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5-13-1981 Spectator 1981-05-13 Editors of The pS ectator

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Recommended Citation Editors of The peS ctator, "Spectator 1981-05-13" (1981). The Spectator. 1630. http://scholarworks.seattleu.edu/spectator/1630

This Newspaper is brought to you for free and open access by ScholarWorks @ SeattleU. It has been accepted for inclusion in The peS ctator by an authorized administrator of ScholarWorks @ SeattleU. Administration'followedpolicy'intenure delays byMark Guelff and thorough, Sullivan noted, which also facultymember'scareer,livelihoodand job Despitethe fact that somefacultyconsider addedto thelengthofthe process. "Idoubt decisionthatadelayisnotinthebestinterest tenure announcement delaysinsensitive, the thatthe last twoor threeyearsthat the rank'' of the faculty memberand the University, administrationwillholdthis year'sdecisions and tenurecommitteehasputinmoretime. according to Harriet Stephenson, chair- untilJune, before thenotificationdeadline. As a result, he added, "the"ultimate bene- personof thefacultysenate. But Gary Zimmerman, academic vice ficiaryofthatis thestudents. Inthe new faculty handbook,Stephenson president,disagrees. "Idon't think we are added,"We (the senate) wouldlike toseeit beinginsensitive,'' hesaid. SteenHailing, associateprofessor ofpsy- movedup to March 1(when contracts are chologyanda facultymemberup for tenure sentout). When each facultymember iscontracted this year, speculated that this year's deci- to theUniversity,heagreestostatutes which sions werecontroversialand thepeoplewho "Ihaven't heardone faculty membersay clearly state the timeline that peoplewillbe could get upset would be students. In re- that they supporttheJune 15 deadline,"she notified if they are not goingto be rehired, sponse, Sullivan said that decisions would Zimmerman said. The administration has not be moredifficult or important thanany The senate recommendedlast week thata adheredtothosetimelines,headded. other year. memobe sent to the president encouraging "Idon'tthink anyonehasbeenkeptinthe And,he added,"Theideathatby follow- him to release the information as early as darkabouttheprocess." ing whatis in the facultyhandbook, you're possible, said Warren Johnson, AAUP goingtoavoidany response,or deny people (American Association of University Pro- Four of the eight faculty memberscon- theiropportunity torespond,seemstome to fessors)president. sidered for tenure are concerned because be overlookingthe fact that theindividualin The rank and tenure committee agreed decisions, apparently final, were not re- questioninany tenuredecision,'' isgoingtobe that the tenure process should take place leased shortly after the April 24 board of aroundforanotheryear. earlierintheyear,Zimmermansaid.Though trusteesmeeting. that would mean department chairmen But William Sullivan, S.J., University If there is further discussion, he said, it wouldbe completingbudget proposalsand president,said theadministrationis follow- GaryZimmerman comes naturally in the course of the next teacherperformanceevaluations at thesame ingstandardprocedurespecifiedin the fac- year. time,headded. ulty handbook. "Idon't think you need a for faculty. "Ithink it is perfectly normal "We are talking as if on June 15 these "The deans are going to have some real specialreasontodothat.'' and Iam neither denyingthat nor being"in- peoplearegoing todisappearoff the face of tough problems schedulingeverythinginto Sullivan sympathized with stress and sensitivetoit.Iamtryingtofollowpolicy. theearth." fallquarter,"hesaid. strainswhich accompany the tenureprocess This year's tenure decisions werecareful But tenure decisions are so critical to a "But weare willingtolookatit."

The SeattleUniversity Spectator spectator Seattle University,Seattle, Wash Vol. XLIX,No,26 the WednesdayJVlay 13, 1981 'Next best thingtobeing there' may cost more

by Mark Guelfi Instead, students must apply for a credit S.U. residence hall students may have to card number through the phone company. paymorewhilereceivingless fromthephone The student will give that number to the company if Pacific Northwest Bell gets its operator whenplacinglongdistancecalls. wayinOlympia today. The student, depending on his credit rat- Thephonecompanyfiledatariff with the ing,— wouldhaveoneof threebillingoptions: Washington Utilities and Transportation The student's long distance charges Commissionthat,ifadopted,willchange the would— appearonhisparent'sbill. service provided to dormitoriesas early as If the student receives the bill, his Friday. parents— must signa guarantee statement. . Thisisadded toal5 to 16 percent increase The student may apply for thecard in- that allphonecompany customers willface dependently. as soon as next week,according toa phone Unlikethepresent phonecontract system companyrepresentative. whichoffersall studentsalongdistanceline, Under the proposedtariff, dormitory stu- thecreditcardsystemmeansindividualswho dents can make localand on campus calls, want long distance must first have their butwilllosedirect-diallongdistancecapabil- creditreviewedby thephonecompany. ities. Also, the new contract willnot allow "We arelooking at establishing somesort students tobill third party calls to theirdor- of flexiblepolicy so that thosestudents that mitoryrooms,oracceptcollectcalls. don't have much of a credit ratingbehind Students makinglong distancecalls must them willstillhave the opportunityto get a go through theoperator, payinghigheroper- creditcard,"said JeanetteMurphy, account ator-assistedrates. Thatincrease willbebe- executiveforPacificNorthwestBell. tween 30 and 60 cents per call, according to But Judy Sharpe, director of S.U. hous- KipToner,S.U.businessmanager. " ing,objectsto thecreditcardsystem. Billingprocedureswillchange aswell.Stu- "Unless they are willingto guarantee to dents will not have phone contracts that extend thatcredittoeachoneofthestudents photoby michael morgan enablethemtobebilled through themailfor whomovesinto a residencehall;until they Longdistancephone service in collegedormitories maybeaffected by a new Bell long distancecalls. provethey can't handle it;then Iguess Iam Service regulationthat wouldshift theresponsibilityofcollections totheschool. notparticularlyinfavorofit." Most residence hall students are paying pay forany thirdparty calls or acceptedcol- This additional cost was not budgetedby their own housing costs, Sharpe said. As a lect callsthatit is unableto collect fromthe the university this year, Toner said. "Th result,parentsmayrefuse tosignaguarantee students. budgetingprocesshasalreadybeendone." statement, -or allow the student's long dis- "It could be anywhere from as low— as Notuntiltwo weeksafterithad been filet tancechargesontheirbill. $1,000—or $2,000 or $5,000, or up to it's withthe WashingtonUtilitiesandTranspor "Ialso think it violates some privacy," scary $25,000, $30,000 ...$50,000, we tation Commission, did Toner receive any Sharpesaid. don'tknow,"Tonersaid. written informationconcerning the propo When thephonecompanyfound thattele- Partof theproblem, Toneradded,is that sal,andthat wasApril15. ■ phone service to dormitories cost more to theUniversitywillreceivethe billthatcould Toner,Sharpe andhousingdirectorsfrom providethanrevenuesthatcamein,thetariff havecharges onitup to60 days old."In 60 other colleges and universities in Western wasproposed. days, students can move out of the rooms, Washington weredisturbed that they were Sharpe estimatesthe phonecompanylost academictermscanend,andthe peoplenot notnotifieduntiltheproposalhadbeen filec as much as $18,000 inuncollectedbills last return." and that they werenot consultedabout the yearfromS.U.alone. At WashingtonStateUniversity,whichis plan. "It wasadecision thatwasbasedonfinan- on this system. Bill Bierbaum, director of "Idon'tagreewiththeirprocess.Theyare cialimplications to Pacific Northwest Bell, housingsaid, "Wehardly getthebillsintime telling us after they havedecidedwhatis the andto the universitiestrying to find thebest to bill before they (the students) have left bestthingforresidencehalls," Sharpesaid. solutions for all concerned, University stu- campus; they are so doggonedelayed. You Thephonecompanyhasnotprovidedade dentsandthe telephonecompany,"Murphy can'tdo that, theuniversityendsup extend- quate time, Toner said, for theUniversity to said. ing credit to everybodyor eatingtelephone make plans or consult with students. "The Financially,neither thehousingofficenor bills." studentshavebeenleftout ofitentirely.'' the businessoffice wouldsay thatthis is the The phone company estimates that the "They just went ahead anddidit inisola- bestsolutionforS.U. University wouldsave$11,OOOunderthepro- tion," said GayleBuckley, director of resi- Under theproposal,S.U.isresponsibleto posal;afigurethat willnot offset thecost of dentiallifeatSeattlePacificUniversity. collect bills from students who break the hiring an additional staff person. Sharpe "It was behindclosed doorsanddifferent contractby receivingcollect callsorbillinga estimates that willrunabout $12,000, with universities are being— told different things thirdpartycallto theirroomphone. the cost ofany bills hitting the University as about theproblems so thereis anethical This, both Tonerand Sharpe agree, may well. issuethatconcernsme,"Buckleycontinued. requirepayingand hiring additionalperson- "I would see the University as losing Buckley wrote a letter to the commission JudySharpe nel. Inaddition, the University willhave to money." (continued onpage sixteen) 2May 13, 1981/The Spectator Luce: A decade later Vietnamese stillsuffer by Claire O'Donnell According toLuce, the war isn'tover for and Vietnam thatdoesn'tknow onthe freemarket. "What they've basically "The Vietnamwarstillisn'tover.We are the Vietnamese who still suffer food and how to farm, saidLuce. "There wasa tear- done isto maintaintheadvantagesof social- stillmadat the Vietnamesefor beating us," housing problems that started when they ing apart of the family structureand lifeon ism in a collective community and at the said journalist and agricultural expert Don were moved from their farms to cities be- the farms basically becauseofinternational sametimeencourageasort of capitalistinit- LuceatS.U. Wednesday. cause of fighting. Cities, especially Saigon, greed,"hesaid. iative so that they get the advantages of Luceis thedirectorofthe AsianCenterin became overcrowded and jobs scarce. - both,"Lucesaid. New York and spent 13 years of voluntary Womenandthebetter-lookingchildrenwere Luce said that Saigon's population-has The Americanmediais not doing a good service in Vietnam before he was asked to soldtobrothelsandfactoriesas payment for decreasedone million since the end of the enoughjobrevealingtheeconomicplightsof leaveby theStateDepartment in1971. Luce theirparents'debts. war, and most became boat people. They othercountries,accordingtoLuce."We just recently returned from a visit Cambodia Because of these "moral and political wereafraidtogoback to theirfarmsbecause aren'tgettingtheinformationweneedabout to of unexploded mines still in the soil and andVietnam. problems" there is a young generation in the conditionsofother widespreadfloodingoftheland. economic countries. Our mediahas tobefree fromthecontrolof Luce wasinHanoiwhenit wasbombedin themultinationals," hesaid. 1972 andsaid thatdespitethe experiencethe Many Vietnamese want normalizationof peoplein the city were very friendly to him. relations with the U.S. according to Luce. Lucesaidthatthe friendlinessshowntoward The fact that the U.S. willnot trade with him best exemplifies the feeling now by the Vietnam gives the Vietnamese complete Vietnamesethat thewar wascausedby Rich- dependence on the Soviet Union, depen- ardNixon, Lyndon Johnsonand othergov- dencethat theydon't want,hesaid. ernment officials and not by the American "Most Vietnamese that Imet feel they peoplein general. "They havealwaysbeen havetohavethe support of theSoviet Union very careful to distinguish Americans as because there are half a million Chinese people from Americanmilitary policy," he troops right on the border.They are scared said. that Deng Xiaoping(vice premierof China) he's talking about, that is, Luce feels that will do what he wasasked toleave Viet- teaching the Vietnameseasecond lesson(by nam because of his reportingon the "tiger invading). cages"inSaigon. The tigercages werewhere said that he doesn't believe recent theSaigonregimekept polit- Luce andtorturedits reports thatsomeAmericanP.O.W.s areleft icalprisonersduring the war. in Vietnam workingas slavelaborers."First The first article that Luce wroteexposed of all, if there wasa bunchofP.O.W.s still theregime'satrocities towardthe prisoners, over thereIthink the Vietnamese villagers and it was published by "Life" magazine would be aware of it, and the ones that 1 and many major city newspapersintheU.S. talkedtowerenot awareofanythinglikethat His second article revealed the fact that atall.The secondreasonIdoubtitisbecause an American construction company was economically, what good woulda dozen or contractedtobuild thecages.The company so Americanslave laborers be?It wouldn't was partiallyowned by Lady Bird Johnson be very useful. The Vietnamese are politi- and John Connally. That article was pub- cally astute enough to know that six years lished by "Phoenix After Dark," "The after thewar isover, to thensay,'We've got Great Speckled Bird" (an Atlanta under- 12 American P.O.W.s and we won't give ground newspaper), and a few other small them,back unless you keepyour part of the publications.Inessence,it waspicked upby Paris agreement,'wouldn'twork.Wewould thepublicationsthat"aren't''exactlytheones bombVietnam, punishthem for doingthat, thatourpolicymakersread, Luce said. but we wouldn'tnegotiatewiththem.If they had held P.O.W.s for thosepurposes,then said Luce that U.S. aid is leading to a they wouldhavedone whatthe Iranians did growinganger gap of the widening between and usedtheP.O.W.s toget theconcessions therichandthe poorinCambodiaandViet- immediately that they believed were theirs. nam. Irrigation systems and other aids are The third reason is that the CIA has pub- built to favor big business corporationsin- licly announcedthat they don'tbelievethere steadofthesmallfarmer."Weneedtodirect areanyP.O.W.sleftoverthere." help poorest people." our toward the In- Luceis currently involvedina programto stead, Luce, said American aid is going send60 tons ofmilk to the nearly three mil- straight big helping to business and not the lionchildren starving inSaigOn and therest poor at all."We haveasituationinthe U.S. of Vietnam."It's pretty discouraging if you now an budget where increased military lookat thesituationalone," hesaid."Butif which cutscosts to thecitieswillcause'' asit- you joinagroup and try to do something, uationsimilar many cities, Campion weapon suspect to Asian hesaid. thenit works.It'stimefor thiscountry toget Luce said that he saw "major improve- back togetheragain.In the60s the Vietnam ments" in the food situation while he was war unitedmost of the country in some way to be arraigned tomorrow over in Vietnam. In 1978, the Vietnamese or another, but that was a bad reason to be government passed united. We needto work together again for calledtotakechargeof the situation,accord- a strict economiclaw to " Jon Snell, a formerCampionresident, is get controlof the rice somethingpositive. ing to McDowell, Campion resident that theChinese bus- scheduled to be arraignedin King County Jeff inesspeople own. The Vietnamese Luce's visit was sponsored by the Social director. were Court tomorrow on a charge of carrying a afraid that in a war withChina theChinese ActionCollective,CampusMinistry, Educa- concealed weapon,a misdemeanor. Snell record states that Snell had a warehouseownerswouldmanipulatetherice tionforSocialJusticeandtheASSU. wasbookedinto jailMay1 afterS.U. secur- kitchen-typeknife inhis coat pocket with a trade and support-thePeople'sRepublic of ity detainedhim in Campion, according to 3 and one-quarter-inchfixedblade whenhe China, which would create a "disaster in police records made available by Seattle was searched by the arrestingofficer,David Saigon and throughout the South," Luce FUTURECIWS PoliceDepartmentPublicInformation Of- Murray.Murray alsostatedinthereportthat said. ficer,GaryFlynn. Snellwasintoxicatedat the timeofhisarrest. A year later the Vietnamese felt that the JOIN OUR The alleged incident occurred on Thurs- Seattle Police were called after a man, law was bad for theeconomy;that it didn't day, April30, whenSnell was saidto have 52,000 CPA lateralleged to be Snell, grabbed Campion takethecontrolof riceout of the handsof followedBoydon anelevator fromthesixth residentSylvia Boyd frombehind whileshe Chinesebusinesspeople,butit tookawaythe BECKER ALUMNI floorofCampion tothe basementwhereshe was leaving the Campion laundry room, initiativeforthe farmerstoproduce. was doingher laundry. The police report is according to the primaryincident report on a passed gave FREE basedonstatements fromBoydandSchoen. Inlate1979 law was which file withtheS.P.D.After theincident,Snell economic Snellis scheduledtobearraignedat 9a.m. incentives in the form of cooper- was identifiedas the suspect by Boyd and atives. this a given INVITATION He hasbeenreleasedona bondof $515 that In system, farmer is a Kathy Schoen, another Campion quota fill, example, TOOUR FIRST CLASS resident posted day arrest,according- to for anumberof tons who waspresent duringtheincident, was the afterhis rice, beyond WEEK OF JUNE12 accord- King County Jail Records Officer, Ed of andanything thatcanbesold ingto thereport. to Call Collect: Forman. The onlychargefiledagainstSnell wasfor Statementsinlast week'sSpectator about SEATTLE carryingaconcealedweapon,Flynn said.No previousdifficultiesSnellhashad withCam- 206 622-7475 victim's complaint has been filed by Boyd pionHall officials werenot meant to imply withtheSeattlePolice. any criminal violations. The Specjator re- Snell was detainedby security staffmem- grets anysuchimplication. Snellhasnosuch ber Dan Ostrander while the S.P.D. was record. Hie spectator LEADERS ANDMANAGERS LOCUTION 8 weekly holidays NEEDED Published during the school year except $14,300, $2B £ r7UC and during?« mnations by Seattle University. Edited by Starting salary over free t2*/)(/ I! S.U. students with editorial and business offices at 11th travel, adventure, and many other AvenueandEast Spring Street,Seattle, WA 98122. Second ' class postagepaid at SeattleUSPS 487800 Addresscorrec- fringe benefits. You will also be 3lOCffSOl/n/ OF t.ons should be sent to The Spectator,Seattle University, raise at oncea tfAV/SOJ/t Seattle,WA 98122 guaranteedapay least year. CallFloydRogersat theArmy Newsroom 626-6850 Editor soffice office, 626-5775, to seeif you MulO'fy&t. few7Qty 626-6851 ROTC 322%f#W Businessand advertising 626 6853 canqualify. mmBKKHKSF PASSINGRATE 3 /May 13, 1981 /The Spectator

Fourselections from this weekend's ArtContest. photo by bartdean Ilove the arts S.U.'s Jeanne van Bronkhorst, Bill Dore and Todd Stevens (left to rigiit) frolic in weekendartfest the "AmorousFlea,"openingSunday.

For your frolickingrefinement and cul- tural capering, the S.U. Fine Arts Club is presenting a Fine Arts Weekend May 15 through17.FromFaure tofleas, the festival will."showcase almosteverythingwe do in the department," according to William Summers, assistantprofessorofmusic. Summerssaid thisis the first timethe fine arts department has done something like this, and he gives thecredit to Ken Nielson, vicepresidentforstudentlife,for suggesting it.The realwork,however, was doneby the Fine Arts Club, now only inits second year ofexistence. The clubof 70memberssponsoredan art show last year, but this year began organ- izing the festival during first quarter. The club'spresident is Ted Leongand member- shipisopen toallstudents. The first activity ofthe weakendwillbea concert by the JazzEnsemble and the Jazz Choir onFriday.The concert willbeheld on Buhr Halllawn, weatherpermitting; if not, it willbeinTabardInn. Katherine Korbuszewski, soprano, will give her senior recital Friday evening at 8 an p.m. She willperform works by Warlock, Perched atophis stoolandbaton inhand, KevinWaters,S.J., puts theS.U.ensemble through itsmoves preparing for their Schubert and Mozart, and will be accom- combined concert with theS.U.choir. paniedbySusanO'Brien. The springquarterconcertoftheFineArts Ensemble, the Chorale and Chamber Singers, will be Saturday at 8 p.m. in the Campion Chapel. The Ensemble will play Haydn's "Symphony No. 97 inC Major" and the firstmovement ofMozart's" "Piano ConcertoNo.20inDMinor. The Chorale and Chamber Singers, di- rected by William Summers, will perform antiphonalchoir piecesof the Baroque and Romanticperiods.Piecesby Fux,Faureand Buxtehudewillalsobeperformed. Anart show willbedisplayed all weekend in the Lemieux Library's Stimson Room, consisting of contributions from students, faculty and alumni. The entries will be judgedbeforethe exhibitopens.The Stim- son Room willbeopen from1 to5 p.m. on Friday and from 10 to 5 p.m. Saturday and Sunday. "The AmorousFlea," thedrama depart- ment's spring musical, will open Sunday night witha buffetdinner at 5:30 p.m. anda champagne reception following the show. Tickets for that night are$25, but for those lacking such riches, the show willcontinue through the23. Tickets for May 19 through 21are$2and ticketsfor the22and 23 are$3 for students. They are$1 more, generalad- performances Ut;a" mission. All willbein Pigott WilliamSummersand theS.U.choirvocalizeduringpractice for theSaturdaynight concert. photo by baM Auditorium. FormoreinformationabouttheFine Arts Weekend or the musical, call the fine arts department,6336. /May 11981/The3'1981/TheSpectator /"^^/"T^N ¥^\ fC\ Y/^P^ 4 Improper Channels-thecomedy computes by JamesBush heloseshis job whenhisbossreceives infor- Inthesedaysofbloatedbudgets and plots mation on what is going on. Their semi- based on complicated twists, "Improper competent lawyer advises them to file for Channels" is arefreshing change — a real divorce immediately "as a show of their movie. goodintentions."But, whenall seems lost, "Improper Channels" is a throwback to theybeginto fightback.Nottogiveaway— the the 1940s school of light comedies.It is a ending,butallthebadguysgettheirs with classic "comedy of errors," where every- thehelpoftheirowncomputer. thinggoeswrongfortheheroesuntiltheend, Arkin and Hartley work well together wherethey are able to retaliate,and emerge here, especiallywhen they are not bothered triumphant. by minorcharacters. The film's bestscenes Jeff and Diane Martley are an average are done withjust the twoof them:in one, suburban couple(Alan Arkin and Mariette Hartley struggles to keep a straight face Hartley) who are undergoinga trial separ- —whileher husband reveals his criminalpast ation. One day, when Jeff is taking their an indecentexposurechargefor afrater- youngdaughterout for adrive,shefallsand nity prank. In anotherscene, Arkin refuses bumps her head in her car. Worried, he to admit that he islivingin his car, a bit of drives to anearbyhospital,where an over- dignity that Hartley allowshim tokeep, al- zealous social worker (Monica Parker) thoughthe truthisobvious. jumps to some very wrongconclusions, and The restofthe actingis also welldone. As isconvincedheisachildabuser. the fat, obnoxioussocial workerwhowants Civil servantsandsocialworkersmay find tosavethe world,Parker is fat and obnox- this film unpleasant fiction. Both of these ious. Ditsonis perfect for hisroleas well,a groups are depicted in "Improper Chan- brutal caricatureof a self-impressedminor nels" as sneaky, self-important creeps.So bureaucrat. where does the fiction come in? Not any- The script is alsogood, after the first fif- where to the average viewer, who finds the teen minutes, which are dull and unfunny. parodiesofbureaucrats quiteaccurate, and Unfortunately, the scriptwriters could hot quiteamusing, up tonogood.Aidedby a friendly computer ulousbills,or worseyet,someoneelse'sbills', resista few predictableslapstick moves, all fterbeing chased out of the hospitalby operator, Parker has managed to get every care ofan "infallible" computer? Why, the ofwhich wouldhavenot beenmissed.It'sa Eiequently,xlies, in a huge mix-up where he acci- detailof Jeff'slife, mostlyfrom databanks numberofpeoplewhohavehadbank access shame they felt it necessary to clutter up a dentallyKO'sa cop,Jeffreturnshome,sans thatsheisnotauthorizedtouse.Turningthis cards eaten by hungry computers alone classy comedy like this with GradeB Jerry child,toafirst angry,then worriedwife.She informationovertoherboss(HarryDitson), should be enough to make this movie a Lewismaterial. runs off to thehospital,where ayoung doc- the twoplot to take "thepoor child" away success. "Improper Channels" is playing at the torassuresherthateverythingisallright,but fromsucha dangerousman. But, for the Martleys, things are going UA 70 theaterat Sixth and Blanchard. Ad- her daughter should be held overnight. The anti-computer theme that takes over from bad ,o worse... and beyond. Their missionis $4.50. The filmmanages toavoid Somewhatcalmer,shereturnshome. the filmatthispointpredictablyendears it to childis placedin achildren's shelter.Jeff's almost everydirty word,but israted "PG" Meanwhile, the social workershave been viewers.After all,who hasn't receivedridic- creditrating is destroyed via computer, and anyway. People, not politics, stressed in story of Irish terrorists The threatennot only to kill the Burke, by SusanMcDonough Fenians Contrasted toSchroeder is Pat a hostages,butalsotoblowup thecathedralif detectivelieutenantwho happensto befirst surge The recent in publicity about Ire- theirdemandsare notmet. on the scene and the first to talk to Flynn. land, sparkedby Bobby Sands, the death of De Mille could be said to have "copped FlinntakesalikingtoBurke,becausehe feels has createdaparticularlytimelymoment for out" on the politics of his characters. The that Burke isnot tryingto bluffhim.Burke the publication of "Cathedral" by Nelson backgroundandreasons fortheexistenceof becomesSchroeder'sunofficialcounterpart. DeMille(author of "By theRiversof Baby- the Fenians is scarcely exploredat all. In- Baxter, thehonorable,but stubbornEng- lon"). stead, De Mille focuses on the personal, lishman, is contrasted to Major Bartholo- place "Cathedral" takes on St. Patrick's rather than the political motives of the mewMartin, ofBritishIntelligence.Martin Day York, in New the cathedral being St. peopleinvolved. Irish, British and Ameri- isacalm,treacherouscreature, theextent of Patrick's, by whichis taken over Irish ter- cansareallcarefullydescribed. whoseconnivingisknown onlyat theend of rorists. The terrorists call themselves the De Milleseems to be makinga statement thestory. Fenians and are graduates of the Irish Re- about politics through his method of ig- Thebook,483 pages in thehardback edi- publican Army. Their motivein capturing noringit — since peopleare the ones who tion, takes place almost entirely on St. (and the cathedral fourhostages)is to force havecreatedpolitics.Whatever thesocial or Patrick's Day. Unlike most authors who the British torelease certaincompatriots in historicaljustificationsfortheiractions,itis basea largepart of the story onthe charac- Ulsterprisons. stillindividuals withindividualmotives who ters, DeMilleuses almostnoflashbacks. His Flynn, The leader of theFenians is Brian have .chosen to take action. Each person, peoplecomealivethroughtheirdecisionson whoisastrangemixture ofhard-headedter- whateverhis declaredmotive,has other,un- onesuspense-filledday. roristand mystic, believing thatan oldring declaredmotives. This focus on the characters causes the he found gives him special powers and DeMilleexploresthe traitswhichhaveput book toseemchoppyat thebeginning,when duties. thecharacterswhere they are:Flynn's sense DeMilleintroducesonepersonafteranother Flynn's ex-girlfriend,also an ex-IRA ter- of duty,Malone's acquired distrust of vio- inonlyafewparagraphs each.As thecharac- rorist, is Maureen Malone, who is in New lence as a means to an end,Baxter's deter- ters-becomerealforthereader,however, the York to meetSirHaroldBaxter,the British minationfororder. fact that a book is being read at allis for- lessadmirablequalitiesin man, or who dis- consulgeneral. Malone hopestoachieve the Theimpliedcomparisonsofthegoodguys gotten.De Mille is a master at keeping the like blood, thisbook should carry an "R" same endsthat Flynn is fighting for, the re- and thebad oneach side leads to a further actionmovingand keepingthesuspense high rating. For thosewho areinterestedin afas- leaseofthe prisoners,but shehas chosen to realization thatDeMilleisnot tryingtopoint tothelastmoment. cinatingcharacter-study,or anexcellent sus- try toreach her goal peacefully.She is con- out aright or a wrong inthe situation, but For those who dislikereadingabout the pensestory,itratesfivestars. sideredatraiterbytheFeniansand theIRA. onlytomakeapointaboutpeopleinrelation Baxter andMaloneare scheduledtomeet to situations. The officialhostagenegotia- one another on the steps'of the cathedral tor, BurtSchroeder,is shown to bea weak during the St. Patrick's Day parade. The publicity-lover, whose previous successes Cardinal of St. Patrick's is to stand with werebased upon a formula he has worked Classified them.Thesethree, andoneof theCardinal's out for bluffingterrorists. WhenSchroeder attendantpriests,areseizedby theFeniansas runs into Flynn's mystic determination, TOMARY G.OF4RTH:Don't SlimWhit- LOVERABBITS? 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" k»^fc>^^Tß FORRENTINN.London, England. 3 bedroom One Dinner on Dine-Around Bfl^^T^ U^-—^BWfitffa house, completely furnished, excellent trans- " Welcome Cocktail 15, >wJiaL portation.AvailableNov.15, 1981 toJune JEEPS, CARS, TRUCKS available through gov- 283-6407. 1982. References.5495/mo. ernment agencies, many sell for under $200.00.Call602-941-8014Ext.# 7602foryour directoryonhowtopurchase. NINE ATTORNEYLawFirmin downtownSeat- person perform University Northgate — tle islooking for a to messen- ger and assortedoffice tasks thissummer.Full THE WALLINGFORD BOYS ANDGIRLSCLUB is 1314 NE.45th 1040Northgate W. Drive rnt=w ww11— =armJw% 632-4365 365-7100 mßXl^an& #1% or part time & part time during next school now hiring summer day camp counselors. ■Acid S 1000 to' June 13Departure year.ContactConnieGray at624-5950 Work-studyonly.PleasecallChris at 632-3523. /May13, 1981/The Spectator 5 ROCK l\oVl©Vfby Dawn Anderson Britishcharity can't save 'Kampuchea' concerts Most of us adhere to some vague notion Aside from this, fill side one that is relatedto politics. White with adequate versions of "Sister " rabbitsused tobe relatedtobrotherlylove, and "Baba O'Riley,"" along with a spirited but Inever have figured out how. British "SeeMe FeelMe. On thelastofthese, The punk bandsoriginally had something to do Who prove once again to be masters of the withworkingclassrage,but tothebourgeoi- crescendo, blaring away at a rousing, if sie, the music was a minor annoyance, slightlysloppy,finale. similartoapin-scratchonaPorsche. Side two opens with three cuts from The Of course,thereis always thatblasegroup Pretenders, the album's token American of California popsters promoting Jerry band (or at least Chrissie Hynde is Ameri- Brown and "No Nukes." But somehow I can, and to many, she is the band). "The findit difficult to workupmuch radicalzeal Wait," which relies on Hynde's sensual, whenI'mfalling asleep. rhythmic reading of meaningless syllables, falls on stage as Although we can usually do little more flat the she shouts to be heard.The counterpointguitarslashing also than admire these artists for trying, one of loses its impact, soundinglikedefective ap- the most recent save-the-world efforts pliancesoffinthedistance. seemed to have everything inits favor. The Concerts for the People ofKampuchea not The failure of "TattooedLove Boys" is only boasteda specificpurpose(ararequali- evenmoreprofound. Again, only Hynde's ty), but also displayed a wealth of British careful vocalscan turn a song about sado- talent. masochisminto wry social comment rather Paul McCartney, with the help of U.N. than a pieceof sensationaltrash. As it turns Secretary-General Waldheim, summoned out, thelyricssound likeneitherof these, as the most prominent British rockers for a theyaresimplyunintelligible. pro- series ofbenefit concerts in 1979. The Theremainingtwo and one-halfsides of concerts, ceeds from these and from the "Kampuchea" offer an entire spectrum of newlyreleasedalbum, are beingapplied The album closes with the "Rockestra it is hard to criticize such an unselfish to interestingsounds.ElvisCostellosings along - UNICEF's aid to theundernourishedpopu- Theme" whichrates right up there with the effort, yet it is hard to justify a double-disc ' with a cheap transistor radio. Lan Dury lationofKampuchea(formerly Cambodia). themes from Laverne and Shirley and The blunder like "Concerts for the People of strangles ducks to substitute for horns on RockfordFiles, though itprobablysounded Kampuchea."Sendyour $12.98 toUNICEF The money provides emergency relief and With Your Rhythm Stick." The country'sschools,agri- "Hit Me great inconcert as anoverdonegrand finale. andskip thealbum. alsohelpsrebuildthe Clash contribute a piece of throw-away cultureandhospitals. reggaedrudgery.EvenQueen, thosetechno- Thenew— albumhasoneveryutilitarianad- rock perfectionists, failto triumph overthe vantage peoplewillbuy it.Middle-of-the- rinky-dink soundsystems. Thelistenermust pieces roadfans willbeattractedtonames likeThe strain to hear Brian May's" lightning guitar Piano performed Who, Paul McCartney and Wings, Led soloon"NowI'mHere. Music will flow from the fingers of six JennyStrandjord,Lisa VarelaandJohn Zie- Zeppelin and Queen. New wave fans will studentsina recitalinCampionChapel linski, all students of Arthur Barnes, will and The Specials provide the S.U. want toheartheperformancesoflan Drury, tonight. performat 8 p.m. Works byBartok,Mozart, only reliefonsides two and three.Rockpile, TheClashandThe Specials. Andpeoplelike TedLeong, Christy Leskovar,Pat Smith, DebussyandChopinwillbefeatured. me whose tastes fall somewhereinbetween who manage a clean guitar line under the will be drawn by side two, which features worst of circumstances, poundout a quick, Elvis Costello, Rockpile and The Preten- catchy version of "Crawling from the Wreckage." The Specials add variety and spunk withtheska tune, "MonkeyMan."I That's the good news. The disadvantage— like this brand of speeded-up reggae, but to the "Kampuchea" album is aesthetic then, I like anchovies and neither is for Announcing the Annual the names are far more exciting than the everybody. musicitself. McCartneydominatessidefour, perform- PiSigma Epsilon Normally, anartisthashundredsof taped ingthreesongs withWings andthree withthe performances tosift through before choos- all-starRockestra, which includes members ing the perfect tracks for a live album.But of Rockpile, Led Zeppelinand The Whe. Kampuchea" nee wasaseriesof onenight Twowords cometo mind when these songs ands,, wemust settlefor whateverthebands areplayed:"So what?" mdtoofferonasingledate.Apparently,the tudiopolishingof these performances was McCartney may be prettier than Little SPRINGRAFFLE minimal,rendering thealbumlegitimateand Richard, butthatdoesnot give himlicense to uthetiticat thecost ofbeinglistenable. sing a lame, bloatedversion of "Lucille." And though not much canbedone withthe Idon't demand that live performances freak-disco hit "Coming Up," how did he Win theGrandPrize oundexactly liketherecords.But couldn't managetoscrewupaclassiclike"GottoHet omeonehave removed the screeching mi- YouIntoMyLife"?On thelatter,thehorns rophone from The Who's "Behind Blue are somuted that all we hear is a monoto- iyes"? On top of this annoyance, Roger nous beat and McCartney's unemotional )altrey'svoiceis flatduringtheintro. howling. SANYOSOLID STATE PORTABLE TELEVISION Bodies are becoming boring by LauraScripture ismurdered,it willbe whenacounselorgets "Friday the 13th, Part'' II" or "How to pulled underwater by the boy's unsightly oroneof theseadditionalprizes: waste35,000feetof film, isnowintownfor corpse. your visual displeasure.Can it becalleden- The corpse, now five years older,contin- Dinner for 2at TheWok Restaurant tertainment? Are 20 consecutive roller uesin"Friday- the13th,PartII"tobloodythe coasterridescalledentertainment? screen what would we all do without Dinner at Capp'sRestaurant This new picture, distributed by Para- modernlivingcolor? atRupo's mount and directed by a newcomer, Steve The acting suffices, considering the Dinner Restaurant Minor, wouldbe put to better use if it were quality of the film itself.Themovie has its Dinnerfor 2atMacFungHo's Restaurant wrapped around radioactive waste and share of teasers, building up to sudden forever. assaultshinted at bysuspenseful musicand Free Haircut atBasil's Hair Fashion AdrienneKing(whosurvived the terroriz- camerashots, only to fall throughand leave g and more onslaught of the first "Friday the 13") the audience tense and expectant, setting arsin along Amy tided thesecond with Steel and themup fortherealgrabbers. Tickets are just $1and30 onsale today! John Furey at the same summer camp at A culturalcontribution, "Fridaythe 13th, Lake Region, otherwise known as "Blood Part II," is not, but the box office per- DrawingwillbeheldMay 30that the Volpe Roomin Lake," where counselorshad beenbrutally formance ofthe first film wasaclearindica- fiveyearsearlier. tion thata continuationof terror was what ritchered"Friday the 13th, Part II"isno letdownif theseaudiences wanted.It seemsthatagrow- Youneednotbepresent towin. you're looking for thrills and high blood ing number of people crave this kind of pressure; it has the same teasingeffect and bloodystimulation. extremes of gore. It simply reaches a new The ParamountPictures original"Friday level of absurdity. Clearly, the object of the the13th"grossedover$35millionin the first filmis toshockitsaudience,and thatitdoes. sevenweeksofits engagement inthe United Inpart one, a campcounselor (Adrienne StatesandCanadaand"thebodycount con- King), distractedby her boyfriend, fails to tinues"as thelonglinesofpeople wait tosee PiSigmaSpsilon save ayoung boy swimmerfrom drowning. its sequel, which opened Friday at four ■KftPl As a result, the boy's crazedmother seeks theatersin the Puget Soundarea. Whatever revenge again and again by massacring a happened to movies like "The Sound of campfullofcounselors, onebyone. Ifone's Music?" Ticket prices for adults, 16 and stomachisn't uneasyby the timethe mother over,is$3.50. /May 13, 6 1981/The Spectator Flipside by SteveSanchez The following is a capsulization of the soap operas that appear on campus the week ofMay 3, 1981: The YoungandtheJesuit Young Mark had put off his fiction writing assignment for the third week ina row, but had ample explanation for the delay when kindlyFr. Steveasked oftheprogressfor said paperduringclass. "Iactuallyhadit finished,"began youngMark, "andIwasready to pullit out of thetypewriter, when my parents paidmeasurprise call. They demanded that Itake time off from my studies to go sailing withthem this weekend. "So Idroppedeverythingand joinedmy family for athree-day sail- ing trip, but on the third day a freak gale hit us, tore thesails and broke thecompass. "We were adrift for a day and a half, then a Coast Guard heli- copter picked us up thismorning. Itold the pilot Ihad an English class toget toinabout an hour,soIaskedhimto flymeback ..." Kindly Fr. Steven siopped young Mark at that point, commented on the student's use of description and gave him aB+ for the story. Later thatafternoon,Fr. Stevencalledhis provincial, inquiringabout transfers,and wasbrowsinghurriedly throughtravel brochures of the Aleutians. As the Semester Terms T.R.stewedinperplexityas hesatinhisphilosophy classlast Tues- day.Etched into hisdesk,obviously done withablue ball-point pen, was "T.R. + N.P." T.R. doesn't have a clue. He doesn't know any- one with the initials N.P. Meanwhile,K.S., whosits two seats back ofT.R.,and whoalso has amadcrushon T.R.,drownsherselfin her tears. She, too, saw the etching,and has never been sadder since the day Eddie stood her up at the Christmas tolo. She silently contem- His last ship reappeared in the center of the screen, just as a plated joiningtheDominicans. woman, out ofbreath,stumbledinto the gameroom. Meanwhile,Joanne,K.S.'s best friend,noticesher classmate's sob- She called out to Bill. "There's an important phone call for bing. K.S. scribbles her plight over her philosophy notes. Joanne you.. ." starts to readthis and she toobeginsto cry. "Not now, woman," he defiantly said as he blasted his way closer T.R.has never had a girlfriend inhis life. He starts to cry out of tothe topscore. "Can't yousee I'msavingtheuniverse?" frustration. The alien saucer returned, this time shooting faster and more Joe, whosits across from T.R.,noticeshiseyesbeginningto water. accurately. A pair of asteroids blocked his retreat, threatening to He isallergic tothe lint that comes fromKleenextissues. crush his ship. There was no escape; but one hope. Bill cut into the Dr. Dave, who up to that point was outlining the orations of thrusters and wildly rammed his shipinto the alien,getting the points Thales, turns from his greenboard to watch his whole class crying. for the suicidekill. "I'm a failure as a teacher," he thinks to himself, and wanders aim- Bill quickly checked his score against the high score. Both lessly about campus the rest of theafternoon. matched.Sweat-soaked, heallowedhimself to slump. Meanwhile,Michael suddenlyrealizes that he wassupposed topick He took his time getting back to his office, and found his phone up Top Ramen and Notebook Paper at the Bookstore, but he can't blinking ahold signal.Heslowlypickedupthephone. remember where he wrote the information down so hecould remem- "Yes,this is the universitypresident,"hesaid. ber. OneGrant to Give Judy is a 4.0 student in fine arts, yet inher four years of college, she has never been offered a merit scholarship. Her budget is care- fully planned out for her senior year, but when her younger brother comes down with an cartilage SPECTATOR infectionand needs an ear transplant, she decides to help out with the family billsand takes anight jobat a 24-hour drive-in. On her third day of work, two armed men attempt to rob the PHOTO burgerjoint. Judystruggles with oneof the robbers and accidentally paralyzeshim by stabbinghim witha potato peeler. Judy is sued by the robber anddrops outof school. The following week, Judy learns that she is a recipient of an EDITOR AlbertsBusiness School grant. She contacts the school to accept the award,but school officials findout sheis afine arts major. The offi- cials revokethegrant. AnotherPlanet Bill sat transfixed in front of the video screen, his hands skillfully Applications manipulatingaset of whitebuttons. are now being On the screen, a small arrow-like ship responded by maneuvering in and around a field ofasteroids, floating inrandom patterns. One accepted for the position of came dangerously close. Bill jabbedat the fire button and bullets of matter/anti-matter shot from the nose of the ship, making short Spectator photo editor. work ofthe meteor. Billrelaxed his guard for just amoment, when an alien saucer ap- peared on the monitor, shooting at random but definitely in the directionofBill'sship. Billhit his thrusters,turnedthe ship hard about andboredown on the enemy.Short of the collision,Bill laid on the fired button. "Die, Bring samples of work to the you devil,"he cried, and the menacing shipexploded,sendingshards flyinginall directions. Chief through or His victory was short-lived. His momentum carried him into the lower May 15 heart of an asteroid field. Despitehis best efforts to blast out of the field,astray meteoriteclipped himinthe stabilizer fin,and Bill's ship call 626-6850 for information. explodedinto sections. "Noooooo,"cried the star pilot, sending an echo out and beyond the gameroom. "Hey,do ya want to keepit down, huh?" barked a student oper- ator. Bill ignored the warning and concentrated on the screen. 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♥ II■ W A1 BBB^tMßßaßßßßßßMßßßßßßßßßaaaß^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^*^^^^^^^^ 8 Human service lackingintenure policy

Inthe past, S.U.faculty members up for tenurehave been greeted withgoodnews or badby winter quarter. This year, when eight faculty waited expectantly for a decision in February after the board of trusteesmeeting, they didn't think they'd still be waiting aftertheboard next met inApril. But the administration is still sitting quite smugly on decisions they'vealreadymade,but won'treleaseuntilJune. A decisionnomore difficult orimportant this year thanany other, according to William Sullivan,S.J., University president, has taken an extrathreemonthsand twodelays. To faculty, thatadministrative stalling ismore thana foot-tapping annoyance.Kept onatightrope, the facultyis anxiousabout thedeci- sion that determines whether they'll be working at S.U. one year or 40. Itmay bea fear that this year's decisions will be unpopular among S.U. students. Announcements made in June would eliminate responsefromthose whohadleft school for the summer. Or, the administration may be attempting to set a new precedent for tenure procedures that pushes tenure announcementsbackin the year,closer toaJune IS notificationdeadline. Inanycase, eight facultymembers are caughtinthemiddle. The administration issimply unsympathetic, and, in the words of one faculty member, the faculty feel like chess pieces instead of people. Little or no communication from the administration has been typical of this year's process. Any information faculty members wanted, theyferreted out,gatheredfrom rumor or readinThe Spec- tator. Because the University is adhering totimeline regulations specified in the deadline, the faculty the faculty handbook on tenure cannot And the timeline specifiedby the AAUP (American consider themselves "left in the dark" about the decisions, accord- is Association ofUniversity Professors) as possible date notify faculty ing Gary Zimmerman, president. thelatest to to academic vice about tenure — not the standarddate. faculty year's process But members weren't told that this would (continuedonpagenine) takelonger thananyother — or told why.

letters presentation of data via such a blocked, publicizing"Ability Week"is verymuchap- ment as didDaleJoneswith wheelchairacti- semi-outlinedformat. preciated.Itisbothexcitingandsatisfyingto vities,KevinKing for themass, Brian Ryan seminar,Missy And finally,pleaserealizethatagraduate haveoureffortspublicized. andGeneRothfor the Kurtz Flipside andJenniWolfguts forartistsandagencies. degreeprogram is not an "exciting" event We learneda great dealthrough this pro- Altogether they made up one tremendous To theEditor, that couldevenbenefitinthe fromthe ject notonlyabout themechanicsofsuchan least committee. Inre"Flipside,"S.U.Spectator,4-29-81: sort ofmediahype thatyou proposeinyour undertaking but also about the people on What do George Washington, Blondie ad"examples,"Steve.After all,this isgrad stoppedin lenda when Also participating from on campus were — campuswho to hand special mass, and an S.U.graduatedegreeprogramhave schoolweare discussing not aHawaiian needed most. Such as: Larry Price Father Sullivan in the Terri it was retreat, Bob Jarmick the incommon,mmm?That'sright.Absolutely vacationor summer camp.Gradschool in- acting asspotter forthe slalom;ReesHughes Ward in the at Ballinger from the ticket nothing. So much for your ludicrous ex- volves a tremendous amount of in-depth 'andTimRoschycoachingthecampuswheel- seminar and Ann certainlydoesnot includeall the amplesofsuggestedS.U.ads. study and overallself-discipline. This sense team;Lois Rainsand JuliaDreves for booth.This chair wonderfulsupportandhelp we receivedbut of importance and seriousness should be putting together the posters. Jim Peacock, Now, opportunity gives widespread Steve:Igrantyou the to relatedintheadasitis. juggling reservations, John Pioli and his it youa fairideaofhow was writesuchanessay; for, afterall, you are a thecampuscooperation. "cap- handy redtruck,andmany many more. satirical whowrites for the news- Isubmit that those who need to be Thank you again, John Miller, James columnist or"enticed"byagradschooladver- paperofa ratheremotionallylethargic Uni- tured" Like the HollywoodOscar speechmaker Bush and all thestaff. You areat your very versity. Therefore, any response you can tisementshouldnot evenbother considering alwaysbegins, "ThepeopleIneed to thank best whenyouarereportingthepositivehap- produceintheUniversitycommunityshould themselvesas candidatesforsuchacommit- aretoonumerousbut...here1goanyway." penings ofSeattleUniversity. You havealso bea feather in yourhat.Andindeed, you're ment. LeeOlson, wasthehero ofthe weekby pro- contributedin a very meaningfulwayto the knownforyourplumage. Respectfullyyours, viding muscleand lastminute rescues.Scott enhancement of the International Year of Tung-EnChic Rainshasbeenasourceofinspirationandan DisabledPersons. Yet allow me, an S.U. student, to shine a.k.a.MichaelDavidFulton unending flow of ideas. BarbaraFranklin Sincerely, somerevealing lightonthe possiblerationale did a tremendousjob organizing the equip- MarieHudgins behind the graduatedegreeprogramadver- tisements inquestion. Congratulations First, wemust considerthe particular tar- get market (groups of characteristically Editor: people) To the The Spectator homogeneous that these adsarede- like to congratulateScott Weiler signed for.Generally, potential l-would the gradstu- andothermembersof theSeattleUniversity dent has some concerns swimming around security and Spectatorstaff for "bringingto in his/her mind regarding the benefits of Tl. jSpectatorwelcomesletterstotheeditorfrom its readers. Thedeadlineforsubmittingletters light thepositive sideof the campus security Spectator Wednesday, spacepermitting. pursuing a graduate degree programat all. is2p.m. Friday. They willappear inThe thefollowing issue.Ithink we,asstudents,failto takeinto All must betyped, triple-spacedandlimitedto250words Allletters besigned. Noticehow theS.U. advertisementsaddress letters must account howdifficultsecurity's job really is. The Spectrum page features staff and guestcommentaries from its readers All un- these possible through - editorials concerns thevery lan- Workinglate-night shifts(10 p.m. 2 a.m.), signed editorials express theopinion of the Spectator staff Signed editorials and commentaries guageemployedinthe Srjectator ads: patrolling the campus and having to deal aretheresponsibility oftheauthorandmay notrepresent opinion. many problems occurring during "...prepare... managerial responsi- with the bilities theirshiftsisnot aneasy task. Editor ...accreditedprogram...advanced ManagingEditor |ohn Miller meetgrowingneeds innovativecurri- 1 would also like to emphasize Mr. NewsEditor ...... " SteveSanchez j culum...professionalresponsibilities Weiler'sstatement concerningthe security's amesBusn escort service.Fewpeopletakeadvantageof Feature/EntertainmentEditor SusanMcDonough Manager Thislanguage,ifnot directlyenticing,cer- a service that, in my- opinion,demonstrates Business Manager Sales tainly appeals Dale Christiansen joeMcGinley to the ambitious nature of conscientiousness on the pan of our securi- Adviser most grad students or potential grad stu- ty. comforting we have a It is to know Photographers GaryAtkins PhotoEditor dents.NeedIsuggest whyyoudidn'tfeelen- security staff that concerns itself with the Nan Zender Bart Dean ticedbytheseappealstoambition,Steve? well-beingofS.U.students. Kk hFassio Moderator Secondly, let us consider the admittedly Sincerely, Phil Dwyer FrankCase, SJ SportsEditor layout. This blocked, Mary C.Taylor MikeMorgan limHlis conservative semi- OfficeCoordinator outlinedformat presents agood deal ofin- Cindy Wooden formationina clear, Artists CopyEditors conciseand intelligible Julia Dreves Dawn Anderson manner. If we may understand, Steve, that Applause lami-s Maier Reporters Claire O'Donnell theprimary focus relating ofthese ads is on Anne Christensen, lanneWilson, DanDonohoe,Mark Cuelfi, information about S.U.s graduate degree Editor, Tothe An-MarieLouie. Suzanne fcckstrom, Reba McPhaden,Tim Healy. programs,it wouldfollowthat purely Applause!Applause! this in- To thestaff ofThe Thorn Herdt Robert Finyar KrithCMtr ,Laura Scripture,KarlBahm formational quality lendsitselfbest toaclear Spectator. Your skill and cooperation in /May 13, 1981/The Spectator 9

Behind barS by Steve Sanchez Positive thoughts about S.U.: don't mentionit such a barrageof "news" and still keep a opinion of Myeditorgave me what he thought was a relatively simple writing withstand civil assignment "Steve," said, baiting me into S.U. for this week. he his office explain why people I've of his (the kind that could sell pet andMt. St. That still does not encountered around with that smile rocks have not been to shed positive thought about this cam- HelensT-shirts). campus able " pus. Why are people Iask them about S.U.? Was it "Why you something positiveabout evasive when don't write S.U.?" something "Sure," replied, as not thinking about what Ijust said. I Isaid? I usual Why don'tknow whyIagreedso quickly to piece. MaybeIthought Ithought about this for a while. Something was wronghere. do the speak of; talkingabout wouldpeople attend a school with no redeemingquality to he was food. $3,000 something they Ibarelyhad enough time toconsole myself with theidea that mat- why would astudent shell out inexcess of for do notenjoy? ters could always be worse when my editor added, "Oh, and Steve it long." Ifigure people don't talk about the good of S.U. for one of four ...make fad, disco, news for a few ideas. "Jim,"Ibegged,"think of reasons: a) it's a sort of like where it's cool to badmouth Iaskedmy editor hair somethingpositive S.U. that Icould writeabout." S.U.;b)it's an embarrassing thing to talk about,like warts or the about on one's knuckles; c) there really is nothing good or positive He paused for amoment, settinghimself ina thoughtful pose that about S.U.; peoplehave givenmuch thought the question. would have made a pigeon happy had he been less animate. A or d) few to IguessI have to worry much about Theory A. I yet to moment passed. A dozen moments passed. Slowly, he turned don't have towardme. see gangs of students in leather jackets hanging around the upper "Steve, youhave the time?" mall saying, "Man, S.U. sure is one bum deal." Ialso doubt that do Theory any good points anybody any- Iheard the approach my sports editor,a jovial fellow, sounding Bhas solid support; the of or of — — just qualify embarrassing sub- in laughter. Iintercepted himin the hallway thing it seems to me do not as off various octaves of embarrassing; just theSpectator. jects. So what if S.U.is men's underwear is advertised outside television,and to "Tim,quick. Whatis the first positive thingyoucan thinkofabout on no oneseems mind. — S.U.?" Inmy experience,people who believed in TheoryC no redeem- ingquality — usually neverbothered tostick around atS.U.I've met Tim is a very gracious person. He broke his stride for a second, my shareof malcontents on campus,,but Idoubt if I'llgraduate with gavemea half salute, andsaid, "I'll work on it."And then he was off any. again, continuing his swashbuckler's laugh until it became a Theory D seems to be the strongest of my reasonings. When one muffled huffingbehind his office door. has hisor herthoughts channeledintostudyingfor mid-terms, making Iasked Susan, the arts andentertainment editor, also my fiancee, it to downtown and back before a 3 o'clock softball game, trying to if she had any thoughts for my column. She used allher breath ina wootheattentions ofonecertain sophomore whoshowsup atSAGA one-word answer: "Ha." at 4:30 every day, or racing to beat a Spectator deadline, thinking After consulting several more staff members and receiving about the good things at S.U.becomes a low rungon the contempla- responsessimilar to Susan's, Ifelt there was a definite patterngrow- tiveladder. ing. Spectator people were reluctant to talk about S.U.s positive as- Ido feel that it should deservean honest session of thought. Each pects. This,Itheorized, was understandable.Spec writers have dealt student here has time and money invested", and there is no harm in with tuitionhikes,academicgrievanceprocedures, security problems, knowingwhatone got for whatone spent. andlosingbaseball teams for three straight quarters; Idefy anyone to Sorryabout the column,John;you did say, "Golong."

seeaboutthem devotingseveralpages to the photosuntilthesenewpoliciestakeeffect; at Student commentary arts — this is a very shrewd deception, to whichtimeThe Spectator willbefreetocon- — keepthoseinthe arts(and theirsympathizers centrate on the moreimportant news items in theliberalarts)docileuntil theproposals like reports on intramural sports and the Fine arts a modest proposal outlined abovecanbeput intoeffect.After- like. all,no one wantsanasty scene. We willjust Respectfullysubmitted, have put up withthese tokenarticlesand KellyKnox by Kelly Knox wardinefficiency anduselessness, muchasin to WHEREAS it must be admitted that theirkindredfinearts; most artists and actors at this institution AND WHEREAS such tendenciesshould have not the force of character to be any- notbeallowedfor or excusedina university thingmorethaninnocuousandmediocre; community based on efficiency and sound Tenure announcements ANDWHEREAS thecontributions ofthe businessprinciples; (continuedfrompageeight) fine on this campus are, admittedly, arts FURTHER RE- relatively minor — there is nonetheless a BE IT THEREFORE According toSullivan,Theidea that by following... the faculty LIBERALARTSOF growingurgency forreevaluatingtheirstatus SOLVEDTHATTHE handbook you're going to avoid any response, or deny people... HISTORY, PHILOSOPHY, THEOLO- inouracademiccommunity; opportunity to respond,seems tobeoverlooking that GY, LITERATURE, AND ALL ... thefact the AND it has proven profit- OTHER WHEREAS OFLIBERAL ARTS,HAVING individualinquestion...is going tobearound another year." able, andnecessary gentlyphase- MANNER desirable to BEENSHOWNTOBE ASUSELESSAND What Sullivan overlooks, however, is the value or strength of a out or simple ignore the fine arts on this INEFFICIENT AS THEIR KINDRED response delayed four months from the time the decisions are campusoverthepastseveralyears; that is (FINE) ARTS, BE LIKEWISE SWIFTLY AND WHEREAS such a status reevalua announced. HALTED AND IN THE FUTURE What Sullivan already tion wouldbedesirable frombothbusiness THIS overlooks is the fact that the decisions have and practical sensibilities, and would be a BANNED FROM PRACTICE AT been madeand approved, UNIVERSITY. andreasons for further delayare unclear. very wise andefficientresponse to aproven What Sullivanoverlooks is the fact that faculty notreceive nuisance; proposal, who do The advantages of this second tenurewill tofind other work,as soon as possible. BE IT THEREFORE RESOLVED, too, seem self-evident. After the have THATALLMANNEROF ARTS,ENTER- implementationof theseproposals,thisuni- What SullivanprovidesisaUniversity with a philosophyofhuman TAINMENTS,INDRAMATIC, PLASTIC versity would be left only with those aca- service that issometimes lackinginits administrative policies. OR MUSICAL ARTIFICE,BE SWIFTLY demic fields that are serious and self- BROUGHT TO A HALT AND HENCE- supporting(business, engineering,andnurs- FORTH BANNED FROM FUTURE ing are good examples). We will have cut PRACTICE. awayall of the deadwoodin order that the The advantagesof this proposalarenum- treemight live. And theseoutmodedand in- erous and I think somewhat obvious. Sav- feriorarts willquietly go the wayof hoola- Spectator ingsonfaculty,materialsandadministrators hoops and white-walls. We must step with 1981-82 Editorial wouldundoubtedly besignificant. But even ,orbetrampledintothedust ofour moreimportant than material benefits, the ownprocrastination. Positions Open convenience and peace-of-mind factors Indeed!This very paper which serves me quite outweigh! any conceivable disadvan- now— as the format for voicing this propo- tages. Quite simply, students and faculty sal affording me the chance—to say what fromthose moreseriou^anddignifiedfields has for solong beenleft unsaid might well News, Sports, Arts& need no longer be bothered by the arts, spearheadthis driveto put thisproposalinto Entertainment, whichare widely known tobeoflittleuse to practice. Although modesty keeps them Photo anyoneanyway. fromadmitting it, thisdrive may already be AND FURTHERMORE, WHEREAS it underway. The editors and staff of The is easily demonstrated that the liberal arts Spectator areto be congratulated! 1hey've Applications are now being accepted for Spectator with their sentimentalities and pretty been at thehead of thismovement from the Editorial positions for next year. Please submit thoughts and petty quibblings, are danger- very first. Although they are too modest to ously closeto, andunusually sympathetic to- admit it, recent editorial decision seem to resumes and published clippings to the Spectator Of- wardtheforbiddenline arts; support this hunch. Bravo!! Thisis precisely fice located in the basement of the Student Union ANDWHLRLAS it isalso easily demon asit should be — afterall. Ihe Spectatorand strated tliai in these ctiatt) and sentimental itsstall should not Ik troubledwith Ihe arts. Building. Don'l be misledhowevei by signs>ou mu> 10May 13, 1981/The Spectator Faculty to be polled on decimal grading —by AnneChristensen addingor subtracting.33 points,so thatanA grading as student-faculty communication, he said, and should decreasethe number of Grades what they represent and how minusis 3.66,aBplusis 3.33,andso on. said David Knowles, assistant professor of grade disputes by distinguishing between, hey are given — are currently attracting Severalspeakersat the senatemeetingcrit- economics."I don't purport Icanevaluate for example,astraight C grade — 2.0 — and oncern amongS.U. faculty members, who icized the letter-grade system as inflexible, betterwithmorepoints," he said,butadded _a2.5, whichis a few tenthsshortofaB. will be polled this quarter about possible sayingit contributedto grade inflation and that the decimal system better fulfills the Gradingchanges arediscussedasaremedy hangesintheUniversity'sgradingsystem. disputes over grades. But faculty members purpose of grading: providing information for grade inflation, he said,but that is not disagreed about whether other methods toastudentabouthisorher performance. their purpose The faculty and will not be their result. senatevoted toconducta sur- wouldbeanimprovement. Knowlesbrought to the senatea proposal "Gradeinflationis problem. eyduring our It's thein- thenext two weekstodetermine if by the faculty of the Albers School ofBusi- stitution'sproblem,"he said, he faculty prefer educators an not a resultof would one of twodecimal "We have exaggeratedview ness, which unanimously recommended a theletter-gradesystem. rading formats to the letter grades oi the precision with which we can grade," now change to the decimal system, calling it A studyalmost10yearsagoshowedstrong sed. The ASSU willconduct a similar poll Louis Gaffney, S.J., professor of psychol- "moreinformative,more flexible,more ob- faculty aridstudent support for changing the mongstudentsduring May ogy,said.It is difficult, he said, forinstruc- " the week of 25- jectiveandhencemoreequitable. grading method, according John Tale- 9,ASSUPresident tors tograde students' work using five to ToddMonohonsaid. cate- The decimalsystem wouldstilluse letter vich,journalismdepartment chairman, who gories — the grades A through E — much Thepolls willask facultyand students grades as reference points, Knowles said, workedona 1972 grade survey. Almost 80 to less to use a 0.0 to4.0 scale, whichprovides upport oneofthreegradingsystems: and wouldallow faculty members touse as percent ofthe faculty who responded that — 41possiblegrades. to the letter grades now used, with an A many or as few points on the scale as they poll wanted to revise the letter-grade meth- qualing— 4.0, aBequaling3.0,andso on; "There's no wayI'm going to waste my wished.But it wouldpromote better com- od,he said, as did73 percent of thestudents adecimalsystem similarto theUniver- time trying to pretend Icould reliably put munication between students and their in- who participated. tyof Washington's,whichusesa0.0 to4.0 students' work into41categories," he said, structors, he said, and providemore accur- Since that time, Talevich noted, many cale— and recordsgrades tothenearest tenth; addingthathe wouldbesatisfiedwith either ateinformation to anyone reviewing a stu- other universities in the Northwest and a"one-thirds"system, whichassignsa oftheotheroptions. dent'stranscript. throughout the country havereplaced letter umericalvalue toplus andminusgrades by But the issue is not so much precision "It increases the relativenessof grades," gradeswithanotherform. Faculty senate approves grievance procedure

A new procedure for settling academic ideally,betweenthe student and instructor, judgments, he said, "grades arethe obliga- Dr.PatriciaFerris, deanof theSchool of ievanceswonthe approvalofS.U.'s facul- Zimmermann told the senate. If that ap- tion of the institution. Individual faculty Nursing, said her faculty's primaryconcern senate last week and maybe publishedas proach fails, the student can appealto the membersrepresent theUniversity. was thatgrievances beresolvedat thelowest rlyasFriday. chairman of the academic department in- "Mostof the time, Isuspect, the teacheris possiblelevel,preferablywithintheschoolin With onedissent, the senatevoted tosup- volved,whomustissuea writtendecision. going to be sustainedby this process, if he which the dispute arose. Since the revised rt theproposedgrievancesystem withthe The chairman'sdecisioncould be appeal- has an objectiverecordon which the grade grievanceprocedureplaces appealboardsat Istipulation thatit be used for one year and ed by the student or instructor to a board was based," he said, adding that the policy the school level, she said, "Iwouldnot ex- reviewed.Gary Zimmerman, academic within the school, composed of two faculty might encourage instructors to document pect too much difficulty at this point,"in cc president,saidhehopestodistributethe members and two students, which would theircoursegoalsandgradingprocedures. getting thenursing faculty toaccept the new ;w policy this week but hasn't decided makearecommendationto thedean.Either "This shouldapplytoany component on process. hetherit willbeeffectiveimmediatelyor in thestudent or faculty membercould appeal which you're evaluating student perfor- Monohon said that he had consulted the jptember. the dean's decision to the academic vice mance," Zimmermann said. "The student ASSU senateandwouldrecommendtoZim- The procedureis basedon more than six president. has a right to know whathe's being graded mermannthat the new procedure be effec- onths of work by a joint faculty senate- At each level, a written record must be on." tive immediately. If Zimmermann agrees, SSU committeeand areviewcommitteeof kept of theactiontaken.The academicvice Thenewprocedurereplacesasimilar pro- Monohon willhave to appoint two student cAcademicCouncil.It outlinesthe steps a president willdecide final appeals on the cess which, however, was mostly informal members to each school's appeals board student can take tochallengea finalcourse basisofthatrecordonly, Zimmermannsaid. and withoutspecifictimeperiodssetfor each beforetheendofthequarter. grade, including appeals to a department "It'snotperfect,but Ibelieveit'sapolicy step. Under theinformalprocedure,three to I TAT 1 1 I iienchairman, academic presi- thatreflectsthe various inputsand alsopro- grievance cases were reaching the aca- deanand the vice six dent. tects the University's interest," he said. demicvicepresidenteach quarter,according worKsnop on procedureismeant toresolvedisputes— While the University doesnot want tointer- to ASSU President Todd Monohon, who RTheis close to the classroom as possible" fere with the faculty members' professional workedtodevelopthenewprocess. black children Earlier versionsof the grievance proposal drewoppositionfromthe schoolsofnursing Russian faculty member and education, whose faculty felt it would planned for S.U. infringe on academic freedom and contri- A seriesoflectures andworkshopsexam- bute tograde inflation.Dr.FrederickGies, ining political, economic and educational impressed by students deanof theSchoolofEducation, saidthere- issuesand theireffecton black children and- visedprocedureseemed"muchmoreaccept- parents willbe heldMayIsand16atS.U. by TimLittle able and much more compatible with the The series, entitled "Parenting the Black When asked why sheenjoys teachinghere viewsofthe faculty." Child:Beyond Survival," will featureguest at S.U.,MarinaTolmachevagave one rea- The education faculty has not taken an speakers Asas Hilliard, professor of urban son:the students. officialposition onthe newprocess,he said, education at Georgia State University and "Thestudents here are very dedicatedto but "from anadministrativepoint of view, Haki Madhubuti, founder and director of their studies," said Tolmacheva, a visiting thelastversionIsawpresentednoproblems the Institute of Positive Education in lecturer inMiddleEaststudies. "They'' don't tome....Ilook forwardpersonallytosome ,111. it asapart-timeoccupation. sort of grievance procedure that is accept- Forinformationor child-carereservations Tolmacheva was born and raised in the abletostudentsand faculty. Thisis a step in call Stewart at 323-7765 or Frances Jones- ty ofLeningrad,intheSovietUnion. After theright direction." Bakerat 325-3919. udying the history of Arab countries at eningrad University, she left the Soviet a.m. -2:00a.m. nion in 1972 to marry her husband, an /^^3^ r^r\ mericanwhoteachesRussianhistoryatthe niversity ofWashington. (ike to teaching at S.U., In addition she has taught at Harvard and the University of Washington, and is currently on leave from 111:00 theUniversityofToledo.However,she said, she likes Seattle and is looking for ways to stay here, rather than returning toToledo. KEGS Tolmachevawouldlike to stay here at S.U. *^ I \WE CARRY A LARGE VARIETY OF / \ atleastthroughnext year. differences between the two cultures, she M I I and PONY KEGS TO GO AT REASON- 1 I "I like the atmosphere here," she said, said,arethecomfortsandthemobility inthe praising the sense of responsibility of both U.S.Tolmachevastatedthat there aremore the faculty and students. After teaching at people who want luxury items, such as cars Thursday Night larger schools, she finds it rather pleasant and televisionsets, than the economy in the that everybody seems to know everyone Soviet Union is ableto provide."There are Bogey's T-Shirt Night sehere." waitinglists for thosethings,"she said. In addition to teaching, Tolmacheva is Pitchers— $1-00 urrently working on a project that deals NATUROPATHIC ith the connections betweenEast Africa nd the Arab world during medievaltimes, MEDICINE withBogey's T-Shirt on Blandt Both ambitionis tocontinue inthe academic er Modern and eld, and she is"concerned with academic Ancient Natural Bogey s T-Shirts uality all levels, especially with her son ±*V_ at Healing Traditions nteringschoolnextyear. soldat bar According toTolmacheva,studentsin the Rigorous four-year \£A f^% fe resident program SovietUnionattendschoolssix days a week leads toN.D. degree and areexpectedto work much harder than and eligibility for state 1 ©l/| 1509 Broadway studentsintheUnitedStates. Asaresult,she John Bastyr College licensing as a *£^ Naturopathic - said, schooling of naturopathic "Sovietstudentsget more '' in 329-4594 JT .^ 10yearsthanAmericansget in12years. Medicine physician. ' LifeintheU.S.issomewhatdifferent than 1408 N.E. 45th Write tor treebrochureor WA 98105 Mix)$2.00 compteH V she had expected, judging by what she had Seattle. I" ftw (206) 632-0165 catalog read in the Soviet Union. The two biggest I-\D J Student Union Building 2nd Floor Office Hours9:00 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. \ MAYDAZE1981 May14,W.C. Fields Film Festival Buhr Hall Lawn, 9 p.m. Bring Pillow and Blanket FREE May15,Steve Russell ife.- I Magician/ Comedian fe Tabard Inn,8 p.m. |Sg I FREE

M^Bsrtvi luiiui May16, Maydaze Dance With Ronnie Lee Band Campion Tower Dining Room, 9 p.m. Students $1.50 (under 21), $2 (21+ ) Non-students $2 (under 21), $2.50 (21+ )

May17 Vfryfrg^ in Concert Buhr Hall Lawn1 p.m. Donation for refreshments $1 Upcoming: * — Spring Senate Elections Sign-upsend May 13! * Get Involved!!! — Bepart of Orientation'81 whence"never a dullmoment awaits you!" Sign upin the Dean for StudentsOffice during spring or summer quarter. * Call Orientationat 626-5699. Trip to Victoria on the Princess Marguerite, May 25, Memorial Day, for infocall 626-6815. * Student Speaker (graduating) wanted for this year's Commencement Ceremony. For more information, contact Todd Monohon at the ASSU Office (626-6815) or the dean of yourschool. 12May 13,1981/The Spectator Fr.Billybrings humor to alcoholism counseling

bySusanMcDonough sense of humor, and that such people are One of the priests atS.U. celebratedhis inclinedtojudgecounselorsarbitrarily. 13th birthday last Saturday. That is not to "If you're too offhand, then you're not say that we have a 13-year-old priest on professional."People whothink that way, campus. he said, "have lost complete sight of what BillyPrasch, S.J., has been sober for 13 themeaningofprofessionalis." years now, and he has beenhelping other The clients, he explained, "want to be people to get that way during that time. relaxedandentertainedaswellasbeinggiven Prasch, who hasbeenastaffmember of the solidinformation." CommunityServicesProgram,adegreepro- Praschrecommendsself-helpgroups such gram at S.U. for the past seven years,also as AlcoholicsAnonymous foralcoholicsand directs a freecounselingservicefor problem theirfamilies.(Thereis ameetingofA.A.in drinkers andtheirfamilies. MarianHallevery Wednesday at 5:30.) Praschis alsotheadviserfortheHiONani Prasch is involved with a branch of the HawaiiClub and has beenamember of the International Chalice Society at S.U., a Orientation team for several years. In his group which tries toadapt a Christianatti- spare time, Prasch lecturesandcounsels on tude to the philosophies of A.A. Thereare alcoholism. about twenty members of the society who According to Prasch, peopleindulge in participate in mass and a discussion every "the most powerful liquid drug we have" month. simplybecause"they likeit. Prasch has also conducted 'Serene So- "Some hold that only severe mental- briety Weekends' for recovering alcoholics emotionalproblems make youdrink," said andtheirfamilies. Prasch, "and the TV shows have added to Praschsaidthat hewasgladaboutthenew this confusion...allthey seem to want to law requiring drunk drivers tospenda night stressisthathereyouhaveaninadequate,in- injail. secure human—being, and they're drinking BillyPrasch,S.J.,infront ofsomeofthepostersthatheusesinhislectureson "There'snothinglikespendinga night in onlytoescape whichis falsein 80 percent alcoholism. jailtowakesomeoneup tothe fact thatthisis of the instances. They're drinking 'cause aseriousmatter." theylikeit." Prasch said that the accessibility of alco- "We have not betweenthe Praschuses a set ofpostersdesigned for him Prasch holdsthatit is the outgoing, pop- differentiated hol hasincreased, andconsequently theage problems that been created, and the by Glen Wagers of KOMOTV. Sometimes ularperson,often, whois thealcoholic, who have of those cominginto the youth counseling fact that they weren't there before. The hesingssongs. starts drinking he likes it and is centershasdropped.He oneboy because addiction created these," he insisted, "and Prasch approachesall ofhis work with a mentioned "hookedsometimes years beforeheknows what's the despairat beingunableto stoptheaddic- senseof humor, as evidencedby the titleof heknew whowas 11 old.He saidthat happened." tion." one of his posters: "Do's for Spouses of the kids have told him of shootingalcohol Prasch blames the psychiatrists for per- Souses." The informationincluded inuhe intoorangeswithsyringes inordertobringit petuating the idea that it is only disturbed Prasch has severallectures on alcoholism poster,however,isserious. toschool. peoplewho drink. Alcohol,he said, creates whichhe gives tocommunity groups and at "Do leave responsibility for drinking "They're much better off if they'don't theproblems. treatment centers. To illustrate his talks, actions tohim/her. — followthelureof thecrowd.They think they "Do leave him to God '' Emotionally have to be popular,and the only way to be releasehimandhisproblems. popularistodrink. Why don'ttheytry being Forgiveness in families Someof theadviceoffered in theposters unpopular?" could be applied to anyone, such as: "Do Although there is no major alcoholism hand nobody the power to keep you de- problemoncampus, accordingtoPrasch,he examined in speech pressed.'' '' hashada fewstudentscometohim forhelp. Kunz andavoidworry. He warnsstudentsto "never get intoa posi- by AngieGrimmer — Dorelaxmore barter what is already presupposed 'I'll very tionwhereyou think youshouldtakeadrink "Those we live, we " Prasch considersa senseof humora with whom those in- loveyou forever if you forgiveme.' Tobe important counseling. ifit's offeredto you You have to pre- vest themost faith in, canhurtus the most. asset inlifeandin He ... forgiven, the violator must recognize the people serve your freedomand independencefrom Thereis a need to rememberforgivenessin believes that some involved in the hurt as an act of free will, express apologies administrationof alcohol programs lack a anychemicals." our families," explainedGeorge Kunz to a and think toward future actions. "The for- fulllibraryauditoriumduringthe fourthlec- givercannot demandanapology andshould tureinaseriespresentedby the SUpsychol- realizethe violationdoes not meanbinding ogy department. The series celebrates next indebtedness.Both partiesmust assume the year's masters degree program in phenom- otherintendsto fulfillthese preconditions," enologicalandtheraputicpsychology. Kunzsaid. Kunz' lecture "Forgiveness in the Fam- "If there isnodialogue of wishto repair, ily" spoke of four-— different concepts: the there will be no forgiveness." In this dia- object of injury faith, blame, the psy- logue it ispsychologicallynecessary for the chological pre-conditionsand the essential hurt to beknownandthat bothpersonsare forgivenessstructuresinfamilies. recognizedasmembersofthespeciesoffalli- "The family's dwelling of faith is injured ble Man; it is not a different class of indi- injured other."Recognizing by violation; this exposes the vulner- vidualsthat the the fallibility reducing the injury, it ability ofthisdwelling. We,aspsychologists, this is not neither shock of surprise nor need find examplesof violationssuch as contains the to blasehurting;it groundspossibilitiesofhurt- abandonment, unfaithfulness and lying," '' ing improveinthe future. saidKunz. to "Forgivenessdoesnot takeplaceat a dis- Theprocess of blame is expressinghurt, tance," said—Kunz. "We need a gesture of seducing andcondemning. "The oppositeof forgiveness it can be a hug or an under- forgivenessisblame,wherethe victimwants standinglook. revenge. Blameis anact of seduction when "The essential aspects of forgiveness in the violatedfamily member turns toa third families' firstly embodies NewalFs defini- person for supportandtriesto persuadethe tion, a gift of the unobliged to the unde- other to think— of the violator as evil. This served;'it is more thanjustice and a neces- 'turning—to' usingthe thirdpersonas aco- sary fulfillment oflove."Secondly, forgive- alition reduces bothpeople of the coali- ness welcomesback the violatorand repairs tion." Kunz explainedthat blamehas two thedwellingof trust. "Wedon't want to feel connotations: to accuse (to point to cause) indulgent,but forgivenessgoesbeyond with and to condemn (to damn). The injured love." Lastly, rememberingis an essential "urges the violatortoreduce himselftoevil, part of forgivenessin— families."To forgive justashefeelshewasreduced,"accordingto and forgetisnot true forgettingdrainsthe Kunz. valueof forgiving.The familymemberslive Certainpsychologicalcircumstancesmust with each other and will not forget the bepresent for boththe violatorand the for- injury. It can either corrode or strengthen family." giver. The forgiver must offer a genuine the appealbecause, "demandsundermine faith George Kunz chairs the psychology de- partment S.U., and therefore create a double sabotageof at and received his Ph.D. Duquesne faith. Anotherattack on faith wouldbe to from University. m KushiyokiandTerivoki mMmw& Specialities

, V| w[ V Harmony g^ Iformmfo 2612thAvenu. fiiiiil m5 ' LunchTues. ■ -Fri. 11-2 may Dinner Tues. Fri. 5-8 18 -19 BOOKSTORE — — — Sot.5-9 £Vpi»i/ Rtquind.MasterCardor Visa accepted. OSS]ArtCarvtdClass Rings.Inc. '.vl9 <">1 62 ■ Take out available— GRADUATEFROM DEBT.

ByjoiningtheArmyforcertainspecialties,youcannov Andifyouever want togoback toschool, yourArmy getpartofyourcollegedebtforgiven. enlistment willqualifyyouforthousandsofdollarsfored- , Here'show itworks. ucationalassistance. On top ofthat,youmighteven qualify Ifyou'veattendedcollegeonaNationalDirect Studeni for a generousArmyeducationalincentive.(Andyouilstill Loanor aGuaranteedStudentLoanmade afterOctober 1, receive loan forgiveness.) 1975,andqualify,the government can absolve youfrom Soifyour dream isto go tograd school,today'sArmy 1/3ofyour debt (or $1,500, whicheverisgreater) foreach canhelp yougetoutofdebtand intograd schoolinjusta year you serve. few years. Obviously,a three-yearenlistment wouldeliminate Ofcourse, withyoureducation,youcanprobably 100%ofyourdebt.Butifyouwant ashorter tourofduty,yoi qualify tostart ata higherrank andpay grade. (And,later, canstillreceive 2/3 loanforgivenesswithour tw^"*" theremaybeopportunities forpromotion.) enlistment.(Only theArmycanmake thisoffer Remember,onlytheArmycan offer yousuchcom- Or youmightconsider servinginthe prehensivebenefitsforsuchabriefenlistment. ArmyReserve.Ifyouqualify,as aRe- To findoutKow youcan serve your servist youcanstay home,get paid country as youserve yourselfinjust for your active duty, andreceive two years,call800-421-4422.In 15%loanforgiveness(or$500, California,800-252-0011.Alaska whicheverisgreater) for andHawaii800-423-2244.Ask each yearofservice. for thename of theArmy's collegerepresentative nearest you. >) / May 13, 1981/The Spectator /*"^s /T^/^^\K^C^ /*7s" I A"^/^C\\ K^Qf7\ I 14

Men's tennis team ends winning season Finish 10-5, place second in Tacoma net tourney byJeffMelgard andWestern Washingtonfollowedclose- can play better than that." Despite the The Chieftain men's tennis team lywith10 points. loss, Graciet felt he had done well, but fought thought S.U.shouldhave won. hardin thedistrict finalsin Taco- Of the twelvepointscompiledbyS.U., malast weekendtosecureasecondplace Wongearnedfourpointsonhisown, and S.U.'s doubles pair Bedoya finish. of and assistedinanadditionalfourpointsinthe Wong mustered up an additional four Going into the finals, the Chieftains doublesmatches. points to "eke out second place for the hadoneof thebestseasonrecords,10-5. Joe Bedoya racked up two points in team," in Thompson's words. Bedova PLU took first over-all, with S.U. fol- singles by first dominatingBarry Adams and Wong wereseedednumber two out lowingasrunner-up.TheChieftains won of Whitworth 6-2 6-3. Bedoya struck ofthe20pairsindoubles. over Whitman, Western Washington, hardagainagainstWestern'sGregLoson They drewa byein the first matchand Lewis and Clark, Whitworth, St. Mar- 6-2 6-3. Bedoya lost to Eddie Schultz took Western Washington by default in tins, CentralWashington and Evergreen from PLU 6-3 6-2. Bedoya has beaten the second. In the third round Bedoya State,eachfinishinginthosepositions. Schultz earlier in the season 6-4 in the and Wong mastereda6-1 7-6 takeover TheNAIA tournament hosted 42 sin- thirdsetofachallengematch. Lewis and Clark's Wagstaff and Young glesseedsand 20doublespairslastSatur- "Quite a feather for numberfour seed and continued in the semi-finals with a dayandSunday. PhillippeGraciet, our senior fromParis, big win overPLU's Craig Koessler and France," commented Thompson on Schultz, contender, Randy Eddie 7-56-4. S.U.s number one whatwasperhaps the best played match- Wong, seeded fourthout of the 42 sin- oftheday.GracietleveledCentralWash- Theloss came in the finals with anex- gles, lost to the eventual winner, PLU's ington's number one player Barcley cellent,hard-foughtmatch against Scott Scott Charlston, 7-6 6-4, but finished as Owens,6-3 6-1,scoring two morepoints Charlston and Craig Hamilton from oneof the top four playersof the tourna- forthe team. PLU,7-66-4. ment. Graciet lost the next match against Thompsonwaspleasedwiththe team's The standings were computed on a CraigHamilton,aPLU playerwhoeven- performanceonthe whole."Placing sec- point system. First place PLU had 29 tuallyfinished runner-upinsingles. ondmeans the team playedto the team's points,S.U. wassecond with 12 points, "Iwastoo nervous," said Graciet, "I potential,"saidThompson. RandyWong Whitman tookthirdplace with11points Injuries, discipline cited by Chieftainbaseball '81 players during recent interviews Mark Zender echoed Burkes comments After atough and disappointing season, At onepoint,the team hadonly ten play- Sestito complained of a communication players, aboutcoaching."Hedoesn'tseemtogetthe the S.U.baseball teamhad achance to look ers to field, leavingthem with only one re- problem betweenthe coaches and — playersmotivated enough to get togamesor back and reflect in a series of recent inter- serve pitcher and utility player a single suggesting that coaches and players have to " substitute. "cometo the middleinunderstandingeach practicesontime." views. Senior outfielder Tony Ditore thought Chieftain Disciplineandmotivationwerementioned other." The ballclubendedtheirseason pitching wasa majorproblem."In order a University by most of theplayers during theinterview. Sestito added that he thought assistant to with devastating17-4loss to the be a good baseball team," Ditore noted, ofWashington. Thelosscappedoffa10 win, "you need at least four strong pitchers." 24 loss season. There were a number of S.U.hadonly twoexperiencedpitchers, said gamesoriginallyintendedto berescheduled problems Ditore. inthepost-season,butdue to with Recruitingwas perennialproblem up another planning, S.UT ended forfeiting the for S.U. this year,as there was only one re- games. — cruit Sestito fromMassachusetts. Andhe At the beginningof the season,two con- wasout for thelast13 gamesoftheseason. vincing wins gave the team an impressive Infielder John Yapp said that "we had look.S.U. crushed SeattlePacificUniversi- good pitchers, not enough handily but there was ty, 17-3, and took the Concordia work." College fromPortland, team 11-5. Teamcaptainandall-aroundutility player eligibilitywas firstof longsea- But the the Tim Trautmann was complimented by his son'sdifficultiesas JeffBehrmanwas forced team-mates as "enthusiastic" and "always wait the winterquarter due techni- to out to ready to play." Yapp observed that it was calities thatmadeMatteoRicci students in- difficult to make the team listen to Traut- eligibleuntilspringquarter. ' mann ashe was "oneof theirpeers,"rather Academics was another difficulty for the thanaleader-figure. "Itmadeit difficult for S.U.sluggers. BobClementswaskept outof him becauseit lefthimwithless timeto Chieftainuniformuntil the very end of the ... '' concentrateonhisplaying. season. He made a solid impressionin the fewgameshedidplay,accordingtoteamob- Zender said team discipline was lacking, servers. especially onroadtrips.But henoted thatit This was only the beginning of S.U.s wasnotjust thecoacheswhoshouldkeepthe manpowerproblems.Injuriessoonbeganto Jeff Behrman, 21, reaches for the ball inlast week's gameagainst the University of playersinline. " take their toll.Dave Whitebegan to gain a Washington.S.U.lost the contest. "The discipline has to go beyond the reputationfor attracting the baseballas he coaches...it goesback to theindividual's was hit several times, including three times These included somewordsabout the S.U. coach Bill Tsoukalas was a "hell of a dedicationand.. .self-discipline." while standing in the batter's box. Also, coachingstaff. coach." thoughts White'snosewasbrokenwhile fieldingasiz- Senior pitcher Brian Burke believed the HeadcoachFrankPapasederoagreed that Zender's on theseason summed up by zlinggrounderatsecondbase. coachingstaffat S.U. hadlostinterestin the this season was "terrible."He put most of much of the frustration felt the team observed, "(The team) Dominick Sestito tore ligaments in his team, to the point that "they don't even theblameonthis season's injuriesand ineli- members when he emphasize enough thumb, which put himout fortheremainder cometopractice,orwhentheydo,theycome gibilities, which required all of the team didn't academics and we '' powerhouse emphasize oftheseason. forfiveortenminutes,and thenleave. memberstoplay in positionsthat wereunfa- werenota toletthem TonyDitorehurthisback whichbothered Burke addedthat ".. .they are excellent miliartothem. baseballenough." himfor the rest of— the season;John Kokesh coaches, but they don't" put out the effort injuredhis thigh andthelistgoeson. they expectfromus. SPRINGEXAM SCHEDULECORRECTION Maytheroads rise to meet you The exam schedule printed in the Spring Bulletin is Jhewind be at yourback incorrect.Thecorrect datesshouldread asfollows: And theLordhold you Examslisted for: Will begiven on: TUESDAY MAY 26 TUESDAY JUNE* 2 always in thehollow THURSDAY MAY 28 THURSDAY JUNE4 of His hand. FRIDAY MAY 29 FRIDAY JUNE 5 Thelast class day will beMONDAY,JUNE 1. TheEXAM Congratulationsto ourGraduating Seniors, TIMES ARE CORRECT as listed in the Bulletin. A Revised withgratitude and best wishes... ExamSchedule willbeposted in theRegistrar'sOffice for Compus Ministry, Seattle University. your consultation.We are sorry for any confusion which may by error. ■ ■■■■■■■■■■■■■-■■ havebeencaused this PageFifteen/ 'May 13, 1981/The Spectator Coluccio chosen for intramural position Correction pointedout. "It makes the S.U. will be in its second year of its re- tion, Coluccio story in last by Steve Sanchez job important to me," he said. "It's The intramural Softball looking forwardto a lot directed sports program, which places a more (May 6) issue of The Spectator con- KevinColuccio is excitingandnew." week's things year. greater emphasis on intramural and life tainedincorrectinformation. of little next number of sports rather than intercollegiatecompeti- Eggleston and Schier- that many With plans to add a greater Coluccio credited The first paragraphmentioned schedule, will operationof the intramural which were sports to theathletic Coluccio burg for their of the intramural softball games this year,adding that team partic- previous week would be re- become S.U.snew intramural director programthis rained out the department an- ipationin organizedleagues had neverbeen scheduled. Rained-out intramural softball fall. The S.U. athletic nouncedhisappointmentlastweek. higher. gamesarenotrescheduled. replace present intramural We regret any caused by Coluccio will wants to set higher goals for inconvenience Mike Eggleston and Scott Coluccio thiserror. co-directors "Mike and Scott, for sure, did a Schierburg. Richard McDuffie, S.U. ath- 1981-82. but you can always improve on director, and Tim Roschy, assistant good job, '' letic something,especiallyifitisyoung. athletic director,Selected Coluccio from six This week in applicants. In addition to maintaining the level of The new intramural director, a psychol- intramural leagueplay, Coluccio would like ogy major fromKent, has experienceorgan- to establish a number of club sports that intramural Softball izing athletic programsby working withthe wouldcompete againstclubs fromothercol- Kent Parks and Recreation Department leges,universitiesand privateorganizations. for three summers. He playedvarsity soccer RaindropsKeep Fallin' OnMy Head during his freshman and sophomore years Special sports and events will also be byKeithGrate and has actively participatedin S.U. intra- added,said Coluccio,including sky-diving, rafting hiking trips.Theintramural- rain came down and it drowned out muralsforthreeyears. river and The up open classes on of theSoftball actionagain last week. Theselection ofColuccio wasbasedonhis department willalsoline most subjects. isthere,"he wereafewbrave souls,however, who knowledge of the intramural program,his various "Iftheinterest There knowledge service to the stu- made the attempt to play ball on a very job experienceand his and in- said, "we willprovide the muddy field. Here are the results of two volvementontheS.U.campus. dents. enough challenge," games this reporter was brave to "I think the job will be a 1'Thekeytogettingpeopleinvolvediswith watch. , Colucciosaid. "I'm lookingforward to get- littlethings. Ibelievethe amount ofinvolve-" The first gamewas betweenthe womens tingmorepeopleinvolved in the intramural ment willincreaseinofferinglittlesports. defending champs, No Sweat and Athletes program." KevinColuccio Anonymous, the only unbeaten women's team. In a wildgame with many hits and a few raindrops, Athletes Anonymous Self-defense to Intramural survey shaping up soundly defeated No Sweat 12-6. The loss place and — was indications that students drops No Sweat down to third S.U 's departmentisintheprocess There . athletic satisfied with the amount of intra- makestheirplayoffschanceslim. of evaluating the results of a survey of the seemed be taught at activities, but participation in the The secondgamewas betweenthe current sportsprogram. mural low; men'schampionDevils111andtheQuivering Although there are no conclusive results activitieswas game — Althoughtheopinionofthe officiating Thys. QuiveringThys came into the yet, therearea few trendsinstudentopinion although Connolly low, especially for football, there were withone loss, and theDevils team thatareemerging.Finalresultsareexpected is was undefeated, most of their games were byFriday. commentsthatis wasimproving.Comments refereeing were more against theweakerteamsinthedivision. Aikido techniques of self-defense willbe Theathleticdepartmentdistributed about on the basketball workshops held this favorable; The Devils startedout strong with a six- thesubject of two tobe 500survey forms.Somemembersofthe fac- — surveys indicatedthatstu- run first inning but they lost the leadas the weekend atConnolly Center. ultyhavealsobeensurveyed. Mostof the Thys back dentsare pleased with the improvements in rains came. The Quivering came The workshops willbe on Saturday and Tim Roschy, assistant athletic director, rain came Connolly Center: the graphicsand painting and took a 7-6 lead when the Sunday, 9:30 to 11 a.m. in theGymnastics outlined someofthe findingsofthesurvey so thegamestill onthe wall,remodeling,etc.; down.It camedownhardbut Dance Room, near the south basketball far: despite muddy field andthe wet — — Most of the students indicated satis- went on the court. There werevery few 1or 2, and4or5 Each team exchanged runs butthe 5 rating scalequestions. factionwiththelevelofinterscholastic com- softball. instruc- ratings on the 1to Devilstookthelead9-8 asthey wentintothe One ofthereasons for the Aikido opinions to be in the middle- petitionthatS.U. is currently participating among womenon The seemed finalinning and held off a strong threat by tion is therising concern ratingareas; in. m assaults, said Tim theThys andtherain. campus over recent Now, how does that saying go: Neither Roschy, assistantathleticdirector."We are snow,orrainorsleetorgloomofnight. .. providingthis service to womenespecially," ******* Roschyadded. Sports Shorts IntramuralStandings,MwfsSouthDivision The workshopsare open to allinterested students, according to the Aikodo instruc- jumpedwith no experience TumNiiiw Win Lost Pet FortalU Vou'H find your lunch on the intramural Five students tor,John Spiers.Spiers,a nationally-ranked trainingfrom aplane Devils111 6 0 1.000 0 field onSaturday, May16.It'sallpartof the andlittlebefore-hand ThisIsIt 5 1 833 0 blackbeltinAikido, saidthe weenend work- Festival, IssaquahParachuteCen- 0 intramural May Sports which will to the fieldsof the Quivering Thys 4 2 .867 shops willintroduce basic methodsfor self- Sunday,May 10,andthree moreplanned Y.C.B.Off 3 4 .429 1 include a wide range of track events and ter 0 defense, willnotbea completecoursein attended Copenhagen 2 4 .333 but dormcompetitions.Bellarminecafeteria will tojumpyesterday.Of thenine who HeavilyOutclassed 2 4 .333 1 fendingoffwould-beassailants. ground school training held inConnolly 2 5 .286 0 be closed that afternoon. The festival will the TheMix Thursday, eightpeople ■Who'sGot Beer 1 5 .167 3 "We can tell them to 'dothis,' or 'don't lastfrom1-5 p.m. Centerlast a totalof complete went through with it. Tim Roschy, head NorthDivision do that.' But this will not be a ***** course." Spiersstressed. leaper and associate director of the intra- ThePlnheads 5 1 .833 0 KennedyHot Springs has beensighted as program, thatit was a real Sombitch's 6 2 -750 0 meeting muralsports said Shallow'sShadows 5 2 714 0 ThereisanAikidoclub thatisnot the location for the intramural hiking and "I don't want todo it again,but TheGooGuys 5 3 .625 0 regularly, however. Membership costs $15 place challenge. .571 1 camping event which will take in the now Icansay that1didit. it'sagreatfeel- ShortCircuits 4 3 quarter,and itmeetsonMondays, Wed- .. Jack Daniels &Co. 4 4 .500 0 per last weekof May.What a greatbreak before ing!,"hesaid. " "Yo'Mama 1 5 .167 3 nesdaysandSundaysfrom7 to9 p.m. finals week!Kennedy Hot Springsislocated ***** "Batman's Ballbusters 1 6 .143 1 0 .intheCascades nearDarrington.Makeatrip TheWild Ones 6 .143 The club presentlyhas eightmembersand Deep fishing is for Sunday, to Connolly Center or call Tim Roschy to sea scheduled workingout since thebeginningof up Connolly Central Division hasbeen signup. „. May24.Sign inthe Center. Deaf Power 6 0 1.000 .0 thewinterquarter.Spiers isthe instructorof Menehunes 6 1 857 0 the course,and sayshe wouldwelcomeany- TheDefectors 6 1 857 0 RoachClippers 5 2 -714 1 onetojoin. TheBigPalooka's 4 3 .517 0 9thFloor Softballers 2 5 286 1 For further information on the work- "Volunteers 1 6 .143 3 shops,call the SportsInformation Office at Women* Division 5305. 1981-82 SPECTATOR Athletes Anonymous 6 0 1.000 0 BBT's 6 1 857 1 No Sweat 5 2 .714 0 POSITIONSOPEN TheS.K.s 5 3 .625 1 Tattered 3 4 ■ .429 1 Mm MyopiciiricicoicU Hi pdUl^tpallliy 111 the "Behrman Bunch 2 5 .286 5 varsity soccer program next fall should at- PHOTOGRAPHY EDITOR Co-RecEast Division tand the meeting at 6 p.m. in Connolly 155. ■r'T.-m Team Wins Losses Pet. Forfeits SPORTSEDITOR TheBetter Batters 5 1 833 Weinstube Baccahus 3 2 600 6thFloor Softballers 3 3 .500 looking "ChickenLip.ps 3 3 .500 The SPECTATOR is currently "BookstoreBookies 2 3 .400 4 .333 3 "Ninas Nobodys " 2 to two positions Half-N-Half 2 * 333 0 for people fill these "IslandSwingers 0 6 000 4 " next year's staff. If you are inter- West Division ME PSYCH" ME"MO for GMAT "DAT OCAT PCAT NoKaOl 6 0 1.000 0 " " of paid positions "E"Street Mental Ward 5 1 833 0 VAT MAT SAT ested in either these Moon&Kroll 4 2 667 NAFl MEO BOS Kegfield 2 4 .333 ECFMG "FLEX " VOE contact the SPECTATOR at 626-6850 or "GreatComet 2 4 333 " "NLE "Dustbusters 1 5 167 2 NOB NPBI 'SpringFever 1 5 167 3 stop by our offices in the basement of 4 "Slugger* Hugger 1 5 .167 EDUCATIONAL CMTM Tell Pr«p«r«llon fMCllllstS UnionBuilding. are thestandingsasofMay 10. 1981 Slnct 19» theStudent *These Denotes teams that arenot eligiblnlor theplayoffs For intotmtlion. Plmtu Call:— *— 523-7617 J looking ahead

PiiguSixU! an/May 13, 1961 TheSpectator

Spring quartergrades willbe mailed tostu- Students interested in being interns with dents' home addresses June11. If you want probation and parole officers being May your grades elsewhere, are now 13 19 mailed fill out a interviewedby the State Office of AdultPro- Learnto mathanxiety Advanceregistrationtor summerquarter temporary change of address form at the bation andParole. Studentsreceive overcome ina work- through today. Registration hours registrar'soffice credits for shopat theLearning Center, Pigott runs are beforeleavingcampus. interning12 to15 hours weekly for two quar- Resource 8:30 p.m. Students should prepare a 403, at noontoday and3:30 a.m.to 4 ters. more call Tom p.m. tomorrow. program The For information Gillamat The workshops with their department adviser and final workshopforspring quarterat the 464-7323. arerecommendedfor current Center, andpotentialmath well bring theregistration permit withanadviser's LearningResource Pigott4o3, willbe tutors as as students during takingobjective essay Diplomas and transcriptsof 1981 gradu- sufferinafrommathanxiety. signature to theregistrar's office regis- and tests. This free trationhours. one-hour workshop will be offered in the ates will not be released until all financialand All National Direct Student Loan recipi- DuaneNiatum willgive apoetryreadingat centerat2p.m. May26, noonMay27 and3:30 library obligations arecleared. A list of gradu- ents who will not be returning to S.U. after 11a.m. in thelibrary auditorium. p.m. May28. Allstudentsare welcome. ates whodo not have clearance will be posted spring quartermust attendan NDSLexitinter- on the bulletin boards June 4. Graduates view. Failure to attend will result in a hold The last day to withdraw from spring whose namesappear onthis listare to report being placed academic transcripts. 20 quarterclasses with gradeof on Thein- HankLevinewillgiveapresentationonself- a "W" is May 22. to the controller's office. A list will also be terviews will be heldin the library auditorium Withdrawalforms, signedbyan instructor and posted cap gown hypnosis and meditation at noon in the at the and issuing desks andarescheduled by the first letter of adviser, be filed at registrar's office thelast of the library part the must the June5. Caps and gowns may bepickedup H-M, 13, p.m.; N-R, 13, Stimson Room as of by p.m. name: May 12-1 May ASSU OpenCollege. 4:30 Nowithdrawals will be accepted June 5 from 2 to 4 p.m. in the foyer of the 7-Bp.m.;andS-Z,May14, 12-1p.m. after thisdate. Pigott Jesse Chiang,associate professor of politi- Auditorium. "The Memory of Justice," Marcel cal science at SPU will speak about "SALT Ophuls' landmark film of the deliberate war and the Prevention of World War lIIat crimes, weaves rich off-guard footage of noonin thelibrary auditorium. Long distance charges Nuremburg with Ophuls' travels through modern Germany. The four-hour film will be etc. busy showninitsentirety at6p.m. inBAIO2. Parti Isyour quarter too already? Weunder- stand. That's whywe won'tmakeyoudo any- will be shown from noonto 2p.m. in BA 402 in dorms may increase your help. today and Part1 willbe shown from noon to2 thing until fall. But we still need being . (continued page one) Toner in January, and p.m. tomorrowinBA 102. Admission foreach Consider — anaideforOrientation— 1981 from Toner said "(she) of theshowingsis$1. Loadsof fun somehard work andlots of outlining the proposal's problems. The simply left a message that'' there was good community excitement await you. .. but not phone company encouraged him to with- newsaboutdormcharges. until September. Please stop by the Student drawhisletter, tellinghim,he said,thatSeat- Tonerdid try to return her call, he said, 14 Office in the Chieftain and leave you in social issues? Activities tle Pacific University was the only school butnevertalkedtoher andasa result,"She Are interested yournamewithusor call626-5699. Please ioinus forapot luck at 5:30p.m. in the that had any problems with the new pro- never obtained our endorsement, nor''our Chez Moi in Bellarmine. Find out what the Applications for the1981-82Search Com- gram;otherschoolshad workedoutwell. concurrenceinanywayabout thisplan. Social Action Collective is all about. Bring mittee areavailablein the Campus Ministry "Thatwasnotthe case,"hesaid. "We werenotifiedinNovember that they please join whatyoucan; usandhelp organize Office. "We have had nothing in writing here werediscussingit andasked for anopportu- fornext year "Uncommon Women and Others." a from the phone company untillate," said nity to discuss it with them and have been play by Wendy Wasserstein which deals with KeithGuy,directorofhousingandresidence given none," said Floyd Bunt, director of 15 womenand their options in life will be pre- TheFine ArtsWeekend is May15-17. The sented by the Independent PlayersMay life at Western Washington University in housingand food services at Whitman Col- S.U. Bellingham. our biggest legein Jazz Ensemble and Jazz Choir will perform at 27-30 at8 p.m. in thePigott Auditorium. Call "That has been Walla Walla. noon in Tabard featuring bebop, latin, and 626-6336 for reservations or information. problemwithit." Western Washington Universityreceived blues and ballads by Kern and Ellington. TicVetswillbe availableatthe door. But,Murphy claimsshecontactedmost of a call from Murphy in lateDecemberindi- Katherine Korbuszewski, soprano, will give is veryimportant that studentscontinu- the universitieslast December and January cating that(hey were workingona plan that her senior recital in the Campion Chapel at 8 It ingatS.U.nextfall bring theircurrentstudent for responseonwhat acommitteehadcom- wouldsubstantially improve current sys- p.m. She be accompanied by Susan the will they Sep- Guy O'Brien photoID with themwhen registerin pletedontheproposalatthattime.Thecom- tem, said. tember. Students should keep their photo ID mitteeismadeup of PacificNorthwestBell "Itis onething tocallup and give people faculty A student, andalumni art show will foraminimum of two years,unless otherwise employees and has worked.for the last 18 allofthegood news,eveningeneralterms, be displayed in the Stimson Room of the it directedduring fall registration.PhotoID'swill months developtheplan. is another to lay out the total picture," he library from1 tos p.m. todayand from 10 paid. to a.m. be validated each quarter as tuition is feedback, said, tosp.m 6aturdayandSunday. Studentswho lose/havelost their cards Based on that she her added. must proposal. Sharpe plan Applications for next year s Student-to- pay a S5 replacement fee at the controller's group mademodificationsto the Tonerand toattendthecom- Student Committeearenow being accepted. office prior to registration and present the However, she did not have response from missionhearingtoday. The deadline is today. Contact the Student- receipt to the registrar's office before a new twoor threeschoolsshe was unable.toget in "We willindicate to the commissionthat to-Student office or admissions office for card canbeissued. touch with,sheadded. theUniversity hss not had adequatetime to moreinformation. Career Planning and Placement offers One of those was S.U. She tried to reach dealwiththismatter,"Tonersaid. weekly Mcgold-' TheFACTsocialget together this week will the following seminars in the feature "Connections." Everyona over 21 is rick Center: Summer jobs workshop, Tues- welcome. Admission is $2. days, 1 p.m.; Introduction tocareerplanning, Tuesdays, 2:30 p.m.; Resume writing, Wed- nesdays, 1 p.m.; and interview techniques 16 and jobsearchstrategies,Thursdays,1 p.m. Ensemble, The Fine Arts Chorale and Summer session credits from other Chamber Singers will present their spring schools will be accepted for transfer to S U concert at 8 p.m. in the Campion Chapel. only if copies of the transcript on file $84.95 two are with theRegistrar'sOffice by Dec 1, 1981. To THE 18 be accepted for transfer, credits earned at In time for finals, Dr. Penny Ayes, director other collegesmust be a grade of D orhigher of counseling, will give a workshop on over- It is advisable to present the course descrip- coming testanxiety today in the Bellarmine tion fromthe catalog ofthe other schoolto the conference roomat4 p.m. The workshopwill dean, department head and/or registrar to videotaped andre-shown in the Learning determine if it is acceptable for transfer to a DIPLOMA. be (Save to$30onSiladium" ResourceCenter, Pigott4o3, at 2p.m. May 19 degree program here. For more information up College Rings.) at noonMay20and at3:30p m. May2l. contact theRegistrar'sOfficeat626-5700.

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