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1969-01-17

Xavier University Newswire

Xavier University (Cincinnati, Ohio)

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This Book is brought to you for free and open access by the Xavier Student Newspapers at Exhibit. It has been accepted for inclusion in All Xavier Student Newspapers by an authorized administrator of Exhibit. For more information, please contact [email protected]. XAVIER UNIVERSITY L!BRARY SOCIAL SCIE.NCES JM: 2 :~ 13oS< avler l?lllS

Vol. Liii CINCINNATI, OHIO, FRIDAY, JANUARY 17, 1969 TEN CENTS No. 12 VP GAY RESIGNS Student Council leaders are now considering the 1967. He was also assistant hall problem of finding a replacement for resigning Stu­ director of Kuhiman Hall. dent Body Vice-President Alvin C. Gay. Vice-President It was at this point also that Gay (the title is used interchangeably with Student he joined the newly formed Afro­ Council President) announced his decision early this American Organization. week. He is currently Council Presi­ Gay, a political science major, Justice and Charity Committee dent and legislative assistant to was elected on the same ticket as since freshman year. Cincinnati City Councilman Wil­ current Student Body President He sat out junior year because liam Chenault. Eugene Beaupre. "I wanted to find out who I amand According to Gene Beaupre, He intends to finish out his ed­ where I wanted to go." But during Student Body President, Council ucation at University of Santa this time, he chaired the committee is working to find an adequate Clara, where he recently attended that organized the Inter-Racial replacement before Gay leaves for a national conference of Jesuit stu­ Community Week in November, California. dent body presidents, January 2-5. He was elected chairman of the conference. He declined to com­ ment on his transfer. Gay entered Xavier in Septem­ ber, 1965 from high school in. Dayton, Ohio on scholarships from the Archdiocese from Cin­ cinnati, the Catholic Scholarships for Negroes Inc., and Dayton YMCA Scholarship. He was elected class president his freshman and sophomore years, but decided not to run for office junior year. During the summer after his sophomore year, he served, as con--· gressional intern for John J. Gil­ ligan, and has been on the Racial I'ass Fail Debate Bernard Wurger plays Alvaro Manglacavallo, the clownish truck­ driver, In. Tennessee Williams' "The Rose Tattoo", playing for three By PETE HARSHAM, News Associate Editor weeks at Edgecliff Theatre. The Theatre is located on the campus of I.n an attempt to develop the there was more information pre­ necessary competition between stu­ Edgecliff College, formerly Our Lady of Cincinnati College. This is dialogue hoped for on the sented. However, he commented dents," Wally Koral, Graduate Stu­ the third production of the 1968-69 Edgecliff professional company. proposed pass-fail study, presented that he thought the pass-fail pro­ dent in English, explained, "I feel Reservations can be made by calling the Bo:ir. Office, 281-2533. to the Academic Council by Fr. gram too general and felt that the such a program would be bene­ (See story, page 3.) John Felten S.J.; members of the present system should bemaintain­ ficial." Pro Academic Council, Faculty, and ed and adapted to meet the desired Mike Koester, senior, stated, "I Musica Student Body were asked to give goals of the proposal. doubt that this system will add • their reactions to the recent pro- Another member of the Aca- anything new to the University Presents Third posal. demic Council, Dr. Robert Ash- with the free audit already in effect, Fr. Jeremiah O'Callahan, S.J., more, professor of Philosophy, however he added that he would Pro Musica of Cincinnati will present its third pro­ Vice President of Academic Affairs stated that he would like to reserve like to see how grading under the gram this Sunday evening, a concert sampling the and Chairman of the Academic the right to comment at· this time, proposed plan would be imple­ music of the Renaissance and Baroque periods. Council, stated that the issue is as he prefered to remain objective mented before the making of his still extremely open and all views as a member of the body which final decision. An ensemble of 16 voices and 8:15 Sunday evening January 19, are being considered. He explained would make the final decision on Professor of Psychology, Dr. 20 Instrumentalists will perform at the Xavier University that there Is much need for dis- the proposed plan. a variety of music from Dufay Theater. Tickets are $2.00 (Stu- cussion of the program on all Gerald Quatman, gave his views ( 1400) to Bach (1750). Record- dents $1.00) at the Community Faculty member Dr. George of the program under study. "I levels at the University, and the D ~ f Econom1·cs ers' Viola dagambas, harpsichord, T" k t Offi 29 W t 4th 0 r t reese, pro1essor o don't believe in pass-fail for IC e ce, es a ma1·or concern, in considering such t t d "I th"nk i"t would be a good and other instruments characteris- the box office before the concert. s a e • 1 majors (courses in a students ma­ tic of the periods will be used. Parking facilities at Xavier are a plan should be, "Is it good for experim· ent · It would stimulate jor field of study) or freshmen Music director Thomas Widlar very good. the student?' more students to perform better However it might be beneficial in hopes to make this "an enjoyable Fr. Clifford Besse S.J., - without the fear of relative grade enabling a student to broaden his Since Pro Musica's Thursday d " and informal performance, truly ant Dean of Arts and Sciences and stan ings. educational background." series has been temporarily can- 1 l·n the spirit of the Renaissance". celled all tickets sold for the Thurs- member of the Academic Counci • Senior Tom Eiden thought the It was noted by this reporter The program will include: day concert may be used for Sun- explained that he had not read the proposed system •avorable'' be- that many of the people approach­ proposal, and would like to defer cause as he explained, "Everyone ed were reluctant to give their Joaquin des Prez: Fanfare for day performances. judgement of such a plan until is too competitive for the grade. views prior to receiving more the King ------, Sometimes, in an effort to get the information on the proposal from Giovanni Legrenzl: Sonata for grade, you miss out on what you Fr. Felten. It is hoped that their Instruments should be learning." minds will remain open until such Songs by· Dufay and Lasso @. information is forthcoming. J. H. Schein: Suite No. 20 in p "If pass-fail will eliminate un- e frcim .. "Musical Banquef' e8 C~ f• C•tr1•s/ "" Mqrd; Gras .U n d erway J. S. Bach: Cantata No. 118 II Clement Janequln: La Chant By Rick Sullivan and Jim Collins, des Oyseaux I 4 • Publicity Chairmen intermission II• e rv I PW S hopefuls must register with the Dufay: Gloria ad Modum This year Mardi Gras will be on the weekend of February 14 University Center Desk and be Tubae (Friday) and Februa'ty 15 (Sat­ clean shaven at that time. As far Monteverdi: Sonata a8 Sopra urday). The theme of the weekend as costumes go there will be no Sancta Maria ore pro nobis January 22-23 will be "Mardi Gras in Latin registration needed, winners will Ayres by Campian and Caven­ America." be selected on the basis of dish originality, execution, etc. There Praetorlus: Dances from Terp­ Friday night of the weekend will Across from the Grill will be several cash prizes for the sichore feature a couple of real exciting contests -- beard growing, costume, winners of both contests. As for J. S. Bach: Cantata No. 106 any questions you might have, "Actus 1'ragicus" and the selection of a queen. As for the beard growing contest, all (Co11ti1111ed 011 page 8) '!'he concert will be given at'------~

\. P11e Two ·XAVIER UNIVE~s1:i-v. CINCiNNATI, OHIO, FRIDAY, JANUARY 17, 1969

The Movement Letter t.o the Et.lil<>r, By JIM HICKEY

This is another in the News his 11it:,.,.r in similar articles or in The military counter supports Felten Proposa I st:_ries of articles hopefully of in- leiters to the editor. · The views ex­ the economic system by joining tert!st to tht: university community1pressed, lioweve1~ are not neces­ with the buslneu and political sec· Any student, faculty member, or. sarily those of the News staff. Ed. tors to form the triumvirate of Presents Problems administrator is welcome to share ' power In this technocratic empire. With Its annual budget of $80 This article ls partly reactionary in nature. It ls billion plus, the military now con. trols over half of the federal pro- Dear Mike, QPA will avoid pass-fall courses both a commentary on the two articles written by perty in the world ( 533). US In response to Fr. Felten's re­ Rice and Zaburanclk and an attempt to explain because they will keep his QPA overklll capacity and conventional quest for dialogue on his pass-fall mediocre or poor. Juniors and draft resistance as an integral part of a larger group weaponry exceeds that of the ·mil· proposal, I would like to offer a seniors with a QPA of3.25orbetter ltary might of the entire world. few thoughts. The student council of conscientious people known in the underground are allowed a free audit each The ending of the Vietnam war academic committee, of which I semester anyway for low-cost as the Movement. will not solve America's problems. am a member, earlier this year de­ Rice states in his defense of the But Iain 't a marchin' anymore. broadening of interests and satis­ The Vietnam war could end to· bated on a modified pass-fail pro­ faction of intellectual curiosity. This Selective Service System that in For I marched to the battles of morrow, and yet the quality of gram identical to Fr. Felten's in "any big government bureaucracy, narrows the field of those who the German trench society and America's role in the all respects except credit eval~a­ would benefit from pass-fail to there are bound to be abuses and • world virtually remains -un- tion. We In a war that was bound to decidedagainstpr~pos1~g good students .short of the Dean's injustices." The system itself is un­ end all wars such a program to the Uruvers1ty just and immoral. Men are changed. Thailand, Laos, and the , . C 'lb could List, and to Dean's List students Oh I must have killed a million · · · Academic ounc1 ecause we drafted, or "volunteer" for fear of Com1rucan RA;public have already . d . . si nificant advantage who are willing to pay for acourse been small V1etnams. Guatemala, fm hm it 0 t g being drafted, as killers for the me11 a11d now they won't be ~ which will pad their credit aver­ the Canal Zone, Rhodesia, Bolivia, fort e stu ens. d state. Their victims are buried all bacll again age. One wonders if this is the and Peru could be Vietnams over- If a student's major subject an across the world. In Vietnam But I ain't a m.archin'anymore. .intent of the pass-fail proposal. night. Meanwhile the colonies at core curriculum courses ar7 ruled alone, over 30,000 Americans For I flew the final mission in h 1 e which he One wonders also about the have died. No one can count the home have risen in rage and des- , out, t e on Y cours s the Japanese sllies tructiveness. The black people of could take on a pass-f~il basis are larger question whether this pro- Vietnamese dead, crippled, or men­ Set off the mighty mushroom America have concluded that after f ree electl·ves · Presummg for the posal can be called pass-fail at tally maimed. But what are these cloud moment that pass-fail grades would all .. A "pass" means a grade of "abuses"? 360 years their acceptance as hu­ lVhen I saw tl.ie cities burnin' man beings is long overdue. be independent of a student's QPA, A, B, C, or D, but this grade will The affluent have their student I !mew I was a learnin' there is little difference between 'not be determined by the student's Injustice is the catalyst of revo­ deferments. The affluent can well That I ain't a marchin' any­ pass-fail and an audit. The cost is performance in the course. The lution. A nation that found life afford expert physicians to get more. the same, the QPA suffers inneither regular grading system has simply those valuable 1-Y's and 4-F's. through revolution has now be­ case, and the amount of work re- been removed one degree of mean­ Now the laborleadersscreamin' The rich know the "respectable" come the world's number one quired for the course is either ingfulness. A student will still have members of the local draft boards when they close the missle counterrevolutionary force, not be­ nothing (audit) or minimal (pass- to worry about which "regular" and know where a few bucks can plants cause American people would have fail). A pass-fail course would grade he will receive. The pass-fail be dropped in order to gain United Fruit screams at the Cu., it that way but because the rich carry credit, but the presumption program, instead of liberating the entrance to the elite National ban shores choose to defend their power and is that a student would be taking students from the old A, B, C, D, Guard. So where does the burden Call it peace or call it Ireson; wealth. The masters of the trusts this sort of course not because he, and F, simply sends them after the of fighting the wars of the power call it love or call it reason and corporate giants, along with needs credit hours, but because he old A, B, c, D, and F by a differ­ hungry fall? The task is delegated But I ain't a marchin' anymore, their puppets In Washington must is intellectually curious about the ent route. to the poor, the black, the 17 year Oh I ain't a marchin' anymore. learn the hard lessons of justice, subject matter. In sum, a pass-fail I offer these thoughts not so old Southern kid, and the over or our country may be swept away course would be little more than much in an attempt to keep pass­ half million young men enrolled The present draft system denies and humanity with It. an audit. fail out of Xavier as in an attempt in junior colleges and technical an individual freedom of choice. The next big war will not even Fr. Felten's credit evaluation to provoke second thoughts about schools who cannot obtain 2-S's It is unjust because it takes young need draftees. The nuclear arma­ proposal, however, changes this what the pass-fail proposal actu­ because they are not pursuing a men into involuntary servitude or ment possessed by the military is picture considerabiy. If a "pass" ally amounts to, particularly in the bacculaureate degree. slavery (as it was called a few enough to annihilate mankind a will mean the grade of a student's area of credit evaluation. Rice goes on to point out that years back). The youth who have few times over. War has demanded QPA, pass-fail will definitely favor ·"Fortunately, we have a legal sys­ shouted "Hell, No, We Won't Go" much of those who support it, or those students who have good Sincerely yours, tem by · which a person can at­ in anti-war and anti-draft demon­ dare not question or cannot escape QPAs. A student with a good QPA J. Cummins tempt to correct these injustices." strations the past few years feel it. For th'ose who oppose murder, will be able to pad his grade aver- The legal system in this country that the draft has reduced young and murderous institutions the cost age with pass-fail courses, and a has not been exactly sympathetic men to cost-efficiency items in a may be no less severe; in the words student with a mediocre or poor to draft resisters or any appeals. Pentagon computer. Protests to the of Camus, "To be born to create, Try to get .a CO in Fairborne, war in Vietnam progressed to a to love, to win at games, is to be Ohio, or Topeka, Kansas. You stage a couple of years ago where born to live in time of peace. But usually cannot even get a hearing. individuals and campus groups war teaches us to lose everything An example of Selective Service felt that their activism should be­ and bec;:ome what we were not. "justice" was Gen. Hershey's letter come more militant in order to It all becomes a question of style." of October, 1967 to all local stop the military-industrial com­ Peace, plex continuation of the present Notiee! boards instrucing them to recon­ Jim Hickey '69 sider the draft status of ·students war. Thus the blocking of induc­ who participated in protests or tion centers, the Dow Chemical Mci·nday, Tuesday, Wednesday, The art exhibit represents posters campus d~monstrations. demonstrations, and the burning of next week in the Main Lobby of made by students and faculty in of draft cards. (Which Zahuran­ the University Center, there will be other colleges and universities The arguments for conscription cik has pointed out failed to stop an art show concentrating in the throughout Ohio and Michigan. rely heavily on .the needs of past the conscription as far back as poster making area. The Associa­ Xavier's entry in the exhibit is a wars and past societies. Their logic 1775). In the case of napalm and tion of College Unions-Inter­ poster made by Miss Eileen Rahe seems to follow the line that since draft cards, protestors felt that national, Region VII, is sending of the University Center Office. man has always had wars, he al­ these articles of property along the art exhibit to many schools ways will have wars and the only Exhibition hours 9:00 a.m. with Hitler's gas ovens, slum pro· throughout Ohio and Michigan. to 2:30 p.m. way to fight wars is to have mil­ perty, and Stalin's concentration lions of men. Young men fight camps have no right to exist. wars, not the militaristic egoman­ iacs who start them. WAR WILL Draft resistance groups are an END WHEN YOUNG MEN integral part of the Movement. No REFUSE TO SERVE. Phil one can say when this movement Ochs says it better in a song of began. Some say it started with the a few years ago: freedom rides in the late fifties. But the roots of the Movement are not important. It is· what the Move­ Oh, !::marched to the battle of ment stands for. It stands against New Orleans war, imperialism, racism, suffer· "A good university, so to speak should be a dangerous pIBce." At the end of the early British ing, and any type of oppression. Wars_ It stands for love, brotherhood, Npws Platform For EDITOR-IN-CHIEF ...... • ...... Michael J. Henson The young'lads started growin' peace and democracy ofthe people. The young blood started flow- EXECUTIVE EDITOR • ...... • . . John M. Dunphy · Movement activities attempt to Progress At Xavier. in' MANAGING EDITOR ...... , ....•Dennis A Repenning illustrate why our country ls dlvl· • c..ctfttlltl tnlpletMfttcldoll But I ain't a marchin' anymore ded at home · and is co.nstantly °' COPY EDITOR ...... •...... , . Tom Kessinger For I killed my share of lnjun's harassed abroad by enemies of Its .,.. ~· ., die ""'""*fl .. LAYOUT EDITOR .•...... , ..•....•.. Bill Barko in a thousand different fights, own creation. America has become • OOlll""""" ., .... ,... ,,..,1. ASSOCIATE EDITORS ...Pete Harsham, Pat Kelley, Bob Wilhelm I was there at the Little Big an empire and history's richest ...... , SPORTS EDITOR •.•...... • , ..••.•••... Chuck Quinn Horn, nation. Although It represents only ...... , ...... ASSOCIATE SPORTS EDITOR , . , .•.. , ...••••• John Price I heard many men lyin', saw 6 per cent of the world's popu· ..,.."' ...... , tolntlllaHt. CIRCULATION EDITOR ...•...•.•...••.. Chris Coughlin many more dyin' latlon, America controls half of CARTOONIST ....•.•...... •.... , ...•••• John Doyle But I ain't a marchin' anymore. the world's productive wealth and • Colada• ...... , ...... SECRETARY ..•...•.•....•.... , ••••.• Rae-Jean Carr two-thirds of Its finances. The US ...... ,. , ., ...... PHOTOGRAPHERS ...... • Chuck Trlester, Seth Warner It's alwasy the old who lead ...... with different trade and aid poll· ...... COLUMNISTS ...... George Eder, J. Richard Hague us to war, cles holds North and South ..,,...... Frank Llenhart, Joe Rosenberger It's always the young to fall, America in an economic vise. In ,._ MODERATOR .•...•. , .•...... ••..... , •• Tom Young Now look at all we've won with a few years time, American Indus­ ...... ,.., .,...... , BUSINESS.~ANAGER •...... , .,, ...... •..Jack Jeffre. a saber and a gun try In Europe will be the third mat "OJlllOl1tt•l&a.t 1# ZHler llUdetae. Co lte maclt ..,_.,,._ i• REPORTERS .... Blll Kwiatowskl;· Chris Nicolini, Pete~Flt;r.gerald Tell me is it worth it all? greatest industrial power In the 4 pcm tiu CM eHr.linot'°'9 of &he Pete Bernardi, Bill Desmond, Denny · Eckart Oh I stole California from the world. US foreign profits run Linus Bieliauskas, Bradley Rider, Owen Donahue substantially higher than domestic 11tcrlv re&H4f obligeClow au &hr:~ Mexican land, Publ11hed Weekly durtna th ·-'- I . profits so Industry flees abroad &Jae cc.myiu.1 'riduMn~. 1100 1 d 8 b ... e "" year except during vacation and examination Fought in the bloody Civil Wat~· under government patronage and pe$r ° Y Xavier University, Hamilton County, Evanston, Cincinnati, Ohio 45207. f) lr.c1·~:1l~

In Praise of Gunther Thompson

There are murmurings again that Xavier draw from the rest of the world and never enter such a "real world' for Its students. There Is In­ should Improve the quality of It• student body. it. But neither of these conditions obtain. The difference and concern, boorishness and sensi­ This Is urged as a panacea for a cloud of uni­ world Is a clumsy, crude giant. And students tivity, cold practice and fiery principle in a pro­ versity ills. However, the social ills of our student must graduate - and then they must be able to portion very near what is found in society. body are remarkably similar to those plague­ live, hopefully in the fullest sense of that word. Certainly Xavier should continue to seek and Ing our whole population, which produces a implement principle, in order to make its en­ measure of realism in our campus atmosphere. • • • • • vironment more varied, more responsible, more We should think carefully before we risk losing It. true to an ideal of human life. For ideals, too, All of this is not to urge a surrender to medi­ are part of the human condition. But Xavier •••• ocrity. It is only to underline that mediocrity should not scorn the very real, human situation is a large element of the world. Any person who it has now. It Is charged that the bulk of Xavier students seeks to shatter it and build a thoughtful, crea­ have a ponderous disinterest In a creative life, tive life, must understand what threatens his • • • • • which presses the living people underground to hopes. If he has never experienced the crass find each other and togethltr to build a thought­ indifference of the world, he won't be able to Perhaps these thoughts are the bittersweet ful, human life. This is unfortunate, to be sure, cope with it when it silently surrounds his results of another vacation, of another two weeks but it also unfortunately resembles the situation humanity. spent in a world that does not turn easily to in American society, where people must sidestep thought and wonder. There is room for thought the exhaustive whirl on the one hand and the • • • • • and wonder, and much need for them, but the suffocating malaise on the other In order to live man who is given to such things must realize humanly. Xavier fairly duplicates for Its students So should the university strive to enclose Its what treasures he holds, and what indifference this environment which they must face when they students In a hothouse academic culture, where the world has for his •treasures." He may dis­ graduate. This Is an advantoge •• one of sorts, a lush Intellectual atmosphere stiflingly hugs cover thought and wonder at a university; he admittedly, but an advantage not to be idly the campus from desk to dormitory? Students may. But whereever he discovers it, If that en­ discarded. fully Immersed in a heady academe are apt to vironment does not also teach him what it is be shodced by their brief forays Into the "real that he Is taking within himself and how his • • • • • world." Our university might do well to foster world regards his new-found wonder, then that a "real world" on our campus. For though ideals environment is exposing the tender insides of For while It is worth our effort to open Xavier have a place, and though the world might do this man to the scorn and ridicule of a careless as a community to the full variety of life, It Is well to heed principle more often, it is simply world. decidedly not deslreable to box Xavier Into a true that It does so only in its own time and in • • • • single mold. While it Is certainly Xavier's right Its own way. Though education might indeed • as an academic community to Insist that her show people how to live better, it is simply true That a human being understands the dangers members seek individual, creative, thoughtful that people live more often than not upon the facing him does not protect him from them, of lives, It Is neither to her advaiVage nor to theirs trappings of an education, If that at all. The course. For it may be inevitably true that a that they only experience the currents of one university will provide a better life and a better man must have his innards exposed and scathed life-style. education for Its students If It provides them with before he can In fact become a man In a human an environment where they can lea.rn not only world. Perhaps It Is as Henry James wrote: • • • • • the principles, the ideals, and the values to be sought and served, but also where they can gain "Life flowers and fructifies out of the profoundest This Is particularly true when It might be the experience with that world where these princi­ tragic depths." Humanity is inextricably Imbued Intellectual life-style which Is the only one pres­ ples appear and exist, and where alone they can with tragedy. ent. If the Intellectual community Is sufficiently be realized. large, the students can become, however un­ • • • • • wittingly, Isolated from the rest of the world. • • • • • There might be no harm In this, If the rest of· It's a lon,g road to Canaan on Bleeker Street the world lived as the Intellectual community Xavier 1!1 not so verv far from !)rovldlng ... on any street. did, or if the students could completely with-

Joe Rosenberger Rose Entertainment Tattoo

Under the unlikely title of "You enough to cail him art too. song used In the titles supposedly Tennessee William's Rose Tat- ls contrasted to the beautlfulyoung Are What You Eat", Peter Yarrow It Is not the fact that the camera sung by three-year-old Jack, who too opened last week at the Edge­ romance of Seraflna'a daughter, of Peter, Paul, and Mary along is hand-held, for in Pennebaker'• lives In the back of the Greta Garbo cllff Theatre and from this Rosa and a sailor home on leave. with various and sundry friends, excellent study of Bob Dylan'atour crash pad for wayward hips. H reviewer's opinion It ls a play lhat The interacting loves of these four long-hairs, short bain, hangers­ of England the entire thing was you can manage to get to the shouldn't be missed. The Rose characters are thrown into a pot­ on, andquasl-entertainenl.e., Tlny shot the same way, yet came off theatre in time to catch just this Tattoo ls Wllllam'a only comedy pourri of people; Catholic women Tlm, bas managed to come up with well, with the idea of a mobile sequence, then nee Immediately and it ls a good· one. The play ls shake their beads l n bewilderment a -kinetic, frenetic, wild, turned-on camera working to help the film. after lt Is over, you may remember more ethnic humor rather than to the going ona wlth a Catholic (ualng the term loosely) Hair-like maker make the mm seem real. It the movie as a good one. Then alap1tick. Thls ls evident ln the priest Interfering ln a altuatlon he feast of boobs and bellybuttons ls not the fact that the fast-cut and again, a.a for the ftlm as a whole, warm smiles that stay on the faces could never handle; a witch and a full of sound and fury, and, moat over-lay on the 80und-traclc is of ignorance ls bllu. of the audience throughout moat goat drop on and off stage to pro­ assuredly,· signifying nothing. The many dlfrerent 10unds not related Just having Steve ·McQueen as of the performance. 'ftlose same vide kind of a circus atmosphere film seems to set the pretense that to the visual dimension, for this the star puts Bullitt in the fair-to- smiles linger on hours after the to certain parts of the play. if you get enough colored U1hta, trick bas been used by such peo- mlddlln' category. The perform- performance 111 over. . The performances of the players enoqh anti-elltabllahment looking pie as Bergman for yean with ance be puts In as :Prank Bullltt The play'• setting ls a famlllar in the cast are truly great. You people wbo do enough anti-estab­ succeu; lt la not the fact that the of the San Francisco police force one to lhe fani of WUUam's. The can go all the way down the line to llabment things before the camera sequences are not chronologlcal, puts the film at the top of the llsta, •playwright tra1111po11e11 the warm the small chlldren and ftnd a good (smoke pot, indulge sexuaily In for a juxtaposed time overlap was even Saturday Review hurriedly Italian people be met ln Rome understanding and adaptatlon of every type of activity, and other used ln Stanley Donon's Two for squealng .lt in as one of the Ten lnto bls Deep South backyard and the play. Wlth the free time that new and avant-garde thlnp ·that the Road, and ailowed a ftlm to Beat of 1968. Fast cutting, a mini- does great things wlth them. The semester break will allow any one just everyone 11 doing) that you be made out of a marital union on mum of dialogue, and a good play'a story is one of the ups and Interested In superb theatre should ·have made yourself a movie flt strike that could never have been amount of cllff-hanglng chase downs of the loves of a woman, drQp In at Edgecliff and catch lhe for the times, that you have made made otherwise. scenes point the way to the perfect Serafina delle Rose. Her love for Rose Tattoo. You wlll be a better an artistic contrlbutlon, and that No, the bang-up Iles In the fact example of the New Wave of Amer- her deceased dope-running hus- person for it. you are deftnltely with lt. that, as ln ail art, discipline, or at lean cinema. See lt. band rules her llfe and that of her Alas, the whole thing smells of least order, la the key which makes daughter. The ashes of her dead yesterday's hash. Aside from the the whole thing gel. Thls orderwas husband are kept In a marble urn fact that the camera work Is poor, totally Ignored In lbe putting to-. in the home and worshipped like lbe editing miserable and lhe logi­ gelber of YA WYE, and the results a tln god. Flashbacks of her pre- cal progression of a thought pro­ make the slns of its fathers well vlous husband are provided by cess absent, the entire concept of known. The only sequence lhat this another truck driver who physi- the film seems to have been hatched revlewer remembers as actually cally resembles her late husband. by the same type of mind who fun, and lacking in the pretense The nervous love affair of the could taJce Mr. Warhol seriously of the rest of lhe flick, was the short widow and Alvaro Manglacavello ~~~~--~~--_..~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~!

---·-·-···---···------... ··-·-- - - -· .. P111 Four XAVIER UNIVERSITY, CINCINNATI, OHl.O, FRIDAY, JANUARY 17, 1969

Upeomin.i Foes

By DENNIS ECKART .olews !iports Reporter

Three out of the four next Mus­ kie games are away Crom home. These games are critical in deter­ mining whether or not XU enjoys a successful season. It all starts l I tomorrow nite with Xavier at the University of Detroit, January 25 Air Force comes flying to Xavier. ~,lore Than a Game Then up to Dayton on the 27th By CHUCK QUINN, News Sports F.ditor for a rematch with the Flyers and then the Muskier roundballers end "Consider for a momenl what we achieve from athletics . .. the sheer fun o January at Miami. pla_ring. . . the building of a healtlay and alert mind.. . . s~i'.!°, courage, Tomorrow, Jan. 18, the Mus­ unselfishness and, most importantly, perhaps - the will to WIJL . kies will journey to Detroit, Michi­ gan to take on the University of R.F.K. Detroit and , star of last years Olympic team. 1------1 Haywood ls currently in the top The words above were not spoken by a coach who had just won the Super Over everyone · · · Luther Rackley's hook shot gives XU their ftna five of the country In scoring and Bowl. The words above were not spoken by a polilician. The words above points. should prove quite a Job for Xavier were spoken by an individual who realiz.ed the value o( athlelics. Photos by CHUCK TREISTER of News StalJ to defend. Bob Caliban's Titans were only 13 and 12 the last time Spor18 are more than a money-making deal for a group of businesmnen. L.------·..------arbund but are looking forward to Sports bring out scmething mnaU and llOIDething fme. Ii:i life it is the l!DlaD so CLO SE BUT off f a much better season thlsyeareven finer things that give it importance. It doesn't matter whether its an alhlelic • though eight members of lastyears conlellt, a busine111 deal, or a romance, the mnaU thing• make the difference. so FAR varsity have graduated. Detroitwill Athlelics is more than a game. For the prolelllionals it ii a job - a way to By JOHN PRICE rise or fall on the efforts of Spencer earn a living. For others it could mean an education - through sch ola rship. News Assoc. Sports Editor Haywood. Still for others it ii a means o(e~oymenL No matter for which reason a per- "We had the opportunities to called which waseventuallywonby The Air Force Falcons will start • • le • lhl .:- h •• ~ .i._ th k'-'-' 1 __ .i. u the Bearcats. the same five that they did last year son partiCapa s an a e""'"• e ge ... more 1rom lll'Cll• an 11:a1ng a mowa win, but we didn't. We have no- when they visit Xavier January or making a ba!ltet. body to blame but ourselves." The "I couldn't understandthecall," 25th. Ail indications are that Bob If one plays an organir.ed sport it takes a great deal of sacrifice. The ath- words of a disappointed George lamented Krajack. "The ref inter- Spear's squad will better their 9 1 tra' • Iete must be willmg• to gave• · up muc h 1or h'11 sport...... rnere are many anmg Krajack, ditl just ·about f th XU sum UC up thish preted Tom's position as beingU in and 15 record of last season and rules that have to be observed. Anyone who has ever played organir.ed sports year s e on ° e - c1 as ' the corner, but he was ha way develop a possible Ail-American knows that there ii a lot more to alhlelics that isn't in a field or court. To the 7797 fans in attendanceld' between the corner and midcourt." candidate in Cliff Parsons who re­ it was evident that the game wou As the Bearcats set up for what wrote the Air Force record book Most 1por18 are team sports. This is how one learns teamwork. An out­ boil down to a matter of which they hoped would be the last shot, in his junior year and Is bound to standing player may have to give up a chance at personal glory for the sake team had final possession, and Joe Gromada deflected a pass to do some editing this season also. of feUow players. Don't think that iln't ·hard, everyone likes to be in the burly Rick Robersonhadthehooor Terry Sillles who lost control on a Parsons is the key to the Falcons limelight. Teamwork will come in hand later in life, after aU we have to learn of ending the hot-potato match drive and U.C.cameupforanother offense and stopping him is essen- to live with other people. wlth an easy shot for a breath of air. tial to victory. It takea a great deal of courage to play spor18. Thing• can get pretty diffi­ 52-50 Bearcat victory. Don Hess, the U.C. forward, When the Muskies head for cult at times. Athletes can leam to "hang in" when the chips are down. They. Possession was something surprised everyone ~y taking a Dayton on January 27, they'll be learn you can't quit when things get bard. They see that you get more value neither ~earn had' a monopoly on jumper with 20 seconds left, and going to a real contest. The Flyers when you do something that is hard. They fmd out that if you do badly all night as both squads suffered he delighted the Xavier fans when will be trying to avenge the 59-55 through 21 turnovers in the first he missed. setback that the Muskies handed one game there will be another game to make it up. half alone. "In this type of pres- John Zeides was pressured as them Januaey 4th. Packing Mickey Mental awareneu and the ability to react quickly - one gets from athletes. sure game, you have to expect a he crossed the midcourt stripe and Donoher's squad are the 6-10 Dan Things happen pretty fast in sports and an athlete has to be able to keep his lot of turnovers," said Krajack. his errant pass tipped off Grom- Obrovac and 6-8 George Jankv. cool. One has to be able to adapt to changes not only in spor18 but in life. "Both teams were tight and the ada's hands and over the time line On Thursday, Jan. 30 the Mus­ Phy1ical fatness ii needed for 1ports. It is alao needed for any individual. play was cautious," he added. giving the Bearcat's the last chance Only 4 7 points were scored in they needed. kies journey up to Miami in Ox­ There ii a lot more to phy1ical 6tne11 than what one Beel in a body-building the first hall as X. U. took a slim ford, Ohio, for a game with the "I tried to get John to call a advertisement in the back o( a magazine. Proper diet and reat are neceuary 24-23 lead on the wings of spark­ perennial rival Redskins. Miami time out," reealled Krajack, "but for one to be in top physical condition. With aU that ii said about being in plug Chris Hall. With 6:04 remain­ is coming off an 11 and 12 season he didn't see me. He probably shape nowadays, one can see how an alhlete has a step in the right direction. ing in the first period, Hall came and the situation is not much brigh­ thought he should make one more off the bench to push the Muskies ter this year as their leading· scorer The fun o( playing sports ii also importanL Sports are a way o( relaxing pass to get out of trouble." Fred Foster (26.8) graduated and and lettiaig off llleam. If you don't believe tbil, juat a!lt the millions o( people out in front from a 17-13 deficit. The 102 points scored was the only five lettermen return. Coach With Roberson shuffilng in and who go bowling or are in the woods looking for their golf baU. lowest t9tal since 1948 when U.C. Taylor Locke, one of the best In out of the lineup, most of the board One leal'Dll bo'w to complete in sports. AU through life people will be com­ was victorious 52-45. the business, is in the middle of re­ play became a personal duel be­ building Miami and the lack of peting with other people. Persons will be vying in alhlelic conleltl, busineues, tween UC's Jim Ard and Luther Only three players scored in experience and depth could hurt and even for odaer people. There ii nothing wrong with healthy competition. Rackley of the Muskies. "Ourstrat­ double figures with Rackley ac- thl b t i t ell t bl Here ii where the will to win comes - to be a meeeu. egy was to go to Lu as much as counting for 17 and Zeides chip- s year, u It sure o sp rou .e possible," related Krajack. "It's ping in with 10, Ard . paced the for all opponents in future seasons. been paying off for us all year so Bearcats with 19 tallies and ten we stuck with it." rebounds. ® Ard responded well to Rober­ These annual classics are be­ IM NOTES son's absence by scoring nine first coming so tense it's a shame that Jets Surpass Colts half points and pinning Lu with someone has to lose. Coach Kra- three fouls. "I thought Lu's foul jack put it like this: "It's too bad The results are in from the uni­ By PETE FITZGERALD, News Sports Reporter trouble was a definite factor in the that you can't just say 'good game versity billiard tournament: outcome," said Krajack. "He was boys' and call It quits." Junior- Senior champ was Jim Intimidating them in the first half, Barschelt and the Freshman-Soph­ In one of the most unbelievable in the end they intercepted 4 passes but he didn't register a rebound in upsets In the history of Pro Sports omore champ was Tom Kane. Jim while the Colts supposedly-impen­ the second." the AFL champion Jets and Tom had a showdown for the etrable secondary failed to inter­ The biggest lead either team XU Championship and Jim Bar­ stunned the NFL's Baltimore cept any. This game not only was Colts, 16-7, in the third Super could mount in the second half schelt came out on top. Congrats! a tremendous one for. the Jets but was X. U. 's 26-23 advantage in the Flash Bowl. The Colts entered the game a monumental victory fortheAFL. In the Bridge tourny Mike Bet­ as 20 point favorites and many first minute of play. The score was tingheimer and Dan ·Bernhardt No longer can people call it an tied 12 times and lead exchanged were predicting a score around inferior league, with just a few out­ The News Office has just re­ were contract champs and Tom 42-7. (I had predicted a 2~7 Colt hands seven times in the final standing players. ceived word about a skiing con­ Spellemar and Paul LaLonde were victory.) twenty minutes. test. The sixth annual Ohio 2nd. It wasn't just Joe Namath that As it With 2:44 remaining in the Intercollegiate Slalom Ski Races the game wore on was beat the Colts it was men like Ver­ Everyone has 'til 9:00 pm tonite apparent that the Jets were superi­ second half, and visions of last will be run at Clear Fork Valley to get their teams registration for lon Biggs, John Schmidt, Randy year's climactic finish dancing In Resort in Butler, Ohio, on Satur­ or to the Colts in every phase of Beverly, Larry Grantham, Win­ tomorrows Tug-0.War in the field­ the game; Their passing, kicking, everyone's head, Roberson re­ day, January 18. house at 2:30. Sign up in the IM ston Hill, etc. NFL fans better get trieved a miss to knot the score line blocking, tackling, and sec­ used to these names and the other Although it is late entries will office. ondary were clearly better than the at 50-50. AFL names because, whether you still be accepted up till 1 PM Satur­ A tip of the IM hat to the XU much heralded Colts. No passer Following a U. C. three-second day afternoon. There are no regis­ like It or not, Kid Brother has Singles Tennis Champs for 68-69 ever picked the Colts as did Na­ tration fees and there will be grown up quicker than you violation, the Muskies called a time Bill Mathews, Ed Hoaeus, Chuck math. out to map strategy for what ap­ trophies for the winners. thought •.------Eberle and Tim Martin. The experts said that nobody peared would be the final shot of In case of bad skiing weather, Intramural Basketball opened could run against the Colts, but Attention! the game. the contest will be held the follow­ its season on Monday, January Matt Snell gained 121 yards In­ Varsity Baseball Meetings for 'fom Rohling moved the ball ing Saturday, January 25. 7th. This year there are 67 teams cluding a four yard touchdown all Interested will be held Febru­ midway into the forecourt and was Anyone desiring more informa­ participating In the leagues. There run. 'l'hc sportswriters continually ary 6, 10th, and 13th. Dally work­ challenged by Ard. Tom couldn't tion can get I~ touch with the sports are over 650 students on the ros­ maligned the Jet's secondary but outs will begin February 17th. make a pass and a jump-ball was editor. ters of the teams. XAVIER UNIVERSITY, CINCINNATI, OHIO, FRIDAY, JANUARY 17, 1969 Pa11 Five

Volleyball XU Stars By BRADJ,EY RIDER The volleyball clinic was held. The crowds were poor. We'll try again. ,'f!It' \ •. • On Saturday, January 11, at Ill 2:00 o'clock p.m. two volleyball teams from a Cincinnati YMCA, ~ and two excellent coaches con­ ducted a volleyball clinic open to v- ~ all Xavier students. Unfortunately very few students took advantage B ow I Games of this rare opportunity. Leading the clinic was Mr. Herb Carroll, By CHRIS NICOLINI an excellent coach who refereed While a good many Xavier stu­ In closing John stated, "Besides volleyball at the 1966 Pan Amer­ dents were eating, throwing down being honored to play in these ican Games. Mr. Carroll will be drinks, and being entertained by games, I feel that I have been conducting another volleyball endless football games at least two able to alert people nationally to clinic Saturday, January 18 at the Xavier students were on the enter­ Xavier's name. If this is true I University of Tennessee. Also lead­ tainment end. Defensive tackle Den­ will have been able to re-pay ing the clinic was a fine coach and nis Dineen andAll-Americanguard Xavier for what they have done player named Mr. Hugh Parrish John Shinners both were selected for me." who instructs volleyball at a local to play in post season games. Both YMCA. The two teams involved For Dennis and John It will be displayed an excellent fieldoftalent John and Dennis played in the a week of preparation for exams North-South Shrine Game on which impressed all who were pre­ and then the pro draft on Janu­ sent. This reporter observed tech­ Rohling Scores . . . Forward Tom Rohling scores to knot the game Christmas Day. In addition John ary 28. Hopefully their perfor­ played in Tampa's All-America niques in warm-ups serving, de­ \48 all. mances In these three games will fense, offense, and positions by Bowl on Jan. 4 and in Mobile's increase their market value. '------....;·.P·h-ot_o_•_b_y_c_H_u_c_K_T_R_E_i_s_T_E_R_o_f_N_e_w_•_s_ta_ff_. Senior Bowl only last Saturday. these two teams and their coaches. John described the pregame Largely responsible for this preparation as ldemical for each clinic was Mr. Sullivan, lntermural Warriors Steal One(Won) game. No pads were used in the Help Co-ordinator at Xavier. It was drills. "The practices were tough, through his untiring efforts that but a relaxed attitude prevailed," this demonstration of ·skill was From Muskies said big John. The classroom brought to the Fieldhouse. Taking work was made somewhat simpler Baseball notes throughout the two hour by the fact that in all games the period, Mr. Sullivan expressed his By JOHN PRICE, News Assoc. Sports Editor hopes of starting a Volleyball Club coaches agreed to play a 4-3 with The Xavier University Baseball which, hopefully next Fall, would no blUzlng, or stunting. team ls planning for its sixth an- The Xavier Musketeers suffered Following an early splurge by be active in playing other teams their second disappointing setback Marquette's outstanding guard Denny felt that to play in such nual southern trip during the Eas­ from the surrounding area. The in four days as they bowed to a Dean Meminger, Lu and Darby a game was a great honor. "I felt ter vacation. Since this ls a trip only thing that ls stopping Mr. that Parseghlan was a great coach which we assume responslblllty for ·Strong Marquette Warrior squad brought the Muskies from behind Sulll\'an ls you. If you're looking and organizer. Joe Yonto (a Par- raising the funds to pay the ex­ 82-69 at Milwaukee. to even the score at 33-33 at the for something out of the ordinary. seghlan-alde at the domed school) penses of travelling, eating and If you're willing to get a little exer­ Surprisingly "high" for thecon­ intermission. really taught me a lot. Rocky Mar- lodging, our 1969 Club has agreed cise and maybe conpete against test following their last-second de­ Xavier ran a streak of nine tin of Colorado was the hardest upon a blood donation at Good neighboring schools next fall, then feat against Cincinnati, the Muskies points at the start of the second hitter I have ever seen. John Kolb Samaritan Hospital as its money give the Volleyball Club a try. played on even terms with the War­ half to bolt to a 42-35 advantage. of Oklahoma state, the boy I pla- raising project. Each player or We don't want the ones who will riors for 38 minutes, but the final The Warriors held their compos­ ted across from could really stick. friend of the Baseball Team who show up now and then. We want two proved costly and a possible ure, however, and behind 6'5" If our linebackers hadn't done participates will receive a check for the kind of guy who ls interested center Ric Cobb, Memlnger, and major upset slipped away. such an outstanding job Mercury $15.00 with his name and Baseball in playing volleyball and ls willlng Thompson they stormed back and . With the arithmetic reading 71~ Morris ( West Texas State) would . Coaches name both listed. To date to stick it out. 69 in favor of Marquette and only waited for the kill in the final two have really hurt us." we have checks on deposit at the minutes. When questioned about the two minutes remainlnginthegame, John was a winner in all three Treasurer's Office totalling $225; possibilities of another cllnlc, Mr. Meminger and Thompson, Al forward George Thompson con­ games and is $1000. richer for this is far from our goal of $1,200 Sullivan answered favorably in McGuire's two brilliant New York verted a pair of free throws to up having been on the winning side in which ls needed for the Southern saying he can arrange another if recruits, led the Warrior attack, the Warrior lead to four. The vic­ the Senior Bowl. John felt the most Trip. we want it. Mr. Sullivan cares, I scoring 24 and 20 points respec­ tory was sealed away in the next memorable experience of the three We are maJdng an appeal to the think it's about time we started to tively. 17 of Memlnger's points few seconds as two errant X. U. games was a visitation made to students at Xavier to rally behind care about something worthwhile. came in the first hall accounting p11ssers were turned into two has­ the Shrine Crippled Children's the Baseball Team in this project; When bulllnessmen and students for all but 16 of his squad's total. kets by the alert Marquette defense. Hospital in MlamL "It made you · show them that we are truly back­ from a YMCA will take time out He also retrieved nine rebounds The 10,055 fans were treated to feel that you were playing for a ing them and the Baseball Program to come to Xavier, display a good and handed out six assists to com­ an excellent shooting display as worthwhile cause," remarkedJohn. at Xavier in the true Xavier spirit. show of volleyball to less than a plete afineall-aroundperformance. both teams. combined to place seven While in Mobile, John said many Get in contact with anyone of the handful of students and then volun­ men in double figures in the scor­ The victory raised Marquette's people readily recognized Xavier Baseball Players or with the Coach teer to come back anytime again­ ing column. So even was the game record to 11-2 as they avenged since the Muskie baaketballera had and tell us that you are lending a donate their time-share their sport that Marquette shot 463 from the an overtime loBB suffered at the just gained runner up honors in helping hand to a very.worthypro­ with us, then it's worth giving Door, while the Muskies hit for an hands of the Muskies last year. the Mobile Classic. ject. Wives, girl friends, parents more than surface attention to. equally impressive 453. Xavier, dropping the first of three The oddest experience for John or anyone interested ln the Unl­ Give these men a chance. Nobody difficult road assignments, fell be­ Once again Luther Rackley was during the American Bowl In versity Baseball Team ls to feel ls so busy that he cannot find time low .500 for the second time this paced the Muskies with 21 points Tampa where John played six perfectly free to come to our assis­ to exercise a little. Maybe if cer­ year. while grabbing a game high of 16 posltlons. John rated Allie . Sher- tance. The Musketeer Club has tain students would quit acting like rebounds. Lu got plenty of help The Muskies will have another man and Roosevelt Broen two of offered to help. university p11eudo-savlors-and start from forwards Don Darby and shot at the Warriors when McGuire his coaches at the Senior Bowl as Joseph M. Hawk to have a little constructive fun in Tom Schlager, and thlstrloproved brings his crew to the fieldhouae the beat he had during the trio of Baseball Coach their lives, they will. become better to be a formidable Inside challenge on February 18. individuals. for the highly rated Warriors We don't care if you're threefeet tall or eight feet tall. All we care about ls that you have desire. Give yourself a chance. Look forfurther Basketball Statistics details as to the time and place of the next Volleyball Club meeting -- ...... in the News. Mr. Sullivan ls al­ ways available in the IM Dept. to answer any questions. This re­ porter will be at the next meetlng­ ii how about you? Player Games Rebounds Points Average Luther Rackley 12 168 220 18.3 John Zeldes 12 27 134 11.3 Tom Schlager 12 64. 120 10.0 Chris Hall 12 19 119 9.9 Joe Gromada 12 21 86 7.2 Tom Rohling 11 66 58 5.3 Don Darby 11 66 45 4.1 ·-··-­ Terry Sillies 8 18 14 1.8 -- Rick Reder 7 6 12 1. 7 Chuck Kromer 3 5 4 1.3 Thanks , Perry Ashley 4 3 2 0.5 Zeides Driving .... Captain John ·Zeldes drives In on UC's Jim Ard · Steve Poppe 2 8 1 0.5 for a layup that put the Muskies ahead 42-40. MW, CK, LT Mike Kelsey l 1 0 0.0 Photos by CHUCK TREISTER or News Stan'(: i .·:··~~======·. Sii =· =····===· =··: =XA=Y=IE=R=u==·==·Y=ER=S==•"=~=-C=••::c='·=·='=··=;... O=H=IO=· '=F=Rl=D·=· '=' ·=· A=NU=A=·='='7=;'=1969=· =· =' ·======~=~==· :.::: : .. - Y-Ds Enter So~ial. A..-ction By· .J. MICHAEL DUNPHY, Mai Bllecullve Editor ·,Now that the Campatsn of '88 unteen wUl be worldns with Cbrll ha1 been decided and the pomfcal . Mulle wbo 11 in charge of after­ hylterla of pre-November day1 noon actlvltlea at the Center. baa waned, the Youns DelDI are Another area of lnterat to the moving to develop other facets of Young Demi 11 the St. Paul Teen their orpnlzatl.on. One of th~ Center at Twelfth am Pendelton faceta Ilea ln the area of commu- tn the Over-the-Rblne dbtrlct. Dean nity relations. Dan Laurence, Floyd, Director of the Teen Cen­ Treasurer of the YD's, baa organ- ter, welcomes any and all volun­ iZed a program In cooperation teers interested in spending a few with the Main Street Bible Center hours a week helping out. Dean ls and the St. Paul Teen Center for organizing basketball and volley students interested in learning and ball teams and needs coaches to working in depressed urban areas. staff them. Another program in "We are providing our members need cf assistance ls the Big Bro­ and interested students an oppor- ther project which attempts to tunlty to broaden their outlook;" establish a one to one relationship stated Laurence, "to become in- with a boy and a volunteer. volved and concerned with prob- The underlying philosophy of lems that exist in the Inner-city the Young Dems has been one of areas." involvement and commlttment and The Main Street Bible Center ls the need to broaden this phlloso­ located in the Over-the-Rhine area phy to include the entire student and provides a variety of activities body. Here then ls a perfect oppor­ for all ages of the community. The tunity to become involved with Center attempts to provide an In- some of the problems of our dlvldual person to person contact society. For further information with the residents of the area and contact Dan Laurence In Husman So fight ice with ice. Bribe them with a bottle of ice-cold • in particular with the children. Vol- 362. Coca-Cola. For Coke has the refreshing taste you never get tired of. That's why things go better with Coke, after Coke, after Coke. Student Discount Set Bottled under authority of The Coca-Cola Company by: In view of the success of the Mount St. Joseph, and Thomas · The Coca-Cola Sottling Works Company, Cincinnati 1968 year, the Student Program ls More (formerly Villa Madonna). 'to be continued again this year. ______...-.-.----==~==!~------., Sophomore Mark Cleary will act b as General Chairman of the 1969 H t ~ew program, taking the reins from ow 0 · Ray Blush, who instituted the pro- gram last year. Mike Martin will act as the Xavier SDP Chairman K B with Dick Grlfftn, Mike King, John th • f Howlett, Nick Esposito, Jim Gar- . g garo, Blll Ryan, and Kevin Roo- e . . ID 0 eers® ney as committee members. If you 're a new student, or aren't If you're a new student, or aren't familiar with the dbcount Ever wonder how Anheuser-Busch takes our breweries for a first-hand look. (The program, here's how it works. To get your dlacount all you need the choicest hops, rice and best barley pleasure will be mutua~.) ls your ID Card, a little caah, malt-and turns it into the King of and a Student Discount Booklet Meanwhile, purely in the interest of which lists all the participating Beers? science and . higher education, here's a merchants. Just present your ID Best way to find out is to visit one of quick cr1;1m course. card at the time of purchase and the dlscount ls all yours. New con- tracts with the merchants Involved will be l11ued as of Feb. 1, l969, and· unW then the merchanta have been aaked to extend the former contracts, which expired Sept. 30, 1968. The program has also been en­ larged for 1969. Many new mer­ chants will be added this year, along with two new schools: the• Ohio Colle1e of Applied Sclence, and the University of Kentucky Extension. Orlpnal membership was composed of Xavier Uni­ versity, University of Cincinnati., Our Lady of Clnclnnatl College, Dean's Speech "Our commlbnent to current 1. . At the laut.er tanks, we <.'OOk dense lat.t.ic:e of beechwood strips. do), a brewmaster who puts his problems ln American Society" malt and rice t.o f>rOOUl~ a clear tThis is where Beechwood Ageing heart and soul into brewing the waa the topic of this aemeater's, amber liquid called wort. <.'Omes in. lt.'s a costly extra step, King of Beers, the choicest ingre­ twenty-second Dean's Speech Tour­ but we think the difference it dients (the cost of which keeps our nament, December- 11, 1968, Tom · 2. Then to the <.'Opper brew kettles, where choi&st imported and do- · . makes in the taste and clarit.y of treasurer awake at night), and Willenborg demonatrated hla elo­ Budweiser is worth it!) We add a thousands of brewery workers who quence by winning the flrat place mestic hops are added to the wort -which is cooked again. · little freshly-yeasted wort to st.art knou• Budweiser is the best reason award. H11 apeech, "A War We the se<.'Ond fermentation, and let in the world to drink beer. 3. Now, aft.er <-'OOling, the wort Can Win," merited him 'the top it. "work." Next lesson? Well, we were going trophy and a $25 award provided flows into our own patented fer­ to tell you how to drink Bud~. by Dr. Hallatonea, Dean· of the .menters, where brewers' yeast 5. The final step. The Budweiser College of Business Admlnistra· works to ferment ~atural s.ugars flows through a series of finishing But you know that. ti.on. into afoohol and CO;i. This is where filters just before we package it for Like to know more about brewing you in barrels, cans or bottles. Tom Buehler, Jim Gnienwald, wort becomes beer.. · in general. and Bud in particular'! John Layne, and Ted Rou11U were 4. Mast beers are finished now. . If that ti0unds like anybody could Write for our free booklet: It "Choicest Hops" the four finalist• ftnishlng behind ~ot B,µdweiser. We ferment it brew Budweiser, forget it. takes Box 8791 Tom. Buehler and Gruenwald re­ again, this time ·in special glass­ a special kind of brewery lWe have Jefferson Memorial Station ceived second and third place Jined tanks partially filled with a the only six in t.he world that will St. Louis, Missouri 63102 trophiea respectively for their ef. forts. Layne and Roussll were given certlflcates of merit. All the awards were presented bythePresl~ ROCK, FOLK, JAZZ GROUPS! dent of the XU Dads Club, Mr.· Enter the '69 Inter· Joseph Nordloh. Acting as judges collegi.1te Music Fes- IJ-1 ti val, co-sponsored were Mr. Nordloh, Mr. Gene by the brewers ol .i­ Beaupre, President of the Student Budweiser. Write: Body, and Rev. Lawrence S. l.M.F., Bo~ 121s; Leesburg, Fla. 32748. Flynn, S.J., Chairman oftheCom­ m·\icatlons Arts Department. . • .ST. ..LOU $. •·NEWARK.• -LOS ANGELES ·• TAMPA .•. HOUSTON • COLUMBUS

~-~~-) .... -· ._._..:.__·_.o...... o.'-·-····-·----·-'··.,- ....c . • XAVIER ·UNIVERSITY,. CINCINNATI, OHIO• FRIDAY~ JANUARY 17, 1969· ·

· ·. Frank- Leinhart · .. -."·Th·,a"nd Pr~: ... ··Harv~~eck· Explai'ns Revolution - The University · ·.,_-. · · Jesuit Education

So far thla column baa le1e ·· ·1tudent hai parente more .. undergraduate 1chool II unreal Last spring, Fr. ·Robert Harvanek, ·head of the attempted to splaln the current amuent than ever before; hie ftnan- Second, the atmoephere of 1radu­ Chicago Province of the Society of Jesus, explained, revolutlom ln the Church and clal dependence le greater and ate echool le polluted by pedantry in Faculty and Student Talk, the uniqueness of Thetto ln terms of the alienated la1ts longer than ever before. In- and politlce. Third, the average a individual. Thia week we turn tq 1tlnctlvely he . fee1a that a Ille of unlverelty adminlitratlpn views the Jesuit education, when he toured the campus. 'the alienated 1tudent. Today'• col- taking rather than produclrw II students much as the manapment To claim that Jesuit education between knowledge and moral unreal. But a bachelor's degree- of pre-union sweatshops viewed ls unique, h~ explained, ls not to action. la a necessity. If the student goes labor during the Industrial Revo­ contend that it la one-of-a-kind. Fr. Harveneck explained that to graduate school, the work load lutlon - with lnd~rence or pater­ There ls actually little difference historically the university educa­ and competition demand complete nallstic lndlfrerence. between the general Catholic con-. tion established by the Jesuit order DON'T . dedicatlon,. very often at the ex- Undergraduate school ls mass cept of education and the specific was an overDow of the training penae of personal relationships production oriented and therefore Jesuit concept; in fact "so little then used for young Jesuits. It such as marriage. In short, under- quality control oriented. Quality difference as to be not worth fight­ was aimed at an understanding of graduate school creates or pro- control la that aspect of an aa­ ing for." However, Fr. Harveneck fundamental Catholic doctrine and LOOK felt that there are two basic char­ the communication of lt. The char­ longa an identity crisis. Graduate sembly line which determines how school fosters a single-minded sel- well the final product comes up acteristics of the Jesuit concept. acteristic Jesuit adherence to the ftshness and postponement of in- to specifications. But the blue­ Haverneck contended first that arts and sciences and humaniUes NOW volvement in the wrear world. . print of a good liberal education there is a "polarity, a fertilization" can be attributed to the fact that that occurs between the secular the Jesuit order was founded dur­ A much more basic problem ,ls intangible. Therefore education But you learning and the understanding of ing the Renaissance. ls created by the universities them- is scrapped ·for instruction which the Faith that are the two prime selves. First, the atmosphere of lends itself well to tests. But Harveneck did not explain maybe about concerns of the Jesuit campus. his understanding of the contem­ The idea ls not to devise a test Each must of necessity influence porary Jesuit education, nor did to blow to measure what one teaches, but the other, since each is to be pur­ he explain its current relevance. your life .. to teach what one can effectively sued deeply within thesameuniver­ In fact, the entire discussion period test. In fact, we might sum up sity. Secondly, a Jesuit university was spent in trying to bring his undergraduate epistemology in is distinguished by its advocation idealistic conception of Jesuit edu­ the dictum. "Knowledge ls that of Christian ethics and morality. An astonishing number of . cation to grips with the realistic . which a ·test measures." From This, also, Harveneck referred to situation facing Xavier and other people make a stupid and tragic SAT's to GRE's, college ls ori­ as a "cross-fertilization" process Jesuit universities in these, our mistake. To put it simply, they STEAKHOUSE ented toward the rather pedantic by which secular knowledge and times. jump into careers without really tests which graduate school and daily behavior are integrated with Fr. "Harveneck was on the looki11g. The result-a dreary life business demands. Christianity. And this he suggested Xavier campus inspecting the uni­ of frustration and anger. might be connected with what versity during the week previous to Can this happen to you? Could l11ecl•I C•t C••r·lr•l•lf many people identify as the "pas­ the FAST session, since Cincinnati be-unless you can answer ques­ • Sirloin St11k toral function of the university," and Xavier are within the Chicago tions like these to your own satis­ • ltll1ho B11ctd Pot1t1 THE SHIRT that is, to establish a connection Province. faction before you make your move: Are you really a Chief... or an c•er1 Crl11t G•rlf•• LAUNDRY Indian? Do you belong in a big organi­ ····~~••I II•• I •ta MolltlJamery Road , zation? Or a small one? Or do you ...... EVANSTON Gerllc belong by yourself? llrHc• lell $159 One Block Sautb of Dana Can you really stand pressure? Few Block1 North of tbe Dorm -· There are a great many serious ROSELAWN BACHELOR SERVICE questions you must ask-and an­ 7100 leelli11• 14. FLUFF DRY BUNDLES swer-about a career. But t-hc most NORTHERN KY. critical arc the ones you ask your­ 4211 Oiaie Hwy. e .t-HOUR SERVICE e self about you. 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XAVIER UNIVERSITY, CINCINNATI, OHIO, FRIDAY, JANUARY 1.7, 1969 Pa1e Ei&ht

A'rr•;~TION - SENIORS - GRADUATE STUDENTS

CO:\ll'A~rns INT•:Rvrnw111m ON CAMPUS·- FEHHUARY 1969

DATE CO:\ll'A~Y UEGHEES POSITIONS Feb. 7 Federai Deposit lnsurane<• l'o. Bus. Degrees Bank Examiner Trainee Frida~· Econ-Finance-At Least 6 Hours Accting Feb. 7 Xerox l'om pa ny All Degrees Sales Friday

Feb; 7 First ::\ntional Bank Bus. Degrees B~nk :\lanagement Trainee Frida~·

Feb. I 0 I II ~I All Degrees Sales-Systems ~londay Feb. IO Leeds & ::\orthmp Physics-Science Field Sales ~londay Bus. Degrees Feb. I 0 Internal Hevenue Accounting Majors Hevenue Agent ~Ionday Bus. Oegrees-12 Hours Accounting Special Agent Feb. 10 All State Insurance Co. All Degrees Claims-Underwriting ~londny Sales-Administration

Feb. 11 ~lagnavox r\ccounting-l'sychology Accountants-Personnel Tuesday Bus. Degrees-Chemistry Sales-Hesearch & Develop.

Feb. 11 Eli Lill~· Bus. IJegrces-~I BA Accounting-Sales Tuesday Chcmistry-:\lath BS/.1.IS :\larketing- i'rogrammer/Analyst Feb. I I Union Central Life insurance Accounting-:\lath .1.Iajors Data Proc. -Actuarial Tuesday All Degrees Management Trainee Feb. 12 Eastman Kodak BS/:\IS Chemistry-Physics Hesearch & Development \\'ecincsciay (2 Schedules) Business Degrees Production· Marketing Quality Control Feb. 12 Interlake Steel Ail Degrees Production Management \\'ednesday Industrial Sales (:\lath) Programmers Feb. 13 General Telephone Accounting-Finance Accountant Thursday Statistics/Math Traffic Engineers Business Degrees Sales-Communications Consult. Feb. 13 Purdue University All Degrees Purchasing-Marketing Thursday Bus. Office Management Accounting-Data Proc. Feb. 13 Chemical Abstracts Service BS/:\I S Chemistry-Math-Physics Systems Analyst-Programmer Thursday Editorial Work On Chemical Abstracts Feb. 13 Chas. l'fizer Co. All Degrees Pharmaceutical Sales 'Ibursday Feb. 14 Alexander Grant Accounting BS/or MBA Public Accounting Friday Follow the Pied Piper, favorite haunt of the on-campus mystic. Feb. 14 Armco Steel Accounting-Finance Controller - Purchasing Exotic Oriental coffee, 5¢. .Friday Marketing -Bus. Degrees Sales-Marketing-Transportation Chemistry - Physics Research & Development (Continued from page 1) Feb. 14 International Harvester All Degrees Production Management Friday Accounting -Sales Management Trainee please see either Bob Bartels ( 281- Candidates will be able to cam­ Feb. 17 Bureau of Federal 15 Hou rs Accou ntl ng Auditor 3068) or Ray Kemp (531-0048). paign from February 10 to · 13, :\londay Credit Unions Business Degrees-Psychology Limited Income Specialist The Queen's contest will be han­ the balloting on February rn and Feb .. 17 Western & Southern Life Also Math Majors Actuarial 14. Monday Insurance dled by Ed Schmitt (Kuhlman 601). The names and biogra­ This year Social Committee will Feb. 17 Arthur Anderson Accounting Major or Public Accounting :\londay Minimwn of 12 Hours phies must be in on or before Jan­ offer $50 a night for any club uary 21 ( Tuesday) and their. pic­ wishing to clean-up the Armory. Feb. I 7 Republic Steel Co. Econ-Physics-Math-Bus. Degrees Sales Trainee .1.londay Accounting - Fina nee -Marketing Production Management tures must be in on or before Jan­ Any Interested club please see Tim Staff Management uary. 24 ( Friday). The Queen Rooney ( Kuhlnia~ 322). SOMETHING NEW IN CAMPUS LIVING AVAILABLE JANUARY, 1969 "THE FRATERNITY HOUSE" A NEW COMPONENT OF THE LINK COMPLEX ADJOINING THE XAVIER CAM PUS

1544 Dana Ave, at Ledgewood Drive

e 2 MINUTES FROM CLASS, CHAPEL AND CAFETERIA e SWIMMING POOL PRIVILEGES Al MANOR HOUSE

e WALL TO WALL CARPETING. PRIVATE TELEPHONE LINE. • WASHER-DRYERS, SNACKS, DRINKS, CIGARmEs VENDING MACHINES AVAILABLE AT MANOR HOUSE e TELEVISION. NEWLY REDECORATED, NEW FURNITURE & DRAPES. e YARD AND LARGE PORCH FOR SUMMER LOUNGING. e FULLY E.OUIPPED KITCHEN, DINING FOR 8. e LARGE CUPBOARDS; LARGE RATZKALLER; TUB AND SHOWERS. e PARKING. HOUSEMOTHER PROVIDES SERVICES, LINENS ETC.

Approved by University Hoitsing Committee for off.campus housing,· all rules apply. APPLY NOW. SPECIAL RA TES. MRS. MADLYN GRUBE, RE 1-6505

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