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THE COWL PROVIDENCE I COLLEGE

VOL. XXIX, No. 8 PROVIDENCE COLLEGE, PROVIDENCE, R. I., DECEMBER 7, 1966 TEN PAGES Mr. Robert M. Purich Appointed Seniors Named To Director of Admissions Post To Who's Who Mr. Robert M. Purich has better than anyone will be able to all concerned this past year Thirty-three Providence Col• large enough to give a well- been appointed Director of Ad• to." attempting to hold two offices, lege seniors were nominated last rounded representation of the missions at Providence College. Religious Superior and Director A great deal of Mr. Purich's week to be listed in the public• student body, small enough to He will replace Father Royal of Admissions. With a large time will be spent on the road ation "Who's Who Among Stu• confine nominations to an excep• J. Gardner, O.P., who will de• community of eighty-seven Do• speaking to various high school dents in American Universities tional group of students, and vote more of his time to his minicans, there are many du• groups. Father Halton, the and Colleges." based upon current enrollment. position as Prior of the Domini• Dean of Freshmen, will help ties which are definitely full can religious community. time responsibilities." Father "Who's Who Among Students" A "Who's Who" student will him to do this. is an annual directory of dis• Mr. Purich, who graduated Gardner explained. have his name and a sketch of Mr. Purich said that he hoped tinguished students selected from Providence College in his personal and college record to carry on the same procedures from colleges throughout Amer• listed in the annual publication as his two predecessors, Fa• ica. The directory has been for the year in which he was ther Gardner and Father Galli- published every school year selected. As a fringe benefit of her. "I don't expect any new since 1934 in Tuscaloosa, Ala• their selection, students can use problems at the present," Mr. bama. There is no connection "Who's Who" as a reference in Purich said, "but something between "Who's Who Among job and graduate school applica• may come up which is un• Students" and the publication tions. "Who's Who" maintains foreseeable." known as "Who's Who in a special "Student Placement America." For the past year Mr. Purich Service" for this purpose. has been doing a great deal of A student recognized in In the school year 1965-66, the basic admissions work due "Who's Who Among Students" 13,977 students were named in to Father Gardner's duties as must first be officially recom• "Who's Who." Three Rhode Is• head of the religious com• mended by the institution which land schools, including Provi• munity. "I know Mr. Purich he attends and then accepted dence College, were represented will do a fine job," said Fa• by the "Who's Who" organiza• last year. Fifty-two were Rhode ther Gardner. "With his experi• tion. Nominations are submit• Island residents. By way of ence he knows the many facets ted annually by four-year de• contrast, California had 27 of the position." gree-granting institutions. Col• schools and 601 residents repre• lege juniors, seniors, and grad• Father Gardner became Prior sented.) of the St. Thomas Aquinas uate students are eligible for The nominating committee in• Priory on October 1. 1965. A nomination. cluded Raymond Lagueux, Paul native of Brooklyn, New York, "Who's Who" requests nomin• Gianelli, Kenneth Shea, John Father Gardner graduated from ating committees to consider the Miniccucci, Dennis Wentraub, Providence College in 1945 and student's scholarship, leader• and Rev. John P. Gerhard, O.P. entered the Dominican Order ship and cooperation in educa• FR. GARDNER, O.P. The student members of the that same year. In 1950, he re• tional and extra-curricular activ• MR. PURICH committee were chosen as pres• ceived the degree of Bachelor Father Gardner is just fin• ities, his general citizenship, and idents of the more important of Sacred Theology and wasishin g a term as president of his promise of future usefulness. 1959, served as Assistant Direc• campus organizations; Father ordained to the priesthood the the New England Association Each participating institution tor of Admissions for four (Continued on Page 4) years. Previous to this, Mr. following year in Washington, (Continued on Page 7) is assigned a separate quota Purich taught for three and a D. C. He was assigned to the half years in Bellingham, Massa• Providence College faculty in chusetts, where he has lived all 1955. He had been previously his life. He has been married assigned to St. Vincent Ferrer's for two years. Church, New York City. James Farmer, Racial Leader Speaks "Father Gardner will be a "I've seen so many changes The Providence College Fo• very difficult man to replace," in the college, in admissions in rum presented its third speaker, said Mr. Purich. "He projected particular, that I feel that the James Farmer, the nationally the image of the college, both college is a great part of my known author and former direc• on the road and on the campus, life. But I felt a great injustice tor of CORE, at 8 p.m., Dec. 15, in Alumni Hall. Mr. Farmer presently is a College Economics Lecturer teacher at Lincoln University, as well as an active member of the civil rights movement. He founded CORE, the Congress Appointed Council Executiveo n Racial Equality, in 1942, at the University of Chicago. This Mr. Edwin P. Palumbo, spe- non-violent group strives for ial lecturer on economics at equality between whites and 'rovidence College, has been non-whites and draws its basic tamed acting executive director ideas from a movement in In• >f the recently formed State dia many years ago. Mr. Farmer Consumer's Council. suggested that CORE was Mr. Palumbo was selected looked upon at its outset, as a rom a field of twenty-nine ap• group of idealists who partici• plicants for the position. His pated in sit-ins and the like, appointment for five years, an• with the emphasis on non-vio• nounced by Thomas Policastro, lence. He stated, "if it were chairman of the council, will be• not for this emphasis on non• come permanent when con• violence, the entire civil rights firmed by the state Senate. movement would have evolved Mr. Palumbo has been in gov• into a blood bath." ernment service in Rhode Island Mr. Farmer stated a couple since 1952. From that time un- of reasons lying behind the be• il 1959 he served on the Rhode ginnings of the civil rights Island Development Council. movement in this country. He In 1959 he joined the redevel• felt that the negro soldiers, who opment agency as the chief in• had fought for the U. S. in dustrial representative for the World War II, emerged with the city of Providence. In that ca• determination which would af• pacity, he handled the promo- ford their sons a position of MR. PALUMBO lion of the West River and equality in American society. Huntington Expressway indus• passed over Governor Chafee's Mr. Farmer said that "the new trial parks. veto. and emerging nations of Africa cast off the old images of the longer look upon their color as Mr. Farmer suggested that this The State Consumer Council Mr. Palumbo, when comment• native, cannibal tribes, and led a 'skin deformity,' but rather to was the beginning of the so- vas set up by the R. I. General ing on the $12,500 per year post, the negroes in America to no begin to assert their blackness." continued on Page 3) Assembly last May. The bill (Continued on Page 6) 2 THE COWL, DECEMBER 7, 1966 Right Direction?

The Cowl is receiving "peace literal moral judgment upon the leaders of tare" from a gToup calling themselves government. Any action which moves in MEMO- "the Chicago Peace Council." The Coun• this direction can only be destructive: cil is trying to enlist this college's sup• and those who believe that such a stu• port for a late December meeting pre• dent protest would accomplish positive FROM THE EDITOR paratory to the calling of a national, results are only indulging themselves in anti-war student strike in the spring. one grand delusion. Father John P. Gerhard, O.P., Senior Class Moderator, There are many serious objections It is very easy indeed to make our• is leafing Providence College for reassignment in the African to such a proposal. First, there simply selves believe that wearing strange missions. It's sufficiently easy to permit rhetoric to flow on is no need for such a move. All the in• clothes signifies something; and that such an occasion in expounding upon Father Gerhard's vir• telligent criticism of the present war ef• attacking the war in Viet Nam neces• tues. It can be said he was a patient teacher, a kind man, fort has already been efficiently voiced sarily means — "I care!" But this is an understanding advisor, and most of all a close friend. Bui by more rational, responsible men — easily the most tragic of self-delusions. there is always the danger in bidding adieus that we lost many in high office. Ostensibly, the It is after all a great deal simpler to sight of the real man and bury him under an excess verbiage strike would "prove" to the world that protest the world situation than it is to that hides John Gerhard the priest. do something about it — and promoting all American academic society is de• He is not an angel nor a super-human, both qualities he a national strike is certainly not doing cidedly opposed to the present conflict. himself is always the first to deny. But he is a man like anything, really. It is much less exert• Yet there can be no question but that it each and every one of us, spending his life cultivating his ing to talk of changing the world than is a noisy minority which forms the ex• talents, perfecting his good qualities and struggling to over• it is to act and change one's own en• tent of the major "anti-war" element on come his bad habits. The one thing however, that makes vironment. our campuses; and the vociferous voice John Gerhard mean something special to us is that he did of this minority is only too-well known. We would only urge the Chicago all these things while living with us—and that makes all The vast (and alas, silent) majority Peace Council and groups like it to di• the difference. It is no exaggeration to say that seldom did generally accept the present politico-mil• vert their great "humanistic concern" his room lights dim until late into the morning; the reason itary situation as an inevitable evil: and to the slums and depressed areas in for this was very often a student who needed perhaps a when this majority speaks, as they have those cities from whence come the most priest, perhaps an advisor, or perhaps only a friendly ear- occasion to do whenever the minority intense cries for human concern. We Father Gerhard was all these at any time of the day or night. embarrasses them sufficiently, they would them to the Peace Corps, He laughed at our antics, sorrowed at our failures, and took speak firmly in favor of the present PAVLA, VISTA, Extension Volunteers, pride in our accomplishments. As moderator he never led policy. and many others, and urge the members «s—that was our own responsibility—but he was a/ways of this council to expend their activity there to help when he was needed. He lived and grew with Secondly, we question any possible by encouraging similiar groups. If there beneficial results this student action really is need of a "national student ac• us in a very real sense for three and one half years, and he may effect. We see none except to tion" as these groups suggest, then this was at once so wonderfully human and priestly that even further create imbalance and unrest in is the only way it can be directed in a the pangs of this four year growth were made somehow an already delicate situation, the com• true spirit of intellectual honesty and valuable by his living through them with us. plexity of which most students could integrity! To Father Gerhard, we wish simply that he will always not begin to appreciate much less un• remain the man we knew him to be, so that those whom he derstand. The PC Counselling Center, in con• will now serve will learn to have as deep affection for him The damage done by such a student junction with the Student Congress, is as we do. strike, on the other hand, would be im• sponsoring a tutorial program for PC THE EDITORS mense. The now-old argument of the students who need extra course instruc• necessity of maintaining political soli• tion. No extravagant "pitch" for volun• darity stateside in time of foreign crisis teers is intended: in a college where LITTLE MAN ON CAMPUS may be simplistic; but it is nevertheless men are taught to think of other than quite valid. Our enemies would ap• themselves, the thought that there are preciate nothing better than to see the those who wish to be helped, should be youth of this country pass negative sufficient. How about it? NotwioisNce Who's Who?

Just who, exactly, is WHO? composition of this element of the pro• To be a bit more precise, "What is cedure, for the universality contained in What" in determining 'Who's Who'? the fusing of such diverse elements The questions aren't meant to be is quite faultless. merely rhetorical, nor "cute," nor To stand and bluntly point the finger facetious. They are, however, meant to of subjectivism is not only unfair, it is be apropos, for it's that time of the year inaccurate. It is undeniable that each of once again. the new "Who's" of this, and other The annual wave of distinction has years is most definitely worthy of the swept across our campus, leaving in its recognition afforded him by selection to wake thirty-three distinguished mem• the honor. And yet, because it is a mat• bers of Who's Who Among Students in ter of degrees of deservedness, there are American College?, and Universities, a groups (or individuals) on the campus few frustrated "Who's," and a surpris• feeling slighted because of the lack of ing number of confused, or even worse, opportunity for student response to the misinformed students. question of "Who's a Who?" For the record then, what does qual• So much for the problem. The solu• ify one for the honor? The organization tion, although perhaps a bit idealistic, itself puts it this way: appears nonetheless to be the only pos• "Who's Who requests nominating sible method of retaining the necessary committees to consider the student's subjective element (after all, someone scholarship, leadership and cooperation has to decide!) in the selections, while " 1 poNT KNOW.' THEY'JUST CAME IN AND 6ET UP." in educational and extra-curricular ac• introducing the factor of universality tivities, his general citizenship, and his which is so sorely lacking now. It would promise of general usefulness." seem only fitting, therefore, that there Fair enough; ... so where's the should exist a provision for the nomina• gripe? tion of members for the Who's Who It would seem to lie in the area of membership by the members of the par• VjlSy PROVIDENCE COLLEGE ^^Q^, the so-called "nominating committee" ticular class involved. member Providence, E. L p""s which bears the brunt of the responsibil• ity involved in selecting, and the re• Admittedly, it would be a skeleton EDITORIAL BOARD sultant criticism of its work. nomination, but if properly oriented it Editor-in-Chief GERALD G. McCLURE Here at PC the committee is com• could make the work of the nominating Executive Editor PAUL W. HARRIS posed of the preseidnts of the central committee itself more inclusive and ac• Managing Editors RICHARD A. METHIA organizations on campus: the Student curate in the long run. Further sugges• PETER C. THOMPSON Congress. Senior class. Carolan Club, tions of a constructive nature could Sports Editor JOHN L. CIEPLY Dillon Club, and D.E.S. In addition, easily be elicted from the classes, but Assistant Sports Editor PETER M. MEADE there is a sixth member, of necessity a whatever the ultimate revision, if one Sports Staff: Joe Adamec, Jim Bier, Bob Fried, Vin Papi, faculty member, who is selected at the is forthcoming, it should be kept in mind Greg Sullivan, Ed Skiber, Tom Hutton, Greg Walsh, discretion of the five presidents, and that leaders are judged strictly accord• Brian Maher. this latter member, quite naturally, is ing to their followers, and it is only Published each full week of school during the academic year by most often the moderator of the class. from this latter element that we can de• Providence College, River Avenue and Eaton Street, Providence, R. L R. I. It is difficult to find fault with the cide who is a "WHO" in actuality. 02918. Second Cass postage paid at Providence, Subscription rate Is $2.50 per year. THE COWL, DECEMBER 7, 1966 Letter to the Editor Dear Editor: philosophical framework ex• ly conservative, let me draw sup• Eight years after completing F pounded by T. Lonergan, S.J., port from Union Theological's my last class in Theology, I am in his monumental Insight: Can• dogmatics professor, John Mac- assuredly not now what I never on Moeller elsewhere indicates quarrie. Macquarrie—the trans• was then—a professional theo• his interest in Fr. Karl Rahner, lator of Heidegger's classic Be• logian. In theology I am at best S.J. The two Jesuits are notin g and Time—observes in his On Campus an amateur—in the root sense that far apart for both have ac• current Principles of Christian of the word—albeit an aging knowledged their dependence Theology how the baton of lead• {By the author of "Rally Round the Flag, Boys!", one. on their fellow Jesuit, Fr. Jo•ership—formerly held by Barth, "Dobie Gillis," etc.) However, even amateurs— seph Marechal of Louvain. Fr.Bultman n and Tillich—has now whether old or young—can hit Edward Schillebeeckx, O.P., passed to Catholic theologians upon relevant factors in signifi• likewise admits the impact of like Rahner. He admires most 'TIS THE SEASON TO BE JOLLY cant issues. Such at least is the Marechal, although this crea• those theologians—Tillich and tribute made by Aristotle (I tive theologian prefers another Rahner are his examples—who Rhet 1; II Meta 1) and Aquinas I know how busy you are—studying, going to class, help• Louvain author, D. De Petter. UNITE ontology and existential• ("Coacti veritate" is his phrase) ing old grads find their dentures after Homecoming—but, My point, in all this, is that ism. Indeed, the criticism he to the inborn power of even in• hark, the Yuletide is almost upon us and it's time we few students here or anywhere makes of Barth, O. Cullman and completely trained intellects. turned our thoughts to Christmas shopping. else—even Columbia Univer• Bultmann serves to underline The recent COWL article on We'll start with the hardest gift problem of all: what to sity—could discern significant his demand that sound episte• theology confirms this. For the give the man who has everything. Well sir, here are some divergencies of Marechal, Rah- mology and ontology be funda• COWL contributors — presuma• things I'll bet he doesn't have: 1) A dentist's chair. 2) A nar, Lonergan or Schillebeeckx mental to any responsible exist• bly amateurs like myself and Mach number. 3) A street map of Perth, Australia. 4) from the epistemology, meta• ential theology. certainly younger than I—have physical analysis, ideogenesis or Fifty pounds of chicken fat. 5) A pack of Personna Super PC should not settle for less in fact hit upon important points methodology of St. Thomas Stainless Steel Blades. for her students than Macquar• in difficult matters. Aquinas. "What?" you exclaim, your eyebrows leaping in wild rie indicates. It should not, for Theology is difficult and it is incredulity. "The man who has everything doesn't have In brief, these thinkers find example, settle for perusal of news—the TIME article on Bish• Personna Super Stainless Steel Blades ? What arrant non• Aquinas valid and relevant. Of merely ephemerial issues or op Pike's "heresy trial" guar• sense!" you scoff, making a coarse gesture. course, they suppliment him by courses based upon insubstan• anteed this. But theology is sig• But I insist. The man who has everything doesn't have other traditions and we shalltia l authors like Bishop Pike or nificant beyond the world of Personna because everyone in the dorm is always borrow• touch this point next, but let me Altizer or Cox or Robinson. Of journalism: the condition of the• ing them. And small wonder! Wouldn't you be there with continue on my present point. course, as the hundred pages ology on a Christian campus is an empty razor and a supplicating sidle if you heard some• Thus, if P.C. students, unlike which Fr. Schillebeeckx devotes a fair touchstone of that col• body had super-blades that were super-sharp and super- these men, find Aquinas irrele• to Robinson in his new book, lege's specifically Christian con• durable ; that scrape not, neither do they nick; that shave vant in their attempt at the in• Dieu et l'homme, indicates, tribution to the believer and to you easily and breezily, quickly and slickly, scratchlessly tellectual life, then some—per• such authors may alert serious society at large—this is true and matchlessly; that come both in Double-Edge style and haps most—P.C. students may students to significant problems whether the academic circle is Injector style ? Of course you would! not be sufficiently gifted intel• although they may not go far in Harvard's revitalized theology So here is our first gift suggestion. If you know a man lectually for such a serious at• solving them. who shaves with Personna, give him a safe. school or Munich's creative tempt. P.C. would be asking too As a final point let me state Next let us take up the thorny problem of buying gifts group centering on Fr. Karl much of most of her sons and an opinion that runs, predict- when you have no money. Well sir, there are many won• Rahner or Providence College. she may have to search out bly, toward my field of special• derful gifts which cost hardly anything. A bottle of good All agree theology must be easier paths. ized graduate training—the his• clear water, for example, is always welcome. A nice smooth vital. But how is that to be On the other hand, some P.C. tory and philosophy of science. rock makes a charming paperweight. In fact, one Christ• achieved? The COWL article students are surely capable of PC, while it should erect an mas back in my own college days, these are exactly the opines that a merely biblical succeeding in the most demand• existential theological structure gifts I gave a beauteous coed named Norma Glebe. I took theology is inadequate for con• ing of intellectual disciplines. on a sound ontological basis, a rock, a bottle of water, a bit of ribbon, and attached a temporary man. This is a per• Dissatisfaction in these cases should not limit its attempts to card with this tender sentiment: ceptive conclusion and a valid would presumably center on phenomenological or existential Here's some water one. For Canon Charles Moel- teaching methods or audience thought. For these two fields, And here's a rock. lor—Louvain theologian and cur• interest or size of classes. These although they are significant rently assistant to Cardinal Otta- I love you, daughter, problems are more easily solved currents of thought in our cen• viani—had observed the same a Around the clock. when they are faced, of course, tury, are not the only ones nor decade ago in a celebrated arti• Norma was so moved, she seized the rock, smashed the than that presented by the ma• —in my opinion—the strongest cle "Can 20th century man be bottle, and plunged the jagged edge into my sternum. jority of students who pre• currents, certainly not in Amer• a man of the Bible?" His con• sumably must gain a theology ica. Physical science, evolution• clusion, like that drawn later that is not merely biblical. ary biology, comparative anthro• by Fr. Charles Davis to a similar Perceptive reads will realize pology, empirical psychology question in Theology for Today, that while we have affirmed the and cultural sociology: these is "yes," but a highly qualified relevance of one part of Rah- subjects represent currents "yes." They agree that con• ner's intellectual patrimony, we which are strong, deep and ac• temporary man, in perusing the have left aside his strain of tive; therefore, they have their kaleidoscopic sequences un• Heideggerian existentialism (or, roles to play in a Western theo• earthed by a century of archeo- for that matter, Schillebeeckx's logy that is alert to man's logical and linguistic studies of interest in phenomenology). achievements as well as alive to ancient texts and cities, must Merleau-Ponty, Buber, Heideg• his anxieties. search out transcultural invari• ger: these are systems, just as ants, i. e., the inchoative or ex• Thomism is a system. What of Such are the musings of one plicit themes, attitudes and no• these? amateur in theology. Hopefully etic structures which remain These systems, so it seems to they advance and do not obscure valid and, hopefully, relevant in the significant and timely plea our day. me, should be taught also, but in one or another optional, up• directed by other amateurs to Here now is a lovely gift for an American History major professional theologians — that This point already looks to per level course—a course con• —a bronze statuette of Millard Fillmore with a clock in from the infinitely fecund Word the second substantive issue the sequent upon a short series of the stomach. (Mr. Fillmore, incidentally, was the only of God they, like good house• COWL raises: a choice of sys• required courses. American president with a clock in his stomach. James K. holders, bring forth things old tems. Before previously indulgent Polk had a stem-winder in his head and William Henry and new. Fr. Davis optioned for thereader s shut me off as hopeless• Harrison chimed the quarter-hour, but only Mr. Fillmore In the Lord, of all our chief executives had a clock in his stomach. Thomas Cunningham, O.P. Franklin Pierce had a sweep second hand and Zachary Taylor had 17 jewels and Martin Van Buren ticked but, I repeat, Mr. Fillmore and Mr. Fillmore alone had a clock Keyed-up in his stomach. Moreover, Mr. Fillmore was the first presi• James Farmer... dent with power steering. No wonder they called him students unwind "Old Hickory!") (Continued from Page 1) But I digress. Returning to Christmas gifts, here s one atSheratonA called feelings of the "Afro- that's sure to please-a gift certificate from the American American" negro outlook in this Society of Chiropractors. Accompanying each certificate ^jand... country. is this fetching little poem: He also stated that one of the Merry Christmas, Happy New Year, worst ghettos in the north, Joyous sacro-iliac! could be found in the area of May your spine forever shine, save money South Providence. To combat Blessings on your aching back! against such areas, he feels, Save with weekend discounts! May your lumbar ne'er grow number, "Jobs created in the process of Get your free ID card from May your backbone ne'er dislodge, rebuilding the facilities of cities, the Sheraton rep on campus. May your caudal never dawdle, along with taking 2% of the an• It entitles you to room dis• Joyeux Noel! Heureux massage! nual budget for the next five counts at nearly all Shera• * * * © 1966, Max Sholman to ten years would relieve a ton Hotels and Motor Inns. good deal of the poverty in such And greetings of the season from the makers of Good over Thanksgiving and areas." rersonna Super Stainless Steel Blades, Double-Edge or In conclusion, Mr. Farmer injector, and from Personna's partner in shaving lux• Christmas holidays, summer vacation, weekends all year said that there are no neutrals ury, Burma-Shave, regular or menthol. in this area, and the innocent round. Frank Pickett bystander is not innocent but 109 Dean Avenue guilty." His speech was met Smillifl.ld, It I. with a resounding applause by the Very Reverend William P. Sheraton Hotels & Motor Inns Haas, and an appreciative audi• ence. the 4 r<>w i- DEtwBa

r 11 11111111111111111111 • • 1 11111111 1111111111111111111111 1111 _ Who's Who. Class President, is a dent Congress Concert Commit• On

From Teacher to Millionaire Louis A. R. Pieri, raconteur, sports and Pieri and Mrbaseball. . Later Pieri taught at was 1929. Times were pretty 10 years trying to convince any• entrepreneur, connoisseur, has Brown's widow sold the team for Brown while studying for histoug h for the inexperienced one, Pieri abandoned the idea owned outright or in part the three million dollars to the Ja•Masters Degree in Science. rookie executive during the de•In 1946, however, Walter Brown Boston Celtics, Holiday on Ice, cob Ruppert Brewing Co. Next he went to Rutgers Prep pression, but he kept his head called Pieri to a meeting in New the R. I. Reds, the R. I. Audi• In 1937, Brown, Pieri, and where he taught and coached above water and in 1934 pur• York to start the National Bas• torium, a successful stable of John H. Harris, then owner of for two years. His last teach• chased 25% of the Auditorium ketball Association. In the first race horses, and 25,000 acres of the Pittsburgh Hornets hockey ing job was a five-year stint at and the Reds hockey club. In year, there were 15 teams, most blueberries. club, launched a new venture, Central Falls High, where 1938, he bought the entire oper• of which went broke. After the Lou Pieri has lost thousands one that became known the again he also coached three ation. 1948 season, Pieri dropped out of dollars, but has made him• world over as the greatest show sports. It was about that time the Ice of the league, which did not self a millionaire. In 1949, Wal• on ice, the Ice Capades. The While he was at Central Falls Capades venture popped up. The have an owner in the black. ter A. Brown, owner of the Bos• Ice Capades, the most expensive high in the 20s, the R. I. Inter- show became so big that a sec• The following year, Brown ton Bruins hockey club, asked theatrical production in the scholastic League comprised ond was formed, Holiday on lee, urged Pieri to join him in oper• Pieri to join him in a venture world with annual expenses ex• only eight schools, while the and later a third, Ice Capades ating the Celtics. Pieri said he to start a professional basketball ceeding one million dollars, was other 20 schools were left out in International. For 25 years, would if a -little-known coach team to be called the Boston sold three years ago by Piere, the cold. Pieri organized these Pieri was secretary of the organ• named Red Auerbach ran the Celtics. Pieri, although appre• Brown, Harris, and three other schools into the R. I. Interscho- ization. Things were not always team and a gangly kid named hensive about pro basketball af• partners for six million dollars. lasric Conference, which later roseate for the ice shows, espe• Ed McCauley was on the team. ter losing $200,000 with his own All this is quite amazing con• merged with the Interscholastic cially during the war years Brown got them both and the Providence Steamroller quintet, sidering that Pieri never thought League. At that time, Pieri or• when there was a premium on Celtics were on the road. Not went along with Brown, each in• he would be anything more than ganized all the teams in themal e skaters. At the time, the the road to success immediately, vesting $100,000. After two a science teacher and a coach state into leagues for each sport, cast consisted of 98 girls and however. They lost a fortune in years, the combine lost a grand until he was 30 years old. an alignment that remains to six boys. two years. total of one half million dollars. After being graduated from this day. Pieri lost almost that much him• Since the late 30s, Pieri had Continued next week; Pieri Dean Academy in Franklin, One day, out of the clear blue self over a period of five years. suggested the idea of a profes• gets Cousy in a hat and the Mass., Pieri received his Ph.B. sky, a Brown trustee and mem• sional basketball league. After dynasty starts, They persisted and things at Brown University in 1920. At ber of the Auditorium Board oi turned for the better. The Cel• Brown he played football, or• Governors, Paul De Wolfe, of• tics became one of the greatest ganized, managed, coached, and fered Pieri the job as manager contingents in the history of all captained basketball, and played of the R. I. Auditorium. That Medical Film Shown at P.C.

The students of Providence by the announcements at meals, College turned out in very large were disappointed in the film's numbers last Monday night to irrelevance to anyone but a bi• see a highly recommended film ology major. If the film's pur• on venereal disease, presented pose was to shock the students Bold New Breed by by the Student Health Associa• into avoiding venereal disease, tion. it only succeeded in disgusting them by its somewhat gruesome -ARROW- According to Dr. Edwin B. pictures. O'Reilly, venereal disease, which The authentic, traditional, was nearly extinct after World Many facts of valuable inter• est to the average P. C. student classic, conservative button War II, is beginning to become i problem again, especially were discussed in the film. For down. Very acceptable. among young people. He said example, those who attended this was probably due to theno w kno-" that 2,400,000 units The long points on this Arrow lack of concern about it, be•of penicillin are necessary to Decton Oxford are just right. cause of its relative ease of cure cure early, primary syphilis. A since the discovery of penicillin. careful listener may remember Anything less would ride up. the four kinds of non-syphilic Anything more would give you too The purpose of the film, ac• venereal disease. much roll. Tapered to a T. cording to Father Wade, who The film was a good clinical 'Save the introduction, was forstud y of the problem of venere• "Sanforized-Plus", in a wash and information and education. al disease, but it was rather ir• wear that goes past midnight "The moral aspects of the dis• relevant to most of the students withouta wrinkle. ease are not to be discussed of Providence College. It would here," he stated. He was cor• be well if those lectures which Available in white and blue. $7.00 rect in his analysis; the film pertain to the students in gen• was a completely clinical dis• eral, having to do with social 100% cotton Oxford stripes. $5.00 cussion of the effects and thean d moral problems, were as cures of venereal disease. well-publicized and as well-at• Many students, who had been tended as was this film. attracted to view the film by The film will be shown again the recommendation on the Ray this afternoon at 2:30 p.m. in mond Hall Bulletin Board and Harkins Hall.

Statement of Policy: Let it at this time be known that the executive board of the John J. Dillon Club of Providence College states its position on the much discussed, current subject of student drinking and conduct.

I. Drinking Whereas there are sometimes facilities to obtain alcoholic beverages at all the club's activi• ties, the executive board states that it will not be held responsible for the sale of alcoholic beverages to any student at an activity. Full responsibility for any unlawful selling, buying, and consuming of alcoholic beverages will be born by the student in• volved and the management of the establishment.

II. Conduct Whereas the Dillon Club holds social activi• ties for the enjoyment and relaxation of its mem• bers, the club retains the right to revoke admittance or to expel cooperatively or forcibly, any person or persons whose conduct will jeopardize the activ• ity and subsequently injure the club. Anyone sus• pended from an activity will have the opportunity to discuss the situation with the executive board.

This statement of policy is not made to lessen the enjoyment of the club's activities, but to in• form all participants of the responsibilities. THE COWL. DECEMBER 7, 1966 6 Holiday Dance Plans

Dillon Club President Ken• dance chairman, or any member neth Shea has announced that of the Dillon Club Executive the Club will hold a Christmas Board. Dance Saturday evening, De• President Shea requests that cember 10 at the Dillon Coun those students who volunteered cil Knights of Columbus in o participate in the Dillon Club North Providence. Tutorial Program but have not The dance is open to a yet met theim commitments limited number of Dillon Club please report to the Student Af• members at $4 per ticket. In• fairs Office. More volunteers cluded in the price of the ticket are still needed and may sign is a buffet dinner. up in the same office. The dance, the highlight of The recently held "demoli• Dillon Club social activities for tion derby," which was spon• the semester, will feature the sored by the Dillon Club netted appearance of Santa Claus. Mr. a sizeable sum. The money will Claus will present each male be turned over to the Provi• guest with a special surprise dence Journal Christmas fund gift. for needy children. The auto• Music will be by "The Unpre- mobile used in the undertaking dictables." This group has re•was donated by the father of cently completed a tour of the Martin Madden, a member of country which was highlighted the Dillon Club. Mr .Madden is by an appearance in Union an automobile dealer. City, New Jersey. February 11, March 18, and Tickets are available in April 15 have been set as dates Alumni Hall cafeteria from upon which the Dillon Club will 9:30 to 1:30 from Joe Pilla, hold its functions during the second semester. As yet it has not been decided specifically Palumbo what the vents on these dates will be. The Dillon Club's an• (Continued from Page 1) nual mixer on campus, which envisioned consumer service as will be open to all students, will the role of the group. be held on May 19. "There are so many different products available, marked in so many different ways, that the choice to the consumer is al•COMING TO most infinite," he observed. "In some areas, the consumer may MEW YORK? become confused and at a loss as to how to make a choice. ••MHSMMHHHHMHHflHIHB "Our objective will be to sup• plement and broaden people's information about products so they will have a basis for an 'ntrllig< ut choice. After that it s up to them," he said. In making the announcement, Mr. Polire'etrc said that Mr. UAKE WILLIAM SLOANE HOUSE YMCA falumbo's background in eco• YOUR HEADQUARTERS IN N. Y. C. nomics and his experience with REASONABLE • COMFORTABLE • C0NVENIEN1 industrial development in Provi• dence will be especially effec• Save money. Go further. Stay tive because so many of the longer. The William Sloane House problems the council expects to YMCA has 1491 rooms available attack are economic. to men, women and groups, sen• He said that Mr. Palumbo sibly priced at $3.15-$4.60 single; will participate in council poli• $5.00-$5.20 double. Rates include cy making, as well as in run• YMCA membership. Enjoy conven• ning the day to day operations. ient transportation to everything. Mr. Palumbo graduated from Providence College in 1950 and Coffee Shop • Cafeteria • Laundry later received his master's de• Barber Shop • Check Room gree in economics from Boston Tailor • Sightseeing • TV Room College. Information

REQUEST BOOKLET [c] Thanks from A.E.D. Alpha Epsilon Delta, the pre- medical honor society, wishes to WILLIAM 356 WEST 34lh St extend its thanks to those who NEW YORK. N.Y. 10001 It's trade-in time donated blood last Wednesday. SLOANE OX 5-5133 ON 34111 STREET - The drive, which netted over HOUSE 1 BLOCK FROM 125 pints, represents the best YMCA PENN STATION for tired old myths. response A.E.D. has had to date. • NOW COED!

Like the one about business. Especially find new and better ways to make things big business. That it is beyond the rugged that help people communicate is very re• individualist's wildest daydream to enter warding and satisfying. Did you ever hear THE WORLD OF THE MIND this holy of holies because he'll lose some• these wry words of Oliver Wendell Would you like to leorn things about your thing that's very sacred — like his inde• Holmes? "Never trust a generality — not pendence. even this one." psyche that your psyche didn't know? How about Sure, it can happen. If a guy or gal That's how we feel about the generality entering the world of the mystique and the unex• wants to hide, or just get by, or not accept that claims you'll just become a little cog plored? LSD, The Kinsey Report, Neurosis, Psycho• responsibility, or challenges. in a company like Western Electric. You sis, Frigidity, Sex. All will be dealt with in the We're not omniscient enough or stupid might, of course, but if you consider your• enough to speak for all business, but at a self an individual now, odds are 10 to 1 coming discussions and lectures which your new company like Western Electric, bright that you'll keep your individuality. And Psych Club will undertake. Interested? If you're ideas are not only welcome, they are en• cherish it. And watch it grow. Even at big, not, you may find that one of the topics under ex• couraged. And no door is shut. Create a big Western Electric. little stir, go ahead, upset an old apple• amination is you. So come to the first gig, seance, You know, that's the only way we'd cart (we replace shibboleths at a terrific want you to feel. If you feel like coming whatever you want to call it Thursday night, Decem• pace — we have to as manufacturing and in with us. ber 8, at 7:00 in the Guild Room or we'll levitate supply unit of the Bell System - in order you out of existence! to provide your Bell telephone company with equipment it needs to serve you.) fm) Western Electric There's an excitement in business. True, \T . V MANUFACTURING & SUPPLY UNIT OF THE BELL SYSTEM we're in it to make a profit, but working to THE COWL, DECEMBER 7, 1966 7

HASKIN'S REXALL PHARMACY 895 SMITH STREET Providence, R I. Junior Class Presents Ring Portrait "YOUR PRESCRIPTION CENTER" TWO REGISTERED PHARMACISTS ON DUTY An oil painting depicting — WE DELIVER — symbolic elements of the junior MAnning 1-3668 OPEN SUNDAYS class ring has been presented to the Very' Rev. William Paul Haas, president of the college. Peter Gallogly, class president, and James Vigneau, co-chairman SAME DAY SERVICE of the ring committee, made the presentation recently in a closed ceremony in Father Haas' office. AIR WAY CLEANERS, Inc. Painted by John Luini of the 558 ADMIRAL STREET art department of the Dieges & (Diagonally Across from Bradley's Cafe) Clust Company, manufacturers of the class ring, the painting features the young sculptured SLACKS AND JACKET Friar's head, -the modern torch with flame shaped like the num• Any combination of the two for $1.25 ber 50 (representing the class I I as the fiftieth to be graduated from P.C.) and the number 1968 above the torch. J Shirts — 4 or more W° EACH ^ The picture was presented to Father Haas, an art enthusiast ROTC UNIFORMS $1.10 — HATS FREE Peter Gallogly, junior class president, points out the sym• and painter of many works, "in appreciation," Mr. Vigneau said. 8 ajn. - 6 pjn. Mon. • FrL 8 a.m. • 5 p.m. on Sat. bolism in painting presented to Father Haas (right) as James Free minor repairs Vigneau, co-chairman of the junior ring committee, looks on. Mr. Luini will donate his pay• —COWLfoto by FRED LUMB ment for the work to a char• itable agency. Mr. Purich (Continued from Page 1) of Admissions Officers and Reg• istrars. This was the first time that a religious had held this post. At Providence, he former• ly served on the Committee of Studies, and is presently on the Arts Honors Committee and is the moderator of Theta Chapter of Delta Epsilon Sigma. Although he is no longer Di• rector of Admissions, Father Gardner will remain on the Committee of Admission to show that he has a continuing Even When She Answers, He Still Gets the Busy Signal. interest in college activity. DEAR REB: Frosh Basketball ... Lately, every time I call my girl, she's either "not in" or "not inter- (Continued from Page 10) . ested." Last week I called her 23 times and couldn't even make a Walt Violand and Gary McKen- coffee date. The trouble started when she started dating a guy na combined for a number of steals that forced Assumption who owns a Dodge Coronet. Now she goes to parties with him, to gamble on their shots. dances, football games, etc. Do you think I should call her again, Gerry McNair paced the Friar or should I forget her and break her heart? attack with 18 points. He was •SMI closely followed by Craig Cal- BAD CONNECTIONS len, who had 17 points for the evening. Coach Bill O'Connor DEAR BAD CONNECTIONS: emptied the bench late in the I think your next call should be to your Dodge Dealer. Then make game. The victory not only marked a first for the Friar a date to see the '67 Coronet, the car that's breaking hearts all yearlings but also the initial over America. You'll find that its good looks are pretty hard to win for the newly appointed mentor. resist. Now, before you break your girl's heart, give her another break. Ask her to go for a ride in your new Coronet. I think she'll get the signal. WANTED: STUDENT REP FOR NEW MAJOR SKI AREA Must be a skier. Will act as ski area representa• tive, handling promo• tional activities at school and in town, in return for free season's lift pass. Contact Ed Siegel, Waterville Co., Inc., Waterville Valley, New Here's the heartbreaker.. .'67 Dodge Coronet 500. A campus favorite with its great new looks, ride, Hampshire 03223. Tel. and list of extras that are standard. Like bucket seats with either a companion seat in the middle or a (603) 726-8911. center console. Plush carpeting. Padded instrument panel. Padded sun visors. Seat belts, front and rear. A choice of Six or V8 models. And lots more. So get with '67 Dodge Coronet and get busy.

DODGE DIVISION CHRYSLER waterville MOTORS CORPORATION W 1 valley IIOIUrB BEVEL!JOB OPEKATION * NEW HAMPSHIRE THE COWL, DECEMBER 7, 1966

Yuletide Party Dr. J. Breen Speak Peace Corps on Campus The annual Carolan Club There will be a meeting on Christmas party will be held on graduate schools in Business side at a panel discussion, and other side of the globe as a Next week Providence Col• December 12 in Stephen Hall today at 1:30 in room Bl (An• lege will be a recruiting station the recruiters will recount their librarian in Iran. Now the three toninus). experiences in the service (all are combining their experiences lounge. The holiday festivities of the Peace Corps. Three Dr. J. Breen will survey grad• have been overseas) with the in one of the Corps unceasing will begin at 9:00 p.m. The oorspsmen from New York will uate school requirements and visual aids of movies and slides. drives for college volunteers. be on campus conducting inter• affair will feature amateur en• will attempt to answer questions On Tuesday at 8 p.m., there views with interested students Providence College ranks tertainment and skits presented often asked by students think• will me another rally in Aqui• and participating in the panel third among Rhode Island's col• ing about graduate schools in nas, where more information by Carolan Club members. discussions and explanations of leges and universities in the Business. the modern foreign service. The can be obtained and questions number of assignments that In charge of the yuletide Faculty members who have at• recruiting session will last from can be answered. Finally, on have been or are overseas. Grad• program are Bill Bennett, Mike tended graduate schools of busi• Monday morning to Wednesday Wednesday the drive will con• uates have served in all three ness will be present to answer afternoon (Dec. 12-14) with pro• clude with a convocation in Har• continents served by the Peace Sheehan, Dick Stoltz, the three questions. grams planned continually kins Hall at 2 p.m. After this Corps since almost the Corps' Senior class C.C. representa• final session the test will be ad• All students are invited. through the three days. inception about five years ago. tives. During the party two ministered. From 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. on Mon• The Class of 1966 has two vol• awards of $5 each will be pre• day and Tuesday and from 9 to unteers, Christopher Dodd and register with Carmen Mele 307 The recruiters will be volun• sented to the winners of the Salvatore Federici, both of 12 a.m. on Wednesday, an in• teers who have just arrived McDermott. The rules govern• formation booth will be open whom are in training now. Christmas Decoration contest. back from assignments abroad. ing the competition in this con• in Alumni Hall where the vol• Patricia Ebert, a social studies Mr. Richard Deasy is the There are still openings for test are posted on the bulletin unteer recruiters will individual• major from San Diego, taught Peace Corps representative on interested members to partici• ly confer with students. At the health classes in Brazil for two campus and the organizer of all pate in the talent portion of board in the Raymond Hall booth students will be able to years while James Cawley, a of the events for this recruit• the event. They should con• cafeteria. register for the Peace Corps test football player from Connecticut, ing session. He said that PC is tact one of the three Senior which will be given Wednesday Besides the Christmas enter instructed elementary athletic privileged to have the recruiters C.C. representatives prior to the afternoon after the convocation. classes in Venezuela. Signe come so early in the year, but practice rehersal on Sunday, De• tainment, there will be free re• On Monday night there will Wood, another West Coast girl he warned that it might be the cember 10. Those members freshments for all. Admission be a convocation in Aquinas who was educated at the Uni• last time this year if the re• wishing to compete in the Yule• to the party is free with the Hall at 8:00. Fr. Haas will pre• versity of Denver, worked on the sponse is poor. tide Decoration Contest may Carolan Club identifcation card.

We asked Westinghouse to send us study aids for serious students. So what did they send us?

Portable phonographs! Pint sized tape recorders! Clock radios that wake you up to frug music! Study aids?

1. This is a 10 pound battery operated or plug in portable phonograph. It's the new Westinghouse Solid State, 4-speed auto• matic. Plays anything, anywhere: lan• guage records at jam sessions. Or the Frug at cram sessions. Some study aid! Model 135AC-$59.95.

2. For the student who has nothing: a high intensity lamp, a clock and a radio all in one. The alarm gizmo works with a buzzer or the radio. The lamp is dandy for needlepoint. And the clock keeps time. Its name is Lumina. Model 974XL— $49.95.

3. You too can be a secret agent with this battery powered, highly portable tape recorder. It has an uncanny stow-away mike that makes it indispensable for those eight o'clocks when note taking is a physical and mental impossibility. Model 27Rl-$29.95.

4. The Westinghouse Space Maker Clock Radio was designed for the average enor• mous college room. It's only 7 inches wide, fits on a cluttered night table and gets you up to music, or a heartbreaking buzzer. Model 215L5-$23.95.

5. This is a tiny travel alarm clock-radio that folds up flat and fits into an over You can be sure if it's Westinghouse (W) stuffed suitcase. And just so you'll never miss it, it has a metal plate for your ini• tials or name. It's the ideal study aid to take home for the holidays. Model 968PL -$29.95.

Providence College Bkst. No. 566 THE COWL, DECEMBER 7, 1966

Fried's Fearless Forecasts Collection Change (Editor's note: Having just completed an astoundinq Announcement Made season of predicttng football games— a.796 percentage If football is to be a reality Fearless Fried has gone into semi-retirement But do next year, or ever at all, the not fear because this will not be the end of our intrepid students are going to have to FROM reporter. He will appear from time to time with com• organize, finance, and run it by ments and clairvoyance on the basketball scene as in themselves. As far as financing this week's issue.) is concerned, the students are THE In March of 1963 little Loyola of Chicago startled the asked, as has previously an• basketball world by upsetting CINCINNATI'S Bearcats in nounced, to pledge five dol• the NCAA finals. Last year the eyes of Texas were on a lars over a five month period. TEXAS WESTERN club, which failed to appear in the pre Five dollars is a substantial season polls. TEXAS WESTERN'S opponent in the finals amount, but it is the only way 1 was "RuPPis Runts"—a KENTUCKY "5" which was sup- to field a team next year. .SPORTSDESK 3 pose to be in a rebuilding year. Where were the perennial By John Cieply | powerhouses, UCLA, MICHIGAN and DUKE? As far as the collection of the installments is concerned, sev• 1966-67 is supposed to be the year of UCLA and Lew eral problems have arisen. Es• Thanks to Messrs. Walker, Riordan, Lamoriello, and Alcindor. The experts breathed easy Saturday night as pecially difficult is the collec• big Lew poured in 56 points to lead the talented UCLANs Dougherty and company, we are again a complete col• tion of payments from the day past USC. But if the Bruins are to cap the title (which is students—due to poor communi• lege. Nothing illustrates the need for some sort of or• highly probable) they will have to avoid that one big upset, cations. The dorm students are ganized fall sport like the excitement of the basketball | which seems to plague the pre-season favorites VIRGINIA easily accessible for the pledge and hockey seasons. TECH taught highly favored Duke that very lesson a few collectors, but not so for the nights ago. UCLA has all the guns, but they must use day students. It is impossible Opening night went as. usual for PC basketball and their ammunition wisely if they are to capture their third for the collectors to approach very encouragingly for hockey. The hustle and spirit national crown in four years. Keep this date in mind- each student individually. To shown by the pucksters make them a greater drawing Jan. 28, at Chicago Stadium—UCLA vs. LOYOLA of Chi• remedy this situation with day cago. If I were a betting man . . . students, payments will be col• card and more potent force than anyone really expected. No one really expected the basketball Friars to be a pre• TEXAS WESTERN will soon know the meaning of the lected during the lunch periods saying "uneasy lies the head that wears the crown." Every• (10:45-1:15) several days a cision unit since they are traditionally slow starters. As one will be shooting at the Miners. HOUSTON'S Cougars week, every week. The dorm soon as a starting five is set, they will probably become S could hit the bullseye, but look for the Miners to hold on students are asked to make a slick unit. If Saturday night was any indication of | to their reputation—if not their crown. their payments on the assigned what Stu Kerzner will perform like, he will definitely date, that is, the eighth of the make his presence felt. My dark horse candidate for DUKE is the pre-season favorite to represent the East month. A member of the foot• stardom at PC (probably not this year but definitely by in he NCAA, but DAVIDSON'S Wildcats are ready to claw ball club will be in hand in the their way to the recognition which has escaped them in re• cafeteria during these hours to his junior year) is Andy Clary . . . just remember Bill cent campaigns. The Wildcats are built like trees, with accept the pledges. Blair as a sophomore. Rodney Knowles 6'9" and Tom Youngdale 6'10" the tallest of the timber. The peripheral aspects to the big opening also went Every new season brings with it a Cinderella team. well. Congratulations to "Sully" and the real "crazy This year it looks like an independent—DAYTON. The Friars," who keep the crowd cheering. Add the carefree, Flyers are one of the smallest clubs in the country, but also unpretentious cheerleading performance to the much im• one of the quickest. They are led by their 6'4" All-Ameri- Intramurals... proved sound of the band and you come out with quite a can candidate, . Gazing at my crystal ball I see (Continued from Page 10) spectacle fittingly complementing a top ranked ball club. the Flyers upsetting highly ranked Louisville on Dec. 17. warks on a brilliant defensive I see UCLA, DAVIDSON, TEXAS WESTERN, and DAY• Speaking of cheering, it was gratifying to note that unit. TON fighting it out in the championship round of the the cheering section is approaching 1C0% PC males . . . NCAA. The Champion? Only a fool would bet against What made the '66 season so I only noted one girl and a couple of old men breaking UCLA's star-studded Bruins. But wise men rarely collect interesting was the number of into the inner sanctum. There will be enough said later the chips. teams that remained in conten• in the season about spirit and cheering, but I would like FEARLESS FRIED'S PRESEASON ALL-AMERICANS tion right to the very end. Met to bring out a point made by Coach Mullaney at the rally. "B" finished in the runner-up First Team Second Team It would definitely speak well of PC spirit and the "ani• Jim Walker—Providence Louis Dampier—Kentucky slot, a mere half-game behind mal section" if we gave the opposing team a reasonable Wesley Unseld—Louisville Cliff Anderson—St. Joseph's the champs. The Mets, the team hand when they are introduced. I know this is hard, but —Houston Don May—Dayton of destiny, were not on paper, a it takes a man of class to applaud an opponent, especial• Lew Alcindor—UCLA Bob Verga—Duke second place ballclub. But they Pat Riley—Kentucky —New Mexico had the uncanny knack of get• ly when it means so much to him to be a winner. I hap• Honorable Mention: Hubie Marshall, LaSalle; Sonny ting numerous breaks and the pen to think that we have (and always have had) the 3 Dove, St. John's; Steve Adleman, BC; Bill Hewitt, USC; ability to play as a well-coordi• class of the league in coaches, and the actions of a Lucious Allen and Mike Warren, UCLA; Rod Knowles, Da• nated and spirited unit. It was "classy" cheering section would underscore this fact. vidson; Jim Jones, Villanova; Bob Lewis, North Carolina; spirit and determination alone 5 David Lattin and Bobby Joe Hill, Texas Western; Ron Wid- that earned them a 12-12 tie There is one aspect of the Saturday night gala with Albertus in the famous § by, Tennessee; JoJo White, Kansas. which I did find a little disturbing. On two occasions, moonlight game of a month ago. players hurtling off the court tripped over people sitting The New Haven Elms were in at the ends of the court and fell head first into the the top spot most of the year un• stands. Last year the same thing happened at least once til Albertus knocked them off, to Walker and could happen many times this year with a 12-6. The Elms were later up• hustling, scrapping ball club. Comets Defeat Rockets'; set by Waterbury, 6-0, and dropped to third place. The When a player stumbles off the court, he has about Nutmeggers had weight on both two strides to regain his balance, and this is impossible. Win First Annual Friar Bowl lines and plenty of speed in By removing the people sitting at the ends of the court, their backfield personnel. The they would give the players another three steps to slow This past Saturday afternoon, Special notice should be given hub of the offensive attack was down and regain their balance. Also, eye witnesses on quarterback Jack Loehmann, t ie Providence College Youth to Coach John Champeau and both occasions when Walker fell said that he tripped while their interceptive-minded ( uidance organization (P.C. big the other big brothers who or• over a person sitting down. I realize that the Friars, who defense was led by safetymen 1 -others) sponsored the first an- ganized and coached the Chil• do such a good job at the games, need a place to sit, but dren's Center team. The unus• Tom Green and Otto Gionetti. ual Friar Bowl football game the situation as it stands is potentially a very dangerous <; the O'Rourke Children's Cen- ual degree of interest and team Although the Waterbury Won• one. A ballplayer hurtling headfirst into the wooden pride exhibited by the Center's tff. The Cumberland-Lincoln ders, Western Mass. "A," and children (football players and stands is very likely to come out of it with a concussion loys' Club "Comets" defeated the New Haven Acorns never spectators alike) is evidence of or broken bone. Let us hope this situation can be cor• tie O'Rourke "Rockets" by a led the league, they had to be the fine performance of the rected before something regrettable does occur. t:ore of 38 to 6. In spite of considered first rate clubs, cap• coaches. tie extremely cold weather, a able of giving the "big three" a great many people turned out The football equipment and battle at any time. This was tor this event. uniforms were donated to the evidenced by Western Mass' 12- Children's Center by the P.C. Lamoriello Charts Frosh Icemen In fact, it was this fine partic• 12 tie with Albertus and the big brothers. Through the re• Coach Lou Lamoriello's fresh• spirit will go a long way in ipation which contributed to Wonders' conquest of the Elms. cent Coca-Cola bottle cap drive, making up the difference." nake Saturday a highly success- And to the less successful teams, man six turned in an impressive the big brothers were able to ob• "Also a problem," continued tol day at the Children's Center. such as the Glee Club, Water• opening game performance last tain 11 footballs for use at the bury Wizards, New Jersey B., Lamoriello, "will be our ex• Ilany big brothers came to help Friday night as they beat an Center. panded schedule. We will play announcer Bob Fried set up the etc., this year will have to be always strong Burrillville High 21 games this year as opposed feld and run the game; the The big brothers also donat• chalked up to experience. School team 4-1. to our usual 12 or 14. How we Levesque Drum and Bugle Corps ed the Friar Bowl trophy which Intramural Tennis Commenting on his team, will do is hard to predict at jrovided excellent half-time en• was awarded to the Cumberland- Coach Lamoriello appeared op- this time. We know very little tertainment; the P.C. ROTC De• Lincoln Boys' Club. The Chil• Freshman Vin Capone cap• tomistic at this early date: about our opponents and will partment loaned its P.A. system dren's Center team will face the tured top honors in the Intra• "We have good hockey players have to play them game to tor announcement of the game; C.-L. Boys' Club team once mural Tennis Tournament. Ca• on this year's squad but ourgame. " and, some P.C. students brought again next year in an attempt pone walloped Dan Ryan 6-2, big problem will be that we "We definately have," con• cates to join with Center cheer• to recover this trophy. Judging 6-1, in the finals played on Nov. lack depth. We will be skating cluded Lamoriello, "five or six leaders in supporting their team. from the interest shown last 16. His adept forehand and only two lines while most of players who will be a great In short, everyone pitched in to Saturday, next year's Friar Bowl backhand placements were just our opponents will be skating asset to the varsity in future guarantee the success of the is eagerly anticipated and prom• too much for the rest of the three. I think that this team's years." game. ises to be just as exciting. field to overcome. THE COWL. DECEMBER 7. 10 Friars 'Walk' Hounds; Meet Bruins Tonight

The Providence College Friar? In the first half the Friars the free throw stripe Koski opened the 1986-67 basketball were somewhat disorganized as was next with 15 and Keren*, season successfully as they the Assumption players worked added 12, most of them comm. downed the Greyhounds from their way through PC's defenses in the later stages of the mmt Assumption College at Alumni and managed a seven point lead half as PC was pulling away. Hall last Saturday. 73-59 before Coach Joe Mullaney In the rebounding depart- PC's Ail-American Jim Walk• could regroup his charges With ment. the Fnars gathered in 65 er combined his uncanny pass• the "Walk" taking charge, the to Assumption's total of 38 Kg ing ability and some timely Fnars came to life and began since the 1964-65 season have shooting with the strong re• whittling away at the Assump• the boards been dominated by bounding of Mike R lord an and tion lead. Kin ally, with 7:57 PC in a fashion similar to that Tony Koski as the Friars took left in the first half. Walker hit demonstrated against the Grey, complete charge of the game on a driving, twisting lay-up to hounds in the season opener. early in the second half by par• put the Friars into the lead for With the already proven ability laying Greyhound mistakes and good. At half time the Friars of Riordan and the long awaited missed shots into an insur• led by a 35-28 margin. Thr "Hun" in unfriendly • ii r r "ii ml in .' - height and aggressiveness of mountable nine point bulge. —OOWLIoto by DAN CASSIOY Behind, but not finished by Koski. the Friars look very any means. Assumption closed strong up front and should hold the gap to a single point as their own against the taller they scored six straight points teams on the 1966-67 schedule. at the start of the second half. RPI, Princeton Next PC Opponents It was at this moment that the Tonight the charges of Coach Friars went on their eight point Mullaney take on the Bruins tear to put the game beyond from our cross-town rival, reach for the Greyhounds. Brown University. This year As Friars Show Surprising Strength Steadily pulling away behind the charges of Coach Stan Ward the scoring of Stu Kerzner, PC's were not exepected to set the scoring with two markers and Showing perhaps their best Gately are returnees from the lead reached a high of 19 points world afire, but the Bruins Murphy lit his first varsity balance and overall hustle since E.C.A.C. Championship team. before Mullaney cleared his have won both of their starts light in the second period. their E.C.A.C. Championship They both dropped out of school bench, giving his first line re• and will be looking for the team of three seasons ago, the serves a chance to gain valuable chance to play the spoiler's role Friar six turned in a great per• experience. when the two teams meet to• formance last Friday night as night. they dropped a close 4-3 deci• Overall, once the Friars got Al Fishman. Brown's highly sion to the Eastern Olympics themselves straightened out, the touted back courtman, and last at the R. I. Auditorium. Greyhounds proved to be no season's second leading Rruin The veteran, star-studded match for them. Tony Koski, scorer, Dave Gale, are expected Olympics, led by former All he big center which PC has to be the main worries of the Americans Jack Ferriera and >een waiting for proved to be ine Friars. Lack of a big CM Gene Kinnasaewich. were hard everything expected of him. n and strong rebounding Aggressive and very strong, pressed to subdue the hustling definitely hurt the Bruins Friars. The defense played a Koski led all the rebounders should serve to neutralize the consistent game and this seemed with 21 and joined skills with effectiveness of their experience to make the difference to the Riordan as they completely and great amount of speed All rinkmen. In the last couple of dominated the offensive as well in all, the Bruins are not to be years the defense has been as defensive boards. lightly regarded and could "spotty" and never really turned For the Friars, Jim, Walker prove to be a stubborn oppo• in a steady game. led with 19 points on seven nent if they get a chance to Don "The Wrecker" McGold play their game. field goals and five of six from rick was the outstanding de- fenscman as he body-cheeked the Olympic forwards at every opportunity. His rough but clean play proved to be a real crowd Albertus Cops 2nd pleaser as he got several ova• tions for his checking. Other Nick Lamoriello showing some of the hustle exemplified defensemen turning in a good bv the Friar Sextet vs. the Olympians. —COWLfoto by JOHN DAWBER game were sophomore Ron Mar- Intramural Crown tell and veterans John Lynes The wide-open scramble for especially in their crucial game* and Mike Menard. touted soph from Lewiston, This week the pucksters face the Intramural Football League at the end of the year. Alber• AH the scoring in the Olympic Maine, who led the frosh in two tough foes as they face-off championship has been conclud• tus can also boast of having game was handled by Coach Zel- and returned after a two year against R.P.I. Saturday night at ed with Albertus Magnus "B," some of the top individual per• lio Toppazzini's "third" line of absence. Murphy is the highly- the Auditorium. Game time is (7-0-2), emerging from the tight• formers in the league this Dan Griffin, Jack Gately and scoring last year. In this game 8 o'clock with the freshman ly-knit pack as the winner. Al• son. There was no quarterback Jerry Murphy. Griffin and Griffin opened and closed the game at 6. Next Tuesday the bertus won their second league (or perhaps no one at all) who six travels to Princeton, New crown, Nov. 22, by edging the could match the fine all around Jersey, for a game with the Ti• Beantown Bombers 14-7. ability of Pete Ryder. Doug gers. One of the marks of a cham• Lees, the prime recipient of Ry• Intra. Hockey League Opens R.P.I, features only three vet• pionship outfit is the ability to der's aerials all year, has to erans led by goalie Dick Green• take advantage of any breaks rank as one of the league's top The Intramural Hockey ner of last year's Most Improved law. The rest of the lineup con• given them by the opposition. receivers. Vin O'Donnell League got underway Sunday, Trophy, picked up three goals. sists mostly of sophomores. The Albertus received many breaks, Don Looney were the main bul- Nov. 20, with a strong dayhop Bill Tillburg, last year's lead• Engineers have shown well in and they put them to good use, (Continued on Page 9) team, the Aces, overpowering ing scorer, and Jim Greene each pre-season play and the game promisee to be a fast, rough one. the dormies, the Canadians, by netted two. For the Reds it a score of 5-1. Kenny Ercolano was the outstanding defensive led the Aces with three goals play of Jay Tieman, a member and Capt. Bob Martone picked up four assists. The goal-tend• of last year's frosh squad, that ing of Ken Soszka was outstand• will add a bit of style to this Frosh Hoopsters ing for the Canadians. year's Intramurals. The Bruins edged the Red In the second round of play, Beat Assumption the well-organized Aces picked Wings 9-8 in a wide open con• The PC frosh hoopsters came test. Harry MacDonald lit theu p their second win in bombing alive in the second half last lamp three times to spark the the Bruins 11-1. It was Ken Saturday, swamping a stubborn Bruins to victory, while Paul Ercolano leading the Aces with yet outmanned Assumption five, Robey led the Wings with two four goals. John Bevelaigna had 81-60 A slow first half, marked goals. A rookie to the league. three, and Brian Kelley popped by numerous Friar turnover Greg Tanner, was a standout for in two more. and deliberate style basketball, the Bruins along with goalie The Maple Leafs and the Can• saw Assumption take an early Fred Pace, who came up with adians fought to a 44 tie in the lead, frequently capitalizing on many key saves. best game played to date. John Friar miscues. The Maple Leafs walloped the Tibbets, another standout on Playing catch-up basketball Rangers 14-2. Joe Pitasi scored last year's frosh team, was the three times for the Leafs, with big gun for the Canadians, scor• most of the first half, the Friars Capt. Dave Conte and Jack Otis ing twice. Mike Muse picked broke from intermission into a pumping in two apiece. up the other two. For the Ma• pressing defense. Caught by surprise, the Greyhounds threw The defending champion ple Leafs it was Capt Dave Black Hawks got off to a fast Conte scoring two and Artie the ball away several times and start by defeating the all-sopho• MacDonald and Joe Pitasi put• could never catch the Friars. more Reds 8-2 Jeff Duffy, win• ting in the other two. (Continued on Page 7)