Vol. XLV, No. 10 , WASHINGTON, D. C. Friday, December 11, 1964 Mr. Quinn Takes Over N~wProtocol~~ad Anniversary Closes · R· Discusses Policies As Reglstrar eSlgns And Past Problems Honoring President by John McNally In an unexpected move a week ago Monday, the Univer­ sity announced the resignation of University Registrar Paul In an exclusive interview L. Mason and the appointment of Mr. John V. Quinn to the with The HOYA, this year's post of Acting University Registrar. Protocol Editor, Peter Carter, Mason had come to Georgetown last year from Wiscon- spoke freely concerning two sin State University. Quinn, who has been at Georgetown topics of interest to all East for the past sixteen years, will Campus students: this year's Protocol and its somewhat ill-fated continue to act as Executive predecessor of the year gone-by. Assistant to the College Dean Feine while taking on new responsi­ Carter said that he was inform­ ed by last years Editor, Paul Feine, bilities in the Registrar's that the 1964 edition of the East Office. Campus yearbook should make its In a telephone conversl:1tion with long-awaited appearance sometime The HOYA last Sunday, Mason re­ around December 10. This date, vealed that he had submitted his however, has not yet been confirm­ resignation last .June, which waS ed by the printer. In regard to the PRESIDENTS JOHNSON AND CAMPBELL • . . at Georgetown's to have become effective at the end theories advanced by some students final Convocation. of the present scholastic year. concerning the cause 'of this delay, Carter stated that the only reason On Thursday of last week, the 175th Anniversary Con~ Speeded Departure for the postponement was the lack However, at his request, Univer­ of definite staff organization and vocation was held in McDonough Memorial Gymnasium, with sity officials had consented to move delegated power. He considered an estimated five thousand persons, including 370 representa~ forward the effective date of his these as circumstances beyond the tives from universities throughout the world, attending. resignation, thereby allowing him control of Mr. Feine. to accept a post with the Depart­ President Lyndon B. Johnson received an honorar-y degree ment of Health, Education and Wel­ and gave his first major policy speech since the November fare. Mason termed his new job a "definite advance in my profes­ election. MR. MASON sional career:' Richard S. Harrell, The Convocation marked Mason further went on to praise the end of the 175th Anniver~ Conference On Freedom the excellent cooperation which he Professor III Institute received from the administration sary Year and the inaugura~ in his attem.pts to conduct a pre­ Dies While in Egypt tion of the Very Reverend Addressed For 3 Days registration and centralize student Gerald J. Campbell, S.J., as records in the White Gravenor of­ On Sunday, November 29, the 44th President Qf Georrgetown By Eminent Theologians fice. However, he added that some Richard S. Harrell, a pro~ UniveI'sity. The final lecture series of individuals at Georgetown were fessor in the Institute of Father Campbell succeeds Fath­ not quite ready to accept the incon­ er Edward B. BUnn, President the 175th Anniversary Pro­ veniences of greater centraliza­ Languages and Linguistics, since 1952, and now Chancellor of gram, the Patrick F. Healy tion. collapsed and died of acute the University, in which capacity Regarding the recent hassle be­ Conference on "Freedom and heart failure in Cairo, Egypt. he will be principally involved with tween the Registrar's Office and Alumni and fund-raising activities. Man," took place dUring the the College Student Council which A spokesman for the State De­ partment said Mr. Harrell, who December 3 was chosen as the date three days preceding the final resulted in a written apology on for the Convocation, since it mark': the part of the Council, Mason was on sabbatical leave from the Convocation. Three very prominent University, was walking along a ed the anniversary of the death of called Georgetown students "real the founder of the University, theologians plus a score of re­ gentlemen" and "the hest groUp Cario street with Miss Barbara Lar­ spected authorities, both Catholic son, a Fulbright scholar from Har­ Archbishop John Carron. The In­ of students I have ever worked vocation prayer was composed by and non-Catholic, participated. vard, when a pic~pocket snatched with. John Carroll in 1791. There were seven sessions, with The New Man? his ey.eglasses from his jacket the three night lecture sessions hav­ Address Mr. Quinn had been in the Reg­ PETER CARTER pocket. Harren chased the man, re­ ing the best attendance. A capacity trieved his spectacles and then re­ In his address to the Convoca­ audience filled McDonough gym­ istrar's Office a week at the time tion Fr. Bunn made reference to the of his interview with The HOYA. Towards the end of October, The leased the culprit, But for some nasium each night. The following reason, according to a U.S. Em­ illustrious men who have come to is a brief summary of the Confer­ He noted that the week had been HOYA received an unsigned let­ Georgetown in the 175 years of its punctuated by the Presidential ter which demanded that it "launch bassy cable, "he resumed the chase, ence: disappearing around the corner." history. "Presidents, from George MONDAY: The p rincip al Convocation and his trip to an ed- an expose" on the use of student Washington and Abraham Lincoln speaker was Karl Rahner, a 61-year ucational conference in A.tlantic funds in the handling of the pub­ Texas Native to .John Fitzgerald Kennedy and old Jesuit from the Univ.ersity of City, and that he was still fami1iar~-lication. The letter accused Car­ Miss Larson followed and came Lyndon Baines Johnson . . . Re­ , Munich. Rahner, who has written izing himself with some aspects 0:£ tel' of misusing funds allocated for upon him lying unconscious on the nowned churchmen, from our ven­ dozens ·of books, many of which his new job. the yearbook's supplies. street. According to the Embassy, erable founder, ArChbishop .John have been translated and published Concerning these aCCUSations di­ he died "immediately and without Carroll . . . to Eugenio Cardinal in English, is regarded by many as rected against him, Carter point­ pain.' The pickpocket was picked Pacelli, our beloved Holy Father of the greatest living Catholic theo­ ed out that there neVer has been up by Cairo police and held for happy memory ... Distinuguished logian today. any alleged "corruption," since prosecution. foreign visitors, from the Marquis F·ollowing a short gl"eeting in the only funds available were Professor lIarrell, a native of de Lafayette to the Emperor of · English he proeeeded to give a specifically earmarked for office Forth Worth, Texa.s, was 35 years Ethiopia. And from these histroic , five-minute address in his native supplies and other m.atters per~ old at the time of his death. He had grounds have left, for their ca­ · German. Then an hour-long t11aIlS- taining to the yearbook itself. been ·a member of the Georgetown reers of service to the community, · lation of his lecture was read to Budget UniVersity faculty since 1957, when the nation, and the world, gen­ the audience. This was subse­ As the Editor of the 1965 edition he came here after receiving his erations of the students of George­ qUently ,explained by two commen­ of Protocol, Carter spoke more doctorate from Ha.rvard. Harrell town." A standing ovation :fol­ tators, the Rev. Bernard Cooke, freely of his own problems, chief of was in the Near East on the syn­ lowed Fr. Bunn's speech. S . .J. from , which is the tenative budget alloca­ tax of modern Egyptian and Arabic After this addl"'ess, the R.ev. and George H. Williams .of Harvard tion. He claimed that the College'S and on advance phonology. the de­ Thomas Fitzgerald, Secretary of Divinity School. yearbOOk, Ye Domesday Booke, will scription and analySis of language the Corporation, presented the TUESDAY: The Conference be­ receive appro:ximately twice as sounds. lie WaS director of an Charter of the University, granted gan at {) :00 'a.m. with the Rev. Piet much money per book, despite the Arabic reserch project under the by Congress in 1815, to be read. Fransen, S. J., from the UniV'ersity fact that College and East Campus National Defense Education Act The Inauguration ceremony was of Louvain, ·speaking on "F:r:eedom student pay the same activity fee. which had been contracted to write characterized by simplicity and and Grace." He was f·onowed by His hope, however, is that in the se'Veral dictionaries and grramJn.M'S dignity. F~ther BUnn mvested Father William F. Lynch, former final allocation Protocol -will re­ on various dialects in modern Father Campbell with the three teacher at Georgetown and founder ceive its fair share in order that it Ara;bic. symbols of the 'President's author­ of the Honors Progt'am, who lec- . may be OIIle of the best yearbo,oks Mr. liarrell is survived by his ity: the academic charter, the Great ever published on the East or Main mother and two sisters all of Fort Seal, and the UniVersity Mace, (Continued on Page 15) MR. QUINN Campus. Worth. (Continued on Page 11) Page Two 'J'RE HOY4 Friday, December 11, 1964 Editorial: Spirit of Renewal Last week's convocation marked the official end of the Anniversary Year, a year characterized by a spirit of re­ Recently, the East Campus Stu­ newal, revision and development. The convocation also dent Council officially recognized marked the end of an era, one that has lasted over a decade. the newly organized Georgetown It bas' been an era marked as strongly by this spirit as the University Gavel Club. The Gavel Anniversary Year has been; it has been the twelve years that Club is an organization dedicated to the promotion of better public Father Edward Bunn has been the President of Georgetown speaking for future busines·s men University. or fool' anY'one eJ.s:e who is interested In last week's HOYA, the buildings erected during those in public speaking. years were mentioned, among them are the School of Nurs­ The Mask and Bauble Dramatic ing, the Reiss Science Center, the Walsh Building, and the Society's most recent production, Gorman Diagnostic Clinic. Enrollment in both undergrad­ "Pantagleize," will be the first pre­ sentation to be housed in George­ uate and graduate schools has been increased almost one­ town's new theater, called "Stage hundred percent, and the University budget has more than One," at 3620 P. Street. It is lo­ quadrupled during this time. Although the list is long and is cated next to the Society's studio a testimonial itself to this man, facts and figures cannot cap­ in Poulton Hall and is Inost un­ tUre the spirit and benefits those twelve y'ears have given to sual in its decor. It has a capacity Georgetown. of less than 100. The Women's Committee spon- The buildings are but a part of this era-the externals. sored a fashion show on Tuesday, The e~ansion of the facilities, the faculty and the curl:"icu­ lum have resulted in greater academic contributions and (Continued on Page 9) Rising Cost of Education prestige in the United States and abread. In looking at the tremendous physical growth of Georgetown during these past twelve years, the real debt of gratitude owed Father Bunn Letters To The Editor • • • might be overshadowed. The debt is owed not so much be­ cause he was a primary "builder" of this University, but Courier Carpings possessions, no matter how extenu­ " because he was an educator. As an educator he has brought ating the circumstances might have In spite of what people say about "Gentlemen of Georgetown", I Georgetown from the past and focused her on the future My let1l~r c~mcerns th~ rece~t been. Recent developments in An­ . . . . ., . . . ' feature artIcle In the Cou'i'"'/,er. ThIS gola and Portugal's armed reluc­ don't believe anyone can be thi8 gJ,vIng her a spIrIt and directton that no buIldIng can Impart. article declaimed the critics and tance in leaving Goa have been conservative. This Anniversary Year has been the product of those years sang the praises of that often un­ quite effective in stating her in­ It would only add to Portugal's shame to mention her bitterness and is a monument to Father Bunn as well as to George- sung. member of the world com- sistence upon maintaining her . . mUnIty, Portugal. RudYard Kipling approach to world over the Pope's intended trip to town. ~t the recent John Carroll Awards dInn~l:" the. citatIon Not only was the article done in affairs. India. Therefore, I won't. conferrIng an award upon him read in part: 'By hIS' force- a quite singuiar fashion by Mr. I experienced a moment of horror In praise of Mr. Arnhold's choice upon realizing that such a mistake of topic and handling of this un­ ful, imaginative, and persevering programs to maintain and ~rnhold, that is to say, sin~lar in could be made at Georgetown. timely tlnd distasteful article I can enhance Georgetown's position in a dynamic world and to ltS. approach, st~le and ~holce of The appearance of this article only say that he certainly had some . . , . 'tOPIC, but the obJect of hIS ltluda- aChIeVe ArchbIshop Carroll s Ideal fOl:" Georgetown as a great tions, Portugal, is also quite unique at the very doors of the dean of the lovely pictures. world's foreign service schools giv­ I am sending a copy of this mOl:"al force of national significance, Father Bunn has in- in her own l'ight. ing page after page of flowering letter to the Courier, but in light of creased her facilities, improved her faculties, intensified the History and contemporary states- verbiage in praise of a nation that the necessity of immediate presen­ men will attest to the fact "modern unashtlmedly exhibits its refusal to tation to the University as a whole, enrichment of the lives of her students and alumni, enlarged Portugal" is not the vigos'ous and adopt a twentieth century policy r thought the HOY:A would be the her contributions to the academic world, and broadened her inviting member of the twentieth for its international relations, made means for publication. horizons for her realizations of service to the Church, the century club of nations as Mr. me too keenly aware of the depth Sam Jordan nation and the world." Arnhold would have us believe, in of human frailty. College, '67 fact, Portugal had to be drtlgged I am also aware that Portugal's Ed. Note-The HOYA apologizes '. In his final message as President, he expressed the hope screaming into the nineteenth cen- brand of foreign policy used to be for any misunderstanding caused ,'! th t f th A' Y h ld d' t I tury. Even now she protests that, the accepted norm, but stories of by the headline "Happy Hoyas ',~ a rom e nniversary ear we s ou erlve no on y for her foreign policy suggests that the colonial era even now are pre­ '.:; satisfaction, but inspiration towards the realization of she will never forgive the rest of faced by: "Once upon a time. (Continued on Page 11) GeOrgetown's potential for greatness. We could offer no Europe for giving up their colonial greater expl:"ession of gratitude than to continue in the spirit ", which characterized those twelve years-concern for the (Est. September, 1920) future of Georgetown. THE BOARD i arnuuril -.~ Editor-in-Chief: Ken McBride Exodus Ql1na~up Managing Editor: Jim Mata Following President Johnson's Convocation address last News Editor: Joe Nugent Business Maltager: Phil Vasta Feature Editor: George Thibault Sports Editor: Rory Quirk Thursday, preparations were made for the celebration of A good deal has bGaston Hall this coming Sun- erode is only of late receiving the day at three o'clock. acclamation he so weH deserves. Mr. de la Torre is a native of Ha- There are traces of Dadaism in his vana, although he has made his plays, a close affinity to Brecht, home in New York for many years. and a foreshadowing of Beckett and He was a delightful pianist at five lonesco. But this Belgian author and an accomplished guitarist sings of the magical joy and dig- when he was only ten. His parents nity of man with the special ferV'or sent him to Spain for further aca- and feeling of a deeply religious demic and musical studies, and it man. here that the young Rey came un­ der the tutelage of the famous Pantagleize is portrayed as a teacher of virtuosos, Miguel Llobet. clown who is nobody's fool. He is By the time he was sixteen he had the poet-philosopher, that part of made a name for himself as a con­ the Christian that is most Chris­ cert guitarist-and also as a star PANTAGLEIZE LEAD ... Tom O'Callahan emotes during recent baseball athlete for his school. tian, that part of the poet that rehearsal of M & B's new offering. sings the truest, that part of man that is most human, confronted night they all mean? Ah! If I'd Debut with a mechanical-modern, de-hu­ CAST REY DE LA TQRItE stayed in my room . . ." He rushes Having made his debut in Barce­ manized society, which thinks of back to Rachel With his treasure, ed with his customary grace, color him as an "imbecile." Pantagleize _____ Tom Callahan lona, he went on concert tours all only to find her murdered as a Bamboola ______James Langlois over the world. His first appear­ and technical virtuosity and that spy! But meanwhile, the revolu­ Innocenti _____ Dave Hammond ance in New York's Town Hall in quality that sets him slightly apal't tion has failed, and Pantagleize is Blank ______Ted Fidellow 1941 opened up a continuous field from his colleagues-a strong, A "philosopher by trade" who left holding the bag (of treasure, of activity for him throughout the rhythmic sense that holds together Creep ______Glenn Messmer the highly inflected phrasing of gUi­ writes fashion articles, Pantagleize that is). Led before the tribunal United States and Canada. He has declares sadly, at the play's open­ the death sentence is passed, and Banger ______John Sullivan tar music. His artistic lineage is ing: "I'm forty years old, and unwittingly bemused, he walks to Rachel ______Jennifer Jolis frequently performed on CBS and impeachable, and he does it proud." my destiny hasn't begun." But his execution. With his dying Balladmonger ___ Thelma Litsas on such television shows as To­ into a cafe, he stumbles onto breath, he can only say: "What a General Macboom _Jack Hamlin night, Camera Three, and Today. Cheap a group of revolutionaries-cyni­ lovely day." One suspects, however, Sentry #1 ______John Kunckel He has soloed with the country's cal Bolshevik parodies. Looking that, like Eulen.spiegel, he'll be back Sentry #2 ______Jim Maue major orchestras, most notably the Mr. de la Torres program will around, Pantagleize happily ex­ again. Cleveland, with which he pre­ include works by Sor; Torroba, claims: "What a lovely day!" Just The Bank Manager Villa--Lobos, Grandos and othel'S. Pete Murray miered Joaquin Rodigro's Conecrto coincidently, this is the signal to for Guita?". Bis recordings for Epic Tickets are on sale in New Soutb Assistant Manager __ Tom Cap Lobby and will also be available start the revolution. Bravo for the Director Donn Murphy has inten­ Records continue to appear annual­ imbecile!" Under cover of an Assistant Manager at the door. Student admisison sified and amplified Ghelderode's ly, and recently Fontana of Europe is $.50, faculty $1.00. eclipse, the revolutionaries seize own sharp sense of the theater Tom Caputo Soldier ______Omar Salazar has released two. recital albums of the city. Pantagleize, quite con­ with a production that crackles fused but unconcerned, encounters Distinguished Counsel this artist throughout Europe and with electric excitement. His tal­ Australia. an intiriguing Jewess, Rachel, with ented and v,ersatile cast has gIleat Florene Memegalos whom he quickly and comically falls fun which is essential to a play Generalissimo ____ James Simon in love. She seductively induces him of this type. Murphy's direction Revolutionaries Inflected to steal the "treasure" from the Jay Montgomery, is well-paced ,and very effective in­ Of his playing abilities the New state bank, which he promptly does the-round. He also makes marV'el­ Jane Du.ggan, Theo Carroll in a delightfully hilarious scene. ous use of slides, lighting, sound ef­ York Times has written: "He play- He returns to the cafe-The "Ob­ fects, costuming, audience partici­ jectine" Bar-to find himself a pation, and all the experimental hero swept up in the revolutionary novelties of the 1920's that made enthusiasm. But when his com­ the theater so engaging. G~N panions have been dragged out, he SHIRTMAKERS wonders: "Am I dreaming, or am / I not dreaming? Oblivion, what have you done with those puppets? Tom Callahan, in the title role, What's happenings! And what a is warmly sentitive and sympa­ thetic. He seems to grow within and into the part as the play prog­ resses. Unfortunately, the rest of the cast cannot quite match his enchanting perf·ormance, but are, n;ev:ertheless, extremely good. Spe­ cial mention must be made of J ames Simon as the Generalissimo, James Langolis as Bamboola, and • The Paulist Father is a modern Jennifer J olis as Rachel. man in every sense of the word. He is a man of this age, cognizant of At times the cast seems to miss the needs of modern men. He is the musical qualities in Ghelder­ free from stifling formalism, is a ode's writing, and some of his in­ pioneer in using contemporary tellectual fireworks fizzle like damp ways to achieve the conversion of roman candles under s'oggy inteT­ pretations. But, on the whole', the 100 million non-Catholic Amer­ Mask & Bauble must be highly icans. He is a missionary to his own complimented for a warm, wise, and people - the American people. He witty presentation. utilizes modern techniques to ful· -J. D. McClatchy fill his mission, is encouraged to call upon his own innate talents to help further his dedicated goal. JOB OPPORTUNITIES • If the vital spark of serving God in the through man has been ignite.d in European Community HUGGER you, why not pursue an investiga­ Gant "inventea" is oxford button-down for tion of your life as a priest? The A LECTURE BY men who want their shirts to look trim, slim and neat. Paulist Fathers have developed an aptitude test for the modern man The fit is as exacting as the flare. MR. FRANK X. GORDON interested in devoting his life to Executive Director In Gant's inimitable soft rolled collar. $6.50 God. This can be a vital instrument Intel"national Student Travel Center to help you make the most impor­ Georgetown tant decision of your life. Write for Thursday, December 10-2 & 4 P.M. it today. STATLER HILTON University Shop NMIONAL VOCATIONS DIRECTOR Earn and learn YOU?' way in Europe-summer or year-round. Corner 36th & N Streets, N. W. PAULIST FATHERS ISTC attempts to match the student to the job of their choice. 415 WEST 59th STREET ISTC, 39 Cortland St., Dept. GW, New York 7, N.Y. Send $3 for FE 7-4848 brochure and annual membership. NEW YORK, N. Y. 10019 Friday, December 11, 1964 'IRE HOYA Page Five THE HOYA Hereabouts PEDANT Music Review by Tony Thomas :I I Carlos Montoya: Flamenco Concert RCA Victor From the "critical aclaim" stand­ point, the ·two records discussed in the remainder of this column are the outstanding flamenco guitar en­ tries to make the Schwann com­ pendium in the last six months. Montoya's recording is "made" with the beginning Saeta, described in the line·r notes by M 0 n tOY a's bumptiously pompous w i ie, Trienita, as a "re­ markable c rea - t ion" depicting the Holy Week processions in Spain with all their cacophonic and visual variety. The l:est oi the album is packed with flashy gyp'sy rhythms played in Montoya's athletically vigorous style. Mrs. Montoya characte'rizes ANOTHER G.U. SOCIAL SOIREE. " the Christmas Dance will fea­ . her husband's playing presumpti­ ture a sedate rock and roll group for the delight of Georgetown ously and typically: "this great gyp­ Gentlemen and their dates. .JOAN MARIE MOYNAGH JUSTINO DIAS sy artist" plays "with the white as "The Countess" as "Figaro" heat of inspirati'on." Probably the Since I last appeared in print I have not seen a single best account of the world's second­ motion picture or stage play, with one exception: the Mask best flamenco guitarist, this record THE MARRIAGE OF FIGARO BOSTON SYMPHONY 1s more than Worthwhile. From Mozart's Le Nozze di Figaro is The songs .and symphonies of and Bauble's production of Pantagleize. However since it is the liner notes, Mrs. Montoya a brilliant social farce of eigh­ Gustav Mahler brought to a celes­ reviewed in this issue elsewhere (Page 4), and since I par­ emerges as the Spanish Buddy teenth century nobility. Bursting tial close the brilliant Viennese ticipated in its production, I will not comment upon it except Hackett. with rich humor, it is concerned music tradition that had begun Juan Serrano: Brave Serrano with Haydn and Mozart. Every to say that by the time you read this' the show will be a total too with human love-a lustful measU'I"e of Mahler's music is a Elektra count, a middle-aged countess who sell-out. Now for the world's greatest supplication for understanding by iears she is losing the man she In the month of December the motion picture industry fl·amenco guitarist. Serrano pos­ a world which fifty years after his sesses the rhythmic sense, irresisti­ loves, a figity pageboy who can't death still fails to comprehend the traditionally tries to trot out a few pictures they feel worthy ble drive, and iantastic techniqUe understand the palpatations and enormity of his expressive genius. of Oscar nomination before the end of the year. With My which is 99 and 44-()IJle-hundredths longings which delight and tOrIl).ent His works are the tonal trans­ Fair Lady already in release, and presumed to be THE Win­ of Montoy.a'~ arlistry. him-and ultimntely with the mutation ,of a man's total psyche. In additi

Marriage Boston effects for winds, and spiteful xylo­ Symphony. Mr. Leinsdorf's con­ Hoya phone parts, Mr. Leinsdorf in­ ducting here tended to produce a (Continued from Page 5) (Continued from Page 5) terpreted the Scherzo as a playful highly unified musical concept. sanctioned by Mahler after the episode which, a c cor din g to Brilliant was the playing of the David Clatworthy (the Count) symphony's initial performance in was adequate. His own aria was M,ahler's QWll1 correspondence, was brass and percussion; the hammer­ Salutes . .. Essen in 1906. his intention. The And ant e strokes and rhythms produced by done excellently, but he saved him­ Probably owing to the accoustics reached an almost idyllic level. small bundles of roots struck self for it. As Cherubino Helene in Constitution Hall, the strings Ed Note-Suggestions of persons to Sometimes countermelodies in the against the rim of the bass drum Farras was on and off. Her first almost throughout, especially in the be mentioned in this column are horns and winds were partially ob­ were especially convincing. The aria was quite pretty but Voi eke first movement, failed to achieve encou,1·aged. Submit suggestion to scured by the strongs. The Landler dull thud of the hammerstrokes sapete had neither vocal purity the depth and intensity required HOY A Office at any time·. melodies of both inner movements are accompanied both times by nor any depth whatsoever. by the ominou.:; rhythms of the were played in a very lyrical Aus­ thundering chords of fate in the MELANNE STARINCHAK-fo'r Only ten violins were employed lower strings and the cataclysmic trian way. This symphony is the orchestra consisting solely ofBb-D her leadership of spiritual activities in the orchestra. Historical re­ falling chromatic passages in the most homophonic of a rather con­ in octaves. Mr. Leinsdorf utilized in the W'alsh Area and the work creation is worthy but the test is violins. This lack of depth and she has done to aid the under­ in the hearing, and these particu­ sistently polyphonic stylist, as well this episode in the highest dramatic urgency was, however, not further manner. privileged. She has been vice-presi­ lar ten violins provided neither the undermined by the numerous brass as one of the most classical in form. dent of the Sodality for two years, tone nor the force so often neces­ employed by Mr. Leinsdorf: ten All thre,e forgoing movements Certainly Mr. Leinsdorf, who co-chairman of the Thanksgiving sary. Mozart's big finales became French horns and five tenor trom­ anticipate the Finale, in which the conducted this eighty minute work Drive to help the needy, and a mem­ piddling affairs. bones, for example. (Mahler called kernel of what Mahler wanted to without a score, reached the es­ ber of the lay mission group that Paul Callaway's conducting was for eight horns and three trom­ say is expressed. This movement sence of Mahler's message, and in­ went to Mexico. objective, dedicated to clarity, and bones.) displays the composer's final recog­ tegrated the total work properly in judicious in tempi. He was by no nition of the inevitable, but not yet a chronological sense. FR. JOHN RYAN-for his suc­ Despite skittish falling staccato means "cold," yet there is far more scales for the strings, flutter-tone the total resignation of the Ninth Jackson Shaw cessful efforts in improving the tenderness and passion here than Theology Department. N<>t only he disclosed. His fourth act finale has he made the courses more in­ had fine architecture but that of teresting but he has displayed an the second act seemed to lack attitude of intellectual honesty unity. which has gained him the respect Exemplary opera productions of many students. are rare. That this was not is no we can ShOW YOU JOE MARCHESE-for doing a shame. But the blame lies less with hard job exceptionally well. As the cast of young singers than president of the Collegiate Club, with the conductor. He may be ex­ he has had to make sure that many cused for poor ensemble, but, if at important .events were well con­ the end of his professional read­ 5 ollhe 6 reasons ducted. The quality of the service ing one was left cold, it was per­ the Collegiate Club has provided haps because Dr . Callaway, unin­ during a crowded schedule is a spired, really had nothing to say. tribute to his leadership. T. A. Gallagher IhiS cordless shaver costs a bil more. Exciting New -Designs

j 348 cutting edges Sharp Stoy sharp be­ Big shaver head Riddled with 756 slots cause they're honed of surgical high­ Once a whisker goes through, good-bye. carbon steel. II's through.

)1iiiiJ::'1~~·tt f.l2"f~1·::tlt "Xii;U~'Mi6iiiife~ . ., "·~"·iiiiiii- y ~;""IiWt#~S~.... *,.:.r.J!j;3!O'

..-- ,';y,':" "'<,y~'J4!a;'1 vq·g,y.... Of ~ll~_!t1!!l,~.~,-'(--~~ 4l:::q;;;,.£;i££2(id?... tIi!I!i!i' 4 Roller Combs Adjust to every kind of skin and beard Gently roll skin down, pop whiskers into the cutter.

:EC~~I2E3c:=L~~. O.,...""""'C>NC> R'N<:::ioS Hidden under the head case, a straight Most powerful motor in shaving Never cutting edge for clean, even sideburns. a slowdown on straightways or tricky True artistry is expressed in the brilliant Neot. curves. Fast. fashion styling of every Keepsake diamond en­ gagement ring. Each setting is a masterpiece of design, reflecting the full brilliance and beauty of the center diamond ... a perfect gem of flaw­ less clarity, fine color and meticulous modern cut. The name, Keepsake, in the ring and on the tag is your assurance of fine quality and lasting The 6th is inviSible. satisfaction. Your very personal Keepsake is awaiting your selection at your Keepsake Jeweler's store. Find him in the yellow pages under "Jewelers." Prices from $100 to $2500. Rings enlarged to show beauty of detail.®Trade­ mark registered.

The REMINGTON® lEKTRONIC II SHAVER is cordless. HOW TO------, PLAN YOUR ENGAGEMENT AND WEDDING I Please send new 20-page booklet, "How To Plan I '.' Runs on built-in rechargeable energy cells. IAlso Your Engagement and Wedding" and new 12-poge I works with a cord, if you forget to recharge.) Shave full color folder, both for only 25¢. Also, send I special offer of beautiful 44-page Bride's Book. I upstairs. Downstairs. On the stairs. Freedom is this I Nam~. ______shaver's middle name. I Freedom alone would make the lEKTRONIC II I Address I worth a little more. The other 5 parts? Strictly bonus. City Co. Stat.. I REIVIINGTON L_ ~E~~E_O~.2~ ..!-!!!G~ .!y~.=.u~ .!::!:....! ~o!. J ELECTRIC SHAVER· SPERRY RAND CORPORATION LEKTAONIC: Trademark 01 Sperry Rand Corporation. Friday, December 11, 1964 rHE HOY A Page Seven LBJ Delivers Major Policy Speech Page Eight rHE HOY A Friday, December 11, 1964 Greater Grants Sought SSutccedssfiLultS~,:~ age as.L' rluay By Deve Iopment Board By Hoya Warriors ELECTRONIC ENGINEERS It was difficult to believe the many happy faces assem­ bled in New South Cafeteria MATHEMATICIANS Friday night could belong to visages so glum on Tuesday Let's discuss tomorrow mornings. This was, however, the case as the Army and Air In science and technology, the accomplishments F·orce ROTC units held their f·our­ of today are hut direction for tomorrow. Why? teenth annual Military Ball with all the trimmings. Unlike the Simply because resting on the accomplishments maneuvers put on up at Kehoe of today is a luxury we cannot afford. and down on the parking lot, the affair glittered with jewels and In COlnlDunicatiolls Engineering, where medals, gowns and smart dress uni­ others are content to modify, our mandate forms. H i g h I y polished shoes moved gracefully over a dance floor is to CREATE. sprinkled with ·a myriad of colored lights, while Larry Laine provided In Electronic Data Processing Systems, a variety of vibrant melodies. All where others are content to innovate, our in all a gala scene. Illalldate is to CREATE. Pumpkins WHAT HAVE THEY DONE ••. to olde 3rd Healy, Home of This, then, is the philosophy ... the crux of Aristocrats ? At 9 :45 the scene shifted, back­ intellectual thought ... at the National Security tracking over 180 years to the days In order to supplement the monies received from tuition of Revolution and Redcoats in the Agency-where the concepts of tomorrow ~re the persons of the Old Guard, the Third problems of today. and fees, Georgetown is expanding the Department of Uni­ InfaLltry Fife and Drum Corps. versity Development as a permanent of the University This is the much-acclaimed group administration. Incorporated with this expansion of respon­ that entertained at the 175th An­ So let's discuss the future ... sibilities is the establishment of the Georgetown University niversary Ball last year. Then at eleven came the long-awaited ap­ yours and ours Dev·elopment Board to assist Georgetown's Administration pearance of the Military Ball princesses and the coronation of the If you are a gifted and interested Engineer or and Faculty in planning and port Qf fifty s·elected colleges l'e­ Que·en, this y.ear Miss Carole Kohl­ Mathematician, we have much in common-including achieving their maximum po­ ceived 15 to 20% of their total schreiber of Immaculata J C. tential. The board is com­ voluntary support fr<>m bequests, A COMPULSION TO SUCCEED. posed of sixty alumni and the establishment of a bequest com­ Lt. Colonel mittee is under consideration. Our future is contingent upon a constant input of friends of standing and in­ The Office ,of Univ,ersity Develop­ Joseph G. Woodward, Profes­ new ... and creative ... scientific talent ... the fluence who are committed m'ent is now forming a group Qf sor of Military Science and head of to Georgetown's ideals ,and ·the im­ Friends of Georgetown, largely Georgetown's Army ROTC detach­ lifeline of any institution. Our success is embodied portance ·of priv,ate, independent non-alumni, who have volunteered ment, performed the coronation in the technical capabilities of our professional staff. to solicit annual support from after which Lt. Col. Theodore P. higher education. With the advice To assure this, scientific employees are encouraged of several organizations, the P.resi­ business, industry, the professiOiIls Ferrato, Prof'essor of Air Science, dent choose the Development Board and some non-alumni individuals in presented the royal bouquet. Prin­ to pursue graduate studies at local universities members. the Washington, D. C. area. The cesses and escorts danced the fact that these volunteers come Queen's Waltz, then the dance floor under Agency sponsorship. Your future with NSA PR from the leaders Qf the Capital's filled once more, not to empty will entail education ... early responsibility. business and professions is espe­ until 1 :00 a.m. when coaches ·once Members represent the Univer­ cially gratifying to the Officer of and unusually challenging assignments. sity in their respective geographi­ more became pumpkins in the best Development. The final proposed Disney tradition. Why? Because ... cal areas in helping to form and means for earning support in the­ car:ry out DeVlelopment and Public annual giving is through founda­ Long Knives • We lVIUST create completely new kinds of Relations programs. The board is tions, which provide a compari­ to provide cOUlllsel ro the· Univ,ersity tiV1ely small amount for develop­ Credit for the great success must communications equipments and systems embodying Administl"ation, as well as a means ment. go to the ROTC Honor Societies, concepts and techniques THAT HAVE NO of communication between Geo·rge­ The De¥elopment has trans­ the Scabba,rd and Blade, and the PRECEDENT ... antennas, transmitters, receivers town local individuals, particularly planted its locale from 1717 Mas­ Arnold Air Society, and co-chair­ non - a I u m n i, corporations, and sachusetts Avenue to third floor men Dan Miclau and Marshall and terminal hardware of a most advanced design. f'oundations. Further, members are Healy. . Michel. to identify, and if possible, intro­ • We MUST assure the complete invulnerability duce prospective donors. of message content through the novel ... but never A monthly cal,endar of events, newsletters, bulletins and reports static ... science of cryptology. will inform members ·of University affairs. When travel .plans of Uni­ F or Dependable Travel • We MUST develop special refinements for vel'sity faculty or Administration computers and electronic data processing systems bring them to a member's city, the Over the Holidays board member will be iIlQtified so · .. experimenting with the latest semiconductors, that he may arrange informal magnetic film and superconductive devices to provide meetings with persons interested in the visitor's field or specialty. new logic circuits and memory units for increased The object of development is to speed and capacity. originate programs to produce the funds necessary to mak'e up the in­ Interested? ... If so, then LET'S DISCUSS cl"easing difiierence between cost of GO 8&0 TOMORROW. Representatives of the National educati

is a 1961 Dodge Lancer with four Round-up doors. He is willing to part with it for a 1964 Morgan, provided it has Seniors Welcolne Yule (Continued from Page 2) a bonnet strap, or even a late-model Dec. 8, in the Hall of Nations. Porsche Carrera. Earl Allen's Women's Specialty The program which promises to With HoyaHollyDance Shop on M Street provided the give this University still another outfits worn by professional mem­ academic accolade is the Confer­ ber of the Model's Guild. A line of ence On The Atlantic Community costumes for all occrusions, with a (CONTAC). The aim of the con­ emphasis on the appropriatness for ference will be exactly what its ab­ the coming holidays, were featured. breviation says, "contacts" for an Read Good examination of the problems of the The Irish Murphia, with an ac­ Atlantic Community from as many cent on the M, has invaded The views as possible. A representative HOYA editorial board. At last view of all is hoped to further Sunday's bo·ard meeting, Donald understanding in this area. McDonough and Martin McEvoy The CONTAC committee is com­ were chosen to sit upon George­ posed principally of Juniors and town's supreme tribunal. McDon­ Sophomores of all the unive·rsity ough, a sophomore in the College, schools. Sponsorship belongs to is a native of Garden City, New the East Campus Student Council, York and McEvoy, a freshman in but the committee is university­ the College, hails from Jenkintown, MAC & MAC wide and at present numbers Pa. McDonough, a former member around forty. Finances for this of the Circulation Department, Catherwood has decided, after group are expected from private said this when notified of his elec­ much thought, to put his 1956 Re­ organizations and individuals. Mr. tion as Copy Editor "I don't know nault up for sale. Will sell for a Lou Rosenberg, head of CONTAC, much, but I bet I could read copy life supply of Budweiser or two hopes that this type of student good." McDonough, incidentally, is hatchet heads, four gold buttons, conference will continue to be an the son of a former Editor-in-Chief two matching weejun nickels and annual event at Georgetown after of The HOYA. McEvoy is very a telephone lock. its birth next autumn. CONTAC's young and very Irish and we will The HOY A Managing Editor, office in the basement of Loyola hear more about him later. J ames ("tuition, tuition, tuition") Hall is open to any interested CHAIRMEN SECTOR AND MARRO ..• anticipate Christmas Dance HOYA Headline Editor Bill Mata, also has an auto for sale. It G.U. student. with Committeeman Tighe. Tomorrow evening from 9 :00 p.m. to 1 :00 a.m. the Senior Class in the College of Georgetown University will sponsor a Christmas Dance in the main cafeteria of New More on the way South Hall. The theme of the dance, traditionally one of the best every day! held on the university campus every year, will be "Christmas at Georgetown." Candlelight to-door distribution of fliers, were decor, including chandeliers among the means used by the So­ and table decorations, are cial Committee of the Senior Class Thanks for waiting! planned. Enhancing the fes­ to advertise tomorrow's dance ac­ tive atmosphere with Christ­ cording to Committee Chairman Joe Marro. Bids for the dance have mas carols will be the Chimes, Your wait for one of these new 1965 Chevrolets is about over-and we want to been made available to all students the university singing and record­ of the uni~ersity since Monday for thank you for your patience. Come see us now. When you get behind the wheel, ing group. Semi-formal dress will $5.00 a coupl'e during lunch and din­ be the keynote at the four-hour ner in the lobby of New South Hall you'll be glad you waited! dance where music will be provided by Fred Perry's band. and during lunch on the east Cam­ pus. "Since this will be the last get· Hanging On Campus together for seniOTS before Chrisrt· Hanging posters at strategic mas," said Mr. Marro, "I am look­ points on campus, as well as door- ing forward to a 1000/0 turount of the Senior Class at the Christmas "AssocI... ~ JUSTlCIt WILI"IAM 0 DOUOI..A. h •• Jeman,.d 0 •• , r},. Dance." Jim Sector is serving as Sup.-.",", Court "..~ 1_, hour. 01 .'.!Iuman, pel ye., and .Ua 1_, da,. /», _k .haft I, ~ chairman of the Christmas Dance to In ,h•• ood old day" 'Tho my,h .bout 'he Supreme Coa,'" Committee. •• ". Dou.' •• , 'u th., H'. 0""'_ ""orlr",d.' O".,wo,lred? Who ..... r •• Id ,h'.,? Wh.t .:::! •• ,d .... . Party It's longer, wider, lower. It's swankier, more spacious. You could A complimentary champagne '65 Chevrolet mistake it for an expensive car-if it weren't for the price. party before the dance tomorrow evening is planned for members of the Senior Class and their dates Enjoy from 7:30 p.m. to 9:00 p.m. in Cop­ ley Lounge Dance bids and Senior New York's Class cards will be necessary for greatest, newest admittance Acquainted hotel at Special Among the other events that the Social Committee of the Senior Class has arranged were the Sen­ Fresh-minted styling. V8's available with up to 350 hp. A softer, College Rates '65 Chevelle ior Reunion Party and the Rat quieter ride. And it's as easy-handling as ever. Race, both in September. On its agenda in coming months is a fac­ It's right in the heart of every­ ulty-student smoker and cocktail thing that's happening. Like party to -enable the seniors to be­ come better acquainted with their theatres, supper clubs, Rocke­ present and past professors. feller Center, and just off excit­ ing Broadway. SPECIAL RATES Nova Sport Coupe Students: Clean new lines. Fresh new interiors. A quieter 6 and-V8's '65ChevyH available with up to 300 hp. Thrift was never so lively. $6 each, 2 in room. $5 each, 3 in room. $10 single. Faculty: $6, $7.50, $9 each, 2 in room. $12 single. NOW! For reservations, contact Mr. Kent THE NEWYORK I HILTON It's racier, roomier, flatter riding. With more power available­ at Rockefeller Center @ '65 Corvair up to 180 hp in the new top-of-the-line Corsas. 53rd & 54th Streets Ave. of the Americas .J More to see, mol'e to trlJ in the cars mOl'e people buy New York, N. Y. 10019 ~ Phone 212·JU 6·7000 ..,. Order a new Chevrolet, Chevelle, Chevy II, Corvair or Corvette now at your dealer's HOLLY HOP Page Ten 'J'HE HOYA Friday, December 11, 1964

I Northwestern Triumphant Are you a Senior who can reach h your classmates? Will you help them expose their talents, train­ In Vacation Debate Tourney ing and desires to diversified em­ '--______by Peter Lichtenberger ______...... ployers throughout our nation? Our new and unique computer­ Since our last column of six weeks agi>, we've collected a closet full based service reports qualified of fiction and fact, believe-it-or-not information from campi around the students to recruiting employ­ country. So believe-it-or-not the Executive Committee of the Board of ers--and we need a student Trustees of Trinity College, Hartford, Connecticut has "banned all agent to distribute our forms drinking of alcoholic beverages by undergraduates on the campus, in during early December. fraternities, and at all College social functions." The Trinity TRIPOD Set your own hours. Easy, no said: "The statement indicated that the College is making its laws on order-taking, no money handling, drinking consistent with those of the state of Connecticut. Previous to no reports--but very -L UCRA­ the ban, the serving of liquor had been allowed on weekends in fraterni­ TIVE. ties ,and the drinking of beer and wine had been permitted during the week. At the major dances of the College, students were permitted to For complete information, write I, bring their own liquor and setup were provided." On the brighter side, immediately to Sven B. Karlen, ", the statement of the Board added that "if responsible and workable President, JED Center Inc., plans are submitted to the College, students who are 21 years old or Box 147, Bronxville, N. Y.I0708. older may eventually be allowed to drink in their own rooms." The George Washington University HATCHET picked up this bit of information from Syracuse University. "Syracuse men placed a sign midway between coed SYl'acuse and all-male Colgate: 'Nine out of ten Syracuse women who have tried Colgate prefer tooth decay' ". The Fairfield University Student Government passed a resolution asking "that the academic calendar be revised so that Christmas vaca­ tion began on or before Decem!:Jer 15." The Fairfield STAG reported that the "purpose for the resolution was to enable students who want em­ CHAIRMAN . gives talk at post-tournament- ployment for the holidays to get jobs early, for the 18th is late for job banquet. hunting." byJimCapm On Sunday, November 29th, the climax of the Philo­ An extended Christmas vacation is not the only hope for the future for Fairfielders. The perennial problem of food ( ?) in the cafeteria has demic Society's College Debate Tournament was reached arisen anew ,on their campus. In the true newspaper tradition the STAG when Northwestern's Mike Denger and CDT Bill Snyder went out and sampled a few student opinions on the contract meal plan. defeated Washburn's Paul Thomas and Jim Riley for the The full page report contained some of the following comments. One junior's observation was: 'the most revolting policy is that of scav­ three foot championship silver trophy. Debating the negative Make it gay, festive and enging unused or intact pats of butter, pams, jellies and marmalades. side of the guestion, they convinced five out of seven judges enlightening. The William Sloane The Jellies and pams are of questionable hygiene since they have been that "the f.ederal government House YMCA helps you do it with scavenged from previous meals as the trays are dropped off for wash- The coach of Augustana Col­ special holiday programs. should not establish a program lege's team stated that the tourna­ Clean, comfortable and inexpensive of public work for the unem­ men "ran like a well-planned com­ accommodations for men, women and ployed." Northwestern and puter operation." Above all, the cooed groups of all sizes. schedule was kept strictly punctual. 1,373 single rooms, $3.15 Washburn had earned the One of the most common problems to $4.50; 120 double rooms, right to complete in the final of debate tournaments is that they $4.80 to $5.20. round by compilirng 5-1 reco'rds inevitably run from a half an hour In the heart of New York and convenient in the six preliminary rounds, to an hour behind schedule. This to everything. defeating their opponents in the is due in part to the difficulty of Ideal year-round residence and program octa-finals, quarterfinals and semi­ tabulating results, and getting par­ center for men, women and cooed groups. finals. Vermont U. and George ticipants and judges to the rounds Washington U. were the semifinal on time. Write Residence Director for Folder losers. Snyder finished just behind One coach said that he and his Debby Lewis of Brandeis in a cum­ debators had been "pampered like WILLIAM SLOANE ulative point total determining the royal guests." This indicates the outstanding debator of the tourna­ effectiveness of the tournament HOUSE Y.M.C.A. committee in obtaining suitable ment. 356 West 34th St. (nr Ninth Ave.) Blossom residence for coaches, judges, and New York, N. Y. Phone: OXford 5-5133 This meet, the transplanted participants either in Harbin Hall, (One Block From Penn Station) Cherry Blossom Tournament, at­ New South or Copley. tracted about seventy colleges from Chairman Morelli called the California to Maine. It was un­ Thanksgiving Tournament "one of precedented in its size and in the the best ever run by the Philo­ efficient manner in which it was run demic." everyone in attendance ap­ by the . parently agreed.

ing." A sophomore summed up the situation in one quick sent1:!llce': "A an good deal of the cafeteria problem could be solV'ed by a few surpris'e unusual visits from the local Board of Health." one year program Notre Dame is not leading the way only in football, but also in The Coaches Sound Off! dances. One Saturday night they held an IBM Dance in which three hundred "fightin Irish" were matched with three hundred damsels from BIG-TIME vs. SMALL·TIME St. Mary's College across the way. The participant filled out question­ JUNIOR YEAR COLLEGE FOOTBALL aire forms which took the committee four days to program for the at • A controversial discussion be· miraculous 1107 IBM brain. It only took four and one-half minutes after tween coach Duffy Daugherty of the magic button was pushed for the three hundred couples to be paired. State and coach Dave At the dance numbers and cards were matched and the lUcky couple NEW YORK Nelson of small·college power Del· began their evening of fun. aware on the fierce competition, UNIVERSITY high·pressure recruiting methods, Along with the factual account of the dance a f,eature article con­ and "must win" psychology that taining some off-the-cuff reactions was printed in the SCHOLASTIC. typify the startling differences be· Three undergraduate colleges offer students from all parts of tween big and·small·time college "Take the highly touted IBM (Instant Bad Match) Dance of last Satur­ the United States an opportunity to spend their junior year in day eve. As I sauntered through the door I got my first premonition of the stimulating environment of the University's Washington football. doom. The girls sat on ,one side of the asile, the boys on the other. I Square Center. Small classes; new residence halls. glanced quickly ,at the bevy of girls assembled there. For the most part, Program open to students who are recommended by the deans they wel'e bad. Tall Tinas and skinny Sues, homely Helens and plain of the colleges to which they will return for their degrees. 1964-'65 *All-America Janes had all been gathered into that one r<><>m." Washington Square College of Arts and Science BASKETBALL PREVIEW Another account included: "In those few minutes before the band School of Commerce SchOOl of Education • The editors of SPORT scan every began to play, the rest of the horror was revealed to me. I could onlY section of the country to select look at her for a few seconds at a time. Each time I did a new horror the nation's top basketball stars of appeared. Her nose convinced me that she had parrot blood running the 1964·'65 season. through her veins. Her lips parted when she smiled, revealing that she had enjoyed some licorice earlier in the day without the benefit of mouthwash." SPORT keeps you apace of all The most fitting conclusion to the story was "unlike true love, events on the college and pro Univac does not conquer all." sports scene. Enjoy expert cover· age, analysis, indepth features, Another example of IBM's failure in the world of love took place ------Director, Junior Year------in New York action photos in at Providence College where schedule programming is done on IBM NEW YORK UNIVERSITY machines. The COWL reports that: "One student approached Fr. Room 906·C Main Building, Washington Square, N.Y., N.Y. 10003 JANUARY Dear Sir: Peterson complaining of 'a schedule conflict, but he was told there was Please send me the brochure JUNIOR YEAR IN no conflict. 'Yes thel1e is, Father,' commented the enamoul1ed PC NEW YORK and the catalog for gentlemen. 'It conflicts with my girl's schedule at Rhode Island Col­ o Washington Square College of Arts and Science SPORT o School of Commerce 0 School of Education lege.' " I am also Interested in 0 Junior Year in Spain Favorite magazine of the sports And on to Oklahoma City University where, according to THE o Junior Year in Brazil 0 Sunrise Semester sIan and the sporls mindedl CAMPUS, ten to fifteen men under the direction of "Chief Floater, Dr. NAME ______Clarence Burg" will soon set out on the annual 'Float Trip" on the ADDRESS ______NOW ON SALE! Illinois river for a weekend of fishing. 'The escapade was inaugurated by Dr. Burg 10 years ago ... and is designed to let the male educators CITY______STATE~ ______and staff members get away from it all." FINIS! Friday, December 11, 1964 THE SOYA Page Eleven

May I suggest that with your hymn in memory of John F. Ken­ get emotionalism which will bring Letters next attempt at "literary sophisti­ Convocation nedy was followed by the coiIlfer­ hate to our hearts." (Continued from Page 2) c,ation," you first ,employ some (Continued from Page 1) ring of honorary degrees. It had The President's speech was quiet­ sophisticated forethought. Hasten Peon Progress." In the which incorporates in its design the been expected that Robert Kennedy ly received by the audience, there would accept the posthumous de­ opinion of the Headline Editor, Linda Russoniello seal of the University and the being but four interruptions for this headline was in good taste with gree of Doctor of Laws for his late applause during the twenty-five motto of the Society of Jesus, Ad brother, but he was unable to at­ the article, and neither cynical nor M aioreum Dei Gloria. After his in­ minute address. Afterwards, the My! My! tend, and the degree was accepted sophisticated. The captions were vestiture, Fr. Campbell took office President returned to the White To the Editor instead by Euniee Kennedy Shriver. printed with the express permis­ and pledged loyalty to the country House. Within a week the two television After President Johnson ·received sion of the author. WSC. and the Constitution. sets purchased by the third and his Doctor of Laws degree, he de­ fourth floors hav,e bee,n s,tolen out In his address to the Convoca­ Council Closeup Peon Progress tion, Father Campbell praised his livered the major address of the right from their lounges. Check the Convocation, which was hailed as (Continued from Page 2) Dear Sir, bulletin a,nd see how many coats predecessor for his "rare devotion and singular skill and imagina­ an "important policy speech" re­ In reference to your headline and and books are "mistakenly taken" garding the Atlantic Alliance. Washington Club President Joe picture caption to last week's each day. tion" during his past twelve years Fortuna are perhaps the hardest HOYA article concerning the N ow I'm perfectly happy to live as President. He then spoke of the In his speech, the President working team on the Council. It Georgetown Lay Mission Group with a few kleptomani,acs and "agelessne,ss" which is natural to stressed "the deeply shared values, was through their perserverance Mexico Project, it is a g;reat deal thieves-in charity, any Gentleman a University, since it contains with­ dangers and interests" of the that much in the way of achieve­ in counter-acting any constructive of Georgetown should be happy to in itself "the natural components American and European commun­ ment has been credited to the mem­ effect we may have on the student sacrifice his coat to another who for a balance between youth and ity. He called for "increased Eu­ bership this year. body in regard to the necessity of feels the need for two or three. age," and affirmed Georgetown's ropean unity" and "the full accept­ its being aware, not only of the We're here to share knowledge­ dedication to the principles of wis­ ance of West Germany "as an hon­ "Resolutionary" needs of the poor here in Washing­ why not our books? And what is a dom and discovery. orable partner in the affairs of John Lee and Brooke Hamilton ton, but of their needs universally. the West." The President struck mistakenly taken T.V. but a mis­ Ageless have proven the most "resolution­ In addition, your captions were a takenly taken wasteland? out against "alarm-mongers," stat­ ary" among their collegues, provid­ In closing, Fr. Campbell thanked ing that the alliance was "in the direct insult to a definite part of But let's keep it in the family, President Johnson and the Bishops ing to the Council resolutions re­ our student body-those Latin brother students, and pray that our midst of change" rather than "in flecting a serious interest in the who were present for their at­ the midst of crisis." Americans who are the countrymen guardian campus police tend closely tendance. He also stated that, as affars of the student body. Senior of those with whom we work. their gates so that the word shall universities are "tim'ele·ss and age­ In closing, he said that there are Class President George Thibault and Representative Bill Gagen are never escape-nor the gates ever less," so was the late John Ken­ many more things which unite than be stolen. nedy the incarnation of the ideal divide the Atlantic Community, in the Sullivan-Smythe tradition as vigorous spokesmen and outstand­ Thomas Stevenson, of public service. and that, "I do, in my own humble ing members of the Body on whch College, '67 The recording of Pablo Casal's way, appeal to each of you to for- they serve. It is fortunate that the school's leading Class has pro­ vided such able representatives. WGTB Station Manager Don Calling all Graduates Mrozek and Junior Class President John Callagy often have acted as and Undergraduates of watchdogs over Council business SUBSCRIBE NOW! and pointed out irregularities local colleges! which might well ha.ve slipped by. RECEIVE THE NEXT ISSUE The Others Bryan Murphy, Alston Johnson, Ted Kenny, Don Lutz and Phil Mause have credited themselves with distinct achievements in sev­ ~oUe~ eral areas, although none has !I¥ placed himself in a position prone Vol. XII November to classification. Of the newest ad­ 1964 ditions in membership, Freshman Class President Jim Carey has al­ ready shown himself to be a dyna­ IN THIS ISSUE . . . mic new face with great potential. Representative La=y Korchnak is MARRIAGE-NOW OR LATER? less a standout, but he too no doubt D will be a welcomed addition. From the preceding at least one D ACADEMIC ALL-AMERICAN conclusion should be apparent. The membership is composed of an in­ teresting selection of able people Maryland American FRATERNITIES & SORORITIES University University D dedicated to their responsibilities. This is true, of course, in 'varying D CAMPUS FASHIONS FOR '65 degrees, but it is refreshing to know that at least the material is there. Three months is not suf­ D BASKETBALL-WINTER KING ficient tim'e to make an unsup­ Georgetown Howard ported genern.lity, but enough has University University passed to say that student gov­ STUDENTS AROUND THE WORLD Pg. 36 ernment at Georgetown has taken a progressive step forward.

"The Only National Magazine For College Men & Women" ~ George Catholic Washington I Un;versily University XMAS SPECIAL - INTRODUCTORY OFFER ""WHAT'S ONE YEAR SUBSCRIPTION ONLY $2.75 NEW IN THE DECEMBER Your authentic ENJOY MANY FINE ARTICLES EACH MONTH ATI.ANTIC? Univ~rsity Colors "Why Europe Fears Us" by Raymond PLUS REGULAR FEATURES • MIRROR ON CAMPUS • THIS MONTHS Aron: Misunderstandings regarding with school "MASCOT" the use of nuclear weapons have led ACADEMIC ALL-AMERICAN • CAMPUS FASHIONS • BOOK REVIEWS • LAWS Western Europe and Russia to fear the United States and to doubt its embroidered on tip. OF SUC,CESS • CAMPUS HUMOR • QUESTIONS & ANSWERS • LETTERS TO sincerity. THE EDITOR • SPORTS U.S.A. "Are Movies Going to Pieces?" by Pauline Kael: A lively criticism of the New American Cinema where there is Pure Silk Cut Out and Mail Today no plot, no sensible meaning, and no recognizable form. REPP TIES "The New Sportswriter" by C. Michael COLLEGE LIFE INC. Curtis: How sportswriters now use the scholarly approach with a touch of 919 18th ST. N.W. Freud and emphasize the motivation 00 of players instead of straight reporting. 4. WASHINGTON, D. C. PLUS AN ATLANTIC EXTRA: Edwin O'Connor: "One Spring Morning": Send me COLLEGE LIFE MAGAZINE at your Xmas Special Offer. An 11,000 word previewofthe Exclusive with Brllce HIlT/t's author's new novel on which Madison Avenue Shop My D Cash D Check D M. o. for $2.75 is enclosed. Send To: ~~~!';ii~I~;~1J~ i.~ editors be it in fic- ;:)tit~.~ :+ BJtuu tlunt- NAME .. _. ___ . _____ .. ______..... _. _____ . ___ . ____ . ______. ______._ .. ______._ .. ______._ ... _...... __ . Larry Nath,m, president AD DRESS .. _._ ... ______. ______. __ . ___ ._. _.. ______. __ .. __ . _. ______. __ . ______. __ . _. ____ .. __ ...... ___ ...... _.. Downtown: 1325 F street, N.W. City ____ . ______. ______.. _.. ______.. ____ State ._. __ ._. __ . ______._ Zip Code __ . ______. ___ ... _. ~{~Rf;~~~f~i~ll Bethesda: SCHOOL . _____ ._. ______. ______. _____ ._ .. ___ ._. ___ . ____ . _____ ..... ______._. __ . __ . ___ . ____ ._. ___ . ______.. _. 7750 Woodmont Ave. This Offer Good Only 'til Dec. 31, 1 964 ~~r~;o::~~:E!£t ~'~o,';, One block from Wisconsin Ave. ;-=,:: NOW iust off Old Georgetown Rd. Charge Accounts SEASONAL RECORDS Polo ______2-3 Soccer ______3-5-1 Sailing ______2nd in East Fr. Sailing ______lst in East Baseball ______1-2 Cross-Country_6th in Nationals Field Hockey ______1-2-1 Football ______1-0-0 Golf ______-4.th in E.I.G.A.

Page Twelve Friday, December 11, 1964

J Hoya Drive Stopped USBWA Oilers Awortl Hoyas Defeat Violets " ; To Colm Unruly Mobs By Sno~y Weather Anti Protect Referees As Drury, Quirk Star Crowds at McDonough Gym this winter will find them­ selves in competition with college basketball crowds at other schools for a newly in­ stituted ·award. The United States Basketball Writers ASSQcia­ tion, in con j u c t ion with the N.C.A.A., has instituted an award which shall be presented to mem­ ber schools where crowd behavior meets "the American standard of decency and fair pl'ay." U.S.B.W.A. A co.py Qf the 'resolutioOn which brought the award into eff1ect was f.orwarded to all member schools of the N.C.A.A. The resolution, which was adopted at the Associa­ tion's annual meeting last M·arch 20, is ·an attempt by the nation's basketball writer's to alleviate the GU'S FUZZY THURSTON ... Sky MacGuire runs interception for present situation where unruly FINEST EVER . • . Georgetown's nationally ranked cross-country Georgetown's .Jimmy Taylor as Hoya's whomp New York visitors. team too ksixth place at the Nationals and proved they're in the big c·rowds haVle attempted to intimi­ time to stay. date l'efel'ees and opposing playe.rs. by Joe O'Brien by Wade Halabi For ,a school to qualify for this Snow-silent, velvety, soft and fluffy, and, Joe Lynch award, a member of the U.S.B.W.A. With a capacity crowd of over 8000 looking on, the would add, very bothersome stuff. Snow limits a cross­ must f·orward a recommendation Hoya football team trounced the Violets of N.Y.U. 28 to 6 country course to a narrow path, making it very difficult to the Association's national lead­ in their first football outing in fifteen years. quarters in Kansas City. If such for late onrushers, such as Lynch, to pass an opponent, par­ Early in the first half, the Hoyas lost field position and a recommendation is made, the were forced into fighting a defensive battle for the remain­ ticularly when the opponent can see-or sense-the tape. school in questi'On will I1eceive the Thus it was not surprising that the leader at the start, award at the conclusion of the der of the half. Three times the defensive squad rose to the Elmore Banton of Ohio Uni- 1964-1965 seaSon. occasion and stopped Violet versity, was also first to cross Ice Season Opens drives' inside the twenty yard Field Hockey Season the tape at the NCAA in For Hoya Skaters; line. Michigan two weeks ago. Hoyas Win Trophy After recovering a fumble Ends With A U Loss; Winning time was 20: 04.5 Lose Close Opener on the Hoya two, the Violets To Lose Letterwoman for the four mile, snow-bound In Frostbite Victory by Paul Sullivan stumbled in for their only course. Hampered by poor team Georgetown entered its sec­ score. Three times plays into the Georgetown's women's field positiQn on the starting Hne, and As Harvard Loses ond season of organized ice line failed but on fourth doOwn full­ hockey team concluded its in fiftieth place at the firstmile back Mike Bersin sneaked oV'er to mark, Lynch had to settle for a Georgetown's sailing team hockey in the Potomac Ama­ intercollegiate season with a put N.Y.U. into the lead. The '-;' 20 :30.3 and eighth place. The won the Potomac Frostbite teur Hockey Association N 0- score remained 6 to 0 until the " Georgetown team finished sixth­ 1-2-1 record. Marie Castellan Regatta last weekend to bring early mom,ents of the second half. ItI";' good but disappointing. vember 16th following exten­ (GUNS '65) captained the the Byrd Trophy back to sive preparation by President ';I team and Brook Phillips (ILL Sajewcycz Offensive \"1lI; Georgetown for the first time Dick Griggs and co-captains Ed The second half was all George- i,~ '68) led the squad in scoring. In thirty-fifth place, 22 seconds Carr.oI 'and Doug Murphy. behind Lynch, and second for the since 1961. Harvard, winner town as the off'ense scored the firS\t'i: Poor Attackers Hoy;as, was George Sajewcycz. Ed in 1962 'and 1963, finished second Outplayed foOur times it got its hands on the ~ ~ The gi'rls got ·off to a bad ·start Duchini, fiVle seconds back, placed with Bucknell third. The Hoyas, unimpressive' for the ball. In the first ·series of downs, -"i fortieth. Fifty-fifth was Eamon first two perioods, dropped the the strong Hoya defense :forced against Catholic University when Pap ~ they drop.ped their opener by a 2-0 O'Reilly, who fell mid-way in the opener to the Eagles, 6-4. Ho·w­ N.Y.U. into a punting situation. ~ SCOl"e on October 15. Georgetown race, suffering hand and face Skippers Paul Disario and Pappy ever, they demonstrated their abil­ Rauth and commodore .J{)e Kelly When the pass from center sailed I~ failed to muster any type ·of co­ bruises. Rick Urbina, with a 21:18, itys as evidenced by 21 shots at­ over Dick McGrath's head, the ; hesive attack and suffered a shut­ was sixty-first. Rounding out the wer.e at the helm for the Hoy'as. tempted in the final period, only Hoya team were Dav,e McCann, in .one short of the Eagle total of 22 Hoya's took .over deep in Violet ; out as ·a cons.equenoe. The girls The turning point of the regatta territory. Fullback John Drury . rallied for their first win of the one-hundred and forty-sixth place, for the entil'e game. The action came in the fourth raCie of the capped the short drive by scoring : season on October 20 with a 3-1 and Paul Perry, one-hund.Ded and "B" division when Harvard fouled was highlighted by the defensive fifty-eighth. At the rC4A's, the tw<> work of Mur.phy and Pollan. from the two. After Quirk scored ~; come-from-behind vic tor y over out and Georgetown won. After had placed thirty-second and fifth, The Hoya's next took on Goorge the two point conversion, the ~ crosstown rival George W·ashing­ this, the Hoyas were in trouble ton. Georgetown was forced to respectiV'ely. The team posted a W,ashington~s new team and 'Out­ Hoya's gained an 8 to 6 lead. only ·once when Bucknell pulled I settle for a tie in its third game of 162 point total. played them 7-5. Dick Griggs got eV'en in the sixth race of the "A" Intercepted , . the season on October 29. The The Winners Gieorgetown moving with ·a goal at division. Georgetown pulled away An interception by John Shar- 'l teams battled to a 2-2 tie. Chanc'es Western Michigan was the un­ 1 :15 of the first period. His score for a winning ·season went down expected winner with a low total of in the ,ensuing rac'es, however. was followed with unassisted goals man ,again brought the ball d·eep the drain on November 5 when eighty-six points. Oregon was sec­ Other lentries in the I1egatta wel'e by .Jim Boyle and Boob Flynn, who into N.Y.U. territory. Drury soon flashed one by the GW golie with American Unhnersity's girls handed ond. Notre Dame, ·second behind Fordham, Rutgers, Drexel and New reached pay dirt to raise the score Georgetown a 2-0 def'eat in the the Hoyas at the· IC4A's, tOlOk York State Maritime Academy. only one second remaining in the to 14 to 6. period. Second period scoring was final contest of the 1964 se'ason. fourth place, with the Irish's Bill In the waning moments of the Gusty led by Bill Scott as he took ad­ third quarter, another bad pass Coach Mary Ann Clark gI'abbing second place in the individual competition. He had fin­ Saturday's wind conditions were vantage of perf~ct assists by f,rom center gave the Hoya's a first Murphy and McDonald. Griggs d(}wn .on the Vi,olet two. Quirk Despite the disapp(}intment of a ished third in New Y <>rk, nearly a light to moderate, but, ·on Sunday, losing season, coach Mary Ann hundred yards behind Lynch. the winds gusted up to 25 miles per added the final second peri.od tally scored and Mac Guire converted to with another unassisted shoOt. The giV'.e Georgetown a commanding Parker has s ,e v 'e r a I returning hour to make the racing rather ex­ sta·rters including Miss Phillips at Good Season icemen were able to contain a 22 to 6 J.ead. right inner. It is hoped that a The Nationals concluded the most citing. Georgetown fini'shed its stl'ong Colonial driv,e ·and l'ap up strong team will be built around successful season ever for the sea.son with a 4-2-1-1 reoord to the game with a final goal by Don McGrath Blocked this returning nucleus and that Hoyas, who won their first IC4A's grab second place honors in the Boyle. Shortly ,after the 'Onset of the ~ more victories will be in evidence following an undefeated 8-0 sea­ East. The sailors ,are looking for­ With a highly partisan crowd fourth quarter, the charging Hoya next foal1. One of the biggest pTOb­ son-. A year ago, the HOylas finished ward to the spring season with an behind them, Georgetown foOught defensive line blocked a McGrath lems will be findi1ng an adequate sixth at the I,C4A's. This year they M.A.I.S.A. Championship and a trip their way ·to a 5-5 tie with the punt deep in his own territory. replacement for Miss Castellan who won. Last week, the Hoyas took to the Nationals as their goals. RebelS, with Tom McDonald scor­ Drury then 'scored his third touch­ was one of the team leaders this sixth at the Nationals. How about Georgetown miss.ed such honors on ing equaliz'er with only telll seconds down of the day to complete the past season. next year? a technicality in 1964. remaining in the final period. rout. Friday, December 11, 1964 rHE HOYA Page Thirteen Hoyas Triumph Over Violets 28-6

DARK MOMENT . . . as full­ back Bersin plunges into the end zone from the one foot line sec­ onds before the half to give NYU a 6-0 lead. Brian Mur­ phy and Quentin McGregor at­ tempt to stop the TD.

AND THEN THE ROOF FELL IN •.. when John Quirk put Georgetown ahead to stay by plunging for the conversion. This made the score 8-6. It was the beginning of the end.

HISTORIC MOMENT ... NYU co-cap­ tains Dave Kreitzman (10) and Mike Ber­ sin (32) watch as the coin falls to be­ gin game. Georgetown co-captains Ed Moses and Steve Langhoff (both ob­ scured) elected to receive.

THE HOUSE CAME DOWN ..• when GU's John Drury scored Georgetown's first touchdown from a yard out to tie the score early in the third period. Drury was co-recipient of the Pop Sweetman Award.

HALFTIME FESTIVITIES ••. MAMA SAID THERE'D BE featur,ed a performance by the DA YS LIKE THIS . • .part of celebrated United States Air the overflow crow of 8,004 be­ Force Bagpipes. The Air Force gins to whoop it up following Drill Team, which had appeared the second Georgetown TD. And earlier, stands in the back­ why not? Fourteen years is a ground. long, long time.

AND THEN IT WAS FOR KEEPS •.• Moses (57) and Langhoff (61) shake hands with Kreitzman and Bersin seconds before the kick-off following the flip of the coin. Georgetown won that, too.

THEN THE SMILES BEGAN ..• Bill Nash paces the sidelines be­ fore conferring with John Murray following QUEEN FOR A DAY ... Miss Sharon Chalmers is escorted to mid­ Quirk's plunge for the THE ISSUE WAS RESOLVED .•• When Drury field by Tom Counolly (Queen Committee chairman) and her date. go-ahead points. The plunged for a second touchdown. The senior full­ Miss Chalmers, a native of Ardsley, New York, is a Marymount Col­ game plan had begun to back was to add another score in the fourth period, lege sophomore. work. giving him three TD's for the day. Page Fourteen rRE ROYA F'riday, December 11, 1964 ToughArmyEngineers, Lackluster Play Mars Hedcom Defeat Frosh; ...... :. '., ..... ,., Stinebrickner High Hoop Season Opening by Chip Butler '" VOice • ....: r. Frosh Coach Ed Lopata's charges dropped their first • .·.·FROM • • .. ',.~ , two games to a surprisingly tough Fort Belvoir team and " •• THE CROYl~. : by • .'•• the Bolling A.F .B. team which • .... 1,_ .1 ..... Rory Quirk e,. was expected as stiff compe­ . .., .' tition. .. .- . Engineers In bowing to F,orl Belvoir, the "Home of the Army Engineers," Bruce Stinebrickner led George­ This past Fall was, in many respects, Georgetown's fine,st in recent town scoring with 25. Denny Ces'ar years. The big news, 'of course, the NYU game. Fears that George­ with 22, Rusty Renaudin with 20 town was incapable ·of fielding a representative non-scholarship team and Jeff Wo,eppel with 15 were and that the student body and alumni would not be attracted by foot­ other Frosh in double figures. ball on ,a small scaLe weve 'vapidly allaY'ed if the score and the at­ It was a see-saw battle for much tendance figures are studied closely. ALso .ranking high among fall of the first half, but in the lru;t TIP FOR TWO ••• is attempted by Hoya's .Jim Barry and Neil Haskin athletic achievements was the perfonnance of the cross-country team. 5 :30 minutes of play F·ort Belvoir during Sunday's game with Be. BC, paced by .John Austin, trampled the disorganized Hoyas 89-71. The harrirers fini,shed unbealten and cOlaSted to their first LC.4 A. Title outscored the Frosh 18-10. The soec­ befOTe the elements finished their championship,s at the Nationals. A ond half was also clos'e until the sixth place fi,nish is commendable, however, and shows that Geoxge­ final 3:58. With the game tied fo,r Loyola B.C. town is in the national cross-country pictul"e' to stay. the 14th time, on a basket by Rusty Georgetown's varsity bas­ Georgetown was catapulted into Renaudin, the Army Enginee'l"s ketball team got off to a lack­ reality Sunday, to be exact, by the Another sr\Ja;ndout this fall was the ·sailing team. Fall sailing is not "'engineered" two seven-point out­ score of 89-71. Soundly licked by nearly so highly regimented as spring sailing and champ10nships in the bursts and pulled away to the final luster start with an unim­ Boston College was a Hoya squad fall oare IIloOt 'easily defined. The fact remains, however, that Geor~o:wn score of 106-94. pressive 89-75 victory over whose potential is far from realiza­ defeated every major 'sailing school in the E'ast, save M.I.T., to grab tion. second pLace in the East in the unofficial standings. The fro'sh sailo:rs Base Loyola of Baltimore on De­ won the fr.eshmen division of the M.A.I.S.A. to rank as Eastern leade:r. In ·the preliminary to the Boston cember 1. The taller Hoyas The Hoyas were lured into foul­ When Spring .arrives, the Georg,etown fleet should be on or near the top ColIoege game, the Frosh ran up failed to dominate the backboards ing the game away. They handed with a good ,shot at the Nationals. A final encouraging note this Fall against a combined team from as was expected and didn't resolve Bob Cousy's charges forly-seven was the improv;ed play of the golf team. Georgetown golfers f3l"ed Bolling .and Andrews A.F. Bases. the contest until the last five chances to a free point via the foul poo.rIy last Spring, but improved play was evidenced this Fall when The "Hedcom Capitols" quickly minutes of play. line, accounting for thirty-one they took fourth place in the Eas,tern. Thing's are looking bettex in opened up a 12-11 Iead with about Eagle points and the margin of this area. nine minutes left in ·the first half The first half was a see-saw af­ victory. but the Fro·sh gradually whittled fair. Georgetown grabbed an early Ther.e wel'e ,some losing efforts on the Hilltop this fall. The soccer The Hoyas never led. It started down the lead to 2 points at half­ lead, but was unable to generate team finished below .500, but two teams on the schedule, Howa:rd and with Austin. It ended with Austin. time, at 35-33. enough of an offensive to turn the Maryland, were .so far 'out ·of Georgetown's leagUJe' tha.t victories could game into a rout, as had been With 16:36 to go, Georgetown had hardly be ,expected. P·olo ,suff.ered a similar fate. Two of the three polo Reggie Minton anticipated. The Hoyas failed to fallen back, 8-2. Austin scored loss'es were to clubs ,as ,opposed to int,e;rcollegiate teams. These losses B. C.'s first six points. Irked by The second half was touch-and­ dominate Loyola's offensive boards, were expected as well. Bas'eball was so radically curtailed by the giving the Greyhounds easy baskets crowd reaction when he missed a autumn ,rains that little can be said of the te,am'·s 1-2 record. A lot of go with Reggie Minton, a 6-4 for­ free throw, the Eagle guard re­ ward, bearing the brunt of the on followups and tap-ins as a re­ v.aJuable practioe was lost, however, and this could prove costly come sult. Loyola's 6'5" Larry 8taver­ peatedly drove. Barry fouled him. Spring. Capitols' scoring with 22 'of hi,s 35 Prendergast fouled him. And with points coming in the second stanza. man kept the Greyhounds within range through the first twenty min­ 14:00 to go in the first half, Boston Jeff W oeppel and Denny Cesar College was shooting one-and-one. combined for 24 points in the sec­ utes and Georgetown left the floor FOOTBALL: THE FIRST STEP with a narrow 38-32 halftime lead. Although the Hoyas' Jake Gibbons ond half, but the fouls that George­ kept pace with eleven points in the There is little that can be said about the Georgetown-NYU game town committed put them in tl'ouble The Hoyas put on a much better final minutes of the half, the vis­ that has not been stated already. The 'entire weekend was an unqualified in two ways. Stinebrickner, Holder off.ensiv,e display in the second half itors were ahead, 45-37, at half­ and Cesar all :Douled ·out in the success. The two big :£actors ill'V'olved in the weekend were the size of as Barry began to pepper the bas­ time. crucial three minutes, and the Capi­ ket from outside with amazing ac- The customary Georgetown early- the crowd and the performance of the team. The crowds at the pep tols capitalized on the charity rally and the game ,surpassed eV'en the most optimi,stic predictions. A tosses to eke ,out the 89-85 win. (Continued on Page 16) (Continued on Page 16) crowd of 500 was anticipated at the rally, yet the c,rowd was e,stimated at between 1500 ·and 2000 Friday ,evening. Six thousand was the top estimate for attendance at the game, y,et in excess of eight thousand people paid, despite the freezing conditions. Team performance was equally amazing. Georgetown was rated no better than ,even going into. the game, yet the Hoyas won and won convincingly. It is true that the offensive unit was composed primarily of .seniors, but the defiensive unit consisted almost entirely of unde,r­ classmen. Thls Indicates that 1964 wasn't a freak year for football .- ...... / ------...... taLent. Thel'e will be plenty of talent remaining. Does A final considel'ation was ,alumni i,ntere,st, It was overwhelming. / /" "\ A,s one University official put it, "I saw alumni I hadn't seen since I \ I \ 1950 the year we dropped football." The alumni not only came; they , , enjoyed themselves. They indicated they would come again if mo,re this , , games materialized. A lot moore could be said about Homecoming- \ I \ I 1964, but it would be, for the most p,art, repetitious. An advertisement , I in the football pr,ogram probably summed up the weekend as well as , / a,ny-Happiness is a Hoya Homecoming...... / Amen. spot '''"'''------,,"

,., FOOTBALL: THE NEXT STEP I ,~ 'J While the ,success of Homecoming-1964 is still fresh in the minds j of many, the obvi·ous question is, "Where should the foothall effort feel sticky? i go from her.e'? What l,S the next step?" I It is my belief that if football is to grow at Georgetown, it must first gr.ow by degrees and, secondly, it must not grow too big. Keeping j these two guideli,nes 1n mind, a reasonable proposal would be the' '''' NEITHER DOES OLD SPICE STICK DEODORANT scheduling of two games next fall. If this were done, the intra-mural league would not be damaged. lntre-muiral football started a week Iate Dries as it applies ... in seconds. And stays dryl Gives this year because of he,avy rains. If the intra-mural league were you fast ... comfortable ... dependable deodorant preserv,ed with each team playing ev,ery other team once, there would protection. Lasting protection you can trust. Try it. still be time for two weeks of practice prior to the inter-collegiate Old Spice Stick Deodorant for Men. 1.00 plus tax. games. A reasonable scheduloe would call for a game with NYU in SHULTON New York on the second Saturday in Novembe·r and a Homecoming Weekend game with Fordham one week later. If this were done, the football program would grow, but it would be kept in perspective at the ,same time. Thi,s is what the students and alumni want. There is strength in numbers. Eight thous·and people c'an't be wrong. Friday, December 11, 1964 'JIBE HOYA Page Fifteen

Conference (Continued from Page 1) tured on the subject, "Creativity Cancel your ·'pressing engagements"! and F'reedom." Both talks were fol­ lowed by commentaries. The third session started at 2:00 FaraPressTM p.m. with "Teilhard de Chardin on Freedom and Risk in Evolution." The speaker was Christopher F. Mooney, S. :1. of the Institut Cath­ olique de Paris. The session's sec­ ond lecture was delivered by Ernan McMullin ·of the University of Minnesota who spoke on "Cl"eativ­ ity and Discov.ery in Science." As in the morning, there were two commentaries after each talk. At 8 :30 p.m. the Rev. :1ohn Court­ ney Murray, S.:1. spoke on the sub­ ject of "Religious Freedom," one of the most controversial theologi­ cal topics of our time. Murray was THE REV. DR. HANS KUNG •.• delivers final lecture of "Freedom Never Need Ironing a very active "observer" at the re­ and Man" Conference. cent session of the Vatican Council Council Reform and Reunion. This undergoing a renewal "which has and was instrumental in writing book, more than any other single given it a new vitality." the final text of the proposal, which factor, laid the ground work for was eventually ·accepted, on religi­ the Second Vatican Council; in this Freedom ous freedom. By all accounts, pUblication Dr. Kiing pleas for a "They're ironing while Courtney Murray's hour-long lec­ liberalization of the Church's out­ Dr. Kung bases the second part they're drying"TM ture was the highlight of the con­ look on modern society. of his address on three major points ference. incorporated in the idea of a "free Before an overflowing crowd, Dr. WEDNESDAY: The final ses­ theology." He stressed that "theo­ Kung stated that theological free­ logy is freedom for the Church" sion on Wednesday evening fea­ dom should not be understood in a tured the noted Swiss theologian by saying "the leading theologians negativE' sense, such as "being free of our day are not interested in a Hans Kung. Rev. Dr. Kung a pro­ from something," but also as "be­ fessor of fundamental theology at purely intellectual debate as an end ing free for something." in itself but, rather, are interested the University of Tubin~en, is the author of a current pUblication, in the very indirect way of serving Vitality our neighbor. He stressed the idea of intel­ Dr. Kung's second point was that lectual freedom in theology as a "theology is f r e e d 0 m in the mainfestation and function of the Church." He defined this as realiza­ freedom of the Church. Dr. Kung tion of theologians "that God's expressed this ideal in saying, word is given to them and that they "Protestant theology (to Catholics) did not discover it." Dr. Kung appears divided and full of con­ added "Theologians must take into tradictions. While on the other account that the Church is a com­ hand, Protestant theologians point munity of men simple and earnest." at what appears to them as a weak­ This wiII enable them to serve the ness in Catholic theology, at its whole Church and hence the whole uniformity and seeming narrow­ world. At the same time, they ness which amounts to a denial of must discern whether the Church the freedom and Catholicity of the is acting in accordance with the Catholic Church." However, Dr. word of God. This discerning activ­ Kung stressed that "within the ity on the part of theology is not past five years" there has been a directed against authority. It wants change in Catholic theology and to help authority with the tools of REV. DR. KUNG that the whole of theology has been theology. Styled-right FaraPreSSTM When ·Gordie Howe Slacks goes booting Never Wrinkle Won't Wilt or Muss Creases are Permanent Colors are Fast Feature Finest Fabrics Wear Longer and Stay New Looking Just wash 'em, They Press Themselves

IChap Slick' goes along! "Sure I use 'Chap Stick' during the hockey sea­ aside. It's just as necessary during the summer. son," says the Detroit Red Wing star. "With my When I'm on my boat, the hot sun is rough on my lips exposed to that ice and cold, it's a must! lips-burns them up, dries them out. 'Chap Stick' But after the season, 'Chap Stick' doesn't get put helps soothe and heal them fast!" FARAH MANUFACTURING CO., INC. EL PASO, TEXAS The lip balm selected A favorite for use by the in Canada. U. S. OlYmpic Team.

DON'T LET DRY, SORE LIPS SPOIL YOUR FUN - WHEREVER YOU GO, GO WITH 'CHAP STICK' 'CHAP STICK' IS REG. TM ©1964 MORTON MFG. CORP., LYNCHBURG, VA. Page Sixteen THE HOY4 Friday, December 11, 1964 Loyola Game (Continued from Page 14) SKYLINE $ 5 A Day Taking another curacy. He finished the ~vening with 27 points, topping all scorers, ho-hum vacation and might ,easily have topped the 60 miles away* 30 mark if he hadn't aggravated because you think his bad knee. Adding :fu~l to the scoring 'output were Hollendoner traveling is expensive? and Ward. Hollendoner, who is just coming into his own after a one SKI year absence, got hot shortly after the second half began and finished AREA Cut it out. with 19 points on th~ evening. r~~~E~;-~~;~;~~~T-;;----:----' It was Ward who made the dif­ WASHINGTON, ference, howe-v>er, he repeatedly Sheraton-Park Hotel ' dumped in ~ey shots from the VIRGINIA Washington, D.C. 20008 corner to keep the Hoyas ahead and ,ended with 14 points in his Dear Sheraton: Please rush me an application for a varsity debut. Three challenging slopes for be· free Sheraton Student ID Card. I understand it will get ginner.and expert on the breath·taking me discounts on room rates at Sheraton Hotels & Motor Inns. Good Deal! B.C. foothills of famed Shenandoah National Park. (Continued from Page 14) Features include T·bar lift, 3 rope tows, certified Name ______second-half-rally never material­ instruction, modern lodge and ski shop. Write for free folder Address ______ized. Barry opend the scoring, but today! Austin and Ed Hockenbury retali­ * Approx. 60 miles from Charlottesville, Fredericksburg and ated with equal determinacy. The Washi~gton, D. C. and 115 miles from Richmond. Hoyas dropped back, 58-47, 67-53, and when Soph Doug Hice slipped FOR INFORMATION AND SNOW REPORTS Call Direct: 1- 675-3512 in nine points in six minutes, the ·or write Skyline Ski Area, Box 87, Washington, Va. animal section slowly emptied. A limping Barry, his gallant at­ tempt vain, scored 19 to top Hoya scoring. .Take Gibbons followed with 14. Austin took game scoring honors with a mere 32. E.C.S.C. (ContinUed from Page 3) friends. Claise then told the coun­ cil that the committee member's time was v;aluable and that they deserved some sort of reward. He also mentioned that the losses -on the concert were, in proportion, far less than the Ray Charles Concert. Apparently Claise's speech was con­ vincing, for only a few minutes of further debate were needed to amend the motion to ask for a ten­ tative budg;et ,of such ,a functi-on to be submitted to the council be­ fore the activity takes place. Other motions considered under New Busines,s were Mike Egan's vequest for a $500 grant to the Polo Club so that it could remain in existence and Senior President Draude's motion to appoint Thomas ./ ~~.<$::~;;;;:t.¥;::;;;::: BUley as chairman of the Business School Committee. The former was ':.:" * .... tabled p'ending further discussion, and the later was passed. The final motion of the meeting was Draude's request for fiVle dollars to enter Georgetown in the Arunual Colle,gi­ ate Turtle Race. The ,event, used to raise money for charity, will take place February 26. So tha;t the lengthy 'regulations f-or the race might be understood, Mike Hartz was appointed coach. New Library (Continued from Page 3) Horigan, S ..T., is chairman, has also suggested the following be in­ cluded in the proposed library: a combined audio-visual and copying service, a music listening room, a map and print room, student discus­ sion rooms and an after-hours read­ ing room. The committee 'has also seen the need for such services as smoking and locker :facilities. A faculty lounge was thought to be unnecessary in view of several fac­ ulty studies which are being planned. .Jeffs' Palace The estimated costs of construc­ Illustrated: 4-4-2 Convertible tion would be $4,000,000. The grant and loan possibilities of the Higher Education Facilities Act of Miss America steps out on campus 1963 are being thoroughly explored by the committee. Mr. .Teffs, the di­ rector of Riggs Memorial Library and Secretary of the Library Plan­ in the high-stepping. Oldsmobile ~p ning Committee, referred to the building itself as "economical of construction and subsequent main­ If you can tear your eyes off pretty Vonda Kay Van Dyke for a moment, we'd like to tell you t,enance, functional, yet aesthetical­ about the car: Oldsmobile's new 4-4-2. Earns its name from a 400-cu.-in., 345-bhp V-8 ... ly attractive both inside and out." He stressed the importance of this 4-barrel carb ... and twin pipes. Red-line tires, heavy-duty suspension, three transmission library to the academic life of availabilities liven up the package-no matter which F-85 V-8 coupe or convertible you Georgetown and urged all students to take an active interest in fa­ pick for your 4-4-2 action! But the real clincher is price: 4-4-2 prices start lower miliarzing themselves with the than any other high-performance car in America designed for everyday driving! progress of this project through the Library Bulletin, which is now Vonda, by the way, is not included. But that's no problem for a tiger like you! available, and through the StUdent Library Committee under the chair­ Watch for the 4-4-2 ••• coming to your OldsmObile Quality Dealer's soon! manship of Mike Egan, a Senior in the College.