multi-use courts funded entirely by the Department of and a four-lane jogging track in the Energy (DOE). According to Mr. Scar­ fieldhouse, four squash and four hand­ brough, "The plant will be capable of ball courts, a swimming and diving burning high sulfur coal which is the pool, sunbathing deck, instructional most abundant and currently the least dance and meeting rooms, as well as an expensive fuel available. It also includes I astroturl field and synthetic track a new system which will cut down the located on the roof of the structure. amount of pollution to the atmosphere As a result of the construction of the I normally caused by coal burning." Rec Plex, water runoff has caused dam­ age to the nearby Glover-Archblad The power plant is part of a DOE I Park. A meeting is scheduled for Wed­ project to promote the use of new sys­ nesday, November 29, during which tems which will conserve the nation's Ben Scarbrough, director of construc­ resources of oil and natural gas. The tion for the University, representatives University will be responsible for a three for the contractor, Creative Building year demonstration period, which is Systems, and representatives from the expected to encourage the use of simi­ National Park Service will discuss the lar systems throughout the country. problem and plans for its solution. The addition to the Georgetown Uni­ Scarbrough has already assured Mark versity Hospital includes several differ­ Burchick of the Park Service that the ent phases of operation. Six floors are University will work with the contrac­ being added to the Marcus J. Bles tor in order to insure that the situation Building (l floor for a new laboratory will be rectified to the Park Service's and 5 patient floors), the renovation of satisfaction. the old laboratory and the existing A t this date, it is still uncertain as to floors of the Bles Building, renovation whether the new student apartment of three hospital wings and the second complex will be ready for occupancy for floor of the Gorman Building, and a the Fall semester, 1979. When asked vault linear accelerator which will be about the apparently slow progress of used for radiation therapy in cancer the construction, Mr. Scarbrough treatment, are all phases of the con­ explained, "The beginning work may struction. John Anderson, director of seem unusually slow because the loca­ construction for the hospital, explained tion of construction (a narrow, slanting that the actual completion date of the· strip of land) is difficult to lay a founda­ project is difficult to determine, tion on. Now that the foundation is "Though the final completion date is set completed, the construction should at October, 1979, some of the phases are proceed at a faster rate." already completed. The project is Though the final completion date as actually running ahead of schedule. It is set by the contractor, Equitable Con­ hard to say, however, exactly when each struction Company, is September 7, phase will be completed because of the Scarbrough stated that the apartments inierrelat:onship of each phase." may still be occupied stating August 15. The townhouses being constructed Scarbrough, who is in daily contact on N Street between 36th and 37th with the architect, contractor, and con­ Streets is not a University project. The struction foreman, is optimistic; "Since homes will be private residences. Equitable will be held responsible for

Senator Cindy Urban THE STROH BREWERY COMPANY. DETROIT. MICHIGAN © 1978

fulfilling some campaign

promises!

~ LAD/ESWEAR D/SCOU/VTERS Crv.R~..cYPAULS)

~T/c:w~YAlJI/ERTISE/J LAD/ES APPAREL ck- ZJ~ #AIY{//i4C!T{/RE~ t/St/AL 8IJf7GESTEP RE77IB- FRCE8_ "Sure, join our study group, we're doing a case history." L.OCATEO IN THE ROSSLYNPLAZA 8t11LLJ~r; l60g Ne KENT Sf. (/YEAr 7V RJ8S£.YNC//vEA1A) -~REE .l?4RKINe c)oFN /O,U1~6,CV ~~8Ar For~~ the real beer lover. PHONE 525-5656 Friday, December 1,1978 The HOYA Page 13 sports GU's Spiked Punches Net Best Season Ever by Patti McKenna the second place team in another. Hoyette volleyball wrapped up its Therefore, if we had gotten past 1978 season with a fifth place finish in Rutgers, in the second round we would the AIAW Region I Tournament on have met Delaware, a weak team who November 16-18. This is the best season we've beaten several times. Instead we ever for the Georgetown women who ended up playing Temple. By beating have proven repeatedly in tournament Rutgers, we would have been assured of and regular season competition a place in the second round of the throughout the year that they are to be championship bracket competition." counted among the top teams on the Although a little disappointed in the east coast. tournament, McClure said he felt good Held at the Indiana University of about the season in general. The team's Pennsylvania, the Regional tourna­ goal was to finish in the top six: in the ment was composed ofthe top 16 teams region, which they did, going into the in the northeastern section of the tournament seeded fifth, and emerging country. Georgetown, seeded ruth, was in fifth place. Comments McClure, "The placed in a pool with Rutgers, seeded teams who finished ahead of us are fourth, Central Connecticut State simply better than we are. If recruiting College, seeded thirteenth, and goes well this year, I hope to aim for a Syracuse University, seeded twelfth, for spot in the top three next season." the first round of competition. Two spots on the squad will have to Just before Thanksgiving, Georgetown's Rugby Club (left) faced undefeated Villanova (right). When the dust had cleared from the The first two matches against Central be filled as seniors Helen Randolph and lower field, Villanova's record, along with the bones of two players, was broken. Credit was due to a tenacious Hoya defense. Connecticut and Syracuse were rela­ Kristin Stanley will be graduating in the tively easy for the Hoyas as both op­ spring. McClure has a number of po­ ponents were weak, and the powerful tential recruits in mind, and is already Georgetown Senior Gridder's Best Season Since '40's G U squad scored decisive victories. The beginning to line up the 1979 schedule. (continued from page 14) able with their blocking and running. good use. the board to just lose the close ones but third match, however, was a different He says, "I am very optimistic about the Lloyd Campbell and Clayton Coach Glacken's idea of a wishbone an improved defense and a feeling of story. recruiting situation, and I feel that the all-around quarterback' in Div. III. This year, Sitz has broken all the Wagner will be sorely missed next year. offense that would 'bend but not break', "tcamness" that circulated among the Meeting Rutgers University in the squad is in a good position for next players proved to be the decisive .records he amassed last year en route to Wagner became the premiere G.U. pass seemed to be effective this year in third match of the initial pool play, year." turning the clock back a few years. But elements to the success of this years' career highs of almost 3,000 yds receiver and also proved instrumental in Georgetown won the first game 15-9. the final minutes of the season finale as by no means can an offense dictatc a team. For the Hoyas. the past years are But the strong and aggressive Rutgers passing. 23 TD passes and some 400 yds rushing. Undoubtedly, Sitz has proved he and Sitz hooked up several times put­ team's final outcome as evidenced last history but the present will always be re­ team, who has defeated GU in previous ting seven years of working together to year when enough points were put on membered as the 'golden years'. tournament matches, bounced right New Crew to be one of the finest Signal Callers to back to hand the women a 15-9 defeat. by Don Faulkner grace the Hoya gridiron. The In the deciding game, the two teams The Athletic Board, meeting last astounding stat of 101 passes thrown battled each other right down to the week, voted to recommend the eleva­ without an interception supports that wire, with Rutgers eventually coming tion of Women's Crew to varsity sport fact. Lacrosse Not Lax for '79 Season out on top with a 16-14 victory. status. The recommendation, if His chances of being recognized as an With a second place finish in their approved by Dean Stott, would place "All-American" are "scrawny" but he's by Jack O'Hara They have worked since the early fall in group are several talented freshmen as pool, GU still remained in the top eight both Men's and Women's Crew on an familiar with the meaning of that word. order to coordinate the organizational well as a few newcomers to the sport. teams and was given the opportunity to equal plane for the first time since the Sitz's backup who will take the reigns What spectator sport combines the end of the sport. Jim Solomon is opti­ Hopefully this squad will turn the move into the championship bracket. Women's Club program began three next year is Bob Gerard. Gerard has physical contact of football, the delib- mistically looking forward to the gen­ program around and create a winning At this level, the teams played in pairs in years ago, according to Women's Crew played little this year but has gained erate patterns of basketball, and the ex- eral future of lacrosse at Georgetown: trend at Georgetown. the first round and the tournament captain Amy Kuhner. considerable knowledge about the citing speed of hockey? Why, lacrosse! "Coming from an area of tough la­ The lacrosse team suffers, along with became a single elimination. "In the past we've raised all of our wishbone offense and admitted, "Before The Georgetown lacrosse team is now crosse competition, I think that George­ many sports at Georgetwon, from a lack Temple University, which finished own money for operating expenses," I came to G. U. I had never controlled preparing for a competitive spring lown will be the focus of much exciting of funds. Despite the rigorous competi­ first in its pool play was the first-round said Kuhner, "but other funds have been the offense from that set but I look season. On February IS, the laxmen will play this year; and [ hope that many tion afforded by Division I play, there opponent for the Hoyettes. The Temple more difficult to come by." The effect of forward to it because I like to run the take the field under head coach Greg students will support our effort." are no scholarship players participat­ five were the third seed in the region, a new varsity program, she claimed, ball and the options that go with it". Swanson and start preparationfortheir Lacrosse is a college orientated sport ing in lacrosse, and the Athletic De­ and had repeatedly beaten GU during would be "to strengthen the team," by The offense will also be losing five challenging nine game season. The full of both fun and competition, partment donates only a meager stipend the season. True to form, they chalked reducing transportation and rental other explosive elements: running­ squad has added Bowden and Morgan Twelve juniors are returning from last to their cause. Therefore, much of the up another victory, thus dropping expenses (the squad could claim the use backs Andy Murray, Ottaway TaUey State to this year's schedule which al- year's disappointing group with bright fund raising is left to the team itself. The Georgetown into the consolation of a University van), and attracting and Andy Blood as well as receivers ready includes Loyola of Baltimore, a hopes for the future. These men have captains reported that they are plan­ bracket. Since no further competition is more freshmen recruits. Clayton Wagner and Lloyd Campbell. perennial power. The team also plans to played together for the past two years ning some type of dance in the future played at this point, the Hoyettes re- This fall the Women's varsity four Murray led Div. III in scoring travel to southern Florida over spring and form the core of a team that lost which will contribute to the team's mained in a four-way tie for fifth place. raced in the Head of the Charles (21 out throughout the year and finished (un­ break and participate in a tQurnament only two seniors at graduation. Ap­ coffers. They are also petitioning "The loss to Rutgers," explained of 40) and the Head of the Connecticut officially) up in the catbird seat with a which will be the group's first taste of proximately forty-five students have various alumni groups for additional Coach Joe McClure, "could well ha'¥#:;", (6 of 20). Winter practices under Men's 10.8 pts. per game average. The stout competition. shown some interest in the sport during financial aid. Despite these burdens, the been iheKey defeat in the entire tourna- Coach, and likely future head coach of a Senior also gained more than 2,300 yds. The captains of the 1979 squad arc the fall informal workouts, and this is team is quite optimistic and unified in ment. ~Uowing the tournament-- combined program Jay Forster has in his career. Ottaway "Breakaway" Jim Solomon, Steve Scheurle, ,.,;wm, .. certainly an encouraging omen for the their hopes for an excellent spring system, the top team in one pool plays already begun. Talley and Andy Blood proved invalu- Rice, and George Lodge, all juniors. future of lacrosse. Included in this season in 1979.

GEORGETOWN UNIVERSITY CHORUS

* . **'"* * PRESENTS * ...... * **,.. •

ON THIS DAY

The Annual Christmas Choral Concert John Palumbo makes make-believe so real, you laugh and cry and nobody can be an "Innocent Bystander" anymore. John Palumbo, formerly the leader of Crack The Sky, flies lohn Palumbo solo on his first album. innocent bystander Tuesday, December 5th, 7:30 p.m. "Innocent Bystander," on Lifesong Records and Tapes. in Dahlgren Chapel Distributed by CBS Records.

rQ 1978 CBS Inc Donation: $1.00 ll~

~~.... -~~.:~- - .".-.. /:.-; ---_ ...... sportsi -- -,;;::,,;::-.. 59th Year, No. 12 GEORGETOWN UNIVERSITY, WASHINGTON, D.C. Friday, December 1, 1978 ~,~.~------~------~--'~------Floyd-led Hoyas Topple Terps in Cap Centre Tourney Tip-off Tilt by Sean Crowley Williams fouled Duren when the Terps Commenting on Maryland's 4-for-19 Spurred by freshman guard Eric could least afford it. The Hoya guard shooting down the home stretch, the (Sleepy) Floyd's 28 points. the George­ then hit both ends of a pressure one­ Terrapin coach said, "we took bad­ town Basketball Hoyas defeated their and-one. Maryland became increas-' horrible shots." old nemesis Marvland 68-65 for ingly desperate, and increasingly Craig Shelton (14 points) and Steve first time since 1970, breaking a string of sloppy. Martin (12) were the high scorers for the six consecutive losses to the Terrapins. Ernest Graham and Al King (who led Hoyas, behind Floyd. John Duren con­ Floyd, who has the unenviable task of the Terps with 18 and 19 points respec­ tributed ten before fouling out. taking over Derrick Jackson's former tively) both missed layups that would The win raises G U's record to 2-0, as position, responded to the pressure of a have closed the gap to one, with over they dumped Bowie State in their big game just as his predecessor used to two minutes remaining. Another fresh­ opener, 79-54. Martin and Shelton do, tossing in 10 of his 16 second-half man, Dutch Morly, threw the ball away sparked the Blue-and-Grey in that points during a 12-2 spurt which pro­ on another opportunity. effort at McDonough last Saturday. pelled the Hoyas from a 42-47 deficit to Summing it up with brutal frank­ The unbeaten Hoyas face perenially a 5449 lead, one which they would ness, 'Lefty' Driesell conceded, "we lost tough St. Bonaventures tomorrow never relinquish. our poise ...• They (Georgetown) de­ night, at McDonough. Last year the Not that Maryland didn't come close. served the win. They outhustled us and Bonnies bested GU 71-67, on their way The Terps crawled back to within OI~e, played smarter at the end." to a NCAA playoff slot. at 56-55, much to the cha-grin of the mostly pro-Hoya crowd of 8100 at the Cap Center. With 9:58 left on the over­ head scoreboard clock, G U Coach John GU Gals Gouge Goucher Thompson called timeout. The Maryland five had switched to a zone to frustrate the Hilltopper's of­ Set Record in 111-26 Win fense. and when play resumed Thomp­ by Sheila Finnegan The record triumph clearly demon­ son had his squad retaliate by moving strated the high caliber of this year's into a stall. For two minutes the Hoyas The Georgetown women's basket­ Georgetown women's team. Coached held the ball, working the outside ball team began its season Monday by team mentor Francis Carr and his ~, ," perimeter. defeating Goucher College by an unpre­ assistant Mary Briese, the team demon­ " " In Thompson's words the game then cedented margin of 85 points. The final strated that they will be quite competi­ turned into, "a chessgame," and Terra­ uutcome was 111-26 lead by Patti tive this year and more successful than pin Coach Driesell was forced to break McKenna and Erin Reid each with 16 ever. The high quality of the team also his zone to go after the ball. John Duren points. Four other Hoyas also scored in indicates the importance of adequate (8 assists) then promptly fed a pass to double figures: Maria DeVita, 15 funding and scholarships both of which Steve Martin. who his a short jumper. points; Sue Kelly, 13; Abbie Dillon, 12; were increased last year. and the Terps never again closed to less and Kerry Keefe, 10; Contributing a The team travels to Fairleigh Dickin­ than three. total of 29 points were remaining team son College tonight and tomorrow to Maryland had several other oppor­ members Jill Will, Maria Comerford, SI. Peter's College, The next home tunities to close the margin. but sud­ An ne Stazeski, Ginger Zimmerman and game is scheduled for December 7 and is denly went cold. Freshman 'Buck' Kathy Leeborn. against George Mason College.

• , y ~

" , ~"Y'~, 'i .<,,~;X\.'o Gridders End Memorable Season by Sal Nigrelli as it gave the offense the chance to pile fidence and a seasoned attitude". ;: :~~:>~:i:~~~; ~:~~,; up the points. The senior stalwarts of For a player such as Elliott, who Now that the HOY A gridders have the 'retarding crew' are Tri-captain Paul started out his career as a runningback hung up their spikes for another year, Zimmerman, Bob Gorence and John and moved up unto the offensive line in the mud caked on them will cling as long Davis. his ~Ofih year, it's not enough to walk off as the tales they carry. Fora team that in Davis, at one time was seen carrying the field with a pocketful of victories the past seasons has been crunched, the football as a half-back and a's a and Memories at the end of the season, bumped and dumped in the mud, this quarterback before he settled down to he exclaims, "I hope the rest ofthe team year will be a relished memory. tightening up the defensive secondary has felt that the effort put forth was a We have all heard stories when the where he has led the team in intercep­ TEAM effort and will carry that into Hoyas, in their heydays (1938-40), rang tions the past two seasons. After it was next season". up 22 consecutive convincing victories. all over, he pondered. "Working with Elliott teamed with other seniors Joe And about the real "Saxa" defense the team, getting our timing down and Gaul and Keith McCormick to solidify " , ,;', ,M r which blanked their foes five times in executing the proper play at the proper a front line that powered the way for an ,i; ~: "" J : each of those years which culminated in time has been an achievement our amazing 3,200 yd offensive show this Eric "Sleepy" Floyd, silhouetted against the Capital Center lights, goes skyward for one of his eleven buckets agaim.t an Orange Bowl bid in 1940. Those are ballclub.can be proud of ... For me, season. Maryland. The GU Frosh's 28 points sparked Georgetown to 3 68-65 victory over the Terps. The 2-0 Hoyas hust Sf. memories that will always be cher­ just being a part of that was a great Coach Glacken made the point clear Bonaventure tomorrow night. ished-those "were" the days. experience". that the Hoyas didn't win because of Coaching tycoon Scotty Glacken The leadership on offense WaS pro­ their size, "What our players lacked in credits the success of this year's club to vided by QB Bobby Sitz, a player that size up front, we made up in finesse". Intramurals Winds Down Year in Three Sports; 'it's coming of age.' "What once was a when he reported to training camp as a Every fall Coach Glacken and his staff team of freshmen and sophomores scrawny freshman was told that HoHo­ must face the fact that the team will be a became full of juniors and seniors ...... ween wasn't until late October and small one and must perform the basics Farm, 6th Darnell Revival, Vegematics Champs "Every once in a while a team will shouldn't waste his money on such ex­ extremely well in order to be successful. mature and reach it's potential and be­ pensive costumes such as jerseys, But The emphasis on tough, well con­ Volleyball League Locked in Three-Way Tie come one of 'the best'-for the most he was determined to prove all the ducted practices comes to light as part, that's what happened this year." midnight practices when he used to play Glacken purports, "Games are won and By Mark Goodman playoff positions determined except in the scrappy Run and Gun t.;:am, win­ This year's squad boasted fifteen catch with his Mom'(who needed atriple lost on the practice field ... I felt that The arrival of Thanksgiving last League D, where there is a three way tie ning by only 9, 41-32. seniors which have been deprived of a padded catcher's mitt to catch Sitz's we did NOT have a bad practice all week, signals only one thing-the end of for the final spot. In a thrilling three ]n addition to the regular 1M action. winning season since their initiation Sizzlers) in his cellar weren't for naught. year". the fall Intramural season. With only game classic, the Stars and Spikes came the Intramural Department is sponsor­ into the G.U. program. As Tri-Captain Since then, he has developed into The Hoyas touted a well groomed the coed volleyball playoffs left, the from behind and wasted Six Pack, 5-15, ing a foul shooting contest this Mon­ Da ve Elliott put it, "We've been around what coach Glacken feels is the 'finest defense this year which was a key factor Intramural Department is completing 15-12, 15-9 to wind up the regular sea~ day at 10:30 p.m. for a long time it seems, this year was a culmination of experience, strong con- (Continued on page /3) another successful year. The competi­ son 6-1, the same as Stars and Spikes tion has been rough and tough. espec­ and the Pironhas. A playoff game will ially in intramural football, where the be held next week to determine who guys play every play like they are the goes to the regular playoffs. As for the lead man on the Dallas Cowboy sweep ,playoff bound teams, it will be the (I'm not a Redskin fan!) defending champions The Washington Two weeks ago. the Euc1ideans were Club, The Wrecking Crew, who have plowed under by Junior's Farm, 6-2 destroyed all competion so far, The allowing Junior's Farm to win the Northern Gentlemen (who have great Men's Independent Football Champ­ looking uniforms), and 2nd New North, ionship: To get to the finals, the which is always tough. It appears that Euclideans. in a coldly calculated game the Wrecking Crew is the odds-on plan, divided up the Tough Darts, stick­ fa vorite to win it all as they have a bye ing them 4-0. In the other semifinal into the semi-finals and have looked game, Doones Plus. despite blocking extremely tough while going 7-0. The two punts, were defeated by Junior's playoffs are scheduled for sometime Farm 6-0. The Farm's defense made hay next week. Intramural Wrapup of Plus' offense, and the Doones had In earlier 1M action, the men's inde­ several costly penalties which ended pendent tennis champion, Charles their dreams of winning the champion­ O'Donnell. beat Frank Polito of the ship. dorm division 6-1, 4-6, 6-2, to win the In the dorm division. 6th Darnall (7- overall tennis championship. The I) conquered 4th Loyola 6-2, Darnall's women's independent champion Nancy only loss of the ycar came at the hands Ghormley thumped the dorm champ­ of 3rd New South. who whipped Dar­ ion Pam Storms, 6-2, 6-0, to win the nall 6-2, on a desperation 76 yd. TD women's tennis championship. In cross strike at the end of the first half. In the country, the dorm division winner for championship game, it was Darnall all the I III mile run was Tom Curran of3rd the way, as their aroused defense stuck it New South in a time of 7:59. Tom to the East Campus stars. In the Raskauskas (7:29) won the indepen­ women's independent-dorm diVIsion, dent men's division and Theresa New South II Revival (7-1). the 1M Roberts captured the women's inde­ football champs from last year, won the pendent. title again this year, trouncing the In the Early Bird Basketball Tourna­ , , Untouchables 6-0. New South, led by ment, the Amazing Vegematics, with an -- all-everything Terri Bernstein, com­ amazing 7 foot center, sliced, diced, pletely dominated the game, gaining chopped, and cut the God Squad, 51-33 four first downs to the Untouchables to win the championship, The " one. Vegematics had little trouble capturing When the final buzzer sounded, allowing Georgetown to escape with a narrow congratulate his rival. It was Georgetown's first win over Maryland in the last In Intramural Coed-Volleyball, the the crown, with their sternest test com­ win, Coach John Thompson led the jubilant pro-Hoy a crowd in exulting. To the seven years. regular season ended last night with all ing in the quarter-final round against far right can be seen a disconsolate Lefty Driesell heading past the press table to