Vol. XLV, No. 13 GEORGETOWN UNIVERSITY, WASHINGTON, D. C. Thursday, February II, 1965 Activity Fees Allocated Kearns Controversy For Three Categories; Dean's Assemblies Continues to Deepen More Student Control Revie1N G.U. Goals Last week, Mr. William C ...... ~';.~-~':'::~;::>-- -. -,-' . - - , -"- -'.' . - . - Wright, Assistant Director of Student Personnel for Stu­ dent Activities, announced that the University will begin a new policy regarding the al­ location of funds for undergradu­ ate extra-curricular activities. Prior to this semester, the Deans of the undergraduate schools were in charge of hearing and deciding upon requests for necessary monies by the various student activities. Last year, however, the Deans sub­ mitted a recommendation to the Very Reverend Gel"ald J. Campbell, S. J., suggesting that responsibility for the activities' financing be given over to the Student Activities Of­ A CONTROVERSIAL FIGURE ... Dr. Francis E. Kearns, whose fice. The Student Activities Office WORDS OF WISDOM •.• the Very Rev. Thomas R. Fitzgerald, S. J., dismissal case was the topic of a recent article in Commonweal was founded as a subsidiary of the discusses current problems and plans of interest to College students ~ magazine, scans student term paper in his office. Student Personnel Office last July. in Gaston Hall assemblies. by Brooks Erickson Wright has been in charge since i then. by Tom Crowe and John Crofton i Commonweal, a national Catholic magazine, has ana­ Efficiency, Efficiency In a pair of informal talks with the student body of the l lyzed Georgetown's Kearns case in its January 29 issue. The primary reasons for this College of Arts and Sciences, the Very Reverend Thomas R. change are an increase in efficiency j Associate Editor John Lee has written a complete account and the desire to place more au­ Fitzgerald S.J. reviewed several immediate and long term of this dispute from the perspective of an outside observer. thority in the hands of the students. goals of the college and university. The first half of the article relates the facts of Dr. Kearn's This added student authority will The Dean believes that there must be a means of avoid­ dismissal and the arguments surrounding it. The second be seen in the organization of a Student Advisory Board for Stu­ ing a rise in tuition and has been investigating the budget half gives the background of dent Affairs, which will hear re­ for needed improvements. He Protocol Finally Out; the case, relating the uneasy quests by student organizations for has had a hand in recommend­ situation in the Georgetown financial support and then submit CSP Seeks Funds , Book Seen Ordinary, its decisions to Wright, who will ing to the President of the community. The piece then make any necessary revisions be­ In Local Environs University that Mr. William New Issue Out Soon discusses the role of Kearns fore his endorsement to the Uni­ Wright, Assistant Director of I versity Budget Committee. With By Hard-Sell Plan ~ in the community. r, by John McNally "Kearns Student Personnel for Student speaks for many younger profes­ the approval of the Rev. John F. For the first time in his­ Devine, S. J., Director of the Stu­ Activities, be appointed chairman A topic of interest to East sors who consider themselves out­ tory, Georgetown is turning of a new Student Advisory Board siders at a clerically controlled dent Personnel Office, Wright has Campus students for the past asked the Presidents of the College, to her neighbors in the Dis­ for Student Affairs to oversee stu­ university. He is also irritated that dent activity budgets. Also, he told the University has not thrown its Walsh Area, and Nursing School trict of Columbia, Virginia few months has been the sub­ Student Councils to appoint two the Freshman-Sophomore assembly ject of the 1964 Protocol. Be­ full weight behind the Negro's drive and Maryland in an appeal that from now on Dr. Frank I. for civil rights." official student council representa­ cause of administrative diffi­ tives to the new board. for financial support. Keegan will be "Dean of Fresh­ Mr. Leo concludes: "It may well men." culties and a lack of coopera­ be that the University would have Mucho The Community Support Pro­ During the 1965-66 academic gram initiated late in November tion on the part of the student let him go even if the three articles Rising Costs year, the university fee will be as­ has already brought in fifty-two body, Paul Feine and his staff have had never been written. But there The Dean discussed the payment are no signs pointing in that direc­ signed in three specific categories­ percent of its $250,000 goal as of been hard pressed to published last Student Activities, student serv­ of the $40 million dormitory loans , year's yearbook. Now, however, the tion." February 1. Because of the pro­ from the federal government and ices, and athletics. Student Activ­ gram's success, it is hoped that it state of affairs has changed. In an interview with the HOYA, the rise of the cost of education in ieies will be assigned one-fourth of may become an annual source of Dr. Kearns explained his position. maintaining our present academic the general university fee, which income for the University. Ye Gads! He agrees that Georgetown has level. He felt that every year it performed many civil rights works amounts to $37.50 per student per annum, or approximately $150,000 Punjabs will be more difficult to meet our Wednesday, February 3rd, saw of charity, such as GUCAP's tutor­ / Under direction of the newly es­ annual budget of $26 million. the arrival of the 1964 Protocol. ing and helping at settlement per annum. "To my knowledge," said wright, "this is the highest a­ tablished Office of University De­ The principal reason for the After many months of curiosity on houses. velopment, prominent members of Dean's delegation of powers to the part of the student body, many He believes that unless the Uni­ mount of activities money given over to activities for any school the Washington business and pro­ Dr. Keegan is attributed to an ex­ questions were answered and about versity becomes an open society it fessional community were recruited cess of seventy freshmen in the col­ jUst as many posed. that I know." cannot educate students to live in to serve as administrators of the lege and the difficulty of the Dean's Keeping with the long-standing a free democracy under the First appeal. The vast majority of these job. The Dean wants to maintain form of organization, the book is Amendment. He cites Pope John's volunteers who now have full re­ the present number of 1500 stu­ divided into seven parts: admin­ position in his encyclical Mater et sponsibility for the program are dents for the next five or six years. istration, faculty, graduate, activ­ Magistra. John wrote that educa­ non-alumni. There is also an expanding need ities, organizations, sports, and tion must foster an awareness of for office and classroom space Undergraduates. The usual stero­ Christian economic and social du­ L. A. Jennings which cannot be realized until the types are present: smiling pro­ ties and cooperate with student General Chairman of the drive is present building program is com­ fessors; drinking students; bureau­ action. L. A. Jennings, Chairman of the pleted. cratic clubs and their officers; and Kearns thinks that the admin­ Board of the Riggs National Bank. better than average sports cover­ istration's reluctance to delegate Mr. Jennings worked in the selec­ Broad Steps age. authority to the faculty arises from tion of other committee members. However, although not anticipat­ Looking ahead to the future, worry over possible loss of George­ At present nearly two hundred ing any increase in the student Peter Carter, 1965 Protocol Editor, town's Catholic identity. He sees business and professional leaders body, the Dean announced that has good news for East Campus the administration as unsure of have agreed to help recruit funds steps were being taken to broaden students. Carter said: "Up to this the definition of a Catholic univer­ for the University. course offerings in two areas, Fine date, every deadline has been met; sity. He holds that Jesuits fear Commenting on the quality of Arts and Psychology. barring any unforseen difficulties that by opening advancement to lay leadership, Mr. William Calomiris, Specifically, Dean Fitzgerald arising in the next month, the 1965 f-aeulty they might lose their Catho­ President of William Calomiris In­ hoped that the College would build Protocol will be published before lic identity. He cited the occasion vestment Corporation, stated: "I in the area of Fine Arts as the the end of the school year." To when Academic Vice-President Fr. have been amazed at the caliber courses presently offered by the ~ompensate for this early publish­ Brian McGrath, S.J., countered a of men that have volunteered to as­ Department are very few. Ing date, a supplement to the year­ request from the teachers for a sist in this drive. We have key rep­ Psychology courses are now un­ bOok will be published early next faculty senate with, "Suppose the resentatives for every major indus- der the aegis of the Philosophy fall to be concerned with spring senate voted to end Catholic affilia­ sports and activities. tion of the school?" MR. WRIGHT (Continued from Page 1) (Continued on Page 10) Page Two 'J'HE HOYA Thursday. February 11.1965 Editorial:

Council Unification Congrats to Hoya ace Earlier this week the student councils of the College .Jim Barry on his recent marriage and Walsh Area formally expressed their support for the to Miss Patricia Menge of Eliza­ beth, New Jel1sey, 'at Georgetown's principle of council unification. This is just the beginning Holy Trinity Church. The couple's of a long and complicated process, which, hopefully, will parents, the Georgetown basket­ lead to the formation of a single student governing body. ball team, and the Rev. E. Paul Betowski were in attendance. Un­ Student government at Georgetown has become much fortunately, the newlyweds' perfect like an exclusive club which goes through the motions yet day was ma=ed by the Hoya five's 95-81 loss to Syracuse University cannot effect any real solutions nor wield any decisive power. on Saturday evening. 1: Students themselves have begun to look elsewhere for representation because little has come from it. It is par­ Gross Hour ~ ticularly frustrating for the elected members on these The Associated Collegiate Press ~ ;~ councils to have to contend with the apathy of the students informs us that Georgia Institute of Technology in Atlanta suggests the j which ultimately has to arise from the attitude of ineptness scheduling of a "gross hour" to which characterizes their efforts. eliminate profanity at movies and ~ sports events. To quote the ACP 1 There are many reasons which might be offered as valid dispatch, "The programs could be '~ ones for not joining the councils. Some see the need for pro­ run by several of the more troubled ,~ tecting the particular values, character, and traditions of students, selected by the guidance department for their pent-up emo­ ~ each campus. Others feel that there is a basic division of in­ tions. The hourly session would '1 terest that could better be handled by separate student start with a IS-minute warmup r~j period of screaming four-letter ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~==; r-, governments. Nothing could be further from the truth. The r words, with prize awarded on origi­ I'l curricular of the different schools in some instances hold nality of combinations of such n them. words." The story goes on to Letters To The Editor f ~~ describe the rest of the hour, which ------'!>~I The primary concern of any student council is the ex­ would feature bottle-throwing and To The Editor! into our ever progressively expand- (~ tent of its 'effectiveness in representing the student body and gross interpretations of normal sit­ The Georgetown University Stu­ ing and liberalized curricula a sem- L~ providing it with services. Thus far the existence of two uations. In light of recent events the enthusiasm and spirit mani­ inar in decency for the few who f':1 at McDonough Gymnasium. such a dent Body is to be congraulated on are casting an ugly shadow over . ~.' councils has only provided a divisive influence on any weight suggestion deserves serious con­ fested at the Georgetown-St. J 0- the rest of us. It could be called, ~ that a single voice speaking for the entire student body might sideration here at Georgetown. seph's basketball game on Wednes­ Decency 01 and 02, Personal and [~ bring to bear upon an issue. Most of the activities are al­ day evening, 3 February 1965. Public. Needless to say, it would ,~ Drawers However, as a Georgetownalumnus, have to be a very elementary ~ ready University wide, 'and for a concrete example of the College A.B., 1936, and as a mem­ course. i ,; benefits that a joint effort on the part of both councils can Students interested in a career ber of the faculty, I was greatly As I left McDonough Memorial !,'.~ offer the student, we only have to look to last weekend's in the Government .service who will offended and embarrassed by some Gymnasium Wednesday evening, I f i~ receive their bachelor's degree in of the expressions and manifesta­ was very dejected because our team [ ~ Junior Prom, which was certainly one of the best events .June are offered an opportunity to tions of that spirit, and I was more had played hard and well, and had : ,:Y of its kind ever presented. apply for fellowships to study at than a little ashamed of those few lost the game, but I was even more I 'l the universities of Al'abam.a, Ken­ who were representing by Alma disturbed because some of our stu- l'~ But perhaps the strongest reason that can be offered in tucky, and Tennessee during the Mater as a finishing school for dents had also played hard and) ~ support of unification is that of the action of the council 1965-66 academic year. For infor­ vulgarisms and indecencies. Those poorly, and as a consequence, St. H mation and applications, students members themselves. As elected representatives of their responsinble for such ,gross and Joseph's had won a victory in thej:i should write to Coleman B. Ran­ tasteless displays would never qual­ stands as well as on the court. r~ student bodies, they certainly exemplify those values and sone, Educational Director, South­ ify for the title of "Gentlemen of Congratulations to the enthusi- li traditions which they represent. However, at the same time, ern Regionl Training Program ,in Georgetown", which was a much conduct at the Georgetown - Syra- !.!:~ Public Administration, Drawer I, they have found through experience that one of the major coveted and cherished distinction in astic students on their improved "~:. University of Alabama. The dead­ days not so far gone by. cuse game Saturday evening, 6 :~1 defects in student government at Georgetown has been this line for submitting applications is It might be well if we introduced (Continued on Page 10) J split. There is every good reason to believe that an effective March 1, 1965. type of unified student government can be achieved which Doctor James E. LaFollette. head :~~ will protect and be strengthened by these values and tradi­ of the French Division at George­ f 0] town University, was honored with tion, providing a much more effective student government. a reception by Alpha Chapter of ':'3 It has been stated time and again that there is a need for Delta Phi Epsilon Fraternity at their house last Friday evening. (Est. September, 1920) stronger student government. If this is to be a university Dr. LaFollette received the Roy S. THE BOARD functioning in the true sense, student opinion through re­ MacElwee A ward for high profes­ Editor-in-Chief: Ken McBride sponsible and duely strengthened representation is needed. sional achievement consistent with fraternal spirit and loyalty. Managing Editor: Jim Mata Council unification is long overdue and there is no reason to News Editor: Joe Nugent Business Manager: Bobbie B:lrone postpone it further lest it become another perennial question Fea".r. Editor: John Druska Sports Editor: W:lde HaIabi debated and swallowed up by the apathy that a lack of it Council---­ Advertising Manager: Randy Matt Exec1ltive Secretary: Martin McEvoy has created. Photography Editor: Martin Quigley Make-Up Editor: Francis Balestrieri This is not to imply that serious obstacles do not exist. ----Closeup Headline Editor: Bill Catherwood Copy Editor: Don McDonough There are many important considerations that must be Circulation Ma'tager: Pete Lichtenberger Moderator: Rev. Edward Geary, S.J. taken into account in the hard and detailed work to follow. by Bob Dixon NEWS STAFF Student hearings are being held today and tomorrow to give "One basic purpose of student serious consideration to any valid objections. If student government is to stimulate, focus, News Assistants: Charley Boggs, Keven McKenna, Tom Crowe ~~ and express student body opinion." Staff: Pete Blodgett, Eugene Boggia, Rich Blum, Mike Campalongo, Ellen Caneppa, Dick -t~ government is to work it needs honest criticism and support. With this in mind the Council fo­ Carr, John Crofton, Bob Dixon, Brooks Erickson, Tony DiFabio, Mike Dorris, Skip Goodhue, Larry Keeshan, Tom Mader, Mike Maloney, Martin McCarthy, John McNally, i~ This is an excellent time for both. cused its attention on what will ~ surely become the dominant topic Ellen Mulhall, Peter Murray, Dan Paduano, Gene Quintano, Mark Sullivan, Jim Wiley, WI of discussion among students. It John Kealy .~ Dr. Kearns was unity. In the past few years FEATURES STAFF the Walsh Council as well as the ,'::~ Mike Dorris, Mike McKegney, John PIordresher, Ken Atchity, John Druska, Sandy ~ Much has been written and discussed both locally and nationally College Council have toyed with McClatchey, James Dobbs, Don Mrozek, Francis Francis, Tony Thomas, Jackson Shaw about Dr. Kearns' dismissal. The facts involved in the case have been unification. '::l obscured or inconclusive and in the final analysis it seems that nothing PHOTO STAFF ,:;,~ can be proven conclusively insofar as the circumstances su=ounding A First Staff: Bernie Huger, Dieter Hoffman, Miki L:lws, Matt Andrea, Tom Divers, Charlie "il the case are concerned. Instead, it seems that what is at stake is Van Beveren :.~~ more a question of attitudes. This, however, was the first time the Council had been asked to reg­ SPORTS STAFF Although, as students, our sympathies may be very much with ister its opinion in the form of a Dr. Kearns, the incident, 'as Dr. Kearns himself would probably be vote. The vote was overwhelmingly Sports Headlines: Vin Rocque be the first to out, characterizes the symptom of a change going favorable. There were, however, Staff: Chip Butler, Andy GaI1:lgher, Dick Griggs, John Kealy, Adrian Krudy, Joe ~i'~ O'Brien, Rory Quirk, John Saunders, Don Schaller }:i';l on within Georgetown. As was pointed out in an article in the latest many points made that deserved iY! Stimulus magazine, there are two Georgetowns manifested on our further study. COPY STAFF ,Jl campus: one that is becoming a vital intellectual center, and one that Bodkin, Bob Curry, M:lureen Lyons, Candy Christian, Tonlan Quagmire, Patti Flynn ,:~.}; fires Dr. Kearns. Apparently HEADLINE STAFF ,.i~ :%1 This statement is certainly an extreme representation of the two i~ It appears true that the present Assistattt: Bob Dixon sides, and, unfortunately, these terms seem to be characteristic of Staff: John Kelly, Brian Tart those which have been used throughout this affair and others com­ three-council system has not been parable to it. There is a definite need on the part of both sides for as effective as it could be when Vol. XLV, No. 13 Thursday, February '11. 1965 each other. dealing with the administration. ~ The Council by its vote appears to ------t~n~ In light of this, the Hoya would also like to clarify a fact which believe that student government's Ollices located in Copley Basement. Telephone: 337-3300, Ext. 342. Ollice hours: fl we too may have ,allowed to become obscured. We are a University lack of effectiveness is due mainly 3-6 p.m. Monday through Friday. :,;t:il publication ,and have a duty to represent both faculty and administra­ to the system and the structure of Deadline for news, releases, letters, and advertising material is 3 p.m. of the "f~ tion, s well ,as student opinion. In subsequent weeks we hope to char­ student government. But it must Sunday precdeing publication. Letters to the Editor may be left in the mailbox on the %1 acterize these attitudes ,and clarify what we feel possible misconcep­ be, it has to be remembered that it office door or may be mailed to Box 938, Georgetown University, Washington, D. C, ,~~ tions on the part of all three parties. We hope these will be accepted is also, often, the people who are 20007. -3M as honest criticisms and invite students, faculty and adm,inistration Subscription rate $7.50 per year. :;' (Continued on Page 8) Copyright @ 1964 Th. HOY A to participate in a forum for airing these attitudes through our pages. ~1' J.,~ Thursday, February 11,1965 THE HOY A Page Three Dominick Lectures Frosh Make Move Hilltop Republicans Student Council Hears To Old Girl's Dorm On u.s. Willpower Reports on Unification by Larry Keeshan College Councilmen Last Monday night, the Walsh Area Council Georgetown Young Republi­ Agrees U nanim.ously Hear Unity Report cans presented Senator Peter By Brooke Hamilton H. Dominick (R-Colorado) in On Unity Resolution an analysis of United States by Jim Wiley Foreign policy. Senator Domi­ The East Campus Student nick, addressing the Y.R. group gathered in the Hall of Nations, Council meeting of January 8 heavily criticized the recent trends dealt with two major issues. in U.S. policy. The most significant issue was The Senator claimed that the the report of Sophomore Class essential weakness of our foreign President Joe Baczko on the policy was that it failed to trans­ findings of the Unification Com­ late the overwhelming U.S. mili­ mittee and the subsequent motion tary and technological superiority calling for the Council to endorse into political willpower. Dominick the idea of unification and the work cited four recent events which, he of the committee to that effect. felt, demonstrated this lack of reso­ Baczko, in clarifying his motion, A MELANCHOLY MOMENT ... Georgetown Freshmen leave the lution. He began by referring to mentioned that the committee did ivy-covered quadrangle for higher ground and newer quarters in the compromise made on Laos in not desire to form any concrete Rober-Cogan. 1962, where, after a pledge had plans for total unification but, been made to protect the security Monday night and Tuesday morning of February 1 and rather, that the committee dealt of the pro-Western government in only with the "whys" of the issue. February 2, intrepid members of the Class of '68 moved power, a coalition government was from the third floor of 1795 Old North, the fourth floor of subsequently accepted. In further discussion, Baczko 1854 Maguire, the fourth floor of 1879 Healy, and very old stated that there were several rea­ Next he referred to the Bay of sons why unification was imperi­ second Ryan, to the third, fifth, and sixth floors of Kober­ Pigs incident, where he claimed PARLIAMENTARIAN tive. Perhaps the most significant HAMILTON Cogan, formerly a women's dormitory and previous to that that the U.S. received "its greatest of these reasons, in light of the re­ defeat in recent history." The cent Kearns case, was that Student by Bob Dixon a men's dorm. In their efforts Cuban missile crisis followed, Government would be effectively Ryan IBM Brain to move a semester's conglo­ where once again, according to the heard if it spoke with one voice in­ At last Sunday's meeting meration of clothes, necessi­ Republican from Colorado, lack of stead of three. Baczko also pointed U.S. willpower resulted in there the College Student Council Computes Marks, ties, and trash, freshmen were out that the dichotomy between the never being an actual investigation College and the East Campus .has occupied itself with a discus­ of the missile bases. , Registration Data assisted by a truck with a been almost entirely eradicated sion over the acceptance of a by Gene Boggia penchant for needing a push, Lastly, Dominick recalled the both geographically and schemeati­ majority report from the cally. The scene in the basement and their own hands, arms, and Berlin Wall crisis, where, he felt, Committee to study Under­ legs. the U.S. failed to take advantage graduate Student Government. of R y a n Administration The new denizens of Kober­ of its situation. Dominick sug­ Long Haul building last weekend would Cogan give up the cats and mice gested that perhaps before wheat The reason for the controversy have proven somewhat inter­ which had lived with them in the was sold to Russia, an agreement In general, the Council agreed over the committee report was the Quad. Third O1d North and fourth could have been made concerning fuly with the idea of unification fact that it stated that "the esting for any inquisitive stu­ Maguire will be renovated, and re­ the eradication of the Berlin Wall. and indicated that they as individ­ Georgetown undergraduate student dent. There he could have seen turn to active dormitory use next uals were ready to support the body should adopt a single under­ his grades and those of his some year. Fourth Healy, with the ex­ work of the committee as it has graduate council form of student tension of the elevator shaft, will progressed so far. Senior Class government." Brooke Hamilton, :,1,",< 7,000d cOI~orts abs they werhe proc- esse prIOr to eing sent ome. be used as office space. Second President Walt Draude pointed out, Philodemic President, in delivering Ryan will be used as a Jesuit resi­ however, that there was no group the majority opinion stated that •.'~' This 72-hour opel:ation is per­ , formed by an J!BM 1460 computer dence. "waiting for unification" on cam­ the committee felt thl1.t unification " system. pus. He said that unification could was the way to strengthen the voice Better Heat only be arrived at· through hard of the student in the affairs of a ~ Little Gadget work. After some further debate, University that often has shown Despite one sixteen year old disregard for student causes, hopes, The little gadget was installed the motion was passed unanimous­ freshman's overruled question as to ly. and opinions. As proof he offered ~~.' last October and basically consists what accommodations could be the Kearn's case, the tuition con­ '::/ of seven components. Among these made for those who wanted to re­ Baczko then proposed that Coun­ troversy, and the suspension of :~ are a processing unit, where, for main near Gaston Hall, the major­ cil President Ethier meet with the Fran Bodkin. ~ example, the information concern­ ity of the new residents favor the Presidents of the other two coun­ ;~ ing paid and unpaid fees written living conditions, having two fewer cils in order to form a joint com­ Unification :~ down at registration can be trans­ occupants in each room than their mittee that would prepare concrete The Committee report held that ;jjj ferred to an IBM card in the immediate predecessors. The rooms plans for unification. Although vicinity of six millionths of a sec­ unification would result in greater are considerably larger than tlhose there was some discussion in rela­ efficiency in student government ·. ond, and four magnetic tapes which of the Quad and have the benefits tion to giving the College more time and give the students an opportun­ :",:.' contain 556 characters per inch of of adjustable heat and air-condi­ to conduct their hearings and ref­ tape. Put one of the large reels ity to act as a whole rather than tioning. Desks, space and book erenda, this motion was also as three fragmented parts. (containing 2,400 feet of tape and shelves abound, as do closet and passed. 100,000 records) on what looks like drawer space. The opposition to acceptance of I~ an overstuffed record and 20,000 The second motion of importance the report was led by Yard Secre­ Besides the sinks, an advantage characters will be transmitted per to come before the Council was tary Jack Egan. He felt that any over the Quad is that the beds are failure in the role of student gov­ second by impulses. firm but comfortable, having double SENATOR DOMINICK Draude's motion to express the Council's "severest censure" to the ernment was due more to the peo­ mattresses. This last innovation Some Sosh The Senator concluded his speech administration for the way in ple in the government than to any causes a hazard to those accus­ difficulties with its structure. He Another component is a Disk tomed to jumping from an upper­ by pointing out that in all these which the Kearns issue had been ~torage Drive, the latest thing in instances, it was the Soviet Union handled. In light of the recent let­ also felt that if unification did bunk. A disadvantage incurred is come about that it would "spell the Its field (until probably rendered the lack of over-head lighting. which served as principal instiga­ ter from Fr. Campbell which stated obsolete in the next few months by tor, and that therefore, one should clearly that Kearns was not dis­ doom of the unique nature of each this ever accelerating industry). Crucial Lack be wary of assuming that a detente missed because of his controversial sector of the University." was imminent between the U.S. and articles, the motion was defeated Records are kept magnetically on Hour Long these disks also, but now any data Hallways are quieter, as the lack Russia. Dominick also reiterated by a vote of seven to foul.'. can be recalled instantly, unlike of echo discourages potential sten­ the theme that policy would be The debate, which lasted for over the tapes where you have progress torian voices. Each hall contains a meaningless until effective will­ an hour, was concerned with re­ through the tape until you reach small lobby with a cold water power was introduced, and ad­ statements of the various points the desired spot. With these disks bubbler. The elevator, artistically mitted that willpower of this sort made by Egan and Hamilton. data can be found, recorded, and decorated from past residents, was, perhaps, being presently stored back in its original position leaves its riders with concern as shown in South Vietnam. Defeated within a fourth of a second. to when it will stop going down, Many members of the Council The machines are currently being and if it will make it going up. Senator Dominisck, 49 years old, felt that it was not in the power Used for a large number of tasks. The bathr?oms are adequate. with is now serving his first term in the of the committee to submit its re­ , I~-a~dition-to.-mar:ks and_l'egistra_t~~,~xceill!91L of ~ lack of. urmals. Senate, after one term in the House port without first consulting the . twn Informatlon, It records neces- St~den~s convertmg wa~hm~ ma­ and four years in the state legis­ student body. Mr. Hamilton stated sary data concerning all applicants chmes mto flower-pots wIll glye tlhe lature. Educated at Yale and Yale that the committe would hold open for the University and figures out users of those ?ev.lCes 3; cogmzance Law School, Dominick served for meetings Thursday from 6:30 to the payroll for the entire univer- of the change m mhabltants. four years as a pilot in the Army 7:30 P.M. in the Copley Lounge sity and also the hospital. Before Long Hike Air Corps in W orld War II, and re­ and on Friday from 3:50-5:00. Af­ summer, it will start performing ceived the Distinguished Flying ter defeating motions to amend and another useful service for the hos­ Some complaints arose as to the Cross. In a recent poll of Washing­ to table, the Council voted on ac­ pital by keeping track of all its proximity of classes when com­ ton Press Corps, Dominick was ceptance. By a vote of 10 to six it outstanding bills, the sum of which pared to the Quad. Although there selected as one of the ten most out­ accepted the report of the Com­ amounts to a very tidy amount. mittee. was discontent as to the distance standing new members of Congress. In doing this the system is aided from the other freshmen, the prob­ The Council then made provis­ by its enormous capacity: the lem has not been as discomfiting as He is currently serving on the ions to study the issue further. Its lastest payroll for all employees of had been anticipated. The added Labor and Public Welfare Com­ "Hamilton" Committee after this tlhe University and Hospital can be walking vexes Philip Marineau of mittee, the Commerce Committee, week's hearings will attempt to , compressed on mere % inch of sixth Kober-Cogan, who said, "It's and the District of Columbia Com­ discover whether its ideal for unifi­ tape. a longer walk to the '89." mittee. FRIENDLY SOLONS cation is feasible. Page Four 2'HE HOYA Thursday. February 11.1965

ertoire war-horses vividly alive. given a glowing reading of great And Ormandy. a conductor often strength and beauty, and the Ravel criticized for his heavy-handedness, performance is tightly controlled is right at home with these orches- but wonderfully evocative. Besides ' BOOKS tral gems. The listerner does seem a number of lighter pieces, there I at times to be more aware of the is a stormy and highly dramatic CANDY the chance to write all sorts of four performance than of the music, but Romeo and Juliet of Tchaikovsky, letter words which some of your perhaps that's just as well-what and the Don 'Juan is a virtuoso ~ by TC1'ry Southern and pseudo-sophisticates will tell you a performance! piece of theater. The sound is ex- ! Mason HofJenberg are used in order to ridicule our cellent, as it has been for all the ~ own way of looking at sex and And finally, there is a new Tos- recent reissues and new releases. '~ The howls and screams of scan­ d r h canini release - a 2-record album of tJ, ea mg with it. But don't let t em C F' (V· LM nAenedd ,:nre·tshayTmOSCorae~. ini conducting, ~ dal are again sweeping the land. fool you, this book is intended for oncert o//J/Yl'1.tes Ictor - ~ , iI The national morality has plunged the teenagers of our country. Yes, 7032). Included for the first time ~ to a new low with the publication 'ttl Th' h thO on records are Maestro's perfor- you l 1 e ones. at s w 0 IS -J•• D McCI""tchyQ ~" of a nasty, lascivious little piece of book is directed at. And of course number, more use is made of Benny mances of El Capitan and The ~ pornography called Candy. Of to the grownups who still think like Goodman's name than of his clari- Star-Spangled Banner. And ifj course it's studded with four letter them, who are still fascinated with net. The sound throughout is brilli- these pieces are not quite enough "$ words and naturally it was first sex and perversions. ant without being brittle. to induce you to buy the set, what '~ published in France. All the intel­ follows should be. For it restores to '., lectuals like it but then everyone You see the real thing is to get the catalogue several deleted per- ,~ knows that those long hairs are this pornography stuff legal, to put Eugene Ormandy and The Phil- formances of great interest--the ?~ probably all a little funny them­ it out in the open where our young adelphia Orchestra have come out Wagner Faust Overture, Ravel's .~ selves. And many of them have can read it and where it can sully with a spectacular disc entitled Daphnia and Chloe Suite No. B, ;~ dangerous communist leanings. We their minds. That let's down our Fireworks (Columbia ML6024/MS- Kabalevshy's Colas Breugnon Over- ' all knew that. Perhaps it is all ,a fighting posture, don't you see, be- 6624). The selections include such ture, Barber's Adagia For Strings :;~ part of the plot to undermine our cause pretty soon everyone will be favorities as Saber Dance, Ride of (w h i c h Toscanini premiered), .:~ great nation from within. We some kind of a pervert and then the Valkyries, S/Yl'cerer's Appren- Paganini's Moto Perpetuo, and the {j know that the communists work we'll all be soft on communism. tice, and five others. That sumptu- Strauss Don Juan. f j from within. Why, just look at the corruption ous Philadelphia sound is beauti- I'~, in public office these days, in the fully engineered to bring these rep- The rarely-performed Wagner is \. h~~rihln&~p~~offi~T~~~~=~~=====~===~~=====~~======~======~lJ And of course the book is a where our country is headed and [:~ classic piece of deception. For one that's what books like this can do : .,: thing, it starts with a quote from to us. H Voltaire's Candide about innocence F: f: ~ and the evil world. Since your t J~ general reader is going to know So what I say is we get tough " . that Voltaire is a satirist, he will with these kind of people. Let's not SUBSCRIBE NOW! t j figure that this book is supposed stand for any of this disguised l; to be satire too. That's what is kind of smut any longer. They say r: so fiendishly tricky about these a book like this is a lot of fun­ RECEIVE THE NEXT ISSUE communists and perverts. They tell 'em they can't have this kind /1 hide all their nasty doings under of fun, that it's unamerican and ["i the cloak of some sort of nebulous against the finest ideals of our his­ !~ artistic form and then claim that tory. If they say its really healthy f.', i they can do anything they please satire showing us how bad we ~~ !Jlifo l ,! and get clean away with it. really have become, let's just jump 1. :~ Vol. XII November 1964 ~1 That's the case with this pair of right back at them and say that things aren't really that bad but 1': propagandists-Southern and Hof­ f ,; fenberg. Hoffenberg we don't know that books like this can make them IN THIS ISSUE . . . much about yet, but this Southern bad and we aren't going to give jJ guy is already on our books. He them a chance. Let's resolve right ~·>l was the guy who wrote part of the now to get right to the roots of 0 MARRIAGE-NOW OR LATER? script for that dangerous movie this Jew-M'ason conspiracy and Dr. St1"angelove, which used that make our country safe and clean 0 ACADEMIC ALL-AMERICAN satire gimmick again to make peo­ for Americans. ple go soft on communism by start­ -JohnPfordresher FRATERNITIES & SORORITIES ing them to fear the bomb and the 0 possible dangers in maintaining a constant, standing army. And he D CAMPUS FASHIONS FOR '65 got clean away with it there. RECORDS D BASKETBALL-WINTER KING But he won't with this Candy book. The public's got his number STUDENTS AROUND THE WORLD Pg. 36 and the truth is out in the open. You remember when Shannon Alex­ ander, just a few weeks ago, came out in a column in Life magazine "The Only National Magazine for College Men & Women" and cut up those perverts beauti­ fully. And it's fortunate that she published that in Life because XMAS SPECIAL INTRODUCTORY OFFER pretty much everyone knows what ONE YEAR SUBSCRIPTION ONLY $2.75 a sharp bunch of people are work­ ing over there for Mr. Luce. But anyway, about this book. I ENJOY MANY FINE ARTICLES EACH MONTH hestitate to call it a novel since it really isn't that good. What it is Three recent record releases PLUS REGULAR FEATURES • MIRROR ON CAMPUS • THIS MONTHS really is a series of episodes. The ACADEMIC ALL-AMERICAN • CAMPUS FASHIONS • BOOK REVIEWS • LAWS characters of course have no depth should be of special interest to the to them at all. These fellows aren't crewcut longhair. The first is OF SUCCESS • CAMPUS HUMOR • QUESTIONS & ANSWERS • LETTERS TO interested in anything like that. Bernstein Conducts Bernstein (Co­ THE EDITOR. SPORTS U.S.A. Rather, the characters are carica­ lumbia ML6077/MS6677)-an ap­ tures of people. Naturally the best propriate title, for the inimitable Cut Out and Mail Today kind of people in our society. Like Lennie is certainly the best inter­ doctors and good middle class busi­ preter of his own music. There is COLLEGE LIFE INC. ness men and messenger boys. But a sparkling performance of the the people who write this sort of complete Fancy Free ballet, a piece 919 18th ST. N.W. stuff are so perverted that they alternating lyric intensity with WASHINGTON, D. C. show you how all these people are glittering high-jinks. Three dance basically sex-crazed. And they do episodes from On The Town are Send me COLLEGE LIFE MAGAZINE at your Xmas Special Offer. it by using this young girl named given a sprightly reading, as well My D Cash 0 Check D M. O. for $2.75 is enclosed. Candy Christian (they may even as the witty and popular Overture be intending a slur on religion). to Candide. The novelty on the disc Send To: This girl is supposed to be inno­ is Prelude, Fugue & RifJs-a "jazz" cent, and that's how these authors work commissioned by Woody Her­ N AM E ____ .. __ . _. ___ . _.... ___ . _.. __ . ____ . _____ ---. -.. -___ . __ --_... ---_---_ .... -..... -. -- --' ------. ------'--.. --... ---- man in 1949. can ridicule even our ideas of vir­ ADD RESS ____ .. _. ______.. _.. _.... __ .. ____ .. _. --. __ . ___ . __ .- ___ . ______.. ----. --. -. ---., ---. -. ------.. -.. -.. ------tue, because her virtues are pretty There are shifts from "hot" to silly. But not as silly as the vices "blue" in a contrapuntal arrange­ City ._. __ ... _... _...... __ .. _. ____ . ______._.__ State ___ ._ .. _____ . ______.. _... Zip Code _____ .. __ . _____ . ___ _ of the people she runs into. ment, rather than Bernstein's usual She meets all kinds of homo­ harmonic composition. But the SCHOOL ____ .. _. ____ ... ____ ._. __ . ___ ... ___ . ______.. ___ .. _. __ ._- _____ .. ___ .. __ ._. ___ ... _. ____ ... _.. __ ._. __ ._. __ .... _... ---- sexuals, nymphomaniacs, and other piece seems to lack that elemental kinds of perverts, but somehow Slhe improvisational character of great remains unscathed by all that they jazz, and the result sounds like do to her. This gives the authors highly-polished "big band." In this Thursday, February 11, 1965 'l'HE HOYA Pap FiTe

THE [ MOVIES HOYA GUIDE SEANCE ON A WET flame splitting the medium's face AFTERNOON before she extinguishes the light. DRAMA' Henry James says somewhere The acting in Seance is superb. Washington theatregoers will that the artist is entitled to his Kim Stanley is brilliant as the have the opportunity to compare "donnee," his idea, and that the medium. Richard Attenborough notes on two different productions critic, therefore, should focus the (who co-produced the film with of Heartbreak House. G. B. Shaw's exercise of personal powers of per­ Bryan Forbes) is convincing in the play currently is running both at ception and expression upon the difficult role of the medium's color­ Catholic University and at the form and technique of the work of less, submissive husband. Mark ever-popular Arena Stage, whose art. James' precept does not en­ Eden and Nanette Newman effec­ recent Billy Budd played to sell­ compass the entire range of the tively convey the sense of harass­ out houses. individual response to a particular ment and frustration of the kid­ Meanwhile Anthony Newley and work, but in certain instances it napped child's wealthy, young par­ Cyril Ritchard opened this week has validity and relevance as a ents. in Newley's The Roar of the critical guideline. The screenplay, which is also the Grease-paint-the' Smell of the Such a guideline should inform work of Forbes, moves well within A PEEK AT THE FUTURE •.. as James Garner wakes up in 1950. Crowd, at the National in a pre­ one's approach to Bryan Forbes's its limitations. Seance provides a just before D-Day, 1944. Broadway run. Seance On A Wet Afternoon (now strong argument for the integra­ The Polish Mime T·heatre is ment. Filumena, responding to life que for treating battle-shocked playing at the MacArthur Thea­ tion of the tasks of writing and presently performing a short stint tre). One may have his quibbles directing (the combination is an completely, loves and continues to soldiers. He found that he could deeply love her first client, Dom­ bring them out af shock by con­ at Lisner Auditorium. Just ac­ with the "donnee" of Seance. The essential factor in Bergman's claimed in New York, the troupe viewer feels an unwillingness-per­ achievement). Forbes makes espe­ inico (Mastroianni) . vincing them that, while they suf­ fered amnesia, years had past, the features some startling -pictoriali­ haps as inability-to indentify him­ cially shrewd use of minor char­ zations of normally vulgar fetishes A perpetual and long-enduring war had come to an end, and they self with the central character and acters and scenes to reflect and like angst and alienation. optimist, she refuses to accept the had no more battles to fear. finds himself considering her prob­ contrast the situations of the prin­ realities of her "true situation", lems with clinical detachment. This cipal figures. A good example is and leaps hopefully from one un­ Applied to Pike, the doctor's British author Arnold Wesker's I'm Talking About Jerusalem opens is understandable, as the principal the lone, nameless man who at­ founded conclusion to 1Jhe other. methods take on fantastic propor­ figure is no ordinary person: she tends the seances. She is thrilled, for instance, when tions. He is drugged and brought today at St. Matthews Court is a professional medium. And as Dominico takes her (just as if she to a German post, which is dis­ minuscule Theatre Lobby; directed One may justifiably question and designed by Mr. Ellis Santone. if that were not enough to isolate were a lady!) 'home to mother', guised as an American army hos­ her on the periphery of conven­ whether the artistic resources ex­ pended in the making of Seance but soon discovers she's not the pital. American flags and uniforms Finally, O'Neill's Hairy Ape tional society, she is also deranged. bride-to-be but the new house­ are everywhere; only English is The unfolding of the plot of Seance were put to worthwhile use, but ends Feb. 21 at the Actors Com­ keeper. And so she goes (for spoken; baseball is broadcast over pany's Evelyn Davis Playhouse. is the none too gradual revelation one cannot deny the quality of the resources themselves. As has been twenty-two years) and grows­ the radio. He is told that it is now of her disorders. older and more respectible-until 1950, that the war is over, and 1Jhat pointed out enough times already, MOVIES The confusion of psychic powers waste is a salient trait of the her dream of life is over and she he has been suffering from am­ and mental aberrations is perhaps afRuent society; but perhaps our decides its time to take the happy­ nesia since a black-out in 1944. (Theatres as of press time) the chief defect of the film. One artists should consider th~t afRu­ ending business into her own hands. While he is drugged, his hair is Americanization of EmilIy (Trans­ is not sure which aspect of 1Jhe ence has not manifested itself in dyed and his eyesight dimmed to But there is no joy in tricking Lux): War as seen by a sup­ medium's personality is respon­ our strictly cultural life. A film convince him of the passing years. Dominico into marriage, for mar­ ply officer, with James Garner in sible for certain of her traits and like Seance slightly abrades one's He is even told that he has mar­ riage and respectibility are only a steady performance as the officer actions. This ambiguity is not of sense of economy. ried his nurse, Anna (Eva Marie the outward signs of the goal she who tries not to see it. Julie the sort that enrichens; on the Saint). If he cannot remember has always sought: Dominico's true Andrews upstages him as his tacti­ contrary, it limits the final signifi­ -Thomas Connors this, Pike figures he must have had love. Besides Filumena has three cal diversion, but an over-eager cance of the film. But one should a memory lapse. sons and now dreams that they too aide eventually lugs him to Norm­ recognize that Seance has no pre­ MARRIAGE - ITALIAN STYLE will love her. When a legal formal­ The next step in the German andy for D-Day. tensions to complexity and dimen­ ity nullifies her plot to make them plan is to have Pike "recall" the sion: it is avowedly not "serious." It is a monumental achievement legitimate, she can still keep her last things he can remember, for One must grant the restricted scope when a movie about the odyssey of pride when they finally return her example, the events of May, 1944 of the film, for its virtues lie not a prostitute-gone-good is both in­ affection. And so after two decades and the Allied plans of that period. in its matter but in its manner. dividual and new, for in recent of service Filumena leaves Dom­ Only by such recall, the doctor in­ years it seems that the good­ inico; "I've run and run," she says, sists, can he hope to regain his full A formidable force of proficient hearted goddesses of motion pic­ talents was marslhalled to pro­ "without ever getting to the finish memory. ture mythology are the ladies of line." But she doesn't depart before duce Seance. The photography and easy virtue. The saga of 1Jhe side­ Eventually, Pike, with some direction are remarkable. The telling him that one of the boys is walk Cinderella has been so over­ his son. shrewd observations, discovers that footage was subjected to a scrupu­ done, and consequently so expected, he is being used, but only after he lous editing job, and the resultant that it has become about as shock­ Which one? Now Dominico suf­ has revealed that the invasion is product is a tight, concentrated ing or as interesting as a soap fers. And suffers. And finally to come at Normandy. If the movie work of cinema. No scene is opera, and about as artistic. comes to love Filumena and make were simply "spy vs. spy," at this superflous, and even the purist all her dreams seem to come true point the invasion would have been would be hard put to cite a single But boasting a tight, effective and reaffirm Marriage - ltalmn foiled. frame that does not somehow con­ screenplay, Vittorio de Sica as a Style as comedy, not tragedy. tribute to the total presentation director, Marcello Mastroianni, and But 36 Hou1's is really a case of (though Esquire's Dwight Mac­ the almost-always magic ingredient The screenplay is never dull and "spy vs. spy vs. spy vs. spy," There donald, the super~purist, has done of Sophia Loren, Ma1'riage - Italmn has moments of both humour and is division in the German ranks. precisely 1Jhis in his review of the Style turns potential melodrama pathos. De Sicas direction is all Nazis are working at cross pur­ film). The camera gives the image, into art. A motion picture un­ but impeccable. Mastroianni's per­ poses. allows us to supply what is not encumbered by the regional com­ formance is of that same high cali­ explicit, and moves on. ment that limited Seduced and ber that distinguished The Organ­ The local SS-C'hief, Herr Schacht, Abandoned and Divorce - Italian izer and 8%. a "practical man," is not much im­ The brief opening scene beauti­ Style (the similarity ends with the pressed with the doctor's sophisti­ POPPINS AND FRIEND fully exemplifies this process of title), Marriage has a theme that But it is Sophia Loren, an alive, cated approach to truth-finding. He compression. The first shot is of is timeless and universal. totally human character, who had begrudgingly allowed him 36 Cartouche (Trans-Lux Play­ a burning candle; the candles places Marriage so high on every­ hours to experiment with the pris­ house): Another comic vehicle for moves across the screen as the Filumena (Soplhia Loren) is a one's "top ten" list. A girl, a oner, after which he would apply Jean Paul Belmondo's antics, di­ camera slowly pans. In smooth prostitute, but much more than matron, happy, tragic, she domi­ traditional "bully-boy" t act i c s . rected by Phillipe DeBroca. The progression the camera focuses on that she is a multi-dimensional nates and propels the story to a Schadht refuses to believe that two paced That Man From Rio as a pair of clasped hands, another woman who is alive as few are wholly fulfilling conclusion. Loren Pike's Normandy story is accurate a frenetic satire, but in this earlier pair of hands, a face, a second ever alive. She has no guile and has never been better, and that or to carry such a "preposterous" production a subtler touch is in face, and then 1Jhe pained visage of no anxieties; and she does not alone would be enough to make tale to his superiors, who had long evidence. Cartouche lumbers under the medium conducting a seance. have that quality so necessary for Marriage - Italian Style the fine insisted the Allied strike was to a slow start, but farce manages The last shot shows the candle women of her calling: noninvolve- motion picture it is. corne at Pas de -Calais. -The audi­ to convey the film to a beautifully ence is placed in the odd position understated finale. -Mike Dorris af hoping that the doctor can con­ vince the high command that 36 HOURS Normandy is indeed the intended Father Goose (Uptown): see beachhead. review. There is a first-rate World War II tJhriller now showing at the The fourth "spy" is Anna­ Metropolitan and Ambassador thea­ chosen to be Pike's nurse because Goldfinger (RKO Keith's): Not tres. As the ads proclaim, 36 she knows English. She is hardly as effective as From Russia With Hours "is the wildest spy adven­ pro-Nazi. A victim of German Love, but nevertheless another ture a man ever lived." concentration camps, she had be­ Bond tour de force, littered with trayed fellow prisoners and is now over a hundred corpses and lib­ The man is US Army major, Jeff eager to compensate for this and erally sprinkled with a theatre-of­ Pike (James Garner.) In late May, regain self-respect. She works with the-absurd touch for violence. All 1944, he is one of the few persons the American once he has un­ for fun, though. who has access to the plans for covered the plot. Still, she is hardly the impending Allied invasion of pro-Pike. Her experience in Nazi France. For this reason the Ger­ brothels has left her incapable of Mar1-iage Italian Styl~ (Loew's mans want him, and kidnap him. attachment to any man. She has Embassy): see review. lost all emotion, has "cried away Pike had been trained to resist her tears." In a sub-plot, we have normal brain-washing tactics, but, the story of her re-humanization. Mary Poppins (Ontario): Julie as he puts its, what the Germans Miss Saint, with her unobtrusive Andrews, in a magically-mixed had in store for him "just wasn't beauty, is excellent in a role that Disney dance, as a totally-believ­ in the manuals." A German doc­ demands dispassion and restraint. able fairy godmother type, with tor (Rod Taylor), after years of SOPHIA LOREN ... as Mar1'iage Italian Style's prostitute gone good. research, had developed a techni- (Continued on Page 6) (Continued on Page 6) Page Six 'rHE HOYA Thursday, February 11,1965

tution Hall, The, Prague Chamber tre, will perform a "Valentine Pop ~~l>:'~~,~~:~"X:;,!:"::lKC:<'~'t~>:tC~~~ Orchestra of 36 musicians w"ithout Concert," also featuring Rodgers a conductor Will play music by and Hammerstein music. ~ ~ Bach, Beethoven, Dvorak, Handel, I Adopt! ; Martinu, and Vivaldi; The Orches­ At Georgetown Sunday the Col­ ~ ~ tra is an important cog in Czecho­ legium Musicum will present pian­ i A Child ~ slovakian cultural life, chiefly be­ ist David Bar-IlIan in his Wash­ ~ ~ cause of its Mozart concert cycles. ington debut. I~.t1 I~ Saturday, Feb. 13, at 8:30, Perennial pop-song champ Henry ~~ Clean Out ~ Mancini will direct the National French baritone Gerard Souzay ~ I Symphony next Wednesday, Feb. ~ ~ will perform at Constitution Hall, 17, at 8:30, at Constitution Hall, ~ Junior Village • followed Sunday at 3 by the vir­ where on Thursday at 8 :30, George ®~ !if~ tuosic Solistis di Zagreb under Szell's outstanding C 1 eve I and ~... III Antonio .T anigro. Orchestra features works by Haydn ~ Today I. i and Beethoven in concert. t~ I Also on Sunday, the National Symphony and the American Light Saturdy, February 20, sees inter- B. Ii Opera Company, which recently nationally known folk singer Theo- 1~··~,X£.o: JO 1-5000 ~ finished Rodgers and Hammer­ dore Bikel invading DAR Constitu- ~ stein's N ew Moon at Trinity Thea- tion Hall. "'~;~~!"~:·X.!!~;,!aB::Kc:<:-r:~"'~~~!:C:¢i~~

RECOVERING FROM SNAKE BITE .• _ Father and Mother Goose whoop it up_ Leslie Caron is more than ade­ 36 Hours quate, but lacks Grant's definitive (Continued from Page 5) comic touch, most noticeable in his After D-Day, and the confirma­ reactions and interactions with La tion of the Normandy data, Herr P'I'ofessour, and in a feigned love Schacht is eager to eliminate the scene with the oldest student. She three witnesses to his stupidity. had made eyes at him, but quickly The doctor is resigned to this fate, retired behind her eyeglasses, sur­ but urges Anna and Pike to escape prised at the old salt's sudden and carry with them his precious virility and marriage proposal. "when can· 1 medical records. The comedy is sometimes marred The remainder of the film follows by moralizing, nearly all unneces­ Pike and Anna in their flight from sary. Not that this lessens the the ever-pursuing Herr Schacht. movie's primary merits, but it does vault Goose's tempo beyond the interview IBM?" Twenty feet from the Swiss border, we still wonder if they will get buzz of overhead planes that con­ safely across. stantly reminds the audience that there are other contending with February 17 hell-sounds of wart that suffi­ Rod Taylor handles his role as the dedicated, sincere medical man ciently draw their own moral. very convincingly. His character Overall though, the flaws are and appearance contrast wonder­ minor and more than compensated fully with the figure of the fat, bald for by some amusing bit parts. ~~for what jobs?" and unethical SS-chief, played to One example: the preacher who the hilt by Werner Peters. marries the oddly-united Grant and Garner's work as Bret Maverick Caron by radio, while a Japanese Programming was good training-ground for his plane strafes their honeymoon hut Systems Engi neeri ng present role. Once more he is the and a girl named Harry MacGregor underspoken, keen-witted "under­ serves as best man. Marketing/ Sales dog; at heart, a sensitive, consid­ -John Druska erate fellow, but far from a patsy.

The events in 36 Hours are given Hoya Guide an immediacy and sense of reality (Continued from Page 5) by the opening film-clips of Gen. Eisenhower and the top Allied Dick Van Dyke in an underrated The IBM Data Processing Representative is a con­ brass plotting invasion tactics. The performance as her adept chimney­ frequent use of German language sweeper helper. The photography sultant to his customers. He demonstrates how dialogues sustains this sense. (Sub­ is at its best when probing Lon­ customers can achieve better business manage­ titles are provided for those who don's streets and roofs, where it nicht sp1·echen.) evokes the temper of the people, ment and control through data processing. lyrically augmented by an excellent This film spins its own web with array of songs. Many scenes are IBM Data Processing Systems Engineers are men crisp, effective scene pacing, which Disney's best ever, capturing the does not allow the viewer time to cartoon in life-sometimes even and women who study customer requirements in reflect on just how "wild" some without added animation. depth, devise an approach, define a preferred of the situations really are. A first­ rate thriller, 36 'Hours makes fine machine and operational solution, and help the use of small details as clues. Be My Fair Lady (Warner) : George customer implement the solution. watchful and get there from the Cukor's straightforward treatment start. of the hist play, at times criticized for staginess, but framed with a The IBM Customer Engineer is a specialist in pre­ -Joseph Wiseman flower motif that counterpoints cision data processing machines and systems. He Cukor's portrayal of society-people is responsible for installing and maintaining IBM's FATHER GOOSE as statues, and underscores Henry Higgins' Pygmalion-Doolittle as the vast line of electronic and electromechanical Father Goose is another in what real thing. Harrison and Hepburn equipment. might be called a new breed of war are quite a lively pair throughout. movies: typified by a cynical be­ hind-the-scenes anti-heroism, as If you have a major in Liberal Arts, Engineering, the contrasted with the run-of-the-mill Psycho (Loew's Palace): One of Hitchcock's most thorough shock­ Sciences, or Business Administration, discover "war is hell" statement. This time what kinds of work IBM has to offer. IBM is an though the hero actually is tem­ ers, starring a strange old lady in pered with a little courage, as he an eerily unforgettable ending, the Equal Opportunity Employer. saves a French school teacher and now occasionally forgotten hall­ mark of Hitchcock and the unex­ her brood of girls from a bombed pected as synonymous. Ton y There are challenging assignments in more than out island during World War II. Perkins has never been the same 200 sales and service offices located coast to coast. Perhaps that's why Director since. Ralph Nelson cast suave, respect­ See your placement office for our brochures-and an appointment with the IBM interviewers. If you able Cary Grant as the unlikely, Seance on a Wet Afternoon bedraggled American, comman­ (MacArthur): see review. cannot attend the interviews, write or visit the deered into running an insular spotting station far-removed from nearest IBM office. the partial civilization of Kings­ Thirty-Six Hours (Metropolitan, point headquarters. At least a little Ambassador): see review. respectability peers through his beard, rumpled face, and perpetual Topkapi (Apex): Dassin's easy R. T. Burroughs whisky scent. The last from an lesson in museum jewel robbery, Branch Manager ample Scotch supply used to pacify riddled with suspense, laced by him under the British command. 3833 N. Fairfax Dr. perfect timing, sumptuously taught Arlington, Virginia 22203 But once this hint of Hollywood by Melina Mercouri and a bevy of IBM DATA PROCESSING past wears off, and the viewer is henchmen including standby-mas­ ready to grant Cary some measure termind Peter U stinov. Dassin be­ of forgiveness for his fallen state, gins his story with some playful Goose unfolds as a colorful exer­ color photography and keeps the cise in repartee, chiefly sustained tempo lightly pitched as he slowly by Peter Stone and Frank Tarloff's pressure cooks the crime. witty screenplay and consistently good photography by Charles Lang, MUSIC Jr. This evening at 8 :30, in Consti- Thursday. February 11. 1965 'l'RE ROllA Page Se'f'en New Night Spots Vie A.F. I~plements New Christys -CoIning OE-lOO Project; For Hoya Munificence More Fliers Seen For Stellar Songfest The Georgetown University Air Science department, un­ der the direction of Lt. Col. T. P. Ferrato, is presently ac­ cepting applications for its new two-year program organ­ ized as a result of the recently enacted ROTC Vitalization Act of 1964. The two-year program per­ mits students, who for various rea­ sons did not enroll in the AFROTC basic course during their freshman and sophomore years, to apply. and if qualified, begin their officer training in their junior year. A new six-week training course is designed as a substitute for the basic course requirements of the four-year program so that students may enter the program at the junior level. This six-week course TAKES TWO BARTENDERS •.. to make a double Brandy Alex­ THE NEW CHRISTY MINSTRELS _ •. differ somewhat in appear­ will be conducted at Keesler AFB ance from their 19th century predecessors. ander. Blues Alley. one of the newest establishments in a lengthy list near Biloxi, Mississippi, and Max­ of area nightspots. well AFB in Montgomery, Ala­ by Lee Munich Hoya night-lifers wandering among the numerous estab­ bama. "Green, Green" and "Saturday Night" will come to lishments in the M Street area have three new choices: Blues FW-FTC Georgetown University on the late-winter, pre-green Friday Alley, 1073 Wisconsin, the renovated Corral, in the 3200 Besides the new six-week train­ night of February 19th. The nine-member New Christy block of M, and the Crazy Horse, two doors down from ing course, all two-year program Minstrels, a modern popular folk-singing group, on that the Corral. cadets will attend a four-week evening will bring "California" to McDonough's Gymnasium Field Training Course. This four­ The Blues Alley features a smooth jazz quartet consist­ week course, which will be given All tickets for the performance are res'erved and are ing of base piano, guitar, and at an Air Force Base, is normally priced at $3, $3.50, and $4. Junior Prom Rocks, xylophone or clarinet. In the taken in the summer between the Devron to Swing , As of Monday, February 8th, Dining Room the drapes, junior and senior years, but may shortly after the announce­ be deferred until after graduation. Schedule Gambol; Martha, Drifters Roll, table cloths and lamps, up­ Other changes brought about by ment of the concert on cam­ Sellout Crowd Shouts holstery and rugs are blue. the new legislation include a re­ Hoya HStarchies" pus, 10% of the seats in all duction in classroom hours from sections had been sold. Pete The walls are hung with vari­ five to three hours per week and by Ellen Canepa by Dan Paduano ous old brass instruments and a totally new and updated curri- Garcia, committee co-chairman, The Junior Class of the guitar and a tamborine. The pa­ The Student Council of the states that he hopes to sell out all seats by • Wednesday, February University incorporated big trons are mostly prosperous Georgetown University School m.iddle-aged people who can afford 17th. The performance on Febru­ time entertainment with of Nursing will sponsor its ary 19th will begin at 9 P.M. in glamorous settings at this the table (dinners from $4.40 to McDonough Gymnasium. $6.50; beers are $.85 and drinks first dance ever held in Dar­ year's Junior Prom Weekend_ average $1.10.) nall Hall, the new Woman's Mario Garcia + The weekend began with a Horsey Dormitory. It has been publi­ The Christy Concert is being champagne party in Copley Lounge cized on the campus as the "Ski 'n sponsored by the College Student exclusively for the members of the The Corral has got rid of the Stein" dance and the dance com­ Council. Pete Garcia ('65) and Junior class. The party-goers cowboy band it used to have up­ mittee stresses that it is "a first". Bill Tighe ('65) are co-chairman came attired in the finest formal stairs. On the stage between the of the planning committee. Also wear from long, flowing gowns to The Affair window and the dance area the on the committee is Ted Kenny tails and top hats. A few of the The affair will begin at 9 :00 pm. ('67), who is responsible for off­ more elite couples arrived at the Teejuns "of London" now play, and end at midnight. Music will campus publicity. The profits from party in a horse drawn coach. who imitate most hit records rather well. The decor is a tasteless pot­ be provided by Devron and the this performance will be the pri­ mary source of funds for the Stu­ Unfair pourri which can be highly amus­ decor will feature fireplaces, arti­ ficial snow and, of course, skis and dent Council during the second se­ After the Champagne party, the ing: Polynesian-type sculptures, sparkling Hoyas and their bub­ steins. The main intention is to mester. Two organizations which driftwood, a Spain travel poster, bling dates headed for the Regency achieve an atmosphere similar to will inevitably gain with the suc­ Ballroom of the Shoreham Hotel. plus touches left from Western the Bavarian Alps. cess of the concert are the George­ Many were the sighs and exclama­ days, like two nude cowgirl statu­ town Crew and GUCAP. Charwoman tions prompted by the luxurious­ ettes over the bar. The young peo­ The New Christy Minstrels are ness of the ballroom. Warren Cov­ ple around you have led some Margie Harris, Charwoman of considered a unique group in the ington and the Tommy Dorsey scandalized Georgetown Gentlemen COL. FERRATO the committee, had this to say field of popular music. The Min­ Orchestra provided almost wholly to call the Corral a "zoo." But if about the "Ski 'n Stein": The culum with new instructional strels have risen with the recent uninterrupted musical entertain­ theme for "Ski 'n Stein" is a folk-singing trend in the United your date isn't too delicate you can methods. ment. Their selections ranged from have fun being one of the animals. Bavarian ski lodge and with States by re-introducing a brand of Strauss waltzes to the fast moving Students applying for the two­ Devron's music and the decora­ music that originated in mid-nine­ tempos of the "Twisted Genera­ The Crazy Horse resembles the year program must qualify on the tions planned you will each believe teenth century America. Their type tion." The climax of the evening Tombs with a dance band and Air Force Officer Qualifying Test, you are in the actual setting. The of music was started by Edwin P. was the drawing for the door prize, quaint movies. But Hoyas accus­ pass a medical examination, appear dress will be of a Sunday type­ Christy in 1842. The music was a an expense paid trip to Bermuda. tomed to the crowds at the Tombs before an interview board com­ suits for the boys and dress and combination of the simple folk Father Fitzgerald, Dean of the Col­ will be wiped out by the subway posed of senior Air Force officers heels for the girls. There will also music of the South and the profes­ lege, drew the winning number crush and their wallets will be of the AFROTC program, and suc­ be intermission entertainment so sional talents of Christy's Virginia and the prize went to Bob Bauer, there will not be a single dull hurting after the $1. cover and the cessfully complete the new six­ minstrels. a jUnior in the School of Foreign moment during the whole evening. $.65 beers (must keep glass filled week Field Training Course in the Service. summer of 1965. Male students Again, ask your date now. Don't Corn And Cliche The Hoyas rose from bed at the at all times.) who have two more years of aca­ wait to be asked because you won't The New Christy Minstrels were crack of noon Saturday morning demic work remaining until the a­ want to miss the 'Ski 'n Stein'. organized in 1961. In a fashion and made their way to the May­ ward of their degree, either at the similar to their predecessors, the flower Hotel for a Cocktail party baccalureate or the graduate level, featuring the fabulous Drifters are eligible to apply, providing they new group has been created with a and majestic Martha and the Van­ can complete such work by their consideration for recent folk-sing­ dellas. At 2 P,M. the East and 28th birthday. ing trends as wen as a musician's State Rooms filled with Hoyas and concern for singing talent and their belles. Martha and the Van­ In addition to these develop­ group hv.rmony. The New Min­ dellas started the afternoon's fes­ ments, the new legislation will strels were chosen in highly com­ tivities with heir lively and popular benefit cadets currently in the ad­ petitive auditions, seeking not only "Dancing in h St?-eet." After an vanced program. Their present musical ability, but also the neat and youthful appearance necessary hour of their scintillating sounds, monthly retainer pay of $27 will to win the public. the Drifters filled 'the air with be raised to $40 per month. This ",Unde?' the Boardwalk," "Up on The group as it will appear in increase, retroactive to October 13, the Roof," and "Sand in my Shoes.' McDonough Gymnasium in two The music played on continuously. 1964, will be received by members weeks consists of seven male sing­ When the Drifters finished their as soon as they are sworn into the ers, who play various stringed in­ hour and a half performance, Air Force reserve. Membership in struments, and two attractive fe­ Martha and the Vendallas returned the Reserve is required under the male vocalists. Although the New to the stage clothed in tight, gold new legislation. Christy Minstrels have done away sequined pants for the grand finale. with the corn and cliche of the ori­ They sang until 5 P.M. When they Interested students are urged to ginal blackface routines, the new tried to leave the stage, shouts of contact Lt. Col. Ferrato to begin group seeks to replace them with "More, more, more" came from the the necessary application proced­ their own special freshness and the crowd. And more they played, an r ...... ures. These procedures must be beat and enthusiasm of modern extra twenty minutes of encore. BUSINESS IS SLOW completed prior to February 15. SKI 'N STEIN PLANNERS popular music_ Page Eight rHE HOYA Thursday, February 11,1965

Council Closeup wanted! (Continued from Page 2) elected as representatives that virile m.en who either make or break student gov­ ernment. wish to earn The concept of unity is one that must not become a rallying cry for $5.00 apiece the various political cliques that The makers of By George! often appear on the campus at elec­ tion time. Rather, each and every Men's Toiletries will pay member of the College must decide this magnificent sum if a for himself on a rational basis the description of your manly values of unity. When he has de­ cided he should make his opi,nions adventures (aided by the known to his representatives. persuasive fragrance of By In the weeks to come everyone George! of course) is pub. will have his opinion concerning lished in this or any other 15,000 JOBS unification. Many will be in favor but they must remember that it is college newspaper. Tell us your tale in 100 THE PRESIDENT AND THE CHAIRMAN ... Mr.' L. A. Jennings, essential that each school maintain IN EUROPE General Chairman of the Community Support Program discusses the its identity as a unit in the whole. words or less. Omit the There will be many that will be Grand Duchy of Luxembourg fund-raising drive with the Very Rev. Gerard J. Campbell, S. J., gory details please. Send -There are 15,000 summer jobs President of the University. opposed and they must remember still available in Europe and the that something has to be done to it, with permission to American Student Information indicated his pleasure with the imp r 0 v e student government; reprint in part or whole, Service is giving travel grants up otherwise, it might truly be said, as 125 Grand campaign: "This first anual com­ to By George! Men's to $390 to the first 5000 appli­ (Continued on Page 8) munity drive is off to a good start Stim1tlus did, that Student Gov­ cants. Wages range to $400 a ernment is dead. Toiletries, 1290 Avenue of month for such jobs as resort, try in the Washington area. Among and should be an outstanding suc­ hotel, child care, office, farm, fac­ the volunteers working on the drive cess. The fact that two hundred Georgetown's basic problem is the Americas, New York, tory, sales and shipboard work. we have four former D. C. Commis­ business and professional leaders that student opinion is often frag­ N.Y. 10019. Job and travel grant applications sioners, the presidents of six local of the aTea that appreciate George­ mented, usualy divided, and perpet­ Need some success to tell and full details are available ifi a banks, a number of former ambas­ ualy unformed. If this could be 36-page illustrated booklet which sadors and several ex-members of town's services to excellence in solved, then perhaps there is more about? See your local students may obtain by sending the cabinet." higher education and to the com­ than hope for student government. druggist. Ask for $2 (for the booklet and airmail munity have volunteered their postage) toDept.F,ASIS,22Ave. In publicizing the benefits which Students definitely have a role to By George! de la Liberte, Luxembourg City, the University affords to the metro­ services, insures the success of the play in the functioning of the Uni­ Grand Duchy of Luxembourg. politan Washington area, the ap­ Program. versity. peal is utilizing twenty second-spot announcements on local radio and television stations. Providing the in-depth publicity for the campaign is a pamphlet Georgetown Uni­ If you've got the cap ... versity: A Vital Force in the Comnmnity. The pamphlet, some fifteen pages in length, stresses the excellence of eduaction offered by the university as well as the fact that a great per­ centage of the business and pro­ fessional men in the Washington area received part of their educa­ tion at Georgetown. The fact that students are accepted without re­ gard to religious belief is also em­ phasized. Impacted Perhaps the most surprising in­ formation however concerns the financial impact of Georgetown on arez. business. Georgetown herself Oids has the car! is one of the ten largest employers in the metropolitan area, and the combined total of money spent by the University, the staff and stu­ dents in metropolitan Washington exceeds $49 million. The Rev. Gerard J. Campbell, S.J., President of Georgetown has

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SKYLINE Dean Confabs AAUP Gives Views GeorgetownGroup ~::::::::::::::::::' SKI (Continued from Page 1) On Student Freedom Great Political Hit; Department and Dean Fitzgerald felt that a separate department FacultyResponsibility Scranton Cheered AREA should be established on the un­ dergraduate level. He stated that Boston, Mass. - (I.P.) - two alternatives are under con­ sideration. One would simply call Members of Boston Univer­ for an undergraduate department sity's chapter of the Ameri­ of Social Relations such as found can Association of Univer­ ~;;:;;;;;;;;;;::::::::J FOR INFORMATION AND SNOW REPORTS at Harvard which could operate in sity Professors recently dis­ Call 1-675-3512 or write Box 87, Washington, Virginia the fields of Psychology, Sociology cussed a published statement ~======~'and ~nthropology. The present building program of faculty responsibility for stu­ will begin in 1966, with the build­ dent's academic freedom. The ing of a new undergraduate li­ statement, published in a recent with brary, and will be completed by issue of the association's Bulletin, Max9hwman 1970. The cost of the library and outlines faculty responsibility for books will be approximately freedom of student newspapers and (By the author of "Rally Round the Flag, Boys!", $7,000,000. There has also been a governments, classroom freedom of "Dobie Gillis," etc.) plan for the construction of a new expression for stUdents, and free­ Law School, Medical and Dental dom from unjust administrative Library and endowed chairs for the punishment. ONCE MORE UNTO THE BREACH distinguished professors. The cost The Essentials of the program is estimated at The statement declares in its Today I begin my eleventh year of writing this column in your $25,000,000. The acquisition of the preamble that "freedom of inquiry campus newspaper. funds will begin immediately and and expression are essential attri­ I wasn't sure I'd be coming back this year. Mter a decade of should be completed by 1968. butes of a community of scholars. doing this column, I had retreated to my country seat, tired but It goes on to propose students In other areas, a Committee on should be allowed to "take reasoned happy, to enjoy a nice long rest. But last night as I sat on my Maintenance ·has been set up to exception" to any information or INAUGUR~L_DELEGATION verandah, peaceful and serene, humming the largo from A Long investigate more efficient opera­ views a pr()fessor may teach his Day's Night and worming my dog, a stranger suddenly appeared tion ()f the physical plant, and class, and demands "protection a­ Early in the morning of before me. plans are being made to release gainst unjust grading and evalua­ He was a tali, clean-limbed man, crinkly-eyed and crooked­ funds allocated for student activ­ tion due to incompetence, error or Joanuary 20, the Reverend grinned, stalwart and virile. "How do you do," he said. "My ities to the various Student Coun­ prejudice." John F. Devine, S.J. Director name is Stalwart Virile and I am with the Personna Stainless cils. With the assistance ()f Mr. Vague Phrases of the Student Personnel Of­ Steel Razor Blade people." Wright of the Office of Student In the Student Publications sec­ fice, succeeded in securing "Enchanted," I said. "Take off your homburg and sit down." Personnel, it was hoped that the tion, the statement projects the be­ I clapped my hands sharply. "Norman!" I called. "Another chair councHs could thus help to keep lief that "editors and managers of several hundred tickets to the for Mr. Virile!" this portion of the budget under student publications should be se"" Inaugural parade from the Inaug­ lected democratically on the basis ural Parade Committee. The tic­ control. of competence, and in accordance kets, worth $12.00 apiece.. were Summing up his experiences in wit h established procedures." given free of charge to the U niver­ his first semester as Dean of the Neither student control nor a stu­ sity. The seats were located in College, Fr. Fitzgerald noted that dent governing body should "limit front of the Treasury building on at the first general f~culty meet­ editorial freedom," the statement Pennsylvani'a ~ve., on the same ing this fall, various professors continues. side as the Presidential rev.iewing Student punishment or dismissal stand. offered him their sympathy. De­ for "alleged misconduct" should be spite the difficulties Dean Fitz­ for offenses defined "as clearly as gerald said he was "happy to be possible, avoiding such vague Students were waiting on line back at Georgetown and glad to phrases as 'undesirable conduct,'" outside the Student Personnel have the job." the report adds. Office for the tickets when Father Devine returned from the White House with them. Everyone that was waiting received a ticket. The "Another chair for Mr. Virile!" grateful Hoyas then made their way to the parade area, many Obediently my dog trotted away and returned directly with a traveling by foot because of the Wanna rock the boat? unusual tardiness of the D. C. fanback chair of Malayan rattan. He is the smartest dog in our block. Transit. "I suppose you're wondering why I am here," said Mr. Virile, The sizable Georgetown contin­ seating himself. gent put on quite a creditable show. "Well, sir," I replied, myoId eyes twinkling roguishly, "I'll No sooner had they arrived than wager you didn't come to read my meter." they unfurled a long sign reading You can imagine how we howled at that one! "Georgetown U." The banner had "That's a doozy!" cried Mr. Virile, finally catching his breath. been made moments before from "I must remember to tell it to Alice when I get home." shelf paper and magic markers. "Your wife?" I said. When the President was on his "My father," he said. way back from the Capitol lunch­ "Oh," I said. eon following the actual swearing­ "But enough of wit and humor," he said. "Let us get down to in, he pointed from his lomousine to business. How would you like to write a campus column for the sign-toting Georgetown stu­ Personna Stainless Steel Razor Blades?" dents in the stands. The Hoyas "For money?" I said. clamored their approval. "Yes," he said. ~s Pennsylvania Governor Wil­ "My hand, sir," I said and clasped his. Warmly he returned liam W. Scranton passed, the HiIl­ the pressure, and soft smiles played upon our lips, and our eyes toppers chanted "We Wanted were moist with the hint of tears, and we were silent, not trust­ Scranton" and for a moment it ing ourselves to speak. seemed as if the Governor would "What will you write about in your campus column?" asked descend from his car and gladhand Mr. Virile when he was able to talk again. among the well-wishers. He decided "I will take up the burning issues that vex the ~merican un­ against it when he realized he dergraduate!" I cried, bounding to my feet. "I will explore, with­ might tie up the parade by doing out fear or favor such explosive questions as 'Are roommates so. ~lso, most of the other state sanitary?' and 'Should proctors be given a saliva test?' and Here's your chance. Pru's looking for people for important dignitaries acknowledged the boi­ 'Should capital punishment for pledges be abolished?' and 'Can sterous Hoyas. a student of 19 find happiness with an economics professor of SO?'" administrative, sales, accounting and actuarial careers. We "And will you also say a pleasant word from time to time about want graduates who like to win. Those who can hang in Personna Stainless Steel Razor Blades?" asked Mr. Virile. "Sir" I said simply "what other kind of word except pleasant there till the job is finished. could I possibly say about Personna Blades, which give me more You'll get training, benefits and a good starting salary. luxury shaves than Beep-Beep or any other blade I might name?" More important, there's room at the top for top-notchers "Another of my products is Burma Shave," said Mr. Virile. "Can you find it in your heart to mention Burma Shave occa­ . .. all the responsibility you can handle. '. sionally?" and more interesting problems than you "But of course!" I declared. "For is not Burma Shave the ever thought existed. whisker-wiltingest lather in the land?" "Yes," he admitted. We expect you to make waves-and you can And then he shook my hand again and smiled bravely and make some pretty big ones in one of the was gone-a tall silhouette moving erectly into the setting sun. nation's best-known corporations. "Farewell, good tonsorialist!" I cried after him. "~loha!" And turned with a will to my typewriter. © 1965, Max Shulman Still wanna rock the boat? See the Prudential Recruiter. He'll be * * * at the Placement Office on Thursday, February 18. The makers of Personna® Blades and Burma Shave® are happy to bring you another season of Max Shulman's THE PRUDENTIAL INSURANCE COMPANY OF AMERICA uncensored. uninhibited. and unpredictable column. an equal opportunity employer We think you' II be happy too when you try our products. Page Ten rHE H'OYA Thursday. February 11. Jesuit's Guild Plans Hoya WGTBAnnounce! Day Of Recollection, Two New Boards Salutes . .. Fashion Show-Buffet Run by Manager With the annual change­ by Keven McKenna Ellen Canepa-for participating in many extra-curricular activities over meeting of February 2, On Sunday, February 7, in addition to Georgetown University radio having done an station WGTB announces its the Jesuit Guild of Washing­ excellent job as ton held their monthly meet­ class president new Board, including the ing at Palms Lounge to make for the past two addition of three new posi­ years. This year tions and change of duties for two plans for their Annual Day of she works 16 others. Recollection and their June hours a week -in a The new Station Manager follow­ hospi.tal, tutors for G.U.C.A.P., Fashion Show and Buffet. The ing the meeting is Rod Shields. The and had ·an important role in other members of the Executive Jesuit Guild is a charity organiza­ 571 B.C. Board include Peter Daymont, in tion consisting of parents and rela­ the new position of General Man­ -tives of Jesuit priests and seminar­ ager; Joseph Solari, Program Di­ ians which raises money to help rector; Vito Zappala, Chief Engi- finance the cost of education for Joe Tiano--for doing many of the neer; and James Leon, Public Re­ seminarians. Father E d war d demanding jobs that have to be lations Director. The basic change is the introduc­ Brown, S.J., Assistant Director of done in the Philo­ Jesuit Seminarians, is the modera­ tion of a two-board system. In this ON THE AIR ..• new WGTB Station Manager Rod Shields and his demic Society. He concept there is an Operations own home-made computer. tor of the Washington group. had to contact 93 Board as well as an Executive embassies last Board, with the positions of Gen­ S.J. Fashion Show year in connec­ eral Manager, Program Director, tion with George­ The main fund raising project of and Chief Engineer over-lapping. town's National The Operations Board, meeting the Guild is their annual Fashion I n v it a t ion a I SPANISH Sat., Feb. 20, 8:30 p.m. every three weeks, functions as tJhe DAR CO'NSTITUTION HALL Show and Buffet which is to be Model General Assembly. This organization responsible :for the ~. . held on June 19 of this year. Last year he is financial co-ordinator daily work of the radio station. FRENCH GERMAN June's affair was very successful, of the college and high school de­ The Executive Board, meeting having added $3,000 to the aid bate tournaments being held here. weekly, is a continuance of Opera- BOOKSELLERS given men desiring to complete tions, aiding the station in obtain­ their Jesuit training. It has been ing improved equipment and main­ Current & Classics noted that eight of such affairs are taining a sound fiscal policy. This BIKEL • INTERNATIONAllY RENOWNED • enough to finance the cost for the Tom Mader-for his willingness Tim A. Chorba FOLK SliNGER • entire education and training of to work for his school no matter The three new positions on the GOOD SEATS AVAILABLE : what the position Board are General Manager, held ~odern Language Q,rch.: $3.30, 3.85, 4.50 one Jesuit priest. The co-chairmen Balc.: $1.65, 2.20, 2.75, 3.30, 3.85 f ~ or what the job by Peter Daymont; Personnel Di­ - of the coming June event are Mrs. Book & Record Store FOR MAIL RESERVATIONS, SEND: Frances Keenen and Mr. Thomas is. He has worked rector, Ronald L. Malcarney; and 51ELF-A D D RES SED STAMPED on John Carroll Publicity Director, Robert C. Klein. 3160 '0' STREET + ENVELOPE WITH CHECK PAY- Payne. + ~3~I:AU~, "HAYES CON C E R T • Weekend, Junior James K. Leon, Public Relations Georgetown Prom, and Home- D· t h d t· h·..n... HAYES CONCERT BUREAU • Day Of Recollection lrec or, as u les WI",,. no + coming Weekend. longer include the inserting of sta- + H~ c~",s~bel~s'f· Stein\~a~ ~r~~~ + Plans were also made for the In all these en- tion identifications, but have a FE 8-8963 1'...... \ deavours, his work has always ··fi· d Guild's Annual Day of Recollec- slgm c.ance In correspon ence out- been efficient and enthusiastl·c. sl·d th" t t· thetion, daywhich before will be Easterheld on AprilSunday 13,. .------.:======:::;~=e==._=s:a=l:o=n:. ======~~======~~======~ Father Gavigan, S.J., pastor of Holy Trinity Church in George­ town, former Director of Novices at Wernesville in the Maryland Province of the Jesuit Order, will conduct the retreat for the Guild.

• The Paulist Father is a modern man in every sense of the word. He is a man of this age, cognizant of the needs of modern men. He is free from stifling formalism, is a pioneer in using contemporary ways to achieve the conversion of 100 million non-Catholic Amer­ icans. He is a missionary to his own GUILD MEETING people - the American people. He utilizes modern techniques to ful­ Letters fill his mission, is encouraged to call upon his own innate talents to (Continued from Page 2) help further his dedicated goal. February 1965. It is disappointing, but not surprising, that we lost the • If the vital spark of serving God game in view of the fact that there through man has been ignited in lIt was a prom the night before and a you, why not pursue an investiga­ cocktail party and dance before the tion of your life as a priest? The game. There were a number of Paulist Fathers have developed an vacant chairs at the training table Saturday afternoon. Apparently it aptitude test for the modern man was more important to be with the interested in devoting his life to drifters and Martha and the Van­ God. This can be a vital instrument rellas than it was to beat Syracuse. to help you make the most impor­ We hear a lot about the necessity tant decision of your life. Write for of the students' backing and en­ it today. Arrow Cum Laude, a gutsy button-down oxford in pure, unadulterated cotton. High collar couraging the team. Perhaps it's NATIONAL VOCATIONS DIRECTOR band that doesn't get lost under a sweater or jacket. Long, swooping collar points that time we heard something about the PAULIST FATHERS button up a perfect collar roll. Square-shouldered, taper-bodied, "Sanforized" labeled. necessity of the team's backing and 15 more like it in stripes and colors you never saw before. $5. _A D DO J-I Z. encouraging the student body. 415 WEST 59th STREET A bold new breed of dress shirt for a bold new breed of guy. ~..I\L\' ,,,~ NEW YORK, N. Y. 10019 E. Paul Betowski, S.J. St. Joe's Stunned by GU, Momentarily. • •

Thursday, February 11, 1965 Page Eleven Oarsmen Preparing Lync h Ru nsas U sua I; To Hit The Potomac By End of February by Adrian Krudy Frosh Pull Surprises If student participation is any indication of a sport's worth, then the crew certainly WHERE DID THAT BALL GO? ... A desperate scramble follows ranks first and foremost in Prendergast's fall early in the St. Joe's game. Bob Ward out-jumped Cliff Anderson in the ensuing jump-ball. popularity and prestige, as is especially evident by this by John Saunders year's overwhelming turnout. Not only has this season seen the great­ Georgetown's seven game winning streak was snapped est freshmen response, but the per­ last week in a 80-72 loss to third ranked St. Joseph's. The centage of those dropping is at its lowest. Hawk was dead for most of the game as the Hoays domi­ Of a total of 155 members, 124 nated play, only to have the game snatched from their grasp have withstood the tortures of pre­ in the final minutes. season workouts, and for the first time in recent years, cuts will be Owen Gillen and Frank Hollendoner combined for 26 made on the basis of physical test points in the first half and the scores. This elimination is neces­ fired-up Hoyas led, 40-34 at sitated by inadequate physical re­ Pucksters Starting" sources which limit the number on intermission. With 16 :00 to each squad (freshmen and varsity) Season's 2nd Half; go in the first half, Owen to the :fi.ye shells available. Gillen exploded, scoring 10 Devilish Tortures M S URBINA BREAKS TAPE . . . Hoyas fared well in PhilIy Inquirer This huge participation is espe- anpower trong points in a three minute Games, and Rick Urbina's performance in mile relay topped all times cially remarkable when one con­ stretch. HoRendoner, who had 14 for 440 yds. siders that the gym training pro­ by Dick Griggs :first period points, tapped in a re­ gram has grown increasingly more bound to give Georgetown its lar­ On Jan. 15, 1965, the Hoya track team began it's indoor difficult. Varsity coaches Frank The hockey team will re- gest lead, 25-14. Hol1endoner also Barrett and Bob Remuzzi and turn to the ice on Sunday, grabbed 11 rebounds in the first season at the Boston K of C Games in the Boston Garden. freshmen caches Pat Doyle, Carl Feb r u a r y 14th, at eight half and the ever present Jimmy i Senior Joe Lynch won the mile event with a personal low Hager, and Jimmy Harrington Brown picked off eight more as time of 4 :06 and was named the outstanding athlete in the have not failed to introduce an en- o'clock A.M. against the Balti- the Hoyas outrebounded the Hawks larged collection of improved devil- more Mercurys, followed by 36-16 and raced to a six point half meet. Lynch also anchored the two mile relay team and ish tortures designed to condition a game Monday night against time advantage. brought it to a photo finish at the wire. the oarsmen from head to toe. Ii ______"The Rack" the Washington Eagles at eight Reincarnation The track stars then moved Important changes in the length- o'clock P.M. Both games will be While the capacity crowd was Hoya Swim Team to the Millrose Games in New ened early-morning (6: 15-7: 15) played at the Washington Colli­ screaming for an upset, the Hoya York City where Lynch ham­ workout include the elimination of seum, third and M St., N.E. shooting dropped from an adequate isometrics, the introduction of a During the first half of the sea­ 40 % to a cold 31 % in the second I Continues to Win; pered by a cold finished running program, and the major son the Hoyas netted a 7-4-1 league half. The Hawks capitalized on Ducks W. Virginia fourth in the mile and Ed Du­ innovation of a timed cycle of record to stand in third place be­ Georgetown's mistakes and tied the chini finished a strong second quick repetitive exercises, fittingly hind the Canucks and Rebels. The score at 50 all with 14 minutes called "the rack." In addition to Hoyas lost their last game before remaining. Jim Barry, hampered The Georgetown University in the 880 yard dash. In the B.A.A. these are the traditional calis- exams to the Canucks by a 3-2 by cold shooting, played deter­ Games an Jan. 30, our only entry, thenics, directed by drillmasters score. This marked the second time mined defense as both teams fought swimming team continued on the two mile relay team finished its way to a Successful season Barrett and Doyle who have on this season that Georgetown has for the lead, with the game tied last. occasion been seen encouraging the dropped a game to the league lead­ four times and the lead changing by downing the University of The first time the Hoya's entered oarsmen with baseball bats. ing, undefeated Canucks by a one hands three times. I West Virginia swimmers by a full squad of runners was at the These daily sessions prepare the goal margin, losing earlier this Frank Hollendoner's 15 ft. jump­ I a score of 55 to 40 last Friday Philadelphia inquirer games on oarsmen for a series of Saturday year 7-6. The game was exciting er with six minutes left, made the ! Feb. 5. If there had been a point morning tests, given on a point even though the Canucks main­ score 66-64 for the Hoyas, but the at the American University Field- basis, the scores of which determine tained a two goal edge for two and Georgetown bid was over, the I, house. score, the Hoya's easily would have walked off with first place. the initial seating of the shells. The a half periods. With ten minutes to Hoyas were simply worn out. St. i The Hoya's won the 400 yard tests, consisting of various exer- go the Hoyas came to life Schuyler Joe's then rared for :five consecu­ lmedley and freestyle relays to ac­ Fastest 440 cises, are graded on the number of MacGuire took a pass at the blue tive layups and went on top 74-66 i cumulate 14 of their 55 points. In the mile relay, sophomore repetitions performed within a line and fired a low shot past the with four minutes to go. The psy­ I The medley relay team was com­ Rich Urbina ran the fastest 440 of limited time period. screened goalie. A minute later, chological warfare failed and the I posed of Kehoe, Leech, Vetter, and the day and led his team to victory. With these six agonizing weeks Benjy Oglethorpe split the two Hawk was reincarnated. In the Dwyer. Bos, Sontag, Sandweg, and His time was clocked at 48.8 Fresh­ of conditioning slowly drawing to defensemi!TI and skated in alone on final minutes Jimmy Brown, who ISemanski were the members of the man Bob Ziemenski showed great a close, the oarsmen are under- the Canuck goalie. Benjy faked was playing with a severe cold, had freestyle relay team. promise as he ran a 4 :21 mile while standably anxious to "hit the once and flipped the puck into the to be removed, seemingly near col­ water," which will be on the tradi- upper right hand corner knotting Leech Wins leading the freshmen to victory in lapse from the exertion of the I the distance medley. tional date of Washington's Birth- the score at 2-2. The Canucks came game. In the individual events, sopho­ day, if river conditions permit. right back with a score that won more Mike Semanski took a first in John Reilly the game. Hawks Outrebounded I 50 yard freestyle and a second If there can be such a thing as I ~he Another Freshman Jim Borce The Hoyas undoubtedly have the i In the 100 yard freestyle. Captain victory in defeat, it was here. The whose running style brings back manpower and potential to improve i Neil Bos also won a first and a memories of former Hoya great Hoyas outrebounded St. Joseph's second. He took the 200 yard in­ on their present record. The first 52-41, something which no other i John Reilly, also looked exception­ two lines have been scoring well all i dividual medley and finished a close Hawk opponent has done this sea­ ally good. Running in the class A year; On defense Co-Captain Doug i second in the 200 yard butterfly. son. Frank Hollendoner played the two mile interval, on three different Murphy and Chris Pollen play ! Sontag and Leech took the remain- best game of his young career, occasions Borce made up as much tough, aggressive hockey. With the ing first place meda~s for the scoring 24 points and grabbing 17 as 15 yards on Villanova's Bill recent addition of Happy Fauth Hoya's. Sontag took the 500 yard rebounds. Owen Gillen, who had Adams only to fall behind at the playing with Schuyler Mac Guire, freestyle and Leech won the 200 end. In the two mile event, George­ given Georgetown its transient yard breaststroke. Georgetown has had a stable de­ glory by his fierce almost brutal town's Eamon O'Reilly took first fense. John Ashton has been con­ play, added 21 points to the losing place with a time of 9 :10. sistently good and often brilliant in Oh, Women! cause. The Hawks who had three the cage. He has played a major Two of the Georgetown swim­ Lynch Cold players in double :figures, were led role in all of Georgetowns seven by junior Marty Ford with 22 mers had the misfortune of en­ This meet was a surprise to victories. c~untering and loosing to the only many as Georgetown's two most points and soph. Matt Guokas with gIrl in the meet, Miss Bette Hushla. The outlook for the rest of the 15. heralded runners Joe Lynch and ~ehoe finished second behind her season is good. Poor backchecking Although the loss brought the Ed Duchini did rather poorly. In the 200 yard backstroke and and sometimes erratic defense are Hoyas record to 10 wins and 4 de­ Sophomore Peter Holihan finished Lynch still hampered by a cold the major problems which the feats, it was their best game to fourth in the same event and third finished fourth in the mile with a Hoyas will have to overcome if date and showed that Georgetown behind Bos and Miss Hushla in the time of 4:11.3. Duchini :finished last Georgetown is to move into second is in the same class as the nations individual medley. in the 880 yard dash. AGONIZING TORTURES place in the league. top teams. Page Twelve 'J'HE HOYA Thursday, February 11,1965 St. Joe's-Hoyas: NIT Hopes Shattering Defeat Analyzed As Bing Bangs Hoyas Of Sports As No Mistake by Sam McKnight At 8 :00 P.M. Feb. 3, amidst the thunderous applause of a and HO!JQ$ jam-packed h 0 use, th e Georgetown basketball team WITH WS<\DE HALABI streamed onto the court with high hopes of upsetting the Sports expansion has long been a focal point of discus­ number three club in the nation, sion. Suggested on countless occasions, expansion proposals St. Joseph's. have been, through the years, ineffective. Such proposals Power-Ball have lacked the specificity needed for effectiveness, and this With the score tied 6-6 and 15 :40 fact may be attributed to the uncertainty that shrouds ath­ to go in the half, the super­ letic policy at Georgetown. To play the game, one need charged Hoyas unleashed a 6 know the rules, but the rules are non-existent--there is no minute flurry of the most devas­ tating power basketball ever seen. definitive athletic policy. Tthe entire team ran, passed, and Resulting from this incertitude is the fact that recogi­ shot well; and the front line, led BING AGAIN. _ . Syracuse's 6-3 Mr. Everything slips another 'J by Hollendoner and Gillen, literally tion of teams h~s been nil in recent years. Without a set pro­ through defenders. The Washington, D. C., boy had a sizable cheering ,~ crashed the backboards at both section of his own, reacted expectedly. :l cedure to follow for recognition, a team has found it need ends of the court. When the dust ~ not combat red tape, but must find a higher hierarchy friend. settled, Georgetown had scored 21 by Don Schaller ,~, points in that brief span and held The crucial week of "make-it or break-it" for the :; "We've had sad experiences recognizing a team," Ath­ a 25-14 lead over St. Joe's. letic Director Jack Hagerty said last week. "For e~ample, Georgetown basketball season has come and gone. George-'~ Sunday Punched some ten years ago, there was a sudden enthusiasm for wres­ town hopes for a post-season tourney bid have been con-,;,~ tling, and 110 turned out for the first meeting." "So," he This was the Georgetown Sun­ siderably dimmed with the realization that an offense is( day punch, packed with sheer man no substitute for even mediocre team work. After the loss continued, "we put out money for mats and got a coach power, ignited by 4,200 howing to St. Joe's, the Syracuse game seemed a "must." The result, ~ ~nd we bought equipment, and got them a ten-match sched­ fans. Any ordinary ball club would ule. Well, by the time the first match came around there were have withered under its impact; 95-81, Syracuse. ~~ but not St. Joe's. The Hawks were Law School Ringers The Hoyas made too many ,~ three-" he pointed three fingers, "three men left, and two rocked on their heels, but never­ were in the 135-lb. class!" "Is there a procedure for recog­ theless equal to the occasion. early mistakes as Syracuse ~ Grabbing AAA Title quickly vaulted to a shockingi~ nition ? Well, yes. A team has to hand in information, like Ramsey Switches ~ number of players on the team, and how they practice, and 20-2 advantage. At that, the ':; It was obvious by now that In Intramural Play if there is student support, and gives that to the Moderator two points for Georgetown~; Barry was still hobbled by a knee were a gift, with the ball tipped '~ of Athletics. Well, after a probationary period, three years injury, and so Ramsay switched by Chip Butler into Frank Hollendoner's hands 1 I think, he--'the moderator-takes it up to the administra­ from a box-and-one (with one man While the Hoyas are play­ accidentally by a Syracuse player. ,~ guarding Barry exclusively) to a tion, and they decide." And who is the administration? ing the likes of St. Joe's and The Big Orange, led by , i three-quarter zone press. This was the Washington boy from Spingarn "Well, the Vice-president, maybe, and the President." designed to put more pressure on Syracuse, the intramural bas­ with All-America credentials, never the guards, rather than slug it out ketball leagues have also had yielded the lead and completely Uncertainty shrouds the track team as well. Repeatedly with the Hoya front line under the heard is the clamor for a Great Track Team, to coincide their big games, such as the throttled the staggering Hoya of· ~ boal·ds. It worked remarkably well, fense with a tight zone that ef· 1 perhaps with other Great Schemes and Projects, but how slowing Georgetown's scoring pro­ highly-contested gam e be­ fectively contained Frank Hollen· _ can the track team expand when Georgetown's purpose in duction considerably. tween the Chimes and the Thalido­ doner through the opening minutes. <~ mide 5, in A League action. In a ) fielding the team has never even been defined? Clock-like hard-fought battle the Chimes Stymied inside by the Syracuse 0 emerged with a slim margin of zone, the Hoyas were forced to {,;.' A lack of outright commitment pervades athletic policy, On offense the Hawks continued rely on erratic outside shooting., in their unspectacular clock-like victory. and the incertitude surrounding the athletic scene may well In AAA ball the pace is cur­ This, coupled with numerous,~ fashion, passing well and taking traveling violations and spotty , be responsible for the lack of growth in Hoya sports. George­ only good shots. The Georgetown rently being set by Boyle's Bomb­ ers, a law school entry captained passing, contributed to the early:] town must commit itself. A declaration of intent and of rules lead began to dwindle, but thanks Hoya collapse. Meanwhile Syra· ,\ to a hustling zone defense and a 36 by Chuck Devlin. High scoring from the University Athletic Board, is long overdue. The cuse consistently controlled the '~,' to 16 rebounding advantage the Pete O'Connor, captain of the Holy administration could hardly object to sports development. Cross team of two years ago, has boards and one quick pass down· ' Hoyas left the court at half time court usually found an Orange··1 After all, an old Jesuit motto encourages it, mens sana in leading 40 to 34. led the team to its perfect 6-0 start on the strength of his offen­ man and two points. Syracuse ~ corpore sano. Indeed, the definitive athletic policy would be Progressively sive barrages, including a 36-point continually succeeded in throwing ::1, the greatest step towards athletic expansion since 1790, effort. the long pass and thus were en- ':j The second half opened with St. when a young Hoya, late again for class, ran through the Watch The Bunnies abled to maintain a 51-30 half-time , Joe's still employing their three­ Running a strong second to advantage. t woods and up that hill, and started the cross-country fad. quarter zone press. The Hoyas, Boyle's are the Bunnies, a junior Revival ~ failing to make any real adjust­ team led by Jim Jones and Tony ." ment, got progressively worse in Cigarran. With Jones connecting Any revival of the Georgetown ;~ An illustration of what is requested is this method for handling it. Brown and Prender­ for 30 points they managed to de- attack was seriously in doubt until ~'" obtaining recognition: gast were picked up by the Hawk feat last year's AA Champs, the 'lfu.e middle portion of the second :~ guards just before mid-court and Joy Boys, by fifteen. half. Using a tight half-court press, ;~ That a constitution be drawn by the club, and presented funnelled to the outside where they A dark-horse in the AAA League the reshuffled Hoya defense forced J may be the Burrs, a dental school the Orangemen to numerous mis· ~~ to the Moderator of Athletics; were pinched on the sidelines. team, that has made a good show- takes, momentarily bogging their ;';l That three (or four) years elapse during which the club There was no movement by George­ ing so far. offense. Simultaneously, the Hoyas ,~ remain in operation (that a number of years elapse would town's big men, with the forwards Stubby's Muscle Factory is un- produced a revamped offense of :~ (Continued on Page 14) defeated in AA competition, due their own, and with the score 68-54 ~! insure continuity of the club following the departure of the largely to good teamwork and the Georgetown made its move. Four "j founders.) scoring of Dick Van Ogthrop and jump shots by Jim Barry sand-" Rick McLaughlin. Their chief wiched around a fierce Owen Gillen .,; That following the probationary period, the constitution competition seems to come the five dunk closed the gap to 74-72, bring- ! be revised and handed to the moderator for final approval. other undefeated teams and also, ing the Hoya rooters to their feet. ~ That a faculty moderator be found to vouch for the team. from the Longhorns with Nick Tlhe Hoyas had scored 42 points in .. "the Greek" Georgelis and Jay thirteen minutes. But then Jim, Finally, that approval be automatic if the above condi­ Bowes, who lost their only game so Barry fouled out. Moments later, ,­ tions are fulfilled. far to Stubby'S. Jimmy Brown fouled out, and a,~ Other top contenders in AA are few quick Syracuse baskets coupled " the Centaurs, with Alston Johnson, with dreadful Hoya shooting dim- .' who lost to the tallest team, Wash- med the home-team's hope and sent: On the basketball scene, just two observations; first ington Club. The fast-breaking and--the--nnal--score-tO- 95-81~-- ._-< late in the last two games, the Hoyas have been shooting as yet undefeated Playboys, the Washingtonians ~- terribly, playing poor defense as well as rebounding weakly. Bombers led by Dave Ingram and " Wally's Warriors are also among Gillen, practically Mr. George-'~ Does that mean some of our boys are not in shape? Second, AA's top eight at the moment. The town Rebounding, led the team with :1. where are last year's double picks ? We have the shooters. 5-0 Tweeds hold the distinction of 19 points. Barry had 18, 16 in the ,i Also, if everyone pJoayed with the spirit Jimmy Brown ex­ being the "best-dressed team" in second half. Syracuse was paced ':. any league. by Church Richards with 27 points " hibited in the last games, who would beat us? The Chimes play almost as well and Dave Bing who contributed 20 ~ H oya Notes: NIT expands to fourteen teams this year . . . as they sing, and lead the A points, 7 assists and 12 rebounds. League due to the scoring of This was only the second victory in , NCAA Eastern Regionals are back at Maryland's Cole Field Freddy Cosco and the two O'Briens, ten away games for Syracuse, who. House, March 5 & 6 . . . The Maryland scrap will exhibit Kevin and John. They will face are now 8-9. And this was the! two of the best passers in the East, the Terps' Gary Wil­ stiff competition at the hands of second time in as many games that -: the Ding-A-Lings, led by Al Car- a native Washingtonian contrib-!t liams and Jimmy Brown ... Georgetown received brief, roll and also the Gypsy Boots and uted an outstanding performance~, mention in the last UPI polls. BROWN DRIVES FOR TWO the Saxas. against Georgetown. ,: Thursday,- February 11,1965 rHE HOYA Page Thirteen Ram.s Slain in Overtim.e, Two Tight Contests Given up by Frosh After GW Falls to Barry To Bullis and C.D. by Chip Butler Last week was a bad week .., for Georgetown basketball ,';!,i~1n;-0;~~:go':r6el/ fortunes, for, while the var­ sity was losing to St. Joe's and Syracuse, the Baby Hoyas • dropped two close ones as tn FARAH" they added two to the wrong column of their record, which is now 1-9. In the first game, against a well­ balanced Bullis Prep attack, ..... Georgetown jumped to an early 8-0 lead and then traded baskets with Bullis for eleven minutes. Then in three quick bursts Bullis outscored the .frosh 17-4 in four minutes, makmg the score 86-25. Bullis pumped in three quick buckets at the start of the second half, and the scoreboard read 60-42, Bullis. Then, slowly but surely, the TWO BIG FACTORS IN TWO BIG VICTORIES ... Owen Gillen frosh made a comeback on the hot floats above GW defenders and scores. At right, Bob Ward scores shooting of Bruce Stinebrickner, two of twenty points he tallied in Fordham victory. who ended up with 22, Denny Cesar, with a high of 29, and Sam Ianacone, who came off the bench by Andy Gallagher A very :flat Georgetown ,\. late in the first half and scored II. t· ,', squad barely squeezed by Le Buffe, also off the bench, was Georgetown raced past t ~ ~ Fordham last January 16 be­ the only other player in double - . George Washington 81-73 figures for GU. fore another capacity crowd GU shot into the lead with 2 :09 last Jan. 13 in another friend­ at McDonough Gym. Ford­ left on back-to-back fastbreak ly game of the Big Three in­ ham, unperturbed by the An­ three-point plays by Stinebrickner tra-city series. .Tim Barry, and Cesar. Then Tolmie, who was imal Section's derogatory refer­ high for Bullis, made one under­ , Owen Gillen and Frank Hol­ ences to their absent mascot, stuck neath, followed by a long corner lendoner led the vigorous Hoya with the Hoyas until Frank HolIen­ shot by Cesar. Then Marusak, who attack with 18, 18 and 16 points doner shot with 35 seconds left had 20, was fouled and made two respectively. 6'5" Ken Legins top­ sealed a 69-67 overtime victory. on a 1-1 situation. Le Buffe coun­ ped the Colonials with 14. tered with a jumper, but the slim Sloppy And Weak A Rout? one-point margin was nullified by Fordham jumped into the lead in Tolmie's drive on an in-bounds Georgetown began the game the opening minutes, taking ad­ play that started with :05 remain­ quickly and well, with Barry and vantage of sloppy ball handling ing and ended at the gun, in a 95- Gillen pushing the Hoyas into an and a weak zone defense on the 94 Bulis victory. , early 14-11 lead with 14: 00 left in part of the Hoyas. Georgetown In the second disaster the frosh the half. Then Jim Brown's pin­ picked up when Coach O'Keefe sub­ had trouble containing CU's high­ point passes began to find Hollen­ stituted 6'7" Bob Ward for HolIen­ scoring frosh, Bob Cioffari, with doner under the basket, and doner, but at halftime the teams 24, and Ron Krasinski, with 22. Georgetown threatened to turn the left the floor with Fordham leading It was a see-saw battle through . game into a rout--with 7:30 to go 33-29. much of the first half, with the . the Hoyas had a solid 32-19 lead. Baby Hoyas leading most of the Collapse? Spin way. With 2:07 left in the half The customary Georgetown sec­ CU went ahead on a jump shot by Hollendoner continued to spin Garwood. Then Georgetown scored layups under the basket through­ ond half rally pushed the Hoyas to a 48-43 lead with 12 minutes to go, a quick nine with Rusty Renaudin's out the rest of the half, but the foul shot after a fast break basket, Colonials began to come to life and it appeared Fordham might collapse completely. But the Rams which was good, giving them a 41- behind the scoring of 6'3" Bill 35 half time advantage. f! Murtha and Joe Pignatiello. By came right back on the quick scor­ ,- ing of their backcourt combination, Catholic U. scored the first five t" halftime the Hoya advantage had points of the second half, coming been cut to 44-34. Wayne McGuirt and Bruce Brod­ beck, and 'with 8 :57 left it was within one point at 41-40. Then Barry On Range Georgetown 51, Fordham 49. Renaudin and Bob Holder, who had been on the bench until this Then came the hard-to-believe Frozen second half. Colonial senior Phil time, came through with some fine Aruscavage suddenly found the The same cycle was repeated as shooting and raised their lead to range and pumped in seven quick the Hoyas jumped to a 59-52 lead ten, at 56-46. points. Legins took over, and at the on the scoring of Barry and Ward, The last ten minutes of the con­ test proved very exasperating for midway point GW clung to a 55- and Fordham again rallied with Ed Lopata's crew as they saw their 54 lead. But the 'Colonials hadn't McGuirt leading the way. With "comfortable" ten-point lead vanish counted on Jim Barry-in a five four minutes left and Georgetown as Cioffari found the range with hi~ ~inute period he popped in four leading 59-56, Coach O'Keefe or­ jumpers. At 4:04 he put Catholic Ifoul shots and field goal, and dered the freeze. It didn't work. ahead by one, but Denny Cesar Georgetown was ahead again 69- The Hoyas managed only one foul . 63. shot whil'e 6'5" Ram center John made a foul shot to knot it at 61 all. Garwood's foul shots and a GW tJhen smashed whatever Stevens tipped in two baskets. ... couple of short jump shots for chance it had .by proceeding to With 19 seconds left the score was Krasinski put the score at 73-67, throw the ball away with remark­ knotted at 60-60, and When Brown as the frosh became frantically able regularity. With 1 :30 to go missed a de-sperate 25-footer with sloppy. Cesar made a lay-up with they trailed 74-64. Four foul 5 seconds left, both teams began shot~ :10 remaining to end the scoring. by Joe Lalli in the final seconds planning overtime strategy. COUldn't turn the tide, and George­ Seventh Straight town had won its sixth straight game. The Hoyas jumped to a 63-62 lead with 4: 15 to go in the over­ 5a,.al&~ Good Night time, but Joe Frangipane's three For Georgetown, the game was quick points and Brodbeck's jump­ SLACKS another convincing example of er put Fordham in command 67-63 What Hollendoner can do wlben he with only 1: 18 left. After another FOR COMFORT, only $798 has a good night. After scoring summit conference at the bench, I? against Delaware, the 18 point Ulght against GW was his second Jim Lyddy and Hollendoner en­ S-T-R-E-T-C-H double-figure game in a row. tered the game for the Hoyas. It Likewise, the game showed that proved to be a wise move as Lyddy SLACKS Georgetown can win even when popped in a 15-footer and Hollen­ that hold their shape ~he opposition does a good job doner added a foul shot to make it olding . down Brown. Joe Lalli 67-66 Fordham with one minute limited Brown to 6 assists, but left. Hollendoner followed with his wear Barry and Gillen took up the slack, game-clinching basket, and when IZf1t1lI and John Prendergast dumped in Stevens missed at the buzzer, 10 points to help the cause. FARAH MANUFACTURING COMPANY. INC. EL PASO. TEXAS Georgetown had won its seventh The victory gave Georgetown a start towards a second straight Big straight. In addition, it was the Three title. The key game will be seventh straight time Fordham has {he Hoyas' encounter with Mary­ lost to Georgetown. The Rams have and at home Feb. 13. not defeated the Hoyas since 1957. DENNY CESAR Page Fourteen rHE HOYA Thursday, February 11, 1965 St. Joe's-Hoyas (Continued from Page 12) remaining stationary deep in the corners. This forced the Hoya guards to float dangerous, looping passes into the forecourt. The zone press did not give the Hawks the ball. Rather, it forced the Hoyas to play Ramsay's kind of game.

30% Shooting ·When the Hoyas were able to set up their offense, they ran into even 1!110re problems. The backcourt, whose forte has never been shoot­ • ing had a poor night, with Brown and Prendergast hitting on only 2 of 16 from the field. St. Joe's took advantage of this by leaving the top of the key wide open and IS: concentrating on the flanks, forcing the Hoya forwards to take poor shots. The result was a disastrous 30 'Ie field goal average for George­ town in the second half.

Marshall Execution On defense, Georgetown used a man-to-man throughout the second half. St. Joseph's offense was a study in well-planned execution. Matt Guokas, their 6'5" guard, • started to slip inside where he could use his height advantage over varIety Brown and Prendergast. In addi­ It's been written that "variety is the spice oflife." tion Cliff Andel'son was continually But at many companies it's difficult to obtain a beating his man on drives. Hollen­ doner dropped back to help stop wide range of work experiences. A college gradu­ Guokas and Anderson from scoring ate can join a company, get locked into one type heavily; but in doing so, his man, of activity and stay there and stay there and stay Marty Ford, was left free at the foul line. Thus Ford dropped in 22 there. That's not the way we do it at Ford Motor points. Company where our young men may work in several areas to develop their full capabilities. We No Mistake believe that a thorough grounding in many phases When the gun sounded, St. of our business is one of the best ways to cultivate Joseph's had a convincing 80-72 Robert Anderson management talent. An example: Bob Anderson win. The Hoyas had never quit in A.B., Univ. of So. Carolina giving a real "gut effort", and had M.B.A., Stanford University of our finance staff. at times displayed flashes of awe­ Since Bob came to us in July, 1963, he's been some power. But in the final analy­ actively involved in five important areas of the Company. As a member sis, raw talent and inspiration proved a poor substitute for near of our finance staff, he has reviewed budget and cost programs of a division flawless strategy and execution. marketing cars, another manufacturing tractors and subsidiaries engaged The St. Joe's victory was no mis­ in automobile financing and insurance. In addition, Bob was selected to take. assist in the 1964 national labor-management negotiations. His present assignment is as a staff budget analyst for product engineering and styling. Because of experiences like these, Bob will be able to channel his career toward the activity that interests him most. As a large automobile concern, Ford Motor Company needs people who can handle a wide variety of assignments. Our college graduates come to us with all types of educational backgrounds. And many of them move into management positions unrelated to their degrees. If a fast-moving career appeals to you, see our representative when he visits your campus. He may have the spice for your future.

THERE'S A FUTURE FOR YOU MOTOR COMPANY

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"BIG POST" Little Royal having appeared at

JOHNS HOPKINS CLEMSON SARAH LAWRENCE BUCKNELL BOSTON COLLEGE CHAPEL HILL COLUMBIA HOLY CROSS WILLIAM & MARY SYRACUSE RETURNS TO GEORGETOWN FOR THE MARDI GRAS FEBRUARY 26, 1965 NEW SOUTH 8:30-12:30 Last Dance Before Easter . $3.00 per couple Mixed Drinks