Vol. LI, No. 15 GEORGETOWN UNIVERSITY, WASHINGTON, D.C. Friday, March 1, 1968 Unification Controversy Sparks Council's Unrest by Tor.n Stoddard day concerning both the prinCiple prOVisional student assembly was Controversey over a bill which of unification and his own plan of drafted by a small group of stu­ might have lead to "the reorga­ confederation, actions which sev­ dent leaders, inc Iud i n g Kelly, nization of the present system of eral of his East Campus opponents O'Donnell, and Nursing School student government into one un­ viewed as attempts to forestall President-elect Honey Lynch, and dergraduate provisional student any further advances by those was completed only the morning assembly" has provoked a bitter­ pushing unification. of the day it was submitted to the ness among Yard and East Campus O'Brien also denounced unifica­ two councils. It stressed that if tion as a "bogus issue" and ex­ approved by a majority of the stu­ ',I politicians unequaled here since "J the "Great Unification Debate" pressed his hope "that that group dent body, the referendum would

" two years ago. of frustrated unificationists, op­ establish only "an interim student The bill, which called for a Uni­ portunists, and neo-unificationists government for one year" and 1 versity-wide referendum of the will feel free to express itself" in that "a specific task of the as­ student body March 6, has in­ March 15 referendum. sembly would be to promulgate flamed both those promoting The bill calling for a referen­ a constitution for a new perrna- I, something less than unification of dum on the establishment of a (Continued on Page 13) j l the three undergradUate student ,~ councils and those desiring unifi­ ~ cation but opposing the methods 'J of the group that drafted the mo­ i Parietal Machinery j tion. 'j When Walsh Area Junior Class T · d President J?hn Kelly introduced rlggere ~ A $3600 roberry in Darnall Cafeteria, an after-hours theft in the the resolutIOn at the Feb. 18 By Tripp ; White-Gravenor bookstore, and a sabotage in the Ryan Administra­ meeting of his council, three of , tion basement which floo{led the University's computers were some the members walked out in pro- The machinery which will decide mittee will not make the final of the problems plaguing campus police last week. The problems have test, thereby forcing the resolu- the fate of proposed parietal hours

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BORIED 1'3?? '\.

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• . . a major means of campus communications would come to a halt. We at Britches of Georgetown have taken this full page in support of The Hoya for numerous reasons • •• as the current major advertiser of the paper, we have found The Hoya to be an extremely important adver­ tising media • •. and thus felt that financial support in the form of this full page ad would serve as a commendation to the entire local advertis­ ing community as to the importance and eDectiveness of the paper. that would result in increased advertising lineage.

It is our sincere Jwpe that the area merchants and the entire stu­ dent body will join us in support of The Hoya as both an important news and advertising media.

OF GEORGETOWN

1260 WISCONSIN AVE., N.W. GEORGETOWN SLACK SHOPPE GEORGETOWN, D.C.-338-3330 1269 WISCONSIN AVE., N.W. GEORGETOWN, D.C.-3333-666 ¥rlday, March 1, 1968 THE HorA Page Three Unionization Issue Involving McSorley., Workers., GUCAP The controversy surrounding against workers heard from the T. Byron Collins, S.J., vice-presi­ r e C en t attempts to unionize workers themselves." All those he dent for planning and physical Georgetown's non-academic per­ talked to, he said, were afraid of plant. He stated, "We don't need sonnel, smouldering under cover losing their jobs if the union came an outside union to represent us. for weeks, has now inflamed a to GU. His contention was that They don't know our problems." large sector of the GU community this was a clear violation of the Fr. Collins further proposed a and has led to reports of internal stipulation in the contract in "company union" set-up for GU. dissension in the upper echelons of which the Board of Directors In the absence of any official Ad­ GUCAP. agreed not to contact the workers ministration statement on the The entire story of the at­ in the Dec. 1-Jan. 24 period. issue, this plan has come under tempted unionization by the Inter­ Gerson cites a Jan. 12 memo­ considerable attack. GUCAP, fol­ national Brotherhood of Firemen randum issued to hospital workers lowing the angry resignations of and Oilworkers is one filled with as further violation of the con­ 15 students, including Gerson, from _ ; - ...... ; I • inflammatory charges of coercion, tract. The notice assured the their Board of Directors, issued a Allen Ginsberg was featured last evening in Gaston Hall. His appear­ and indignant counter-charges of workers that the impending sepa­ statement last week finding ance was sponsored by the Yard Cultural Committee, aware that untrue statements. The Rev. rate incorporation of the Medical "severe faults in current employ­ culture encompasses most everything. Richard T. McSorley, S.J., is firm­ Center would in no way be detri­ ment conditions" beyond the union ly entrenched with the union. The mental to the workers and that issue. University is being charged with all benefits and wages would be They criticized "the announce­ being anti-union and against social continued. (Continued on Page 12) More Masses, Honrllies justice. And the workers have The University contention is found themselves thrust into the that the memo was necessary to middle of the battle along with allay rumors being spread by pro­ SABSA Grant Set For Lenten Season GUCAP. ponents of unionization meant to The unionization "mess," as it scare the workers to the union. "The Absence of Christ" is the of The Image Of God in Man Ac­ was described by one University Gerson and McSorley point to Enables HOYA subject of a homily to be delivered cording to Cyril of Alexandria, official, began when the union was the recent unionization of Catholic Sunday afternoon at 4:00 p.m. in The Testimony of the Patristic given permission to try and union­ University help where they say Dahlgren Chapel by the Rev. Age Concerning Mary's Death, ize Georgetown's workers between workers get 50 cents more an To Start Again Walter J. Burghardt, S.J. The and All Lost in Wonder: Sermons Dec. 1 and Jan. 24. The union hour than their Georgetown on Theology and Life. The HOYA appears this week homily is the first in a series of failed to collect the signatures of counterparts. Maids at CU are on Friday, instead of the usual Lenten observances sponsored by Fr. Ceroke, speaking next Sun­ 30 percent of the workers required currently being paid at a scale day, is associated with the reli­ to hold an election on the matter. Thursday. This is due to produc­ ! the University chaplain. The ten cents an hour less than at tion difficulties. Last week, The gious education department of The It was at this juncture that Fr. Georgetown but in June they will !- theme of the observance is "The HOYA did not appear at a11- Catholic University of America. McSorley, GUCAP, and Joe Ger­ get a 20 cent raise. Fr. McSorley Christ-Encounter." and almost remained dormant for Each Sunday during Lent, Mass Fr. Madden is associated with the son entered the issue with a flurry and Gerson believe "if the workers liturgical institute of the Univer­ of words. The Georgetown priest, do not want an outside union, let the remainder of the semester. will be offered in Dahlgren at That was due to financial difficul­ 4 :00 p.m. accompanied by a homily sity of Trier. Frs. Ryan, McHugh, active in many movements con­ them express that belief in a fair and Haughey are of the George­ cerned with peace and social and open election." ties. r on "The Christ-Encounter". Next The Student Advisory Board I town Theology Department. justice, listed "specific threats They took issue with the' Rev. , Sun day, the Rev. Christian for Student Affairs ordered pub­ Ceroke, O. Carm., will speak on lication stopped last week because "ME'eting Christ in Holy Scrip­ The HOYA's budget had nearly ture". On March 17, the Rev. run dry. barely enough funds re­ Lawrence J. Madden, S.J., will ex­ East Campus Budgetary Refor11l maining for another issue. SABSA, plore .. The Liturgical Confronta­ purse string of the co-curriCUlar tion". budget, t-hen requested the editors "Encounter in the Celebration Labeled 'Hypocrisy' By O'Brien to outline the causes of the pa­ of the Eucharist" is the topic of a per's fiscal malady. The editors March 24 homily by the Rev. by Vic Forker organization holding an account R. Fitzgerald, S.J., had said stu­ also presented an estimate for John L. Ryan, S.J. On the follOW­ Recently both the Yard and the would thus be directly responsible dents had a basic right to sit with additional funds. And, thanks to ::/ ing Sunday, the Rev. Lawrence C. Walsh Area Council proposed ma­ for the withdrawal of its funds the Administration and faculty in SABSA, The HOYA will continue McHugh, S.J., will speak on jor modifications in the budgeting and payment of its bills. major policy-making sessions. to appear-resuming its Thursday "Christ-the Crucified and Risen procedures of student activities. Yard president Larry O'Brien, Until the students "are able to schedule next week. Lord." On Palm Sunday, the Currently the budgets of the vari­ in reacting to the Walsh Area take part in the University's over­ A t the heart of the financial Georgetown Lenten series will be ous student activities are ad­ proposal, finds it "basically un­ all policy-making sessions, student difficulties was a $6000 debt in­ concluded with a homily by the ministered by the Student Ad­ realistic." He explained, "The influence within such organizations curred during the 1966-67 pUblica­ Rev. John J. Haughey, S.J.-"Find­ visory Board for Student Affairs Board of Directors, as corporate as SABSA will not be as well in­ tion of The HOYA. The debt was ing Christ in the Contemporary (SABSA). This advisory board controller of the University, has formed as it should." erased with funds taken from the Community." consists of an administrator, Direc­ every right to retain on SABSA an Tom Kelly found that an off­ 1967-68 budget. Thus approxi­ This Sunday's preacher, Fr. tor of Student Activities Anthony administrative agent." Further­ campus account for SABSA's bud­ mately the same amount was Burghardt, is professor of patrol­ J. Stangert, and two representa­ more, O'Brien finds Mr. Stangert, get money would promote greater needed to continue. SABSA ogy and patristic theology at tives from each of the three un­ the present director, to be a com­ efficiency. granted $4600. The additional allo­ Woodstock College. An associate dergraduate stUdent councils. Mr. petent and fair administrator of Jay Berlin, the head of the cation should be sufficient since of the late John Courtney Murray, Stangert has the power to veto funds. Walsh Area Council's Research one less issue (last week's) will he is editor of Theological Studies, SABSA decisions. It is "sheer hypocrisy for stu­ and Advisory Committee, strong­ be published during the semester a national review. He is co-editor Under the Walsh Area plan all dents to call for complete con­ ly defends his committee's budget and more advertising will be of the Woodstock Papers series activities' budgets would be de­ trol of SABSA or SCAB (the plan. solicited. and the Ancient Christian Writers posited in separate checking ac­ Walsh Area plan) when some stu­ "Functionally, SABSA would re­ The debt was due to increased series. Fr. Burghardt is the author counts at the Riggs Bank. Each dent councils and student organ­ main the same with one basic ex­ printing and typesetting costs, izations have recklessly abandoned ception. We would like to see Mr. which in turn were due to irregu­ all respect for their budgetary ex­ Stangert's veto power removed." lar production procedures. This Who Looks Better on a Motorcycle-You or McQueen? penses." Berlin went on to say that year a new, less expensive type­ "It is also the job of the three "though Mr. Stangert would no setter has been contracted. Pro­ BLOW YOURSELF UP TO POSTER SIZE student councils to scrutinize the longer be allowed a controlling duction schedules and the number behavior of other student groups veto, he would still be a voting of pages in each edition will also within their various spheres of member of SABSA." Send us any black-and-white or color snapshot. IVe'll blow it up to 2' by 3' be stabilized. influence before attempting to po­ Mr. Stangert has very rarely, (poster size). $4.75 for one, $3.00 for each additional from same photo. Resolutions were passed last lice the budgeting of all student if at all, used his veto power. Yet, week at both the College and Inquire as to quantity prices, group rates, and special projects. Original organizaHons." according to Berlin, "Its very ex­ Walsh Area council meetings photos returned. Add 2J¢ for halldling. "The Walsh Area plan has merit istence strongly influences the stu­ urging their SABSA representa­ in the willingness of students to dents in their decisions as SABSA tives to allow The HOYA to Operation Blow-Up, Inc. handle their own budgeting affairs. members." continue publication. 636 Pennsylvania Ave., S.E. However, I cannot presently point to any student activities efficiently Washington, D.C. 20003 handling their budgets. Unfortun­ ately this plan would not be effi­ I- cient until every student organi­ NO SI&N OUT FRONT BUT ... zation had shown the proper re­ sponsibility in the management of its allotted budget." O'Brien was in favor of deposit­ INSIDE- ing the activities money in an off­ campus account. He felt it would ~fUN ,t FELLOWSHIP be easier to reach if this were 1tFINE FOOD done. Tom Kelly, president of the "'38 BRANDS Philodemic SOCiety, felt that rath­ It1PORfEO ... DOt1EST'IC. BEER er than eliminate Mr. Stangert the students should require much more out of him. "The students already ~ S. lANC\NC7 UPSTMRS 10 'ltE ",~ SOUND­ have a greater deal of control in OF THe "SELDOM SCENE II TUES_~ SUM. the area of SABSA. Mr. Stangert's power rests in his knowledge of the facts. If those stUdents on the Board knew all the facts used in determining an activity's budget, Lt. Gen. Lewis B. Hershey, director of the Selective Service System, that would increase their bargain­ was recently interviewed on WBTB's "Premise." Host Barry Rubin ~CKS~&-ER. ing position." is perched at the General's left. Hershey indicated that Congress IS2S-2ZNDST. Il. DE.2-1~ He explained that at a recent granted its approval of the Vietnam involvement in the Gull of Tonkin council meeting the Rev. Thomas resolution.

+; Page Four THE HOrA Friday, March 1, 1968 Rostrum

Is It Worth It? Bruce F. Davie, Ph. D. (Dr. Bruce Davie is Associate Professor of Econom­ ics; he holds his B.A. from Pomona College and Ph.D. from Harvard. He joined the faculty in 1963.) The recent announcement of tuition increases evi­ dently angered students more by the way in which it was made than by the SUbstantive issue of the amount involved. Those who pondered the latter question may have asked themselves, Is it worth it? The remarks below are directed toward this question. Although we all attach non-economic values to a college education, particularly an education in the lib­ eral arts tradition, we are convinced by empirical studies POW, ZONK, CRASH, BLOP that college pays. The relationship between education and income can be expressed many ways; some of them quite technical. An easily comprehensible bit of evidence comes from one of the best studies in this field: Herman EDITORIALS: P. Miller, Income Distribution in the United States (1960 Census Monograph) (Washington: GPO, 1966). Males, living in the North and West, who were 35-44 A Sfrange Panacea years old when the 1960 census was taken and who had completed four or more years of college had a mean The new student power party, created University or in deciding its policy. Certain­ income of $11,395. Males in that same age group who ly there has been no previous indications recently by a small group of students, has had ended their education with high school had a mean called for various radical changes which that "faculty power" was on anyone's mind. income of $6,520. Perhaps more significant is that these would establish "complete student-faculty The University Senate, Georgetown's college graduates experienced an increase of 134 per­ control of the University." Although the faculty voice, was designed not for faculty cent in their incomes over the decade of the 1950's rationale behind many of the proposals made control but to give the faculty a greater while the high school graduates experienced only 64 by these students is questionable, the real voice in University affairs. What this latest percent. (The increment in income for the college grad­ fault lies in their cure-all solution. group of student radicals is missing is that uate over the person who attended college for three One thing the leaders of this group over­ students should likewise be trying to obtain years or less is much greater than the increment be­ a greater voice rather than trying to gain looked is that the faculty for the most part tween the income of the fellow with three years or less control of the University. is not interested in either controlling the of college and the high school graduate; it pays to go to college but it pays even more to graduate). This is a little bit of evidence about the financial benefits of a college education; what about the costs? Dean Klein Again Even at an institution which charges no tuition or Twice this past weekend Georgetown stu­ cil was under some "pressure." Hostile reac­ fees for a four year college education, the cost is near dents have encountered open hostility in tion encountered by Georgetown students at $16,000. This figure is based on the assumption that the dealing with students from Boston College, a conference in Boston last weekend con­ student forgoes $4,000 of income per year he could have firmed this fact. earned by working rather than going to school. (When I in marked contrast to the cooperation that lt is fairly certain that the student was have asked Georgetown students to estimate in this they received only a few months ago when "pressnred" because of a letter sent by Dean fashion the opportunity cost they bear, the responses I the house councils inquired into B.C.'s parie­ Klein to authorities at Boston College. Al­ get are uniformly higher than $4,000.) Tuition and fees tal policies. The cause of this hostility ap­ though Dean Klein acknowledges that he did at Georgetown, with this recent increase, equal $2,000 pears to be Edward R. Klein, Georgetown's send a letter to his equivalent at B.C., he per year or about one-third of the total real cost which Dean of Men. said that he would have to look at his letter includes foregone earnings. In response to a request by one of George­ to determine if he had made reference to To answer the question posed by the title of this town's house councils, the head of the the letter that the B.C. student had written. piece, benefits and costs must be compared. The analy­ resident council at Boston College sent in­ He wasn't sure if he had a copy of his letter sis requires the use of a theoretical technique which formation on the parietal system at B.C. but promised to look and by the end of the takes time into consideration, that is, which discounts along with a personal letter discussing the week decide if he could disclose what he had the monetary value of future benefits. The typical re­ matter. The letter, according to Harbin said in it. sults to be found in the literature suggests rates of re­ House Council President Dick Gregorie, did lt would appear that Dean Klein has vio­ turn on the full costs invested in education of around contain some "four-letter words." lated the trust students were willing to place 10-15 percent. This mode of thinking sheds some light Copies of both the information and the in him. His small-minded, petty, and undip­ on the specific issue of the $100 increase in tuition. The letter were given to Dean Klein "to show lomatic action does not become a George­ money costs of operating a college or university tend to him how other students thought." Last week town University administrator but should be increase about as rapidly as general levels of income a hostile letter from a Boston College student reserved for high school prefects of disci­ because the majority of expenditures are for the sal­ indicated that the head of the resident coun- pline. aries of faculty and staff. To attract and retain facul­ ties and staffs universities must offer salaries that are at least comparable to incomes elsewhere in the econ­ omy. Now incomes in other sectors of the economy, sec­ tors where the majority of graduates will be employed, can rise faster than prices because of rising produc­ (Est. September, 1920) tivity: greater output per employee. Universities seem THE BOARD OF EDITORS unable, or unwilling, to experience increases in pro­ Editor-in-Ch.f.e/...... Gene Payne Managing Editor...... Joe Collins ductivity (e.g., a larger number of graduates per fac­ News Editor...... Do n Casper Exec. Secretary...... Jo Garaventa ulty members). Hence costs per student increase more Feature Editor...... Alan Cariddi Circulation Manager...... Chip Hogan Sports Editor...... Larry Finefrock Advertising Manager...... Neal Zimmermann rapidly than the general level of prices. Unless revenue Business Manager...... Rich Williams Photography Editor...... Joe Riener Copy Etiitor...... Denise Belanger Layout Editor ...... Don McNeil is available from other sources, or non-salary costs can Headline Editor...... Charley Impaglia Moderator...... Edward W. Bodnar, S.J. be cut or student-faculty ratios increase, (all of which THE STAFF Assistant to the News Editor: Stephen Pisinski. might be possible at Georgetown), students must expect News Staff: Tom Tobin, Harry Gerla, Barb Benzies, Frank Charron, Barry Rubin, Brian O'Con­ nor, Tom Stoddard, Phil Cardinale, Norman Roger, Paul Genega, Ron Henry, Ralph DeFour, tuition payments to increase at about three percent per John Reale, Joanne Peartree, Bob Boege, Bruce Bavinger, Vic Forker, Jim Tannnebaum,. year faster than the general level of prices, three per­ Paul Metrinko, George Condon, Torn Gilberti, P. Mark Hansen III. Features Staff: Louis Pangaro, William Helzsouer, Terrence Odlin, William Niederkorn, Walt cent being a very rough measure of the rate of increase Foody. Sports Staff: Don Finnerty, Rick Komson, Phil Moller, Chip Butler, Steve Stageberg, Pat Quinn, in productivity which permits non-inflationary wage in­ .Jim Vaughan, Dan Reynolds, John Cordes, Roger Geiss, Ken Hoch, Steve Dean, Rick DeLeo, Mark Davis, John Przylucki, Bob Fulton, John Dwyer, Phil Yell man. creases in other sectors of the economy. At the mo­ Layout Staff: Rick Schulte, Phil Leas, Steve Wilkins, Greg Russo. Headline Staff: Matt Crosson, J. Ward Amberg II. ment when the general level of prices is increasing at Photography Staff: Dave O'Neil, Myles Swift, Rich Hluchan, Pete Chowka, Pat Finelli, Greg about three percent per year, tuition can be expected Norris, Joe Hayes. Business ~ Adv. Staff: Pat Antonelli, Paul Suozzi to increase at six percent per year. But the same ulti­ Copy Staff: Betty Datig, Marsha Dobrzynski, Karen Erickson, Sue Napolitano, Marie McConville, Peggy Kelly. mate factors which affect college tuitions also affect Cartoonist: J. C. George. Cartoon Staff: Mike Wehrstedt. the monetary benefits of a college education, that is Circulation Staff: Bill Griseau. productivity and general price increases lead to increases The writing, articles, lay-out, pictures, and format are the responsibility of the Editor and the Editorial Board and do not necessarily represent the views of the Administration, Faculty, and in money incomes. The basic economic forces which dic­ Students unless s:pecifically stated. The University subscribes to the principle of responsible freedom of expresslOn for our student editors. tated the $100 increase in tuition are precisely the same Vol. LI, No. 15 Friday, March 1, 1968 forces which will increase the future money incomes of college graduates. Copyright © The HOYA Friday, March 1, 1968 THE HOrA Page Five misinterpretation. Once we have follow. For example, if you are finished our work (including any extremely heavy, I recommend additions or deletions recommend­ walking three to four miles with a ed by the faculty committee), we little running added in the first Letters to the Editor • • • will submit the document to the week, but not so much as to place three Councils. At that time, our any strain on the heart. Then I:i Due to the large number of money than any other school in document and then return it to duties will be completed. We are gradually you can increase the 1 letters which The HOYA receives the area. So, all we can say is the committee for suggestions and certain that there will be con­ running according to your indi­ I each week, we are unable to pub­ "thanks" on behalf of the kids at criticisms. A point made by Mr. siderable debate on the bill, both vidual progress. Others can start :i Ush all of those submitted. In Junior Village. Hill, and ignored by Mr. Roger in by members of the Councils and out with more running and less j order for The HOYA to print as Art Buchwald the article, was that the bill of by individual students. If the walking. It all depends on your ~ many letters as possible, we ask rights is first and foremost a stu­ Councils feel there is a strong di­ physical condition at the start of I that all comments be limited to dent project-a definition of our vision of opinion on the document, the program. You will quickly find '1 200 words. WHAT THE 'L' role in the University community. they can call for hearings or a yourself able to increase the To the Editor: However, since we are asking to referendum. If not, they can ac­ amount of running you can do as it becomes easier and enjoyable 1. "Of course, dear evangelistic be recognized as equals in a com­ cept or reject the document them­ RE-RUNNING selves. To say that the individual each day you work out. At the 1 little MahariShi does have to get munity, we are fully prepared to 1~ • student will be "uninvolved" is to same time you should begin a A To the EdItor: around-and surely an un exalted make changes in areas which the question the principles under short program of calisthenics Two weeks ago I wrote to The llama won't suffice in this day Faculty and Administration find :i unacceptable. We will admit some which our representative student which can be done in your bed­ !~ HOYA announcing that I would and age." guilt in failing to keep Dr. Fort governments exist. It might be a room, though of more benefit if ,~ not be a candidate for the Presi­ -Alan Cariddi informed of our progress. Our good idea to do so; but we fail to done outside. j dency of the Yard. Because of sub­ The HOYA, Feb. 15, 1968 see how this problem affects the .l sequent events I have found it communications with him should The running program is one of 2. "A one-"l" lama is a priest. have been better. bill of rights. As for the comment the best ways of getting your body I':; necessary to reevaluate my posi­ that the document will then be ;t tion. A two-HI" llama is a beast. As for your major criticism, the in shape. It not only develops And I will bet my silk pajama returned to the Faculty Senate, your leg muscles but also your 1 Recently, there has been a secrecy of our deliberations, it "simply to ask their approval," There isn't any three-"l" must be remembered that student chest muscles from the deeper " fervor over the issue of the uni­ lllama." we wonder just what Mr. Roger .; fication of the three student coun- hearings on the bill of rights were breathing involved. It keeps the -Watch your spelling. expects. This will be the second cils. I have always maintained a held in early December in the lower stomach flat instead of fat. -Ogden Nash step in the implementation of the Most importan t, it act ually very definite point of view on this New South Faculty Lounge. These bill of rights, which will go into matter, and it is a point of view Karl Edgerly hearings, well-publicized, were in­ strengthens the heart by physi­ ColI., '69 effect only after its formal en­ cally exercising it and by clear­ which I do not feel has been ade­ tended to allow the students to dorsement by the Student Coun­ quately represented by any of the voice their opinions on the bill. ing the body and mind of the ten­ (Ed. note: Mr. Cariddi was refer­ Once the actual drafting of the cils, the Faculty Senate, and the sions so easily encountered on to­ present candidates for the office. ring to the two-Cl' llama, which Administration. Furthermore, at the time of my document was started, we agreed day's campus. As the old saying has proven to be an inSUfficient not to disclose the content of the Finally, we wish to state that goes in reference to body muscles: last letter to The HOYA, the list means of transportation. That is of potential candidates inclUded bill for two main reasons: first, to the Student Bill of Rights is pro­ what you don't use you lose. All why, as Mr. Cariddi goes on to avoid any possible Council rivalry; gressing rapidly. Our target date of this will add much to your bank several students who had long say, Maharishi found it necessary and second, to leave ourselves in for completion of the document is account for future good health in been interested and involved in to buy a twin-engine Beechcraft.) student government, and this is a position to work freely and com­ Feb. 29 and, with a little luck, our the later years of your life. no longer the case. promise when necessary. We felt work will be completed before Some of you many be thinking that any public statements on par­ then. As soon as the bill is pre­ For these reasons and with the BILL OF RIGHTS that it sounds dull to run, but ticular parts of the document pared, we will begin immediately you can make it interesting by support of friends and associates, to work with the faculty commit­ I now declare my candidacy for To the Editor: might tie committee members prOviding yourself with different Presidency of the Yard. As chairmen of the three stu­ down to those statements, either tee. settings in which to exercise your dent bill of rights committees, we within our own committee or with The Bill of Rights has not died body, as well as watching your Andrew D. Hendry the faculty group. The cuts about ColI. '69 believe it necessary to respond to a quiet death. It is very much own progress from a physical fit­ your article on the bill of rights, "junior James Madisons" were un­ alive. ness standpOint. For running there written by Norman Roger, which called for, and the vague refer­ is the tow path that runs beside ence to "some" people who want Honey Lynch THANKS appeared in The HOYA of Feb. GUNS '69 the canal and Potomac River. If 15, 1968. Although we find fault to have more open discussion and you go east on the tow path, it To the Editor: debate is not very thorough re­ Andrew Hendry with many statements and inti­ CoIl. '69 takes you to Rock Creek Park I know you don't like to print mations in the article we will limit porting. Perhaps we have been with its many miles of bridal too secretive in our deliberations. David Hill complimentary letters in The ourselves to consideration of sev­ S.F.S. '70 paths made to order for your pro­ HOYA, but I was wondering if eral major points. If so, we thank you for calling gram of running and walking, you would make an exception this The Faculty Committee on Stu­ this to our attention. However, a with wonderful scenery to boot. time because I just wanted to tell dent Affairs was never "relegated news article, as slanted as the PHYSICAL FITNESS Also, just beside the University is the stUdents at Georgetown how to an advisory capacity." It was one in last week's HOYA, is not the Glover Archbold Park that grateful we all were for the sup­ agreed by the students and facul­ the way to do this. To the Editor: goes as far as the Nebraska Ave., port they gave us during our re­ ty members in attendance at the The statement that "The ratify­ Students of Georgetown, you Tunlaw Rd., area. All these areas cent Telethon. meeting held last November that ing procedure will also leave the can make yourselves the best are free from traffic and present GEORGETOWN raised more the stUdents should write the student uninvolved" is another physically fit young people in the a wide range of terrain and nat­ country. A large percentage of ural beauty. you are athletically inclined and without any effort Will go out to At 4:30 p.m. Monday March 4, the playing field with a group of 1968 I will be in front of McDon­ Let the truth about Bounty be known- young men and really enjoy a ough Gymnasium to organize into game of football or softball or groups those interested in their How the first seeds of mutiny were sown. whatever the game be without physical well-being and to show What made the crew mad thinking twice about the exercise them the different routes avail­ you get from it. But there are able. To all those who are in­ many others who are not so for­ Was the Schlitz that Bligh had ... tunate to have the ability and terested, male and females and all The Schlitz that he kept for his own. know-how to play these games University Personnel are invited, and, therefore, are not too eager to tennis shoes and warm clothes are do so. To both groups I want to necessary. 'I. suggest another and simpler means of exercise: a program of running Let's start this program for '" .,- and walking. future good health now. _ ® This is one of the best individual Marty Gallagher exercise programs a person can Coach of Boxing Tomorrow. .. Tomorrow, and tomorrow, and tomorow, , .: Creeps in this petty pace from day to day ,~ (Macbeth V.v. 19)

FRIDAY, MARCH 1 FRIDAY, MARCH 8 Mixer - Darnall Cafeteria. Junior Prom-Peter Duchin 8:00-12:00. and His Orchestra. Washington Mask and Bauble-The 001- Hilton at 9:00. lection by Harold Pinter. Mid­ night Theater at Stage One. Held over for one week. SATURDAY, MARCH 9 Junior Prom--Jay and the SATURDAY, MARCH 2 Techniques and The Bucking­ Basketball-GU vs. University hams. Washington Hilton at of Maryland. Away. 9:00. Mask and BaUble-The 001- Judo-Eastern ColI e g i ate lection by Harold Pinter. Championships. McDonough Gym MONDAY, MARCH 4 from 9:00 A.M. to 9:00 P.M. Dr. King's March-Students Guest Lecturer-Korean am­ explain Dr. Martin Luther King's bassador speaks in New South upcoming civil rights march. Faculty Lounge at 7:00. Hall of nations at 8:00. TUESDAY, MARCH 5 MONDAY, MARCH 11 Basketball-GU women vs. Astronomical Colloquiwn Montgomery J.C. Away. Alumni Lounge at 8:00. THURSDAY, MARCH 7 London Graphic Arts - Sale © 196B Jos. Schlill BreWing Co .. Milwaukee and other cilles. Basketball-GU women vs. and exhibition of prints. New -- Trinity. Home at 7:00. South Faculty Lounge. All day. Page Six Friday, March 1, 1968 THE BOrA .... Page Seven -FridaY, ~arch 1, 1968 THE HorA The Changing Role Of The Modern Jesuits

Georgetown's Jesuits are at has bothered to accuse the Jesuits filled by a non-Jesuit, and a non­ ways distinguishable from the various times praised or ridiculed of scheming with the devil. The Catholic non~Jesuit at that. As one madding crowd. Many doff the _but seldom ignored. As the out~ modern critiques have somehow blackrobe pointed out, "Ten or cassock and collar whenever they Zook and scope of their University lost the old fire. fifteen years ago, this appointment are canonically able. The differ­ widens, the i r r 0 lew i t h i n it But Georgetown's Jesuits were would not have been possible." To ence between Father Fadner and changes, to the extent that some not exempt from the charge of use a phrase somewhat over­ Mr. McIntrye--o u twa r diy, a t Jesuits no longer call Georgetown Machiavellism. During an anti­ worked during the past few cen­ least-is easily d e t e r min e d. their University. In this article, Catholic spell in the 1920's, a turies, times are changing. Father Fadner is readily identi­ the first of a two-part study, the United States senator was thrust Thus Georgetown and the fied in his black cassock, flowing Jesuits' changing role is examined into a panic by the two ancient Jesuits are no longer one and the black confessional cap e, and in its more outward forms. cannon squatting 0 u t sid e the same. Yet Georgetown proudly three-cornered biretta. Mr. McIn­ by Don Casper Healy Building. The distingUished calls itself the oldest Catholic tyre, when teaching, wears a busi­ News Editor legislator ex c I aim e d that the university in the country, mean­ ness suit, white shirt, and tie. Jesuits scheme with the devil Jesuits had trained these cannon ing at the same time the oldest Many priests would fain follow and live on the moon-at least ac­ on the Capitol. (Actually, they Jesuit university. But the fact Mr. Mclntrye's example and shed cording to John Donne. In a satire were last fired aboard the Ark and that Georgetown always was and their Roman collars-but Patrick entitled Ignatius His Conclave, the Dove, vessels that brought possibly always will be called a Cardinal O'Boyle has strongly !i Donne relates how Lucifer feared the Catholics to Maryland in Jesuit university clouds the subtle suggested that priests of the ,j that Ignatius of Loyola, if he 1634.) Thus Georgetown Univer­ differences now setting in. Washington Archdiocese wear the I'l spent much longer in hell, might sity was closely linked, in the collar when laboring in the vine­ 1 The Faculty Handbook boldly i usurp the satanic legions and in­ minds of some, to the Society of yard. Exceptions are made, of I asserts that Georgetown Uni­ J stall the Jesuits in their stead. Jesus and its sinister schemes to versity is "conducted by the So­ course, for a lawyer-priest, to take Lucifer persuades the first black overthrow the government. An ciety of Jesus." In that disarming as example, who is arguing a pope to move to the moon. He earlier, more real reticence to­ case for Holy Mother Church in a tells Ignatius that hell isn't really statement, the handbook bears ward the school on the Potomac witness that Georgetown is a court of Law, which is not neces­ worthy of the Jesuits anyway. If sprang from the silly idea that it Jesuit university if only because sarily the vineyard. And while the they set up shop on the moon, was a means by which Papists it is "conducted" by the Soldier's Jesuits, as members of an exempt however, that he a v e n 1 y bod Y could more firmly root themselves religious order, are not under the would become a suitable hell. Sons. But things aren't all that in America-which was entirely simple. In accord with Jesuitical Cardinal's direct control in many termed "the foolish world," which For good measure, Donne notes correct, if one calls them not matters, they think it best to con­ began at roughly 37th Street. But that the Jesuits, adhering to a logic, the statement is open to Papists but American Catholics interpretation. form to his directives. But Father they probably assumed business mysterious Church canon com­ or, better yet, Catholic Americans. suits for rather defensive reasons, The Rev. Frank L. Fadner, S.J., Panuska touches the white collar manding all clerics t 0 car r y peeking abo v e his scientist's such as avoiding errant Know­ sharpened knives, employ the Georgetown Outgrows regent of the School of Languages and Linguistics, takes a rather smock and says, "I personally Nothing bricks. cutlery quite often, chiefly in the Cannon aside, Georgetown's re­ would like to see clerical attire Outward changes in Jesuit garb entrails of princes and kings. broad interpretation of "to con­ have been accompanied by out­ lationship with its Jesuits is not duct." To him, it means to lead, disappear completely for all func­ A later writer put it more suc­ quite the same as it was when tions except the strictly liturgical. ward change-public attitude to­ cinctly. "In the vows taken by to inform, to delineate, and lest ward the University. And this the good Fathers were accused of any doubt remains, to character­ I think it's lost a lot of meaning." Jesuits, there is heresy, Machi­ treason. Until fairly recently, changing attitude underscores the avellism, and manifest cheat ize. "Originally a Jesuit university Most Georgetown Jesuits think Georgetown University and the was one that was run by Jesuits­ they have hit upon a medium in school's widening scope. and fraud." Moreover, Jesuits are Society of Jesus were one and When the residents of the sur­ "a herd of beasts, hogs, epi­ anyone of any importance was matters of priestly garb. They the same, the University being wear the collar but not the cas­ rounding vicinage spied the Rom­ cureans, and atheists." Jesuit. Strictly speaking, that is ish frocks on the Hilltop. they simply an extension of the So­ what a Jesuit university should sock, substituting the familiar ciety. It was what the Rev. Ed­ be. But it isn't anymore. For one clerical black suit and rabbi. The thought that the school might be mund Nuttall, S.J., for mer I y thing, it is too big. For another, Rev. John C. Haughey, S.J., as­ a seminary for the production of superior of the Jesuit community, you have to do more than just sociate professor of theology, ob­ Catholic clergy. Such a notion was called CIa total and complete tolerate laymen since we don't serves that this is "my idea of not entirely preposterous-at least I Jesuit outfit." The Jesuit hand have enough Jesuits." Fat her modernity"-depending, of course, not in the mind of Georgetown's was everywhere evident, whether Fadner's modern definition is on how one interprets modernity. founder. The college was estab­ in the administrative role, the di­ founded on the Jesuit spirit with­ The Rev. Royden B. Davis, S.J., lished to ~impart what John Car­ rectlyeducative, the co-curricular, out quite as many flesh-and-blood dean of the College, says, "The roll called "permanency and suc­ the spiritual, and the disciplinary, Jesuits. "A Jesuit university is cassock for myself, has so many cess to our H. Religion in the that hand, perhaps more tangibly one that is led by, informed by, connotations in this society in United States." American Catho­ felt in the last. delineated by, and characterized which we live that it can hinder licism's "permanency and success" But Georgetown has outgrown by the Jesuit spirit of education." the work I have to -do." He con­ hung suspended on the twin cords its founders. The Society of Jesus tinues, "Although I am a priest, I of a laity thoroughly entwined in simply cannot c;upply the men Other Jesuits would not entirely the principles and practices of re­ agree with Father Fadner, and it am also dean-and want to be needed to keep Georgetown homo­ praised and criticized as such." ligion-and a clergy to serve them. geneously Jesuit. Then again, the is encouraging to see that there While the school on the Po­ world and, some say, the Church is a genuine spirit of discussion The Rev. Edward W. Bodnar, tomac would not itself be a sem­ itself have outgrown the sort of and debate within the Jesuit com­ S.J., associate professor of classics, inary, Carroll hoped that the structure which Georgetown once munity. The Rev. Joseph A. takes a rather practical approach education it offered would inspire matched. One seriously doubts Panuska, S.J., associate professor to the affair--surprising for a some students to bolster the ranks that the Society would wish to of biology, takes issue, though classicist. He does not wear the of the American clergy. In 1792, permeate Georgetown with black­ cautiously, even with the term cassock because, in pas sin g he wrote, "Now may we not robes even if it could. "Jesuit university." He says, "I through so many doorways dur­ reasonably hope, that one of the wonder if you should refer to ing the day, he might get the effects of a virtuous course of Three laymen and one diocesan Georgetown as a Jesuit school­ wind-flung robe caught in a door­ priest now count themselves mem­ education will be the preparing of it's a school in which a number of jam. minds of some whom Providence bers of the once all-Jesuit Board Jesuits work." Mr. Edward J. These old attacks on Jesuitism, of Directors, begetter of policy. may select, to receive and cherish however, seem to have disappear­ McIntyre, S.J., ins t r u c tor in Changing Dress a call from God to an ecclesiastical ed. They have given way to Next year there will probably be philosophy, says outright, "George­ five more lay directors. There are Yet in days past, cassock, cape, state." Even when he had begun 0 0 town is not a Jesuit university. modern critiques, m s t f ten lay vice-presidents together with and biretta were de rigeur-per­ to plan for his "college on the leveled by Jesuits themselves. Yet a full-fledged bureaucracy of lay There's nothing in the charter haps to better conceal an iron Potowmacl{," he thought that the among the sundry c r i tic ism s that says it is Jesuit." In fact, poker or two. Occasionally, long institution might someday sprout aimed at Georgetown's Jesuits by administrators. Conceiveably even Georgetown's description in the the president might someday be a strings of large rosary beads a seminary. This was confirmed the studentry, there are echoes of Manual of Freshman Class Pro­ layman. would be added by more pious by Rome's answer to his proposed the old attacks. The mushroomed stu den try, files for 1967-68, published by the souls. However, these pioneers project. Informing him of the ap­ To many students, G e 0 r g e­ nearly half non-Catholic, is taught College En t ran c e Examination seemed to have reached an even proval of the proper curial con­ town's Jesuits might well live on Board, makes no mention at all happier medium as regards their the moon. One freshman noted by a mushroomed faculty, over gregation, Car din a I Antonelli half non-Catholic and 98 per­ of Jesuits, the Jesuit spirit, or for dress. They donned full regalia that the Jesuit prefect on his dor­ that matter, Jesuitism. wrote Carroll, ". . . the design of mitory corridor is affectionately cent non-Jesuit. Most co-cur­ while on the college grounds and establishing a school for the in­ ricular activities are no longer The Georgetown campus is not ordinary business suits and cra­ struction of youth in piety and called "The Phantom." The fresh­ always recognized as a Jesuit man explains that few corridor supervised by Jesuit moderators, vats when out in what a particu­ learning and a seminary for the residents have ever laid eyes on and the remaining Jesuit modera­ citadel since Jesuits are not al- larly early Georgetown Jesuit training of clergymen, is warmly "The Phantom" in the first place. tors no longer wield the power commended." once theirs. The characteristically But he knows there is a Jesuit Close Supervision living on the corridor all right. Jesuit activities, such as the So­ The freshman's quarters are next dality and the St. John Berch­ It is little wonder that Cardinal door to the Jesuit's, and he hears man's Society, have experienced a Antonelli placed the words "piety" the priest cough during the night certain unpopularity, the latter and "learning" in the very same and occasionally, shower in the extinction. The spiritual and the phrase, even "piety" before "learn­ morning. disciplinary are no longer inter­ ing"-as if the two came hand When the University's tuitions twined - compulsory weekday in hand, and the former was a were increased, many accused the Mass is no longer overseen by a means toward the latter. In the Jesuits of "manifest cheat and Jesuit prefect of discipline. In best scholastic tradition of those fraud," though not quite as elo­ fact, there are no religious re­ days, learning was seen as a quently. Again, when the Lowen­ quirements at all. And responsi­ means to salvation, not as an end brau truck makes its regular ap­ bility for the students' good be­ in itself or, as many moderns be­ pearance outside the J e sui t haviour has been given over to lieve, a means to money. This was kitchen, witticisms not unlike laymen. reflected in Georgetown's aca­ "hogs, epicureans" are bandied The Jesuits once considered the demic, dis c i p lin a r y, and co­ about. And one supposes that at students' non-academic develop­ curricular make-up, all closely some time or other Georgetown's ment an -integral part of Jesuit supervised by Jesuits. In fact. this Jesuits were accused of carrying education, the spiritual and the same notion, when clothed in more knives. There is evidence that disciplinary mating with the aca­ palatable language and more finely such a charge would not have demic, in their scheme, to fashion honed with Teilhardian insight, been unfounded. In 1845 or there­ what they called the whole man. might very well be Georgetown's abouts, a Father William Clarke They reserved the pOSitions deal­ one credential as a Jesuit uni­ concealed an iron poker beneath ing with student development for versity today. his cassock-to protect himself themselves, such a task requiring Years ago, but not too many from bands of marauding stu­ men expert in Jesuit theory. The years, this idea was plainly evi­ dents. newly created post of vice-presi­ dent in a curriculum relying As yet, no one at Georgetown dent for student development is (Continued on Page 17) Page Eight THE HorA Friday, March 1, 1968- Communism Trial's Validity Divides Professional Opinion ,

by Bob Boege the court's testimony, but did not opinion a fair verdict could not be A moot trial of International allow the spectator to speak be­ reached until after much more Communism was held last week in cause his statement was "irrele­ careful deliberation." Dr. Slemmer Georgetown University's Hall of vant to the proceedings." stated that the court's final deci­ Nations. The "trial" was a major The strategy of the defense was sion would be published in an test of the University's new to disprove the conspiracy charges upcoming record of the three-day fight it. speaker policy. which took effect by showing that the "crimes symposium. last September. Sponsored by the against humanity" attributed to an The entire proceedings of the Georgetown Chapter of the Young international communist conspir­ moot trial were videotaped. Ac­ Americans for Freedom, the Twin acy were merely the political poli­ cording to one television techni­ Get Eaton's Corrasable Bond Typewriter Paper_ Circle-National Catholic Press, cies of separate communist re­ cian, some of the expenses were and numerous other anti-commu­ gimes. indirectly financed by Georgetown Mistakes don't show. A mis-key completely disappears nist and exile groups, the three University through the YAF. The from the special surface. An ordinary pencil eraser lets Attorneys day affair featured many contro­ technician mentioned that the you erase without a trace. So why use ordinary paper? versial speakers whose antipathy Defense Attorneys were Mr. tapes would probably be used in to communism was quite apparent. Leonard J. Keilp, a Washington law classes at Georgetown's down­ Eaton's Corrasable is available in light, medium, heavy According to Mr. Lee Edwards, D.C. criminal lawyer and gradu­ town Law Center. weights and Onion Skin. In IOO-sheet packets and 500- a trial coordinator, the purpose of ate of Georgetown University Law Many questioned the use of sheet ream boxes. At Stationery Departments. the symposium in the form of a Center; and Georgetown's facilities by the moot trial was "to present the Dr. Malcolm W. Houston, a purportedly "right-wing" speakers American public with as complete Washington D.C. general and trial before the Court of World Opin­ and accurate a picture as possible lawyer and graduate of the Uni­ ion. ThE' Washington Post criti­ of communism." It was hoped that versity of Maryland Law School. cized the affair ac; being a "right­ the trial's publicity would offset Prosecuting Attorneys were Dr. wing version of Bertrand Russell's "favorable reports" depicting com­ C. Dickerman Wiliams, an LL.B. anti-U.S. War Crimes Trail" held munist gains in health, science, from Yale and former member of last year in , Sweden. and education in the fiftieth an­ the national board of directors of The Post stated that Georgetown niversary year of the Bolshevik the American Civil Liberties University was doing itself a dis­ Revolution. Union; service by "providing hospitality Mr. Fred Schlafly, partner of for such a peepshow." Conspiracy Charges an Alton, Illinois, law firm and a It was last fall that the Uni­ The moot cotlrt followed inter­ graduate of Georgetown Uni­ versity's Board of Directors voted Only Eaton makes Corrasable. versity and Harvard Law School; national procedure. Conspiracy to give student organizations com­ EATON PAPER CORPORATION. PITISFIELD. MASSACHUSETIS charges were placed against the and Dr. William H. Rob e r t s, plete freedom to invite speakers world's major communist parties. former director, Institute of In­ without asking the permission of Those communist countries with ternational Law and Relations, a faculty advisors or the administra­ embassies in the United States professor of international law and tion.

were served a six count summons relations at Catholic University, Dr. Philip Tripp, III, the vice ..,. ',.:"';"'":,"::' . ',' .. :~.,,~ ":,: '" ...... ,. and were asked to appear before and associate editor of The Ameri­ president for student development, the Court of World Opinion. The can Political Science Review from reaffirmed this policy. "The Uni­ "',." 1953 to 1962. . :: court invited representatives of versity is a platform for the free ';: those "subpoenaed" countries and The tribunal, headed by Dr. exchange of ideas," Dr. Tripp said. $ also leaders of the American Com­ Selmmer, deliberated an hour and "Though we may take exception .00 munist,Progressive Labor, Social­ a half before reaching a temporary or disagree with the ideas ex­ ist Workers, Chinese Communist, conclusion. "The amount of evi­ pressed, we have an obligation to and Trotskyite parties to provide dence amassed is so great," Dr. provide an environment for the a defense for "international com­ Slemmer read, "that in the court's exercise of free speech." ea· munism." When they failed to do so, the court appointed a defense of its own. Proceedings went rather peace­ abJy, despite several incidents in­ You Are Cordially Invited __ _ volving anti-Viet Nam War pro­ a week or more ... ponents. Another diversion was provided by the Rev. Richard We af the Washington Hebrew Congregation are not pri­ Wurmbrand, an exiled Rumanian AS HUNDREDS Evangelical minister. marily interestecl in holiclay mixers. You of the opposite sexes OF COLLEGE GUYS A prisoner of Rumanian com­ will, we believe, devise your own means of getting together. We munists for 14 years, Rev. Wurm­ AND GALS HAVE brand insisted upon removing his woulcl, however, like our building to be a focus for good fellow­ upper garments to show profuse SUMMERTIMES back and chest scars inflicted by ship, as well as very basic talk, and we're cerlain that there is a with ... torture. "I brought here the screams of one billion enslaved hearty quofa of you "nitty gritties" around. We'd like to issue a people," the Rev. Wurmbrand shouted. When the defense ap­ standing invitation for supper on the first Sunday of each month, pealed to the court to stop the dis­ like March 3, April 7, and May 5 for a starter_ play, Rev. Wurmbrand retorted, "I object to what the communists are doing and to the apathy of All' we offer is fairly goocl spaghetti, chianfi, and that sort America." The tribunal was composed of five of stuff_ The intellectual stimulation we expect from you. We've jurists from several areas of the tried it in the past ancl have not been disappointed. We just feel world. The presiding judge was a prominent Ohio jurist, Dr. Richard that there are more of you floating around whom we are not H. Slemmer. Dr. Slemmer is a lecturer in law at Ohio State reaching_ University, a State Judge Advo­ cate for the Ohio Air National The menu, as you have noted, is not bagels and lox. We Guard, and former staff member of the Allied Air Forces of are, therefore, implying no ethnic exclusivity. Topics of discus­ Europe (NATO). sion range from A to Z_ Their only common clenominator is that Witnesses You're trained and work on routes where people have they are stimulating. bought Good Humor Ice Cream for years . no in­ Other tribunal members were Dr. D. S. Chen, former dean of vestment ... everything supplied. Soochow University Law School We don't have any points to make; that is, we don't need and past president of the Shang­ HOW YOU QUALIFY FOR INTERVIEW hai Bar Association; Dr. Emilio the activity. On the other hand, we do think there are those of 1. Minimum age 18. Nunez Portuondo, twice president you who would find this meaningful, and we want to make our­ 2. Need a valid driver's license ... and must be able of the United Nations Security to drive a clutch transmission. Council and a former Cuban diplo­ selves available_ mat and national leader; Dr. 3. Be in good physical condition. Stefan Osusky, member of the In­ ternational Commission of Jurists One thing we feel we can ask, even of "egg heads," ;s if Sign Up Now For Our Campus Visit in Geneva, Switzerland and a past you would like to join us March 3, at 6 P.M_, to lift the tele­ Ask your Summer Placement Director or Student Aid diplomat and delegate to the Officer to schedule you for our campus visit or write to: League of Nations from the Re­ phone, call EM 2-7100, and let us know how much spaghetti to public of Czechoslovakia; and Dr. Carlos Marquez Sterling, one time put in the pot (not vice versa!). GOOD HUMOR, Dept. A. member of the Cuban House of 800 Sylvan Avenue Representatives, an anti-Batista Englewood Cliffs, N. J. 07632 presidential candidate in 1958 and In all seriousness we have found these evenings extremely past Cuban minister of labor and fruitful, whether they involve five or fifty_ We would prefer the minister of education. INTERVIEW The defense failed to provide laffer. Please be our guest. J ( DATE: March 1~ any witnesses. One spectator wanted to deliver a statement The Washington Hebrew Congregation_ against the motives of the court. An Equal opportunity Employer (M/F) The tribunal decided to accept the hastily scrawled paper into Friday, March 1, 1968 THE HOYA Page Nine Fitzgerald Expects Annual Tuition Rise

by Norman Roger of income sources unable to close Fr. Fitzgerald told the same of Feb. 9 at The Hole. But Larry "The rising costs of higher edu- the gap" The Rev. Thomas R. thing to a student meeting on Feb. O'Brien, Yard president, said that cation" is without a doubt a ne- Fitzgerald, S.J., academic vice­ 22, but put it in much more des­ "Student Government was expect­ ing the raise as early as Decem­ bulous phrase, and one that has president, pointed out that the perate terms. "The Federal Gov­ ber when Fr. Haller spoke to us. little or no meaning for most col- operating costs of the University ernment must get into the picture We tried to antiCipate it. What will go up 5 percent next year, and lege and unive~sity students. But that even with the $100 increase in a much more direct way. If aroused the ire of the council was the desperate Importance of the the University will still suffer a they don't come in strong in the the way students were informed, next five years, we will witness the and the fact that the council was words to institutions of higher' half million dollar deficit. Fr. Fitz­ not kept abreast of changes as learning was driven home to gerald pointed out that "were disappearance of private higher they occurred. Student leaders Georgetown's students by the im- there no tuition raise we would be education." To many the inclusion took steps to inform themselves, pact of a $250 increase in tuition back to being a million and a half of government in private education but any information we could get over last summer, followed by a in the red." seems un-American and unconsti­ had to come from the Adminis­ tration. Now we can only react." tutional, but the trend is irreversi­ $100 raise for next year, and the The University is being hit hard likelihood of annual increases from all sides, whether it is from ble. Of the $16.8 billion spent by student Notions thereafter more than certain. The a drop in enrollment and needed colleges last year, one fourth was O'Brien pointed out that many implications of the phrase are of revenue in the graduate schools provided by the Federal Govern­ student notions on the University such drastic consequence that by because of the new draft edicts ment. It is estimated that by financial strategy border on the the year 2,000, despite soaring tu­ or the penny increase in the cost 1975 that figure will jump to 50 absurd. Students scream about itions, most of the nation's private of mailing a letter. Rising expen­ percent. But Fr. Fitzgerald pointed Jesuit spending, research grants, colleges will be almost totally de­ ses are such that the University's out that government will not be etc., "but the only people who can pendent upon the Federal Govern­ financial head is completely under able to play this increased role do anything to dispel these ideas ment for support." water, and increasing the tuition until the end of the Vietnamese is the Administration. If they want is like trying to empty the pool conflict. FR. FITZGEARLD to propagate these falsehoods, all Rising Costs in which the University flounders they have to do is sit back and do sure it is done effectively." with the proverbial thimble. Fr. But the long range aspect of nothing." The Rev. Joseph A. Haller, S.J., Haller said that "the tuition raise the University's struggle for sur­ The nurses, disturbed by a $120 University Treasurer, stated that won't really help. We will not see vival in the financial jungle is not increase over and above the $100 Many people feel that much of "Georgetown University, Ii k e any significant improvement in the of pressing concern to most stu­ suffered by the other schools, are many institutions of higher learn­ the friction on financial matters is UniVersity's financial condition un­ dents. What they are interested in also asking why. Fr. Fitzgerald caused by the fact that nobody has ing, is faced with severe pressures less we start getting significant is the immediate how, when, said that in practice "everybody in of rising cost, with present levels a bird's eye view of the Univer­ federal aid." where, and why the increase. The the Nursing School gets a $500 sity's situation. Students feel they question that concerns most stu­ scholarship, as that is approxi­ are being milked dry, teachers feel dents is how often this will occur. mately the operating deficit of the they aren't being paid enough, and Fr. Fitzgerald commented on this school per person." He said the everybody seems to dislike the both in an interview and at the reason for higher costs in the people on Second Healy. O'Brien meeting of the 22nd. He said, "As Nursing School is the large num­ said that "while the term 'open­ long as costs go up, we have no ber of faculty members in pro­ ing the books' has been much choice but to raise tuition. There portion to students. He went on abused, there should be some sort will be another raise in the near to conclude that "facing a $.150,- of an annual or semi-annual brief­ future, and although I am no more 000 deficit, the future of the school ing with the Administration, fac­ anxious to see it than anyone ... is in danger." ulty senators, and student leaders the University must avoid success-' Alumni Support on the University's financial pic­ ive large deficits. Unless income ture and strategy." When asked goes up to meet expenses, we will On the question of research, Fr. about this, Fr. Fitzgerald saw no be facing insolvency in a very Fitzgerald said that a university objections. "There is a good pos­ short time. Fr. Haller estimated has three functions: to teach, sibility oI taking some student 1. Planning a trip? 2. But that's just swampland. that the increases would vary from to discover, and to render public leaders in on a confidential basis. Dabbling in real estate. I'll call it Bog about $100 to $200 every year. service. "Research should be pres­ I am sure that our position will There's some choice Harbor. Fr. Fitzgerald went on to say that ent and prominent in a university. sober them as quickly as it has acreage for sale. "small increases every year are Not just any research, but only some members of the faculty." more palatable than large increas­ those kinds which in some way en­ es every two years." rich what the university is already O'Brien went on to add that the doing. We are not engaged in de­ University has reached "the point Scholarships fense research. This is not appro­ of no return. If tuition continues The next immediate concern of priate to our purpose, and our to go up, you will find that stu­ students is with scholarships. Many people should not ,be involved with dents who are here now will walk students wonder if their parents such things." out because of financial reasons." will be able to support this annual Most students are now ponder­ Although Fr. Fitzgerald did say added burden. When questioned, ing the question, "Why us?" They that nobody should have to leave Fr. Fitzgerald said that "the total look for other goats, and the one because of the raise, he did agree amount of the scholarship fund that seems to be most handy is the that "enrollment will drop. This is will be increased, and relief will alumni. But according to Mr. Reed, already happening at other schools. be given where the need is great­ director of the Annual Alumni Giv­ It just hasn't hit us yet. We'll est." Fr. Fitzgerald said that any­ ing, "the alumni are performing begin to feel it in a couple of body currently enrolled in the Uni­ well, although there is always years." versity who feels they cannot sup­ room for improvement. We're just 3. What'll you do with 4. Have you checked for port the raise should go to the slightly above the national average Despite the gloomy picture, the alligators? tsetse flies? Student Finance Office. If they of 20 percent. Mr. Reed, while not Georgetown is by no means near feel that they have not received an displeased, did say that "we have the top of the range in either its How about one free You sure look on adequate hearing, then they should a lot of catching up to do. Catholic immediate problems or its tuition. with every acre? the dark side. go to the deans of their respective institutions are not known for the The Ninth Annual Comparative schools. "This is to make sure that support they receive from alumni. Survey of the National Association their arguments are properly One of the big problems the Alum­ of Colleges and Universities shows evaluated. No one should have to ni Office faces is "communication, that Georgetown is somewhere in withdraw from the University be­ making the alumni aware of just the middle of the tuition spectrum. cause of the tuition increase." how real the University's plight This year tuitions ranged from is." In the area of grants, endow­ $895 to $2400 in colleges through­ Some students expressed their ments, and other sources of fi­ out the United States, with disturbance over the method and nance, Fr. Haller said, "If there is Georgetown falling in at $1650. effectiveness of distribution and anything to be done, we've done Although Fr. Haller estimates that wondered if a re-evaluation was it." Georgetown will hit a tuition of not in order. Fr. Fitzgerald said Attacks by students have also $1,000 a semester within the next that he too is worried about how been leveled against their councils, three or four years, he was quick effectively the money is being and the supposed student govern­ to point out that the cost of high­ given out, and that he is "doing ment apathy was the object of a er education will be on the rise everything in my power to make demonstration held the afternoon everywhere. Increased Vandalism 5. I hate to see you throw 6. Then why don't you put some your dough away. money into Living Insurance What can students do? It seems from EqUitable. That way, that there is really very little. ListelI, I'm doing this you'll all be on solid ground. Junior Prom Special Vandalism, now at an all time so my wife and kids will Living Insurance gives top high, does contribute to the Uni­ have something to fall protection while your kids versity's operating cost in the back on if something are growing up. And when happens to me. forms of increased wages and ris­ you retire, it can give you a fformal attire oLtd ing material costs; and student or­ lifetime income. ganizations that exceed their bud­ I never could 1416 H Street, N.W. gets and force the University to read road maps. Washington, D.C. 20005 pick up the tab do nothing in the way of constructive contributions. Phone: 638-3300 Yet in the world of high finance and dollar signs followed by ten Hours: 9 AM to 6 PM and eleven figures, these indeed For information about Living Insurance, see The Man from Equitable. seem insignificant. But whether it For career opportunities at EqUitable, see your Placement Officer, or The Finest Tuxedos By After Six is in "the crowded rooms at St. write: James L. Morice, Manager, College Employment. Mary's, the uninhabitable condi­ The EQUITABLE life Assurance Society of the United States tions of Xavier," or broken win­ Black $8.00 dows that remain unfixed for Home Office: 1285 Ave. of the Americas. N. Y., N. Y. 10019 months, the reality of the Uni­ An Equal Opportunity Employer, M/F @Equitable 1968 Fancy & Colors $9.50 versity's plight is evident, and its future hidden in a dark gloom. Page Ten THE H" r A Friday, March 1, 1968 ------~~~~~~~~------Theatre: High-Voltage Sartre the others are subjected to the THE VICTORS. Starring Jean placed in the custody of some silence or screams resulting from Perry, Harold Blankenship, Ed­ French collaborators, are to be the torture. Making an about-face ward Levey, and Gary Schrenk. questioned, and finally executed. in alternating acts, Sartre looks at At the Clendenen Theatre. For Sorbier, one of the captives, the problem from the point of usefulness is the determining fac­ view of the French collaborators. When and how does a man die? tor, illustrated by his line, "We It is through this altern a tion in This is the question Jean-Paul died long ago--at the precise mo­ scenes, the subsequent arrival of Sartre explores in The Victors. ment we stopped being useful." their leader, and the reason to "Mort sans Sepulture", literally The action takes place in the attic live given to the group by their translated-"Death without Buri­ and classroom of a schoolhouse in leader that the tension is main­ al,"-is the French title of this a village near Grenoble, France. tained. work conveying the idea of a liv­ The drama centers about the in­ ing death. Sartre delves into this terrogations of the prisoners, how The American Univer8ity The­ problem in the context of the Re­ they will react, and the psycholog­ atre presentation is greatly en­ sistance movement in France dur­ ical effect of guilt produced if hanced by the tremendous use ing World War II. Four members they renounce the group. One by made of the stage. The two scenes of the movement are captured, one the prisoners are taken while set upon a revolving platform and the high sophistication of the sets produce desired effects. Their use of lighting successfully conveys the time lapse called for, further­ ing the dramatic tension and show­ ing the short time in which a man necessary tension. Jerry Perry, in second only to Clochet. Schrenk may be called to evaluate his life. the role of Lucie, turns in a below portrays the true character of one Although scenery and special par performance because of her fraught with the ambivalent effects play an essential part in inability to reach the heights to questions arising out of the prob- ' the overall success of a produc­ which this role could have taken lerns of freedom, guilt and their tion, the true key for determining her. Lucie, the female member of intermingling. Just as the per­ this success is the ability and the group, is to have a sobering formance of Levey during the talent shown by the cast. Save for influence on the group. Jean Perry classroom acts holds up the ten­ one truly brilliant performance, does not quite fill the require­ sion in that area, so also the per­ this production is marred with ments of the role and creates a formance of Schrenk has the same mediocrity. Clochet, played by Ed­ void which is not filled. Henri, effect in the attic acts. ward Levey, is the sadistic tor­ played by Harold Blankenship, is a Although a difficult play to pro­ turer, who enjoys the final tri­ strong-bodied, weak-willed Greek, duce, the American University umph as three gunshots ring out. who provides the ideal -to which Theatre's interpretation of The Levey mastered this role to such the group looks for strength. Victors is good-unfortunately the a high degree that were it not Blankenship turns in a perform­ personnel in the cast were in for the fact of his appearing in ance of not outstanding nature, general unable to handle such alternate acts, he would over­ yet not injurious to the produc­ difficult roles. shadow the other performers. It tion. Gary Schrenk, in the role of is to his credit that the torture Sorbier, turns in a performance W. J. Helzlsouer held on and off stage becomes truly believable, maintaining the The conquered commiserate .•• At your newsstand Guess Who's NOW Coming To The White House WEEKEND. by Gore Vidal. Star­ is simply too shopworn to sustain sunk to new lows (her current ru;4tlanfic ring John Forsythe, Rosemary an entire work (witness Guess motion picture is Planet of the Murphy, and Kim Hunter. At Who's Coming To Dinner?) and Apes). SUPERNATION AT the National Theatre. provides a plethora of plot supple­ The supporting players offset PEACE AND WAR ments. the coolness of the leading figures It is time we recognized that well. Staats Cotsworth is gifted Mrs. MacGruder (R 0 S e mar y Gore Vidal is a valuable national Murphy) is endearing, enchanting, enough to savor the richly comic asset. Although it is highly im­ eternally elegant - the embodi­ lines the script has allotted to him, probable that he will be remem­ ment of a senatorial spouse. She while Eleanor Wilson comes aw­ bered as one of the era's great is also terribly tolerant of her fully close to walking off with the playwrights, he has carefully husband's dalliances wit h his whole show every time her carved a special niche of his own secretary/mistress (Kim Hunter). sweetly white supremacist, mag­ in theatrical annals. No other Senator and Mrs. Andrews nolia-loving self comes into view. dramatist shows an even compara­ Weekend has been a smash, to (Staats Cotsworth and Eleanor use the press agent's phrase, in • "?Z;' ble amount of ability in reducing Wilson) are a respectable, con­ to laughable insignificance that Washington, a city crazed with servative Southwestern c 0 u p 1 e subject which so obsesses Ameri­ politiCS year 'round. Whether it whose recitation of a litany of manages to survive the New York cans in years divisible by four­ rig h tis t platitudes occasionally the often Quixotic quest for the critics depends solely on whether A superb punctuates a sluggish scene. Anxi­ or not they realize that Gore Vidal reporter's Presidency. A merger between in­ ous to prove that bigotry is a _§~~2·~~"':~_'YocaHo. DIrector lOll: C magazine cessant wit and iconoclastic im­ does not fancy himself a new ".0. stranger to their door ("I just Pinter but simply a polemicist So... rset. N.w Jersey 01173 length mediacy (the names "Johnson," love Henry Belafonte"), Vidal im­ "Reagan," "Nixon," et aZ are fre­ who prefers to spice his periodic profile of the' plements them as an engaging NAME ••••••••••••••••• G ....D! •••• AGE ••• quently used as targets for dev­ pronouncements with the hilarity United States caricature of a philosophy-one he can so masterfully manipulate. ADDRESS ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• astation) makes Weekend not so for which he plainly holds little in a year of -Charley Impaglia CITY ••••••••••••••• STATE •••••• ZIP •••••• much another situation comedy as sympathy. turbulence a safety valve for release of PHON!•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• A-6 The cast is virtually unimpeach­ and decision. the frustrations our governmental AMERICAN processes cause. Since the demise able and, to a large extent, re­ of David Frost and That Was The sponsible for transforming what INSTITUTE OF Week That Was, political humor is structurally a drawing-room period piece into an enjoyable HYPNOTHERAPY has slipped into the insecure The American Institute of Hypno­ grasp of quasi-slapstick afficionados farce. John Forsythe has out­ therapy, Inc. announces its new grown Bachelor Father and is now patented method of hypnosis by Perhaps the most beautiful movie in history. with no sense of the inherent records. .... ludicrousness of most of the ma­ making up for lost time by dis­ Never before has anything like - Brendan Gill, The New Yorker. playing a quiet, assured demeanor this ever been introduced. chinations of our quadri-annual These profeSSional quality 3311.3 I popularity pollings. The vicarious that is perfect for the role. Mr. r.p.m. records are specifically de­ Vidal seems determined to bring a Forsythe is not yet ready to tackle signed to be used with any standard Coriolanus or Who's Afraid of automatic phonograph and by the bit of graceful intelligence back to use of a patented method the sug­ i Virginia Woolf?, but he has de­ gestions, such as, suggestions to the genre and it is in Weekend curb smoking, are placed deep with­ I that one becomes aware Myra veloped into a Henry Fonda sub­ in your mind and become immensely stitute for a television-reared gen­ effective. Breckenridge's creator is succeed­ There is absolutely no danger of ing brilliant!y. eration. any type. A full set of instructions, Rosemary Murphy is magnifi­ thoroughly describing its operation, Senator C h a r I e s MacGruder cent. It is best to leave it at that is enclosed with each recof"d. These records will render you (John Forsythe) is "an amiable since any other word might imply positive results Jor the following: mediocrity" - articulate, attrac­ fault where there is none. First o Overweight o Smoking tive, and ambitious. As the choice as the alcoholic Claire in A Deli­ o Motivation, Concentration" of a not overwhelming 28% of cate Balance and now as a graci­ Memory for school courses o Tension" Nervousness rank and file Republicans, he none­ ous Georgetown gentlewoman, o Self-confidence theless ranks as the front-runner Miss Murphy is fast emerging as A square is placed in front of each type of record. for the GOP nomination, well on one of the most polished profes­ Please check in the appropriate his way towards controlling the sional performers on Broadway. square the record or records you wish. convention, when suddenly his Kim Hunter is an actress who Price of each record is $10.95. prodigal son returns, dragging needs a special kind of part and Send checlc or money order to American Institute of Hypnotherapy, along his bride to be. Panic grips in Weekend there is none that Inc., P.O. Box 5181, Philadelphia, both MacGruder's household and suits her. An Academy Award Pennsylvania 19120. These records are not offered as a his upper-echelon advisers, for the alumna from A Streetcar Named substitute for medical or psychi­ ,- impending in-law is no fair­ Desire, Miss Hunter apparently is atric diagnosis or treatment nor is hypnosis proposed or intended to skinned debutante but a White a victim of the legendary Oscar alleviate or cure any organic ail­ Plains, New York Negress. Com­ jinx. She is largely ornamental in ment. Paul S. Symmes, Ph.D. mendably enough, Vidal ascertains Weekend (through no failing of Director Fine Arts Theatre, M Street at 19th N.W.· 223-4438 • that the matter of miscegenation Mr. Vidal) and her film career has Friday, March 1, 1968 THE HOrA Page Eleven Going To The Dogs ...

THE PAGAN EYE/Alan Cariddi

Last Monday night's basketball game with Fairleigh ", :.. ~ I Dickinson was fairly typical--except that we won-which " :;'. ~~ is hardly something to take for granted, even around here. !-::>~~ On the other hand, why we won has been largely a matter .' :~, ~ of wholesale speculation. In fact, wafting above al~ the usual '. .~~" ,;!~ drivel in the past few da~s about skill and te~hmque, h~ve . ".'It~ come a few lonely but emmently reasonable VOlc~ proclrum- . t " " .. n, ing "luck"-and the part played by the long Ignored but Running hard to earn Elvira ..• certainly long·suffering Jack--our immortal mascot. And in spite of our team's various and valiant efforts throughout the season, I would tend to agree with these loney prophets Movies: Soapy Madigan -but not on the same grounds, to be sure. For while Navy still has its goat-and proudly proclaims it-and Anny main­ . Starring Pia for the sake of love. They live in her performance to be convincing. Dagermark, Thommy Berggen. country villas, [rom which they Morever, despite playing a girl of tains its mule, our calls for athletic support and fortune Directed by Bo Widerberg. In are successively driven, during an considerable experience, Mis s from the animal world seem sadly few in number. Jack Swedish: 90 min. At the Fine Arts entire summer making love, and Dagermark acts out all her sex Theatre. catching butterflies (a rather related scenes, as if each were her has, in great part, been supplanted by a traditional cheering The best thing that can be said cruel sport), until autumn and first time. Several attempts to section which-if one must be fair-is quite more animal for Elvira Madigan is that it has winter come, whereas being out make her lusty in the Elizabeth tre trappings of a movie. That it of money and food, the pair com­ Taylor style, are also unusually in nature than he is. Of course, this isn't to say that it is one of the worst "art" movies mits suicide. Since the story clumsy. Only once does she per­ doesn't perform a valuable function in many respects. The barely hangs together, and many form well, at the very end, when ever made is incidental, it gives "section" admirably responded to our pathetically anemic people what they want to hear, details contradict each other, the her excitable eyes, for a few sec­ see and feel. usual smokescreen of gorgeous onds play with the thought of and insipid cheerleaders with harmonious choruses of Elvira Madigan is one of those camerawork, lovely music, and death. Of Thommy Berggen's Six­ M-I-C·K-E-Y M-O-U-S-E and "Good Night, Ladies." But rare soap opera movies that can good looks is thrown at us in the ten little can be said, except that be sold to both the intellectuals current fashionable style, with, of he looks perennially unhappy; the then again, they're not as good as they used to be; real and the mass audience. Usually, course, little dialogue as to keep only scene where he seemed to be spirit here has pretty much gone to the dogs-and I don't these two groups purchase their the pastoral atmosphere sacred. enjoying himself, he was playing soap at different theaters, the in­ This return to the good life clap­ soldiers with a friend. mean to Jack-although that's probably where it belongs. tellectuals see Hiroshima Mon trap is at best arch, and some of The film is loaded with the new Amour, while the mass audience­ the reactions the makers of this conventions of popular moviemak· Not that Jack is the most ardent of Hoya supporters. I imagine-watches Valley of the film try to pry from us, are like ing. Elvira says that she was split Dolls. But, since Elvira Madigan being asked to feel sorry for the in two until she met Sixten; Six­ plays the game every possible way Rothschilds since all they can do ten gives a definition of love (the appealing to everything between is bank. philosophy is endless and em­ pacificism to doomed lovers' sui­ The movie following A Man barassing); the lovers play games, cide, the tears come from all and a Woman's tradition of over­ and do sports, and of course they quarters. I first saw Elvira Madi­ blown photography is shot in are protected by dear old mama; gan in New York roughly two lovely pastel colors, with off focus the suggestion is made that she months ago. As I walked into the and slow motion incerpts. The was painted by Lautrec dUring a theater, a small white card printed photography is supposed to do Paris visit-the lady next to me in traditional lettering was handed what the story can't do-arouse gobbled that one up. The director to me. It requested the patrons our emotions. The music is by Mo­ Bo Wilderberg doesn't trust the to maintain silence in the lobby zart, played in what I guess is audiences' perspicaCity or sublety, during the engagement of Elvira fair to call the Francis Lai style, (and judging from the popular ac­ Madigan, since they would ap­ with all the sugary, corny over­ claim, perhaps, justifiably so); preciate the same courtesy While tones that can be wringed from everything is underlined several they watched Elvira Madi.gan. My it, but it does cccassionally man­ times until the whole effect be­ suspicions about this 0 u t rig h t age to come through. And as we comes unbearable. fraud of a movie, were further al­ listen to it, the falsity and dull­ Elvira Madigan has been termed ness of Elvira Madigan is further layed by a talk in the theater by many people including some of exposed; there is a wide disparity lobby with a New Jersey matron; our most eminent critics as being she informed me that her CCNY between the feeling, and beauty the most beautiful movie ever daughter had seen it four times, we hear, and the frames we made. But is this unholy combina­ and that the movie was very watch. tion of music, good looks, and beautiful, and very sad, and brace Elvira is played by Pia Dager­ photography sufficient to create yourselves, a tragedy. Well I mark who is one of the loveliest beauty in any meaningful way? couldn't agree with her any more; females, I have ever seen; she is Some people would have us be­ it is a tragedy. a sixties' beauty at its most re­ lieve it is enough, but where are Like all English bulldogs nowadays (and indeed, most of Elvira Madigan is yet another fined, and this sixties look is what structure and content, the basis us), version of the story of young is also wrong with her per­ for artistic expression in every he has an almost insuperable congenital problem; he doomed love; Elvira and Sixten formance. She walks slowly but medium; they are not to be found was born senile. One look at him will convince anyone. have both desserted their environ­ not like a fin de siecle girl, her in Elvira Madigan. The poor pathetic beast is even starting to look as ugly ments, a circus (where she is a style, and movements, are too tightrope walker), and the army, reminiscent of Manhattanville, for -Sixto Aquino as the now senescent Elizabeth Taylor-and you might say he walks almost as seductively . . . unfortunately, he can't act. What Went Wrong Here? Actually, poor Jack seems rather upset about the whole SEBASTIAN. Starring Dirk Bo­ liver-one is never quite sure of by cracking the code thanks to thing. Like most good members of the university commu­ grade and Susannah York. At the how any of it fits into context. his illegitimate son. Clear? Trans Lux. Apparently, hero Bogarde, the Sebastian raises dis t u r bin g nity, he dislikes being ignored, and when he isn't straining head of the United Kingdom's questions about the future of a to leave the court, he'll gladly prostrate himself at the slight­ Sebastian is the kind of film Code Division, is a totally com­ once fine actor, Dirk Bogarde. His est sign of attention-forget affection. (A revelation which Which makes the viewer wonder mitted professional who scorns, notoriety began with The Servant, what went wrong where and spurns, and generally avoids his progressed with Darling, and cul­ has brough him many admirers recently ... understandably.) whose fault it was. Certainly persistent pur sue r, co-worker minated in Accident. Still, Bo­ He does, however, have a most eloquent manner of express­ there were reasons to expect a Susannah York. Finally, as any garde has been afflicted of late successful work-the plotline was television viewer could confidently with some singularly poor roles, ing his disgust-which he does-quite uninhibitedly in the refreshingly unique (a British predict, Susannah begins to share especially Modesty Blaise. In Se­ hallowed corridors of dear McDonough. I must confess cryptologist's search for love and in Dirk's paSSionate affair with bastian, Bogarde smiles, scowls, an unbreakable code, not neces­ himself. An obstacle arises though gestures, and recites with all the though, that I honestly don't know how anyone can really sarily in that order); the cast is -inter-office relationships are vitality of a heart-transplant pa­ ignore the animal-he smells awful. It's no great wonder somewhat more encouraging than frowned upon. Bogarde resigns tient. As for his co-star, Miss if Rock Hudson and Doris Day when the sordid story is revealed York is still very beautiful from few opponents have ever tried to make off with him . . . graced the marquee. Yet, all the and Miss York disappears for pur­ some angles. The direction is best merely approaching him constitutes a real act of heroism. hopes are dashed as minute drags poses we discover later. When an left ignored. into hour and, in a seeming con­ apparently impenetrable Soviet To commend a film where the But to get back to the point, mascots are traditionally tradiction only one of Sebastian's code arises, though, Sebastian re­ victims could possibly understand, main attribute is some flashy set turns, his long nights progressing design is inadvisable. Worse still supposed to foster fortune; and whether or not Jack in fact suddenly it is over, and the source poorly because his thoughts are of wonderment shifts to what is recommending a film which re­ made us win to remind us of his presence is, of course, de­ dominated by Susannah. Inexplic­ veals how a gifted actor can go exactly it was that he had just ably found recuperating from batable. But certainly, if a rallying point must be found witnessed. wrong, something m 0 s t m 0 vie bearing his child, Miss York is buffs find distasteful. for flagging Hoya spirits-why not poor Jack? And then An adequate summary of Se­ still infatuated with Sebastian, bastian's events is hard to de- who achieves the ultimate triumph Joseph Orispino too-how about a bath for our harried Hoya hound? Page Twelve THE HOYA ~day,~arch 1,1968- GUCAP Dictum Urges Position Clarification GEORGETOWN UNIVERSITY (Continued from Page 1) issue. "In some cases, University FOOD SERVICE ment of some form of company employees were reported to have union which would bind the work­ been given union material to hand ers irrevocably to the University out during work hours, an appar­ Administration, beyond the possi­ ent violation of the agreement. Daily Hot Sandwich Line: New South Lunch bility of free choice to unionize. Some workers were told that they "'Vhat irritates us most," the were signing petition cards which statement said, "is that no state­ would invite the union to present ment, much less a clear one, has its program on campus, when in been made by the University on reality, they were signing mem­ its unionization of the workers, bership cards." whatever to form. No election The GUCAP statement con­ provisions, no right to strike, has cluded that "there was no sub­ been mentioned. In fact, reports stantial proof that this union Hot Roast Beef on Poppy Seed Roll, imply that the employees are now would give the employees the bound by University policy so as better deal, or that another union with Natural Gravy ...... •75 to be unable to unionize, if they could not offer greater benefits." truly desire to. The GUCAP Board criticized "Why hasn't the University what they called the "fear of em­ Hot Pastrami or Corned Beef clarified its position to the workers ployees to manifest complaints, or to the students? This is bad suggestions, or an apparently on Rye or Pumpernickel .... , .. _ ..75 public and employee relations, and widespread desire to unionize in could be severe injustice," the some form." Virginia Baked Ham on Rye ... _. _ ..75 statement concluded. They blamed deficient employer­ The students who left GUCAP employee relations, due to a con­ said, through Gerson. that, "for cept of paternalism for this fact. Pickle & Cole Slaw Included GUCAP, charity begins in south­ GUCAP further decried the low east Washington." Georgetown wages being paid the GU workers. students have only "to look out They urged students to press for their windows, however, to see real a clear statement on University poverty," he said. policy regarding the physical plant The GUCAP dissenters disagreed workers on campus. with Board member Fred Perel­ la's assertion that GUCAP is "not convinced that the University en­ gaged in intimidation of the workers during the solicitation period." "It seems that the workers were CAMPUS not threatened with loss of bene­ fits of jobs for cooperating with the union, but rather these state­ INTERVIEWS ments were opinions by other workers and superintendents who thought this would result from NEXT WEEK unionization." The GUCAP board feels that Graduates at all degree levels the points raised by Fr. McSorley are urged to investigate were tenuous as legal issues and no solid case could be built upon the career opportunities at them. In addition, the statement said, reports of deception of the workers and of the students by union personnel have clouded the

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There could be no An NIH representative will be visiting your campus next week more demanding task than to serve in the hope of unifying mankind, and to discuss these positions with interested students. You may this is the sacred burden of the arrange an interview during this visit by contacting the Place­ priest and hi.! Christians, placed gently IIpon us by Christ himself: ment Office. Or, if you prefer, you may write or call "He has let us know the mystery of his purpose, the hidden plan •.. to Col/ege Relations Officer act upon when the times had run their course to the end; that he would bring everything together under NATIONAL INSTITUTES OF HEALTH Christ as head, everything in the Bethesda, Maryland 20014 heavens and everything on earlh." (Palll's Leiter to the Ephesians) Phone: (301) 496-4707 CONTACT: An equal opportunity employer, M&F Maryknoll Representative WALSH HALL March 4, 1968 Friday, March 1, 1968 THE HorA Page ThIrteen 'Wave Of Future' Envisioned A natural setting for SUIDIDer study. As O'Donnell Deplores Yard (Continued from Page 1) a University-wide student assem­ unification but because they object bly. to the manner in which the pro­ nent form of government that posal was offered. must be ratified by a majority of "However we adopted their the student body before its enact­ plan with ~ne important differ­ "I favor unification wholeheart­ ment." ence" Kelly said. "Our student edly," Scott stated, "but I didn't asse~blY would be only provision­ feel that this was the right year to "We weren't trying to ram any­ press the issue. The leadership of thing down the throats of the stu­ al." Also unlike Modglin's group, Kellv and O'Donnell decided that the three councils has not been dents," Kelly said in an interview working close enough together." last Sunday. "We were just trying "the' changes had to be made with­ in the system-according to the The academic representative of to create an atmosphere condu­ the School of Foreign Service also cive to a discussion of the issues. constitution." The opponents of the resolution argued that a plan for unification Study with us this summer. Our 300 acres of green shaded campus "We wanted each of the three should not be offered by one coun­ provide a perfect summer study atmosphere. During off hours enjoy councils to agree to hold a refer­ sponsored by Kelly and O'Donnell on·campus tennis, riding or bowling. include most of the members of cil, but should be the result of the endum. If enough students then work of a joint committee. We're just minutes from parks, beaches, golf courses, several fine voted to abolish the present sys­ the tradition-minded Yard and theatres and museums and just an hour from Manhattan and the the three East Campus representa­ Those who support both unifica­ tem, we wanted to see a provi­ tien and the recent referendum Hamptons. sional student assembly act as the tives who walked out after Kelly Modern residence halls are available on the campus for undergradu· introduced the bill - Susan B. insist that Georgetown's student ate men and women. authoritive form of student gov­ leaders can do nothing until the ernment for one year." Mooney, Jim Scott, and Mike UNDERGRADUATE COURSE OFFERINGS Campilongo. three councils are united. Kelly explained that such an "I can't see too much more that Liberal Arts and Sciences, Pre·Professional, The major spokesman for those Pre· Engineering, Business and Education assembly would be a sort of "con­ can be done under the present stitutional convention which would opposed to any attempt to unify, structure," Kelly explained. "I GRADUATE COURSE OFFERINGS in the Graduate Schools decide the best structure for a Yard President O'Brien, admits am curtailing my political activi­ of Long Island University: Biological Sciences, Business future student government and that there are "intrinsic problems" Administration, Chemistry, Education and Certification, ties next year almost completely then write a constitution to make in the present system, but insists because I can't see anything I Management Engineering, English, Foreign Languages, that the three student councils Guidance and Counseling, History, Library Science, Marine that structure a reality. can do under the present system." Science, Mathematics, Music Education, Physics, Political "It wasn't even predetermined should join in some form of con­ He called unification "the most Science, Sociology, Speech. that unification would result," he federation - "some sort of sys­ important question facing student continued. "Those against unifica­ temic guarantee that the student government." Apply now for TWO 5-WEEK SUMMER SESSIONS tion could elect representatives to leaders of all three councils will Walsh Area Sophomore Class the provisional assembly who meet and speak when necessary President Dave Hill stated in an June 24·July 26 and July 29·August 30 • Day and Evening for the student body at large with Admission open to visiting students from accredited colleges. would push against unification. interview last week that he would Kelly also said that neither he unity. not run for office in his senior For additional information, summer bulletin and application, nor O'Donnell belonged to the "I am in complete disagreement year because several College poli­ phone (516) 626·1200 or mail coupon "large group of influential Uni­ with the notion that the present ticians had accused him of work­ versity leaders" which passed leaf­ structure has been so frustrating ing for unification so that he could lets detailing its plan for a stu­ that progress and advancement become the first president of a C.W.POST COLLEGE dent assembly under dormitory have been made impossible in any unified student body. He said that doors two weekends ago and way, O'Brien explained in an inter­ he would rather see some form OF LONG ISLAND UNIVERSITY which was apparently organized view last week. of unification at Georgetown be­ "NEW DIMENSIONS MERRIWEATHER CAMPUS several months ago by East Cam­ "There are definite aspects of fore he graduated. -~~~~~~------I pus President Terry Modglin. OUr present system that should be Terry Modglin sounded a similar I Dean of Summer School, c.w. Post College, Merriweather Campus, I Modglin's group had at first maintained." note of frustration. He suggested I P.O. Greenvale, L.I., N.Y. 11548 CP I hoped to begin a petition cam­ I Please send me Summer Sessions inf?rmat!on bulletin. I O'Brien indentified the concept that a second way to correct the I 0 Women's Residence Hall 0 Men s ReSidence H~II I paign for unification, but inex­ that "it is the job of student gov­ lack of u:pity, however, would be I 0 Undergraduate 0 Graduate 0 Day 0 Evening plicably decided a few weeks ago ernment to stand in opposition to the election of student officers by to dump the campaign plan. At II Name .••••••••• - •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• - • • • • • • • Administration" as the major party slate and that only through I the same time, however, Kelly "misconception " of those propos­ a party system could candidates I Address ••••••••••• - •• - •• - • - • • . • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •• • • • • • • • • • • • • • . I and O'Donnell concluded that now ing unification, and he decried the deal with issues rather than per­ J City ..•••••••••••••••••••••••. State •••••••••••• Zip .•••••••••. I was the most opportune time to invocation of the phrase "student soncrli ties. bring the problem of unification I If visiting student, from which college? ...•..•.•••••.••••...••... power" as too vague. O'Donnell, however, was less I before the three student councils, Reflecting the growing disagree­ critical of the present system. ~------and with Modglin's cooperation ment and distrust between the "We haven't impeded progress, they adopted his group's plan for College and East Campus execu­ but we can do more," he explained. tives, the Yard president also ex­ "Unification is not the most im­ pressed his irritation at the portant issue f3.cing student gov­ leaders of the Walsh Area Student ernment, but it is important." Council, who, he said, "have He deplored the Yard Council's pointedly avoided inviting hostile "provincial attitude" and its leadership to their recent secretive "Pavlovian response" to his resolu­ discussions. tion, but like Kelly, Modglin, and It is difficult to cooperate in Hill, called unification "the wave good faith when one has to cope of the future." with this sort of clandestine silli­ How do most of Georgetown's ness." undergraduates react to their Although explaining that he leaders' machinations for and would not campaign actively for against unification? Probably with any candidate running for the neither interest nor concern, ac­ presidency of the Yard, O'Brien cording to a survey College senior did state that he would associate Jim Capra conducted for his class himself "with that group of stu­ in analysis of pOlitical data. dents that will actively campaign Capra found no significant rela­ against unification and for con­ tionship between overall student federation." support for stUdent government Unlike O'Brien, Miss Mooney, and student attitudes toward uni­ Scott, and Campilongo opposed fication or between student atti­ the resolution calling for a refer­ tudes toward unification and their endum not because they oppose respective schools. ASK SAM ABOUT MIKE .. , Why The

UNISPHERE® Is The Official Microphone In todays ivy-covered jungle, Of Sam The Sham, The Pharaohs And if you don't stay with it, the competition The Shametts On Tour Sam knows his microphone will eat you alive. is his link with his audience. He wants you to hear his Let's face it. You can't afford to be drowsy. Not in class. voice and the lyrics, natu· Not in your room. Not ever. rally, without howling feed· back, without annoying So when you feel the grip of drowsiness pulling you close-up breath "pop", with· down, fight it off. ® out audience sounds. Pretty Get out the NoDoz. It'll help you spring back-your tough test for a microphone recall, your perception, your ability to ... routine for the incom· parable Shure Unisphere. solve problems-without being habit Just ask the better groups. forming. So you can pad through the jungle. Alert. And ready to strike. Shure Brothers, Inc. 222 Hartrey Ave. After all, you're the lion, not the lamb. Evanston, III. 60204 Page Fourteen THE HOYA. FrIday, March 1, 1968-

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Sign up for an interview at your placement office-even if as government, business, law, education, medicine, science, you're headed for graduate school or military service. the humanities. Whatever your major, you can do a lot of good things at Maybe you think you need a technical background to work IBM. Change the world (maybe). Continue your education for us. (certainly, through plans such as our Tuition Refund Program). Not true. And have a wide choice of places to work (we have over 300 Sure we need engineers and scientists. But we also need .locations throughout the United States). liberal arts and business majors. We'd like to talk with you even What to do next if you're in something as far afield as Music. Not that we'd We'll be on campus to interview for careers in Marketing, hire you to analyze Bach fugues. But we might hire you to Computer Applications, Programming, Research, Design and analyze problems as a computer programmer. Development, Manufacturing, and Finance and Administration. If you can't make a campus interview, send an outline of What you can do at IBM your interests and educational background to P. J. Koslow, The point is, our business isn't just selling computers. IBM Corporation, 425 Park Avenue, Jlm~ It's solving problems. So if you have a logical mind, we need NewYork,NewYork 10022. We're an ~ you to help our customers solve problems in such diverse areas equal opportunity employer. ® Friday, March 1, 1968 THE HOrA. Pa&'e FIfteen

MEET THE EUROPEA.N New Campus Power Party Organizes; ESTA.BLISHMENT ON A 1968 GRA.ND TOUR In the 18th century it was customary Demands Control By Students, Faculty for Oxford and Cambridge students to tour Western Europe accompanied (Continued from Page 1) A university should be a place tive party." But many students for student power. But THEY by some distinguished gentleman­ where we can become individ­ began to feel even more restless wanted to organize it. They did scholar. Contacts with the leading "general philosophy" that students uals away from any part of literary and political men were to be were to sign to become members. after Laurence Davidson stated not want to sign their names in made which would last the rest of society that is concerned with that: "the party is already in ex- endorsement of many incidental their lives. The original core group of the (maintaining) the status quo. Spp felt that ROTC credit defi­ Can you join the military and istence and we don't intend to positions just for the sake of stu­ There must be some American stu­ have everyone in the party. If dent power. Gerson tactfully pro­ dents who would never join a tour nitely should be abolished. Gerson be in an atmosphere that en­ guided by a provincial high school said: "We're concerned with ideas. courages free thought? you are diametrically opposed to posed at this point that all of the teacher (for instance) who would Marc~ing on an asphalt parking one of the minor points listed you minor pOints "be put up for gen­ like a chance to be introduced to lot gIves you an academic credit Because of the strong objections don't belong here!" This imme- eral review across the board" and some of the leading figures in poli­ equal to my seminar and this from the floor and the threatened diately brought an indignant re- a vote was quickly taken to adopt tics, industry and the arts as young doesn't fit in with our idea of ed­ dissolution of the party before it tort-"In other words you people Gerson's suggestion. At this point adults and fellow-scholars. They will ucation." But many students really began it was agreed, after who proposed this party are dic- almost a third of the students be accompanied by an Old Oxonian, thought that the SPP shouldn't a vote, that the SPP would go tating to us. We were not asked left. Many of them were disturbed author of several books, professor of immediately alienate so many p0- on record as demanding only a here to form a party but to join because they had not been allowed international relations and a member tential supporters. "Besides," stat­ general review of ROTC and its yours! This is undemocratic!" Ap- to vote on the rejection of all of leading clubs in London and Paris. role in the University. This seemed Social activities with young Euro­ ed one student, "many cadets do pIause and a few cheers followed. minor points-only on their word­ peans (Oxford balls, etc.) will be a lot of academic work for their to please most of those present. Students were constantly being ing! part of this unregimented tour for credits." "If we want to study However, the issue of including told "don't discuss the details. The approximately 70 students intelligent and knowledgeable stu­ military science or political sci­ any minor policy points such as Now the important thing is stu- who remained did sign the policy dents. Although black tie will be ence we should be able to. The "ending theology requirements" dent power. Sign (the policy state- statement and a steering commit­ worn often the whole cost (10 whole area of ROTC should be or "establishing a student coop­ ment) and come to the conven- tee of 16 volunteers, only five of weeks) will be $1295. Write to dropped as an area of policy by tion!" Many student power sup- whom were from the original core Dept. 102, A.S.P.E., 33 Chalfont Rd., erative bookstore" proved to be Oxford, England. this group," commented another more difficult to handle. The core porters felt that they were being group, was formed to set up var­ r student. Topper's next statement group insisted that such concrete pushed into an organization that ious committees and to further just increased the tension that was ideas were needed because, as was already structured. Yes- organize the party. present in the room: Topper said, "We want an effec- they did want to organize a group The steering committee met r------. during the next week. A provision- al structural constitution was drafted and Tom Moritz was elect­ ed chairman of the committee. However, another development Pssst. during this week seemed to be even more important for the SPP. A new group for student council Wanna buy a revealing glimpse unification sprang up. Circulars were distributed throughout the dormitories and on campus urging of student life in Europe for a buck? students to contact their academ- ic representative and voice their support of a student unification movement. Included in the plan was a detailed deSCription of how the new unified structure would be organiz~d with a student union board, a Senate, and class repre­ sentatives. A resolution promoting this plan was introduced into each student council. It appeared that if this plan for student unification was realized there would be no need for a stu­ dent power party since the stu­ dent body would be an entity and this would give them all the strength they needed to protect their interests in the University. The members of the SPP did not agree. Topper stated, "We are a group with a particular philos­ ophy on how to change George­ town and unification is just a pre­ requisite." "Naturally we will run our candidates" added Gerson, "the united student government would just be a means to gain educational reform, student-faculty control of the University, and complete student control of extra­ curricular life."

Listen. It's called Let's Go-The Student Guide to Europe, written by Harvard students. And it's full of the real stuff. Like how to pour Spanish cider by holding the jug over your IlnrlI.~a.c-.:ala. teo shoulder and the glass behind your back. And the most successful Priests and Brothers (fully researched) ways to hitchhike in . Spain. Everywhere. YOU ARE OFFERED A WORLD WIDE And, of course, places to eat and sleep that only a student could love. MISSION Take a peek for yourself. Send one little buck with coupon below. Whatever your talents are, we have a place for you who Offer good while stocks last. r------have a calling to the religious I TWA, Dept. 208, P.O. Box 25, Grand Central Station, N.Y. 10017 life. What a challenge! A Oh. By the way. If you do I world-wide apostolate to the Here's my check to TWA for $I.OO. Quick. Send me my poor of the world. decide to get a student's-eye­ I Let's Go-The Student Guide to Europe in a plain brown wrapper. I Unlimited opportunities. Our view of Europe, you'll fly there seminaries are modern, fully : Name' ______accredited, with a compre­ on a U.S. airline, right? So hensive religious and intel­ I Address' ______lectual program, sports and make it TWA. The airline that I social activities. knows Europe like a book. I City'-----____ State' _____ Zip Code' ____ For further information, write: Vocational Director I My travel agent is' ______Need further info on travel Oblates of Mary Immaculate in U. S. or to Europe? Check I R. D. 1 Dept. 00 your travel agent, oryour I Newburgh, New York 12550 I Pleas;;end ~e-;: free booklet ~ nearest TWA office! I mr~ Oblate 0 Priests 0 Brothers I UpUpand aw"'J Name, ______I Address.______'Service mark owned eXClusively by Trans World Airlines, Inc. ~------______Zip __

Age ____Grade' _____ Page Sixteen THE DOrA Friday, March 1, 1968 University Seeks Approval For Power Plant Location (Continued from Page 1) that he had not had an opportu­ will be such that "all of the noise Q!rn~y ~nr!1t Of course, the future of the nity to study the plans in detail, will be vertical." The upward path 3259 M Street, N.W. Observatory Hill location depends said, "At first glance, it appears of the noise, according to Mr. on the feelings of those in a p0- that the new location will be sat­ Roper, will be directed both by a sition of authority and/or influ­ isfactory, although of course I retaining wall and a cushion of You are cordially invited to come down and hear ence. The blueprints must travel can't make any definitive state­ space around the base of each of through the Planning and Fine ments at this pOint." A refusal of the cooling towers, which will be Arts Commissions and gain the the site from the Zoning Board the major source of noise. blessing of the Board of Zioning could have dire results, for as Fr. Another point of some concern Adjustment, and once again, the Fitzgerald says, "We really don't is the financing of the plant. Ac­ CHARTBUSTERS big worry comes from the citi­ have anywhere else to go." cording to Fr. Fitzgerald, the zens' groups who dealt the death Speaking from a viewpoint quite money necessary has already been blow to the Glover-Archbold site, removed from the problems of included in the projected costs of such as the previously mentioned zoning, some of the most con­ new University buildings, and for Free Parking on Thomas Jefferson Street lot Committee of 100 on the Fed­ cerned parties will be students, south of M Street particularly Gym residents, who this reason represents no addi­ eral City. Mr. James Deane of the tional expense over and above committee, although he admitted don't particularly relish the idea of having a power plant humming that which has already been an­ ticipated. 24 hours a day outside their win­ 333-0400 PARIETALS dows. This concern, according to As December 1 of next year (Continued from Page 1) George Roper, assistant to the moves closer, many Georgetown the committee's 12 members were vice-president for planning and administrators are already shiver­ present and voted for a tentative physical plant, is unfounded in ing in anticipation of just how agreement that any proposal would that the construction of the plant cold the winter of 1969 might be. require a two-thirds majority for approval. r------, When asked about the length of time required for the parietals proposal to travel from the stu­ dent affairs policy committee to the Board of Directors and the president's desk, Dr. Tripp replied, "1 think that the proposal is basically a modest one, but I can't speak for the other members of the committee." He continued, "There is an executive meeting of the Board of Directors in March, and Fr. Campbell (the Rev. Gerard J. Campbell, S.J., Uni­ How would you like to jump versity president) could take the proposal to them personally. But into your career with both feet ... and be on the that's option." Yard President O'Brien ex­ run from the beginning? pressed his hope that parietal hours would be in force by junior prom weekend, March 8-9.

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SIC Medium Point 19C -Friday, March 1, 1968 THE HOrA Page Seventeen Jesuits' Control Slips Away As G. U. Grows Diversified TRADITION AT GEORGETOWN (Continued from Page 7) -or at least what most thought to train men who were not only heavily upon the classics, which the Ratio said. Of course, the learned, but who were men of vir­ are the mortar of scholastic Ratio was not always imple­ tue and character as well. Since philosophy, which in turn was con­ mented in quite the same manner the student of every age is a ra­ sidered the handmaid of theology. because its more specific regula­ tional being, whose end is God, The disciplinary code required tions, of which there were many, this principle must and will ever weekday Mass, at first every day were not always amiable to every remain the foundation stone of at a suitably monastic hour, later age. However, Ye Domesday Booke the Ratio. only three times during the school of 1948, commemorating the 400th "The second principle of the Ra­ OLD.MACS tio follows as :l corollary from week at hours more genial to the anniversary of Jesuit education, laity. The first co-curricular activ­ outlined the two primary princi­ the first, namely, that the classics ity was the Sodality, whose of­ ples of the Ratio which were "en­ and scholastic philosophy are 'con­ ficers were in effect the elected during qualities"-and presum­ stants in any educational plan­ student leaders because of the ably Georgetown's, too. ning, because they offer abiding corner of 34th & M absence of any other student ac­ "And the first of these principles and universal values for human tivity until the Philodemic in the is that the mind and will must be training... .' It 1830's. Thus, if all Catholic stu­ trained in their mutual relation to The Ratio demanded c los e dents would not "receive and each other. While it is true that guidance by the Jesuits in most Free Parking In Back of Groovy's cherish a call from God to the the framers of the Ratio strongly every phase of the students' life ecclesiastical state," all might re­ advocated the full development of while at school. This was no less inforce a strong laity. the intellect, they regarded this as evident in 1948 than in 1789. Only 965-5065 Georgetown functioned in ac­ incomplete, even dangerous, un­ 20 years ago, each sector of the cord with the Ratio Studiorum, less the will w ere I ike w i s e University was under the surveil­ the Jesuit blueprint for education strengthened in good. They desired lance of a Jesuit. The president and directors were, of course. Jesuit, as were the other Uni­ versity-wide officers. The Foreign Service and professional schools were directed by lay deans com­ petent in the respective fields, but above the deans were Jesuit re­ gents. America's favorite The College faculty boasted some 52 members, 23 of whom were Jesuit. Co-curricUlar activ­ ities were assigned Jesuit modera­ tors, including the golf and tennis teams; and in group photographs, a jllndslide. the moderator was usually given .. . by the most prominent poSition. (In /--­ a photograph of the 1936-37 Col­ lege student council, for example, / a Jesuit sporting a biretta, not I the Yard President, sits at the \ head of the council table.) And '\. student publications were cen­ ~ sored by Jesuits. Even the year­ books beli~ the Jesuit influence. "- The aforementioned '48 Domesday -- '\ Booke celebrated the 400th anni­ versary of Jesuit educaton. The \ 1947 edition was dedicated to the North American Martyrs. And / quite frankly, most of these year­ ,/ books, especially the '48 edition, -- were too well-done not to have been more than cursorily inspected / -- by the Jesuit moderator. / And concerning c ens 0 r s hip, Father Bodnar, also the present \ moderator - but not censor - of The ROYA, says, "It was due to \ the feeling that anything said or '\. done by anyone at the University was looked upon as an expression of policy by the University. It was the Jesuits' school, and they want­ ed to say what was said." At that time, the prefect of dis­ ::.:. '.': cipline was quite naturally a Jesuit, and his deputies were the Jesuit prefects living on the corri­ dors. Those prefects enjoyed full disciplinary powers in the dormi­ .. ::', :...... \ tories, and exercised those powers \ at the four or five room checks taken during the course of the evening. Today, however, the Jesuits living on the corridors are there for counseling and guidance only. Their influence is to be felt not through control but through friendship. In like manner, the l Jesuits' spiritual influence, once i enforced t h r 0 ugh compulsory Start your own party. You get the Budweiser® ... we've Mass, is now spread by the Jesuits' got the buttons. We've selected 12 assorted "Beer Party" buttons attempts to attract students to liturgical functions. Not long ago, to send you. Mail $1 and the coupon below. Offer void in states the compulsory annual retreat where prohibited by law. would simply be announced in The ROYA, and full attendance would KING Of BEERS· ANHEUSER-BUSCH. INC • ST. LOUIS· NEWARK· LOS ANGELES. TAMPA· HOUSTON II be assured. Now, to bring the stu­ dents news of upcoming Lenten homilies, the University chaplain has taken a full-page advertise­ I~------, Mail this coupon to: Buttons, Dept. N3 ./ _./' / ,I ment. P. O. Box 58 St. Louis, Mo. 63166 ~ The Rev. James Ryder, S.J., president of Georgetown in 1848, ' perhaps unwittingly prophecied I Enclosed is $____ _ Please send me __sets of "Beer Party" Campaign Buttons. I the nature of the modern Jesuit I I role when he said, "Far more good , NAME I is to be done in America by reason and good example than by author­ I I~~ I ity and force." I ADDRESS I INTERVIEWER Glean-cut young man with car to in I CITY STATE ZIP I terview single working girls. No experience necessary. I (ZIP CODE MUST BE INCLUDED) I PART-TIl\IE SALARY: $250 A l\IONTlI Gall J A 5-6525 between 1-6 p.m. ~------~------~ for a.ppointment Page Eighteen THE HorA Friday, March 1, 1968-

Dear Mr. Galvin: When Napoleon caused the names of his dead soldiers to be inscribed on the face of Pompey's Pillar, someone criticized the act as a "mere bit of imagina­ tion." "That is true," replied Napoleon, "but imagination rules the world." Although students lack experience and full maturity, they are endowed with lots of imagination. This imagination excites the student to search for new horizons. Imagination motivates idealism. Business, however, projects a dull image: the comfortable job, the comfortable family, the comfortable punching of the clock. This does not appeal to the imagination of the American college student. It's not that his attitude is anti-business, it is just that so many more occupational opportunities are more stimulating. For a career field to capture the imagination of today's college student, it must be exciting, personally rewarding and must carry a measure of individual responsibility. Today the men that challenge the student are not the "captains of industry," but rather the "midshipmen of government"-the young Jack Kennedy or the young Charles Percy. The student is excited by the "riches to rags" story of Charles Bush of Texas, who left his position as head of a twenty million dollar company to win a seat in the House of Representatives, because he felt a commitment to society. Can business move fast enough to meet the new horizons that are opening up every day? What is being done by business to stir the imagination? Sincerely, -;r~ 'W ~ Fred W. Sayre MR. GALVIN: WHAT CAN ON THE LEVEL ... Last September, Robert W. Galvin, Motorola Chairman, invited four students to discuss the pros and cons of business. Letters between them and Mr. Galvin appear regularly in this and other campus newspapers BUSINESS DO as a step toward improved understanding between campus and corporation. Barbara Caulfield, Northwestern; Ralph Kimball, Stanford; Fred Sayre, TO STIR THE Arizona; and Paul George Sittenfeld, Princeton, are the students. Your comments are welcome. Write to Robert W. Galvin, Motorola Inc., IMAGINATION? 9401 West Grand Avenue, Franklin Park, Illinois 60131.

.(';J

Dear Mr. Sayre All careers offer some measure of excitement, but I believe active committee on civil rights, and helped organize the none offers more than a career in industry. now-famous "March On Washington." He spurred the direct concern of Protestant churches throughout the land toward From placing men on the moon - to development of practical ameliorating what he regards as one of our most pressing issues. electric cars ... from irrigation systems that will permit cultivation of millions of acres of desert-to new refuse disposal His company has been in the forefront of efforts to provide techniques ... industry offers tremendous excitement. equal opportunities for Negroes in housing, education, and employment. This blend of corporate interests and the public A bright graduate concerned about air pollution can enter any good is evidenced more and more in business today. "Too little" one of a number of companies dealing with the problem. Gulf Oil, or "too late" critics may say, but I am confident that business will for example, is one of a group of oil companies that has spent take the lead with highly imaginative resolutions billions of dollars over the past twenty years on development for many human needs and problems in the of processes and equipment to reduce air pollution. If a graduate years ahead. sees the need for increased communication between peoples, he can take his abilities into one of several corporations active There is promise of an imagination-stirring in the development of, say, sophisticated international satellite future for business-in scientific projects communications systems. If slum clearance and urban renewal of all kinds, in transportation, in interest him, there are major corporations working on such development of new ways to feed the solutions as prefabricated low-rent apartment buildings, and growing world population, in production there are smaller companies working with the larger ones. All of new materials and goods to make lives these companies will require top student talent. fuller and more comfortable, and in Today's graduate need not feel that to come to grips with involvement with virtually all of sociological problems he must enter government service. society's problems. Corporations, which have often been considered slumbering giants in this area, are bestirring themselves and identifying In the final analysis, it is business, problems on which their vast resources and skills can for the most part-sometimes in be brought to bear. partnership with government, education, the professions, sometimes working Consider Cummins Engine Company in Columbus, Ohio. A independently-that finds the practical quarter of a century ago it was a small, deficit-ridden answer to problems often defined manufacturing concern. Today its world-wide sales are in by others. excess of $330 million, yet in building it, Board Chairman J. Irwin Miller maintained an active concern for the sociological Top·graduates who think business can't problems that surround us. In 1960, as the first lay president of move fast enough, Fred, should join us the National Council of Churches of Christ, he sponsored an and accelerate the pace! /J Sincerely, 3 . ~41.~ Robert W. Galvin :Friday,- March 1, 1968 THE HOYA Page Nineteen ,GU Los·es To Eagles; Del·eats Manhattan 011 the Cull Georgetown squeaked by a to put Georgetown into several grudging Manhattan team 78-77, ties and finally a lead. During the but found itself steamrolled two final minutes, the Hoyas missed days later by Boston College, 103- several critical foul shots, but 79. managed to emerge victorious 78- The Hoyas opened the Manhat­ 77. tan game with Mike Laska replac­ Dennis Cesar was the high ing Paul Favorite in the line-up scorer for Georgetown with 22 by Larry Finefrock for the purpose of using an oc­ points. Marty Baietti was tops for casional fast break. These tactics Manhattan with 22 points also. worked for a while as they raced The second leading scorer for the Calling this year's Hoya basketball team hot and cold out to a 15-8 lead early in the Jaspers, Bill Goodfellow, was pres­ ranks with the ten greatest understatements the world has first half. sured by Laska and made only yet experienced_ The overall view of the past season defies The combination of numerous seven of 22 shots from the floor. Hoya fouls and deadly Jasper foul A horrendous cold spell from the explanation from any sane basketball enthusiast. shooting led to a 17-5 Manhattan floor in the first half against Bos­ At the beginning of the year, Coach Jack Magee had scoring advantage during the next ton College was the deciding fac­ seven minutes. Georgetown main­ tor as the Eagles increased a 13-8 more question marks than the Georgetown College Bowl tined their man-to-man defense for lead to 29-8 after ten minutes of team_ He had only four players with any varsity experience the remaining minutes in the first play. During this period, the Hoyas half and left the court on the missed 20 shots in succession and and he tagged sophomore Charlie Adrion to be his "big short end of a 44-38 score. were consequently out of the ball man." Magee's thinking was reasonable because he thought The tempo of the game remained game. that Dennis Cesar, Bruce Stinebrickner, Jim Supple and the same in the second half as BC's most destructive weapon Jim Supple, Charlie Adrion and was their fast break as the Hoyas CHARLIE ADRION Rick Cannon could provide the necessary fire power-but Rick Cannon soon picked up four again showed themselves incap­ he did need that big, consistent rebounder_ personal fouls apiece. Bernie White able of stopping this tactic. Coach was sent into the game with the Jack Magee tried numerous play­ Hoya Athlete Magee was not optimistic by any means. His bench was Hoyas trailing by five points. er combinations, but the Eagles White provided the spark needed could not be stopped as they took untested, and he tried to survive with his five iron men. To­ a 50-27 halftime lead. Of The Week day's college basketball won't permit this bucking of the The second half had more of Although the award is only be­ odds, and the challenge was finally issued against Columbia. the same for the Hoyas as Boston ing made for the second time, College increased their lead to Charlie Adrion has again grabbed To everyone's surprise, especially Magee's, an inexperienced 27 points. With Coach Bob Cousy honors as the Hoya Athlete of the squad of bench warmers pulled the upset of the season. substituting his exceptional wealth Week. Adrion scored 78 points of basketball talent, Georgetown and hauled down 36 rebounds in The Lions have yet to los~ another game and stand sixth did manage to cut the margin to games against George Washington, in the nation. 16 points, only to see the gap N.Y.U. and Fairleigh Dickinson. quickly increase. The master of the outside "tip­ The Hoyas played sensational ball throughout the next toe" shot was also named to the Charlie Adrion was the high Washington Area All-Star Basket­ three weeks against 3 murderous schedule, and student in­ scorer for the game with 21 points, ball Team this week. These selec­ terest was soaring. The losses to Army and St. John's were most of which were lay-ups. Bos­ tions were based on a vote by ton College placed six men in Washington area sports writers accepted because, realistically, Georgetown did not belong double figures, with sophomore and commentators. The announce­ on the same court with these two teams; and yet the games Bob Dukiet leading the way with ment was made at last Tuesday's could not have been more evenly played. Hopes were buoyed 17. Touchdown Club Luncheon. Georgetown shot 41 percent Also selected to the All-Star for the second half of the season mainly due to the much from the floor while Boston Col­ team were guards Ray Ruhling, a easier schedule which included such pushovers as Seton lege clicked on 52 percent. This 5-11 senior from American Uni­ Hall, Navy and George Washington. The bubble burst dur­ high percentage was the result versity, and Pete Johnson, a 6-1 ing the last game before mid-semester exams. of many simple lay-ups, a product junior from Maryland University; of Georgetown's inability to de­ forward Will Hetzel, a 6-5 sopho­ It was never quite the same after Seton Hall for the fense the fast break. more from Maryland University; It and center Art Beatty, a 7-1 senior players or for the students. was obvious that the team from American University. missed shooting over a zone defense, but they also missed Named Most Valuable Player on the Xavier and Boston College fast breaks. The Hoya fans the other area teams were Bob undoubtedly missed their team's role as giant killers, but Hodge, Howard University; Roger many of them also missed the. remaining home games. The Ciofarri, Catholic University; Roger Strong, George Washington; Gone were the days of the welcoming reception for the Hetzel and Beatty. team after an away game; the novelty had worn off_ Intelligence It also came as little surprise when Adrion, a math major in the The chief interest of the few believers that still remain College of Arts and Sciences, was is Charlie Adrion. It was evident almost immediately that Profession named as Georgetown's MVP. the Hoyas' offense moves fluently only when he is in the line-up. Besides leading the team in nearly every offensive FROSH B-BALL category, Adrion is the only player on the club who can THE CENTRAL INTELLIGENCE AGENCY OFFERS (Continued from Page 20) move to the basket with a little muscle to back him up. UNIQUE PROFESSIONAL OPPORTUNITIES TO behind early, and at the half were The importance of this asset is seen not only against a man­ behind by a 44-36 score. to-man defense, but also in Adrion's point totals in the last QUALIFIED SENIOR AND ADVANCED With three of the starters in foul trouble, the Hoyas had to dozen games. DEGREE CANDIDIATES. play a zone defense, and St. .John's Speculation for next year is always fun, especially at was able to make the outside shot. Georgetown. The continued development of Paul Favorite As happened against AU, the Academic Fields of Interest BA/BS* MA/MS* PHD is one of the needed ingredients for a successful year. He Hoyas' accuracy deserted them, has got to remove some of the rebounding pressure from Engineering (EE) X X X but this time from both the field and the foul line. They missed 15 Adrion because opposing teams are going to be crowding Mathematics X X X foul shots, and made only 30 per­ Charlie more and more in the future. Magee can have a cent from the floor. fast breaking team next year by using two small, quick X X Physics X The Frosh had only two more guards; or he can concentrate on shooting and rebound­ games before ending their season. Computer Science X X Last Monday, they played Bain­ ing by moving Jim Supple to guard. Geography X X X bridge Prep, and tomorrow night they travel with the varsity to By the time the season comes around next year, the Economics X X play Maryland at Cole Field slates will have been wiped clean as everyone will have for­ House. gotten. Library Science X X Journalism X X Foreign Area Studies X X X 1967·68 Hoya Stats (ThrouCJh Feb. 26) Psychology X Player FGM.. FGA Pet. FTM FTA Pet. Reb. Avg. Pts. Avg. Career Adrion ...... 140 284 49.3 82 105 78.2 211 10.1 362 17.2 362 * In the non-technical BA or BS fields preference is given in the Cesar ...... 122 295 41.4 76 117 65.0 62 3.0 320 15.2 924 case of male applicants to those who have fulfilled their military Supple ...... 120 249 48.2 45 62 72.6 121 5.5 285 13.0 530 obligations. Stinebrickner .... 107 211 50.7 57 76 75.0 132 6.0 271 12.3 643 Cannon ...... 54 138 39.2 32 43 74.5 94 4.7 140 7.0 304 Favorite ...... 31 53 58.5 15 32 46.9 81 3.9 101 4.8 101 ALL POSITIONS ARE IN TIlE WASIUNGTON, D.C. Laska ...... 32 94 34.0 15 26 57.7 24 1.6 79 5.3 79 Higgins ...... 12 25 48.0 8 12 66.7 8 .7 32 2.0 32 AREA; SOME REQUffiE FOREIGN TRAVEL. White ...... 13 29 44.8 2 3 66.7 19 1.7 28 2.5 43 Pyles ...... 5 10 50.0 6 6 100.0 7 .9 16 2.0 16 If YOII wOllld like to look into this fllrther, please contact your Stewart ...... 2 5 40.0 2 2 100.0 4 .8 6 1.2 6 Placement Office where literature is available in the Placement GEORGETOWN 652 1412 46.1 340 484 70.3 954 43.4 1647 74.9 Library, located at 1316-36th Street, N. W., Washington, D.C. OPPONENTS 600 1452 41.3 389 564 69.0 976 44.4 1604 73.0 Page Twenty GEORGETOWN UNIVERSITY, WASIDNGTON, D.C. Fri<1ay, March 1. 1968 Violets~ Knights Suffer Violent Nights Probations Harm Adr;on~ Frosh Hoopsters; Supple Lead! Team Loses Two Hoya Scoring Binge I Georgetown's Fro s h cagers, I' tempts from the floor. By half­ with three of their scholarship by Don Finnerty ~ The Georgetown University time Adrion had pumped in 22 ~ starters on academic probation and points and Supple 16, and the .,1 unable to play, have lost two of Hoyas started their season-closing Hoyas led 59-28. "o their last three games, to bring drive to finish above the .500 mark their record to 8-5. Missing from by thumping New York University The second half saw the Hoyas the team are Tim Mercier, Dick 80-69 and demolishing Fairleigh continue to run up their lead, Zeitler, and Bill McGarrity. Dickinson University 104-74. The They enjoyed their biggest margin Last wE'ek, the baby Hoyas two wins left the Hoyas' record at 98-62 with four minutes re­ traveled to Ft. Myer to play AU's at 11-11, with only a Saturday maining. Most of this damage was Frosh team. This game was with­ night game with Maryland at done by the substitutes as Coach out precedent as the Hoyas, who Cole Field House remaining on Jack Magee began to empty his are averaging close to 50 percent the schedule. bench at the 12-minute mark. in their field goal attempts, hit Against N.Y.U. the Hoyas start­ Everyone had ample playing time, their worst field percentage of the ed slowly, hitting only 39 percent and all eleven team members man­ year, making only 37 percent from of their attempts in the first half. aged to break into the scoring the floor. The cagers fell behind With co-captain Dennis Cesar on column. 9-2 after the first five minutes the bench with a pulled back mus­ Additional excitement was add­ and were behind for the rest of cle, Charlie Adrion and Jim Sup­ ed in the second half when the the half. ple took over the scoring duties, injured Dennis Cesar entered the In the second half the Hoyas tossing in 18 and nine points re­ game with three minutes to play. came alive behind Bob Hannan spectively. He scored on his first attempt and Don Weber. Hannan scored Even so, the Hoyas were hard from the floor and thus passed 19 of his 21 pOints and pulled down pressed. With five minutes re­ Steve Sullivan as the eighth all­ 11 rebounds in this period while maining in the first half, super­ time Georgetown scorer, with 924 J' Weber, who was high for the game sub Bernie White came off the points. ' with 27, threw in 13. bench and sparked the Hoyas to The cagers hung on to a slim a 37-32 lead at intermission. lead to gain a 67-65 win, their The second half was all George­ Seton Wall Leads eighth against three defeats. town. With Adrion scoring well Then, on George Washington's from the foul line and underneath, Women To Win birthday, the Hoyas again traveled Charlie Adrion goes after rebound in last Monday's game with Georgetown moved to an II-point to Ft. Myer, this time to battle Fairleigh Dickinson, as the scoreboard predicts the Knights' eventual lead, 49-38, with 14:12 remaining. Over American U. GW. Here the Hoyas fell behind fate. The Hoyas won, 104-74. The Violets countered with a six­ again early in the game but point run behind Miller and Sig­ The Georgetown W 0 men's caught up and took a 42-40 lead norile to close the gap to 49-44 at BaskE'tball Team gained its third CSt d the II-minute mark. Georgetown win of the season by beating '__ ? ~~e.the dressing room at half- agers unne then surged with back-to-back American University 39-25 last In the second half the Hoyas baskets by Bruce Stinebbrickner Tuesday in McDonough Gymna­ played well and hung onto their and a spectacular burst of scoring sium. Freshman Seton Wall led B G W ' by Supple for an insurmountable the Hoyettes with 16 points; lead until there was 4 :36 left. Then it seemed everything turned 74-64 lead with 1:22 to play. Junior Kathy Allen was close be­ Y • • S Upset High scorers in the ball game hind with 14, and Kathy Donovan against them. GW scored eight straight points and flashed out to George Washington University previous years on the varsity. A for the Hoyas were Adrion with added 7. Kathy Gilligan, Kathy a seven point lead. Then, with used a surprising rebounding ad­ year ago, Sullivan did not miss a 27 and Supple with 23. Stinebrick­ Gallagher, and Miss Donovan pro­ 2:13 left, GW had an 11 point vantage to upset Georgetown 65- shot of any kind in scoring 16 ner played a fine all-around game, vided excellent reb 0 u n din g lead, and went on to win 91-81. 61 in a game played at Fort Myer points to help upset the Hoyas. scoring 16 points and grabbing 13 strength as the G.U. women domi­ Then last Saturday, Georgetown last week. This year he managed all of his rebounds. High men for the Vio­ nated both boards. played St. John's High School, History repeated itself in the 12 points in the second half to lets were Miller with 26 and Sig­ The Hoyettes' record includes the Washington area's fourth guise of Mickey Sullivan, a senior assist the Colonials in overcoming norile with 14. Overall the Hoyas wins over Dunbarton and Mary­ ranked team. Again the Hoyas fell substitute who has averaged only a 13-point deficit. hit on 48.5 percent of their at­ mount while the single loss was to (Continued on Page 19) five points per game in his two The game began as a run-and­ tempts to only 39 percent for the Gallaudet. The leading scorers so shoot contest in which both teams losers. far this season have been Seton scored at will. GW then hit a snag Against the Knights of Fairleigh Wall with a 9.3 average, Kathy as the Hoyas opened a 37-26 lead Dickinson, the Hoyas enjoyed one Allen 9.0, and Kathy Donovan 6.0. late in the first half. They took a of their hottest first halves of the The women's JV team turned in G.U. Oarsmen Return 41-30 lead into the locker room season in their final home game. an 8-3 win over A.U., making With Jim Supple and Charlie Adri­ at halftime. Georgetown a double winner. The on hitting at an unbelievable pace, .lV's record is now 1-1, the loss It was soon apparent in the sec­ From Rowing Holiday Georgetown moved to a 20-10 lead ond half that Georgetown would coming at the hands of Gallaudet, by Jack Murray with twelve minutes left in the University with a newly acquired not maintain their good shooting 17-13. Georgetown's varsity heavy­ lightweight shell, while the light­ of the previous half. Only Charlie first half. During the next six Among the opponents remaining minutes the Hoyas outscored the on the women's schedule are weight crew recently returned weight crew kept busy in the Adrion could continue his pace as from a two week stay at Rollins gym with calisthenics and at the Knights 18-5 for a 38-15 lead. Up Trinity, George Washington U., he repeatedly drove on 6'8" Fran­ to this point, hot shooting George­ Montgomery J.C., and Marjorie College in Winter Park, Florida. boathouse painting oars recently cis Mooney for lay-ups. town had hit on 17 out of 24 at- Webster J.C. The "rowing vacation," the first of purchased from Princeton. Sullivan then got into the act, its kind for the crew, proved to In addition to the shell and oars, and his long jump shots provided be one of the most successful, as the crew increased its inventory the bulk of the Colonials' surge well as enjoyable, semester breaks by the acquisition of American which saw them take the lead 52- for the oarsmen. University's heavyweight 8 (AU 51 with 5:50 left in the game. It dropped crew this fall); two new was during these final minutes that In past years semester break was 40 h.p. outboards for the coaching a time for dOUble workouts in the the Hoyas lost the advantage on launches; a quad (four-man shell the boards, frequently getting only gym, waiting for the Potomac to equipped with two oars at each thaw. This year, however, at the one shot at their own basket. seat) from Potomac Boat Club; The last minute involved tac­ invitation of Rollins, and with the and an additional set of light­ unanimous approval of the heavy­ tical fouling by Georgetown, but weight oars fro m Columbia. they could not make the clutch weights themselves, the decision Georgetown now becomes the best was made to row in Florida. Hav­ basket which would h.fl.ve tied the equipped crew in Dad Vail com­ score. ing driven down in their own cars petition. immediately after final exams, the Sophomore Charlie Adrion con­ oarsmen began practice on Lake Senior rigger Chagnon super­ tinued his fine development, scor­ Sark Jan. 26. vised a revamping of the boat­ ing 25 points and snaring 12 re­ house to make room for the new bounds. Garland Pinkston had 16 During their stay at Rollins, the gear, in addition to constructing a points to lead GW. The Colonials oarsmen spent most of their time double rowing machine and bench held a commanding 48-33 edge in down by the boathouse, rowing, press. With the addition of this rebounds, a definite turnabout weight-lifting, sculling and other exercise equipment, the oarsmen from the game played 12 days activities often carrying on into will be able to lift weights im­ earlier betwen the two teams. the evening. Good weather, great mediately after rowing, sparing The rebounding story was typi­ food, and inexpensive accommoda­ time-consuming runs to the gym. fied as George Washington's Steve tions combined to yield what_ coach All squads, two and one-half Loveless stepped to the foul line Tony Johnson described as "one boats for each varsity and two with two seconds left in the game. of the best rowing periods we've boats on each freshman squad, His four teammates were all had yet." have begun rowing workouts on placed down court on defense to Riggers Dennis Chagron and Bill the Potomac although many prac­ protect their narrow lead. Ludolph have recently returned tices have been called due to ice The 5'10" Loveless missed the Jim Supple hits for two of his twenty points against the Knights of from a lengthy trip to Harvard on the river. shot and got the rebound. Fairleigh Dickinson. Supple hit eight of twelve shots from the floor.