AT' I recent «run|off session of Co 1 Bge Bowl candidates are Speakers include the Very Rev. coaches! Dr. Emmanuel Jlllman. left, and las Carol Kyle, canter. Henry J. McAnutty. C.S.Sp , Uni­ Also pjrturifrl to the right Is George For Jr., director of public versity president; Mrs. Paul B. infermation.1- These run-off sessions will cotftnue for the next several Relnhold, chairman of the Wo­ weeks fjn the.Administration building. men's Advisory board; Mrs. Ri­ Singer Judy Collins chard Lund, president of Sigma Lambda Phi Alumnae association; Carol LoS, president of Women's 12 Bovvlj Cand dates To Appear On Campus Residence council; and the Rev. James F. McNamara, vice-presi­ * Alpha Pbl Omicron and Sigma for this album are Idiomatically dent for student affairs. Trjr|Outj For Finals Lambda Phi sororities will pre­ classical, which befits her de­ Special honor will be given to the'Women's Advisory board which sent Folksinger Judy Collins In livery. Principal characteristics Run-offs to select candidates for Constant M ; CaptKsl, Jean Ann; is celebrating its.tenth anniver­ concert Wednesday, Nov. 20,1963, of Miss Collins* performance here Dujquesne's a^pearanceonjheGen­ Cavanai Charles T.; Cham- sary. "1. in Peter Mills auditorium. are a marked sense of drams eral Electric College , Bpwl are pagne, R nald; Coda, William; The board, wnich helped with Diverging from the usual for­ coupled with rare sensitivity. She continuing it the Admin|stration Cofskj Stewart; Cohen, Jordan; the Interior decoration and mag­ mal lecture co-sponsored by the swings from the bold objectivity building. "onlay, Thomas iM ; ; Conneen, azine subscriptions for Assump­ two groups annually. Miss Collins- of "Bonnie Shjlp The Diamond," At present, a Duiter .'system, Sheila; tion hall, hopes to establish a will be presented In two 45-minute with Its flare of adventure, to the much like that used on thje actual Dank! Jacqueline; De Palma, •browsing library" In St. Ann's recitals of folk music. strongly reverent a*capella*Chrlst program, is being setiajj in the Ray tig; Charles Frenkow- similar to the lone in Assump­ A native of Denver, Colo., Miss Child Lullaby" and on to the wist­ television studio on the fourth floor ski, Ci ol; Ffoftiagllo, Anthony tion hall. ' ( Collins "picked up her art on fully subjective moods of "Crow of the Ad building. , g, the campus of the University of On The Cradle" and "Shtile Aroon" Afterwards, te* will be-served Beginning I with seml-flial com­ Ganm Joha J.; Garlln, Alice Colorado. Success inboth personal with a fine balance of sureties; in the Resident's Dining hall. petition, sometime around Nov. An*; Gl ligan, pat; Gludlci, Ray- and television appearances has and effect. Sandwiched amonj Tfiose invitedtothe*open house" fa student si will be ablej-to view mond; C jmbosli, Steve; skyrocketed her fame across the these 'is the beautifully melodic are'ithe Holy Ghost Fathers, Wo­ the run-off action via eloped cir­ Guen ert, Dave; Guerrlerl, Vin­ country as one of the nation's fop •Tell Me. who I'U Harry" wjdel men's Guild, - Sigma Lambda Phi cuit'1'television. In two rooms ad­ cent R.; Halterleln, Paul J; Hanae, female folkslngers. affords incontestable proof thai Alumnae association, and com­ jacent to the television studio. John; In a. review in the CHICAGO here fs a folksinger who can sing muting students The finals, scheduled to start H ana- Philip, Jr.; Harrington/ SUN-TIMES, the reporter stated sometime after Nov. ISlwlll be Sty jj-t ; Holvech, John; HVber, that 'she has an alive style that moved to Mills auditorium were Germal e; Krell, David; . doesn't sound like a relic of me­ students will be able to attend the K«ia, James; Loftus, William, dieval England, she's here and New 20-Mi niHe C01W Film sessions In person. I jr.* 1> Carol; Maier,.!ohn;Mal- now." , During the preliminary compe­ linger, iitrton J.; Two of her r< Oil University Is Released tition, students will attempt to Mele n, Joseph; Mt-yers, wai- • currently on the market. One is build up as many points as possi­ ter;; Mo lar , Julie; Moor he ad, Mar- •A Maid of Constant Sorrow" and ble. Mainly on the basis of these Ian L.j auto, Susan; the other is "Golden Apples of the points, a field of IS semi-fin all sts On» Frances; CRoarke, Sun." ' . " * wl|ll be selected. Mary; >alaacak, Joseph; Parent, She has also appeared otr ABC- This number will be trimmed to Mary qarroli; parks,* Mary'Ann; TV's •Hootenanny" taped at Brown the final eight students who will an, Bill; Peters, Gil; university and more recently at then battle It out for first team PeaclU Sam; pocevince, Carpi the U.S. Naval Academy. honors. • -1 Ana; I Two performances will be held in speaking of upcoming compe­ PC iak. John M.;(juinn. Ron- at 3:15 p.m. and 8:15 p.m. Tickets tition. Dr. Emmanuel stllfian, one aid; tin, Janet; Ratdal, Mary; are available from any member of Saunter Frederick J ; Stgnore, the participating groups or at the of theCollege Bowl coaches, stated Bichan | door the day of the concert. Ad­ that there is still a "definite need Skelt «i, Angela; Skendall* Anr mission is $.65 for the afternoon for faculty help," especially In the K.; Sal, ThereSaCarolyn; smoi- and 91.00 for the evening. submitting of questions. -" e»J elle; Miss Collins' selection of songs The "final four" to represent Duquesne in the College Bowl on Sir* Verner J.'; Taylor, Lsr- Sunday, Dec, 22, will b« chosen il, Dolores; Walkowski Eleano PICTURED ABOVE ARE Wtlliani G. Bhal, left, and Al from the following 71 caadtdates Demolition listed in alphabetical order: . - Carl; White, Brian; /# producer and narrator respectively of the University's newly released r'anda: 7.tiles, Donna. color film, "Duquesne---Today and Tomorrow." J Accetta, John; Adland, Mary Ann; to(, Antonaceio, Michael; Boblnskl, Will Begin John; Brown, Richard Ti: Brun- T—\—r t •Duquesne—Today and Tom­ tel recently. nett,pet«n 1 » T1", , Art CoiiimiUee On Bluff orrow," a 20-minute film tricolor, •The initial rjaeponse to the mo­ Carlson, | Mary Um; Carroll, has recently been released by the vie, was good," Ford remarked. To Demolition begins this week on Division Of University Relations. •It was very well received." Prewent Film the Bluff! According to George Ford, Jr., In Ford's opinion, one of the Jean|Cocteav'a Beauty and tbV University Vice-president for Ciiristmai' director of Public Information, the most "effective" sequences in the Beatt, •elected as one of the Management, the Rev. Louis A him, which has been "In prepar­ show is a series of serial shots •Ten est Films" by New York Dietrich, C.S.SP., stated that the ation since early summer,* will of. the campus'taken from a heli­ Contribution? crttlci will be the Committee for Noralco Co. will begin demoli­ the Pefcmotiori o| the Arts neat . be used initially as a development copter flying down the Monongahela -All ye merry leotlemen end tion today, Friday, No*. 1. tool for downtown businesses and River. ] atlon. i Raring will be completed in par­ ladl M WHO would Uke to coo- corporations. *- A press conference opens and year we began the film cels. The first parcel is in tot tribute article*, abort aiortea, •It present* a 'good overall pic­ closes the film.. Participating In ^series with a fl'.m by Cocteea, area surrounded by Bluff, Forbes, sad/or poems to the apecial Ones,* and the ate* ture of the university with special UUs.ggnnferenc* are the Very Rev. Magee, and Stevenson sts. chrletma* leaue <* tbeDl KE, who saw .sj asked us to emphasis 00 the new Science Cen­ Henff J. McAnuky, C.S.Sp., Uni­ Tkw Urban Redevelopment A*- to be publlehed Friday, Dec nore," remarked Dr Al- ter." Ford stated. J- versity president; and television snow thority has contracted the Nor alec IS, ere asked to submit your Lingis, head of the Com- Produced by WfHiam G- Beat, announcers Ed Conway, WTAE; photist Co. to rase buildings for the city. lladtldlmjs before Weceseeday, Inc. of Pittsburgh, "Duquesne--- Tom Finn, KDKA; and Larry Gaft- mltt< Because of the proximity of the D«.«. J 1 . Todsy and Tomorrow" is narrated ney, wnc. The •ilm which tea won many work. Noralco will also level the Article* abould be limited by Alexander Scourby, nationally Father Joseph Lauritis, vice- nil awards, will he pr*>- buildings due tor destruction under to 300 word.; short stotlea to 1 wed.. No*. «, at Hit known for his acting, and, more­ president of the Division of Uni­ tented the universttyrebutldtaf program. 800; and ooeme, any lensth. 101 Rockwell ball; Mo*. over, for his narrating ability. versity Relations, and Allan Jor­ p.m Submitted material sbfuld be ".all TI . IntheC ampu» theater; Father Dietrich stated demoli­ The film was first shown to a dan, assistant director of develop­ I m . addreaaed to CkrUtnfumfu,. \ andFl Nov. », at J:l5 and I p.m., tion is -scheduled for completion rroup of Pittsburgh corporate but- ment, coordinated operations for DUKE. I in.101" tocrwel! hall in Jane. 1964 " . inessrnen at tnePenn-Sheratonhp- the film. DUQCTJNE DUKE MONDAY. MOV. 4, 1»« Rockwell Hall's 1620 Computer Placement Center Now Has Puts-DU In IBM Data Processing Holiday Employment Lists what is • i«80 computer1* It'i [ BY JERRY PLANTZ sleek, it mikM sounds. It blink*. For: those who haven't looked at door, for all tupes of wires, TV DOM 11 rwsJly tbink?Does li under­ 1 a calendar recently there art oflly installers, teachers, stock clerks, stand people' ' Morr- important, do SS days until Christmas. cashiers, proofreaders, investiga­ people understand It? Let's look first at lis component!: Th« sys­ Many students will be pressed tors, collection workers, and stu­ tem now installed t» 102 Rockwall with the problem of, "What will dents with vehicles to pass out the hall consists of an IBM ISJOeon- I buy nim or her for Christmas?" new telephone directories. sols unit, an IBM 0*6 printing Many more students will not only Many more Jobs are available and card punch and an IBM 407 account­ ask that question, but also, "Where are there for the asking. ing machine will I get the money to buy it?* This service is one of the spe­ The console is the centra) part If you have this problem, or If cial services offered by the Center of tha cotnputar system from which you belong to the "Weekly Parents' and It constantly keeps Job op­ 11 11 operated and watched. It Allowance Club," then now Is the portunities current. contains moat of tha sxtarna) time to avail;yourself of all the Such a service Is i great in­ switches, buttons and controls over job opportunities afforded to col­ strument in helping students de­ oparation and moat of tha lamps lege students st this time of year. fray expenses and to provide ex­ and indicators of internal fenctloo. Hundreds of temporary and per­ perience while attending school. Hsra also la tha 1M0 memory; manent Jobs will be crested to These Jobs are usually onaflrst u is capable of memoruing and handle the Hood of shoppers that come basis. storing tt,000 characters of Infor­ will invade area department stores Remember, tomorrow will only mation, ready for use at sny tlma. and shops. I* I, be 54 dsys until Christmas. An IBM typewriter la attached JEAN GRANT, left, watches activities on the control panel of the Stores are preparing for this by and can ba uaad to key In instruc­ Console Unit. William Jordan, right, checks the 1622 Card Read Punch. accepting applications now. tions and also to print out raautta. The best source for those seeking Dr. Olah To Lecture Tha 0t6 serves u tha maani of vastly. full Ural durloc the holiday employment is through the Dr. George A. Olah will speak : racordlog both numaTlcai and al­ Non-credit courses In program­ students In praeTamml Placement center,' 106 Rockwell on "Electrophilic Aromatic'Sub-' phabetic data.Into IBM earns to ming the 1620 In FORTRAN will • ratine the •qulpment ay*. stitutlon Reactions* at 3 p.m., iha form of punched holaa which be offered periodically to all in­ Miss Rita Keins performs the On the bulletin board lntheCen- Wednesday, Nov. 6. art rtadabla by othar IBM mach- terested students and Instructors. same service la the evenings. ter's office Is an array of Job op­ All are Invited to the lecture in inaa. ' A schedule and admission re­ The Computer center Is capable portunities including skilled, semi­ room 204 of the Administration Tha account inc. machine has both quirements for this eoors* will be ol growth equal to all the depart­ skilled, and manual labor. building. an ar unmet leal and a printing func­ presented la the near future. ments in the inlversltr and ad­ Jobs available include salesmen Dr. Olah represents DowChem- tion, it can print onto continuous minister- and women, both Indoor and out- icala of Canada. or individual forma all, or selected The baste 1620 systam installed data ratal from punched card* fad in the computing center.Is not a static entity - it can be modified ;T and expanded. The Information It can also read figures from !• lhaaa cards, prlntlnf them or not, befof stored la magnetic core* as required, and accumulating could also be stored in disks and THEY SING HONEST FOLK SONGS. iroup totals and crand totals by exchangeable disk packs. addition and subtraction Its memory can be enlarged. If Thia machine can do eruss- necessary, paper tape input and additioo and cross-svbtraction of output can ba used instead of several figure* and rtad from tha cards. A card-read-punch and a aame card or a troop of card*. faster on-line printer can be added to the System. . In addition to identifying and' IN Al WILD, printlnj tha totals accumulated In. The University has entered the lta counters, it can causa them to realm of data processing. It bast DRIVING, ba punched into IBM cards on an begun with a basic system that can' attached summary punch. be greatly expanded both In Its SPIRITED, The .407 can calculate and print mechanics and its utility. EXCITING, ap to ISO Unas par minute Dr. Robert L. Karg la in charge » While tha 16*0 remembers, it Of the computer center. Two AND SO&ETJ'IMES QUIET doesn't think. It remembers only Business Administration graduate wha< the operator tells It. It does assistants, James Hay** and Wil­ NEW WAY. only what it is told. And it must first ba told exactly what its possi­ liam Jordan, work directly with ble choices art. him. Miss Jean Grant Is employed Its instructions must be logical, precis* and minute in every detail; It cannot make assumptions. •tych Staff Workshop Special codes can be used to Five members of the psychology address several locations of the staff will conduct a three-day work­ computer's memory, but these shop at the Maryknoll Sister's coda* must also ba esplicit. motherhouaa, Ossinlng, N,Y.,Nov. UOURNEYMEN There are saver at available 8-10 I machine languages Tha tnlver- Dr. Alice K. Wagstaff. chair­ alty'a 16*0 understands on* called man of the department; 'Rev. Ed­ FORTRAN, Which means •Mathe­ ward W Hogan. C.S.SP., asso­ matical Formula Translation Sys­ ciate professor, of psychology: tem.' Rev. Adrian L van Kaam,C.S.Sp., It closely resembles the ordinary associate professor; Anthony Bar­ language of mathematics and allows ton, assistant professor; andChar- the expression of any problem of le* Maea, assistant professor; will numerical computation. discuss religion and personality In particular, problems contain­ in relation to a possible revision ing large set* of formulas and IB the Maryknoll sisters" con­ many variable* can be dealt with. stitution.

SINNY LdfJ CLUB ) Dinnors, Dancing Cocktails Full Court* Dinnar $1.2•

tout. SI, PUaiont Hills I Reservations • 881-9904 Just listen to their Capitol album, "fit* Directions in Folk Music" Pinchera Tbull hear the rocking, driving way the Journeymen sing "Someday Baby" a tow down blues out of Chicago. The fun they have with "SUckolee" the wild aonf about a legendary terror of New Orleans. Their quiet and moving version PIZZERIA of "All the Pretty Little Horses;' one of the most beautiful lullabies ever written. I Italian * American Food Their spirited ragtime rendition of "San Francisco Bay? ^^"T^~^s Then you'll know what's new in folk songs. And what's best. I SlrSkm/ ! Naat'lo Ginny low Club ^^a * K • a • •_ • too* ior-atk jor-thr Journeymen in concert on your campus. JTok. Out Orders TU-4.1140

.' First DU Volunteer 200 Attend DU«t*SNE DUKE MONDAYI, NOV. 4, 1M1 TAGS THREE . Finishes African Duty Music Clinic Two Groups Plan Unique One hundred and tea owst ending high school musicians played to­ Fund Raising For Lounge gether tor the first time under the direction of Mr. Paul Yoder, recently elected president of the American Bandmasters Associa­ tion and visiting clinician of Du­ quesne's first annualtri-state bend music reading clinic. Under the direction of Mr. DonaW E. Mecathren, chairman of the clinic, and Mr. Frank Farina, as­ sistant chairman, the clinic was host to over 100 school band direc­ tors at the Monday, Oct. U, all- day session, 4 Playtng together as the Duquesne University TH-StateReading Band. the high school students alternated with the university's 6* piece symphonic band sad the smaller symphony of winds, to provide a program of over 50 nem numbers for the clinic's geests. ! Featured on the program was one of Mr. McCathren's new band ar rangementa, two compositions by Joseph Wilcox Jenkins, assistant JAY SHAFFER, AMA vice president, and Dt ma Baler. AMA member, professor of theory in,the School examining c tmpus Pac. litis gift assortm nt will be given to donors, of Music, and one work of a for­ to the AMA and Lambda lappa Sigma spot wred program which will mer Duquesne; student, Sammy raise money to fun ish the new student lounge planned for Rockwell ROGER STUART, Duquafoe's first student to complete his tour of duty Nestico, M*S0. ] i' • j» •••.•• | in the Peace Corps, points to Tanganyika where he was sent to work. •Of the many fine services which • *,«••*< '•. ' the School has offeredthefrl-state •It's better to give AND re­ What Is it like to spend two years in a completely different society: school band directors, the clinic ceive." i i Amfto be watched by scrutinizing eyes everywhere you go? 'These are is one of the bast. It helps esse That is tie slogan of tie fund minor problems compared to personal adjustment and disease," says tlie never ending task of seeking drive to be conducted by lambda Roger Stuart, Duquesne's first student to complete his tour of duty in materials for our bands to per­ Kappa Sigma and the American the Peace Corps. form," said Mr. Michael A, Torino Marketing Association td] raise Roger was in the' first fully- natural, barriers of native H of Park Terrace unior high school. money to help furnish Hie pro-: trained unit to go to Africa. He white men. East McKeespor posed student lounge planned for trained eight weeks in the United Roger, a native of Pittsburgh, Rockwell hall's 10th fleorj States, then flew to Puerto Rico, studied engineering at Lehigh uni­ Each student donating 9) cents where he participated in the out- versity for two years and then will receive! a free Camjfus Pac ' ward-bound training program. decided to (join the Peace Corps] Chi Rho Cancels worth several times that amount. From there, he was sent to He is now working for his Mas­ Campus Pac Is an assortment Modomt Moo Tanganyika to learn; then on to ! ters degree In Foreign Affairs and Two Meetings of national brand products sup­ Say i. My Daughter, Mbey.'a small town in Tanganyika. feels that when, and If, he accom­ plied through the courtesy of lead­ It is amazing to note that, at plishes this,he would liketoreturn Chi Rho orientation and Scrip­ ing manufacturers to raise money Mugsjy Poo Moo, And the time, there were only thirty- to Africa to teach, or work for ture discussion groups I will not for worthwhlle projects at colleges our government as-a foreign cor­ five Peace Corpsmen in the whole meat next Tuesday and ] Wednes­ and universities throughout the tlways fat At of Tanganyika, which' is toe same respondent. day, Nov. S and 6. country I size as Oklahoma, Colorado, and The groups will resume meet­ It will ba-available at several THE DUG OUT." Utah, together. ings on Nov. 12 and 13. * Duquesne locations next week. , Although Roger went over to Father McAnulty Africa as a surveying engineer, the lack of qualified people kept him busy in the fields of planning, Member Of CIClj surveying, and even building roads Named last weektotheexecutive and bridges. The over-all project. committee of the Commission for was to improve communications bv Independent Colleges and Unlverf building "feeder roads" from sities (CICU) of the Pennsylvania farms-to-markets. Association of Colleges and Uni­ Some of the inconveniences en- versities (PACU) was the Very i countered by the project were; Rev. Henry J. McAnulty, C.S»Sp.|, camping, lack of equipment, and president of Duquesne university. rain. Also, in this very moun­ CICU win be headed this year tainous region of Africa, Roger by -Dr.. Roald Bergethon, presi­ had to work his last four months dent of Lafayette. in winter clothes. Attending the three-day meet­ When Roger first arrived in ing, Oct. 20-22, at Pennsylvania Tanganyika, It was a United Na­ State university with Father Mc­ tions Trust country. The following Anulty, was the Rev. Joseph year, it became-a republic. "The LWitls, C.S,SpL. 1 *'*~': townspeople recognized this new independence, bit it didn't seem to affect-the natives in the small villages," Roger explains. He went on to ^ay that "with the 128 different tribes in Tanganyika, very few of them have really different characteristics.' Roger Chuck Bell also commented thai the Africans have a tremendous sense of humor Thrg Monday which even shines through the1 Nov. 11 Pso MUCH CONJUGAL! ^CLATTERING ABOUT Ai • BOUDOIR HAS SELDOM BEENl I Fine Food {SEEN ON THE SCREEN)" | — Besler Crewlhvr J •Convenient Parking New York Time* | II about brides J no mm. no cover \iwh o discover |j their hidden talents! Dots a inn really take unfair advantage off women wnen lie i Hon Bracer? Alt dopondi on why r» u Mewl mm imply thmk Monfhol-lcod Skin Br*:.-., th. b..t •ftor-oh. - mum H cool. nHhi I

i.^i ,nwjiiw.—f IIIM.MIMII »• nwipa pwiwn vnwanWi West 1 So who CM blim Hi— It Bowr1, Cftop, lanfrlMtlnc norm furt tappona to tifoct womon M romailuMy? Ofcouroo.aommmmmmmmMknnmfytoirwcmboewto _ 15741 Ellsworth Avo. of this affect. «»••*•' ~ Howintolliooirl! «a*WSSBSBf in Shaduside L \ it •>Jt»!; —— DUQUESNE DUXE^fONDAY. NOV. *, 1»63 PAOfcKOLfc Editorial / 'Pttft GistmilL Loan Amendment 1 Maatr !• the tingle factor determining whether or Ml many potential Pending e Cinema catfcsf* Otwdonts will. receive the education they so earnestly desire. Committee for the Promotion of the arts TktN students, increasing by leap* isd hounds with each high school The cinema, as hss ofton boon said, Is the now art, the mass art, the graduation, vtll flad tt more and more difficult to combine college The universal art.. High-school students who would never think of entering sad work wWW aimuttaaeousty maintaining gradne. a" museum go to the movies. Manual laborers who will probably never What CM be done to solve this rtnenclal problem, which by the way, will Frightened Weep open a book of poetry go to tha movies. Housewives worn out with affect any DWNM atawiolo as of September, 1M4T How to pay that keeping track of five children and additional lit doll art la a aaioflun looming not too far on t ha horlaoa? BY TOM ATKINS making ends meet have the movies of the dream, of toe magical. Even Ooa poauiibto aolutlon lias la in* hand* of the voters of Pennsylvania, in their homo at the flick of a the dullest of human beings keep this Tuesday. NOW. S. Black boots poundVd down television button. a sort of private, unspoken coot act On election day, votara will have the opportunity to vota *yae" for darkened streets, 1 Turks and Algerians and Congo­ wtth the fabulous, Just behind the tba const ituttonal amendment astabllahtaf aetudeotplan in Pennsylvania. While the frightened lese who will never know anything scenes. Just beyond the horizons. ' What la thla amendment? Why Is H onload? and How will tt arork? wept, under swealed sheets, about Bach's fugues are perfectl> By wa» of background information, on August 7, 1963, Governor And yet this marvelous window Hear the rumble of adis ant doom. acquainted with movie actors from ScraMoa signed Houaa Bill **0, *to create the pannsylvanii Higher upon the liberating world of the a dozen countries they will never fabulous is today treated with the rdiacatton Attleience Agency to improva opportunities for higher Cattle cars screamed through see. most sterile moral conformitlsm. , •duration In Pennsylvania, by asalatlng qualified ftodanta In meeting d«af countryside, This incredible development of Today * s Hollywood c me m a the exponas of a college education." packed with people afraid, a truly mass art, an art which seems to have no other mission However, before the agancy can become effective tba votara must Bound for approve9** udenf Loan Amandmant 1-A to tba Constitution. is destined to unite for the first than to brutalize us by turning Genocide, time all of humanity about one Th* agency, mada ap of a tan-man board of directors will guarantee this magical window upon the fabu­ LISTEN form of communication, poses a lous into a mirror of conformist, rapaymaat of loins mada to studanfa by banks and other private To tha rumble of * distant doom landing Institutions m uniform interest rates f very grave problem as to how cowardly, and functional lives. this mode of communication will It has become like the extra­ A student repayment loan program in Pannsylvanii similar to those Mothers wept tor children, lad be used, and for- what. ordinary machine of Opus 11 Bun- carriad on in Ma* York, On*o, and Jaw Jersey will require tba appro­ naked to die, •The cinema," wrote that great uel speaks of, with a thousand priation of no no w taxea,* because tt will be an interest-bearimr loan, Past husband-dug graves director L.uis Buneul, «is a mag­ complicated gear-systems, tubes, not i giveaway program. whore; wives would He, Already funds of up to five million dollars have been pledged for nificent and dangerous arm If a levers, motors, dials, exact as a free spirit handles it. ' clock, big as an oceanllner, whose etude* use one* the program Is approved by the voters •God send strong solldei|s sole usage was to lick postage- Recent statistics from Penn state University show why such a plan to free foreign ground, and "Tha creative mechanism of stamps. U madid in PanasyIvanta. v alienee forever the rumbling cinematographic images is, among . Talrd largest state In population, Pennsylvania is outranked by all tha means of human expression, Such is the cinema today: it W othar at Mas In tlw parcaot of eoUaga-age population going to rolktgo. the one which best recalls the labor snows us over and over again Mr. X bored with his wife, looking for . Half tha high school rraduates in Pennsylvania are collage material, They puked at the stench of the spirit during sleep; The a little playmate with whom to yet last than a third go to toiler*. of last minute tombs, film seems an Involuntary-Imita­ distract himself, finally abandon­ : Sixteen out -of 100 capable student* do not go to college because They heard the Death-roar, tion of the dream." ing her to got back to the domes­ tbay lack tba funds. of that distant doom. B, Brunius observes thai the With the propoood student loan program, students may borrow up to night,which little"by Uttle Invades tic nest in Suburbia In time for .• "> \ $1000 a year on their signature . the Happy Ending. Thank Cod we're Americans -that the cinema-hail Is equivalent to All vary edifying, escapist, and To qualify th*> must ha • state rMldant, have completed thalr first won't happen here, the action of closing one's eyes vekr at an •pprovwd institution of higher learning, demonstrate need tranquillizing. This moralizing We're Cod fearing folk. We hold "The Images, like In the dream. for financial -aid, and maintain good academic standing. and propagandizing cinema grad­ freedom dear, appear and disappear by means oi Repayment begins all months after graduation and must bo completed ually blinds the invitation to the Fight dictators, Love liberty, •melts;' time and space become within five years. '*'*.''* vast horizons of thefantastic which We have Justice for all, and ]' flexible, retreat or expand at will; Both political parties have endorsed tba amendment, as wall as stirs the unconscious spirit. Equality. the chronological order and the re­ tba pannaylvania State Education Association, the AFUCK), and the lative values of duration no longer Octovio Pax has said: "It suf­ Association of Collages and Universities. The Ull was "passed in the Hoar the rumble of a new distant correspond to realttyttne cyclic ac- fices for a chained man to shut House by 117 to 0 "4 in the Sanate by 50 to 0. +?., doom? • I - tion must be accomplished in sev­ his eyes and he will be able to - All thai la needed now is. a yes' vote from the people of Pennsylvania. Naw - eral minutes or in several cen­ shatter the world." Those students willing to pledge a portion of thalr future earnings to Just some nigger kids turies; the movements accelerate We can add that the white eye­ ••cure a college education now, should do what they can by voting for Dead, ' the delays.* <- lid of the screen should reflect or encouraging others to vota for tha student loan amendment on In a Sunday school room ' The cinema then is this machine the light which belongs to It, ex­ •lection dayf for Introduction into the fabulous. plode in the universe, and dissi­ Let us not object that the fabulous, pate the prestige of the prosaic. the dream, the fantastic are unreal: . It is with such thoughts that precisely the dream is real. the Student Committee • for the We Get Letters It accounts for man, whose pro­ Promotion of the Arts has begun saic work-a-day world is secretly their selection of films for show­ 'Buih Iwogu*?' Carnival occupied the front page mon-unity' within the Body of embroidered with a certain depth ing this year at Duquesne. and the majority of the advertising Christ. DEAR SOfTORx space the week prior to carnival. Dorothy Garrltv. Aj'M I have found It necesaary (o write Let's give the team a chance to Gistmill this lector becauoa of your apparent get out of th* gym. Exact Survey lark of interest concerning two Im­ portant campus events. 1 am speak­ R«ol Participation DEAR EDITOR: ing of too coverage given to car­ , All of us, at one time or an­ Loving As Children DEAR EDITOR: other, as G.K. Chesterton wrote, nival and the basketball team. v * Yes, the paper did cover carni­ in the tost issue of the DUKE, do not fall to find the t ruth, but . ' ' BY DON MeGRATH •; '-, . { • -? -M " val. However, from the apace al­ a letter from Mr. Paul RetUy rather having found It find It lotted one might get the feeling: that blasted tha paradoxical lack of unpalatable. When one reads the words of Chrlsi in the New Testament, "Unlest carnival Is disgraceful and should congragational participation and Perhaps that is what happened you,lova as Uttle children you will not entermy kingdom," one may be be hidden. In previous years the chaplain activities on this "Catho­ to the correspondent who last week puzzled as to how a Christian adult is going to act as a child. "PUKE" has found carnival im­ lic" campus. dlsparged the college survey However, there is a way to love our Lord that is given by the example I im- portant 'enough to five tt Had thia letter been published printed In the Oct. 8, IMS issue of children. To see this is to i\fww whole pages of coverage. three weeks ago. It would have been of "National Review.* ,\ recall a child you have come in parents.- They ignored the criti­ Has the »renovation' gone too not only an accurate account of an In fact, the survey was the contact with and try to visualize cal eyes of those around them existing sttation. but an under­ most careful and the most complete the way he responds to someone to seek His openness, confident of - far* I roollao that this paper is statement of the sad state whore Inquiry into *the political and re­ who is willing to love him, some­ His living and vibrant love. not a* Informal at tt once was, "a few indisputably pious,but moat ligious attitudes of American col­ one who is willing' to sacrifice > In growing older one's confi­ bat i am inclined to believe that unUturgtchl devotions* wore the lege students' ever undertaken. little sett* dence may turn to fear of the it may have gone too far in the •entire offering of the chaplain's That la palable to any one who This Is something the child can future, and hope may change to opposite direction. office ' reads tt. sense. When a person; really wants anxiety and worry. Yef the per­ Aa far aa the DUKE is con­ However, as a point of both in­ But the correspondent evinces to give love, he usually responds sonal relationship wlthChrlst, once cerned, basketball might as well terest to, and information for the that she never oven rood It. to the person with all his attention. held as a child, should give way not exiet at Duqueooe. For the student body, wo eon now bo en­ Now Christ was that to the children to the mature reflection thai He record; t hie year wo have one of For example, she asks "the couraged by the fact that although In the scriptures. They sensed still desires that enthusiastic rush. the finest teams in too, school's exact numbers' when simple ar­ wo still do not have a chaplain. His love and avidly ran to Him. that solid conviction and bold con­ history - but like Coach Manning's ithmetic would give them; she asks during too post week wo have be­ Mratocr - thla is also being kept for "the opinions and brass down Tt ts wellitojnote the way they fidence, and, thai no matter what gan the great movement towards under • wraps,' - of conservative and reform" when went to Him in spite ^disap­ a person's age; He*aiways waits a thriving liturgy on this campus. indicative data la given; she says proving looks and critical re­ to extend His love to the children 1 cast believe wtth basketball The dill** Mass at soon Is now "11 colleges" whereas the num­ marks directed to them by their of the world. Or act ice tiaglnagni last week that 0 participated Mass replete with ber was twelve, your paper hasn't had one word hymns, an offertory-litany, and Evan If accurate, such objec­ to say about the team. I; M.4 Duquosno DUKE communion procession. tions are hardly relevant to a There lo enough aporta news survey It lo (to reverse an­ on this campus to fill four pages. This initial restoration of the Official newspaper of Duquesne university, 901 Bluff Street, Pittsburgh other objection) by Its nature in Maybe If reporters would quit try­ liturgy came about thanks chiefly If, Pi. Published weekly during the school year. DUKE office, Ad- •incomplete list of percentages.' ing to write a gossip column sad to the concern and activity of mimstration building, Phone GRant 1-4600 Ext. 227. "atop following the social lives of Father Edward Hogan, whose pro­ Far from- trying to ••equate the our-, basketball team and COW 10 gram was Implementedthrougtithe inquiring mind wtth. atheism' the Members of th* Associated Collegiate Press, Catholic School Press trawe on their athletic endeavora, efforts of a group of willing and survey reports exhaustively tha Association, and National Advertising Service. - answers to specific questions add paper and tats school woulc* able students (Mr. RelUy included ! EDrrOR . t « . , SUSAN MUTO then generaJnes. aa. is the pur- br batter. who realist that the •primary and Managing Editor iv Richard Naser - pose of a survey: tt makes do Ydmr paper mart* be All-Amer- indispensable source of the genuine News Editor .; j . ;. Mtry ^ja, Hoaloy value }udfmeats whatsoever. teas asttoaally, bat Christian spirit" is in the liturgy. Copy Editor ., , ; 4. Barbara Nichols you are Duquesne university is proud of Evan If tt ware inadequate and its community spirit., hi ased. wa should hardly 1 a m poon Advertising Manager • Paul Stabile r We should rejoice that the op­ •National Review.• BUSINESS MANAGER • ••• • VTNCE VENTOMILLER UlTOeV KOTaU We are glad portunity is again our s, through ac­ Tha survey is tha exact Faculty Advisor ' '• • •, Mr. Louis Corsetti taw DUKE la hsdged by competent ute .participation in the Euchar- dwettoo of that prepa Librarian ••...!...... ,. ..Clare paulukoms Harvard staff advised by D«Tid lOUc Banquet, to gleo visible ex­ Editorial Staff ..Ua Polutnik, Son MirmarelU, Phil Musics, Ken saw, aa* aagry yoeag cheerleaders pression to owr on on at i, oor*coav to I , " Berner, Dolores Frederick. Josephine Schuda

• [• •: !| • •':-'.'.' \ - I v • "••*:- WDUQfTo Airl DUOtrum pura ggaJS* »ov. *• HSj PAGE rrvc New Pjrogram] 'Utttn To The .•It.r' Continued from Page 4 n 1 prefer to •emtes in­ On Politics Riesman, but rather then,; Her stead if starting a wee tear koto- verd's two, it was applied to Political problems Is cwrM canst rhich would kill most of ea twelve representative college*. perspective are the bull lor a in this country? R seems strange new WDUQ prorram, 'Inelftil ud The only value of am- survey to me that la one instance you CWlook". la to verify truths already known •religi msty* apply Aristotelian lo­ The one- hall hour protram, pro­ in another way and to indicate gic at 1 Thomas Aquinas' Lai in. duced by AndrewCoodlellow, A'«5, avenues of inquiry. So Judged, and th napeakoulaffain*t*ree*on* ud the Conservative Society, wUl this survey is immensely value- with i ir enemies and new twen­ be heard at 9 p.m. on alternatlag tieth < rotary English Wednesday nlfha, Declnmnf Oct. For eaample, ti ranfiea what | Bob Burke, A*M 25. - many of US at Duquesne have; known for a long time: |) that Alone with III bi-weekly sched- Mist »d Th* loot by and large Catholics are the ullnt on WDUQ; •laesrht ud Out­ DEAR EDITOR: only Christiana who hold to the look- will be presented by WPTT, Mr. Guerrlerl has accomplished corpus of belief that traditionally a local commercial radio station. three hings by his latest column; define* Christianity; t) the) there He as shown us that he can think The program will consider such tends to be a correlation hjatweer only l calagorieeof liberalism and problems as crrU rtfbts, the Re­ the devdutneaa of a student's re­ publican presidential dilemma, co­ ligious belief and his anti-Com­ coose vat lam; existence with ; the Soviets, and munism. H« Ind* it necessary, despite his present monetary policies of the eicetl ml vocabulary, to create a WELCOMING THE LARGEST group ever to attend the University Colin* But aside from these factual federal rovemment. detinl loo for prejudice (which ta Days Is the Rev. Frederick R. Clark, director of report*, it makes several" valua­ direct y opposed to Webster's) In David Guerrlerl, A'65, chair­ ble Inferences. For instance, order oot to admit an error on his man of the Conservative Society, the great discrepancy between the Approximately 1,995 high school pert; followed tndi vldual meetings. •aid, "I believe -Inslabt and Oat- fww wen believe la the effleaCj seniors participated in college He :annot accept crlttetam. He These were guided by members of loos* will be a timely and in­ of prayer and the many who pray Days sponsored by the Univer­ pan Hellenic Council and student formative program,' even goes so far as to ridicule •is one of the many striking the­ and ttstort by rhetoric a pro­ sity Oct. 12, 23, 24. Congress, and resident students' He also said, 'the show fains ological i neon* latent lee found In positi :al concern for a' grave he- According to the Rev. Freder­ added Importance as the possibility The tours Included the radio the survey, ail tending to indicate man roblem—human hunger .and ick R. Clark, C.SLSp., director of of s confrontation of liberal and station, WDUQ; the University cha­ the existence of s large number hums i sufferings admissions, this wai toe largest conservative viewpoints In the up­ of students who want to {believe pel; pharmacy labs; Canevin hall; He does these things beesuse he group or students ever to attend. coming presidential election be­ ID an ethically and eaistentieliy and the library. nelte ea himself to be involved In This total compared to an atten­ comes more apparent." meaningful God, and cannot ' dance of 1,500 last year. Sisters of the social sororities a de ate where winning points Is Three days'are set aside an-' acted as bostessess at a social Dain Roland men important than respecting nuaily for high school seniors to hour following a concert pre­ AFROTC Forms EDITOR'S NOTE: ft would do fact! and seeking justice become acquainted with Duquesne, sented in Mills Auditorium by the! well for ua to review the last Hi Insist* that he is in a debate; its campus and academic policies. Music School. Cadet Glee Club statement rather than worry if no c e else mentioned the word, the "Review" survey was biased Her* During the students* visits with Mrs. Margaret Hockswender, we discover the tragedy of Formal organization of an ornot; bis. specific departments, professors administrator of general student sltloo. AFROTC glee club has been an­ Guerrlerl not only missed explained the different aspects of activities, said of the activity, M nounced by Maj. Irwin B. Wels- Then Opin Man the lost, he didn't even know th* each major program. *It was another successful all-1 barth, USAF. j oeet ; existed. Tours of the university campus Duquesne endeavor!" DEAR EDITOR: The glee- club will function as a Wolfgang ruche, A-M I would like to make t ftjw com­ part of* the AFROTC Wing with ments in reply to Mr. Guerrteri's Cadet 1st. IrAJ Thomas spontak Shi r 'n Ti* j •Contra Liberates" •Rabbi Ruben stein Conduct as flight commander, and Maj For those of ua who don't believe DEA I EDITOR; Wetsbarth as supervisor and mu­ in *rellf;iously applying fur lives A pre-pharmacy students we ' sical director. 1 to Aristotelian logic* as Mr Guer­ are .embers of a distinct class of Study Groups On Judaism The group win consist of 50 rlerl does, I would like to state indl [duals: a group of men (rain­ basic and advanced cadets; how­ A new Jewish organisation on t ween what you know as a Jew that in my article on liberalism ing ' .'enter a profession. ever, any AFROTC cadet is eligi­ Duquesne's campus, B'nai B*rtth and what you should know," Dr. I never equated the open man with H * can ether pereona connected ble to participate. HUlel foundation, held its first Rubensteln told the group. "AS the educated man. with the u n i v e r s 11 y -distinguish tn organising the choral group, official meeting' yesterday (Oct. the level of attainment In college A quick re-reading will reveal the* men from anyone else on Maj. Weisbarth stated be had a 31) in 907 Rockwell hall. increases, the level of attainment this. There are other gross sim- cam us? dual objective, primarily, it'la The general format will be week­ of Judaism, must also Increase, pUficstlon* which Mr. Guerrlerl At far as we're concerned they a musical program to give the ca­ ly study groups on some phase of •we are living m a world where uses In order to destroy the opin­ cant And why not? Because w* dets the opportunity to exhibit mu­ Judaism in which members will our beliefs are challenged and we ion of those who feet that there 1* havt no mark of symbol which sical expression. p participate, and a monthly guest must know our religion.. Psycholo­ more to Ufa than Aristotelian logic sepa -ate* us from other*. Secondly, the group will serve aker who Is a prominent leader gically we cannot retain our self- and who know that all the evil in the TI ire are numerous waya tn as a form of military training In rhe Pittsburgh Jewish commun­ respect if we do not know and un­ world isn't due to Communism. whit i we could distinguish our- accordance with the AFROTC pro­ ity. derstand the religion we profess.* Tea, Mr. Guerrlerl, my heart selv *; but the moot nottceableone gram. [ • Rabbi Richard Rubensteln, di­ Rabbi Rubensteln concluded by does leap up when I behold s rain­ IS t dress and personal bearing. rector of the B'nai B'rith HUlel stating, that the «emotional aspect In addition to appearance by bow tn the sky or see a beautiful We lust wear a dress shirt and t ie Foundation tn Pittsburgh, and cha­ is also Important. There must be Invitation, the]Major la planning woman walk down the street. And to pi armacy orientation class. plain for all Jewish students at opportunities for Jewish students many future activities, with the If you wish to call this irrational, W y not wear a dress shirt and Duquesne, University of Pitts- to meet on the college campus.1 possibility of a concert perfor­ emotional, and foolish, then i am a tie t all our classes? What better 1 burgh, CarnegieTechandChatham, mance. 1. parson with all those character­ emb am could there be of a man.' will conduct the weekly study Ma]. Weisbarth also emphasised istics, j . in p ofasaional training? A dress groups,-. WPPS Meeting that the group's purpose is not a J-l. am sure there Is more to life shir and tie: It doesn't seem tike Acting Chalrmap, Harvey. Mar- competitive one, but strictly for the than your logic will ever dream of muc i. But consider it aa a mark kovitz, A'65, urges allJewishstur On November 9 enjoyment of both the participants or explain. Evan Aristotle used of p ofesslonal training, as an ei- dents, to participate as members and the audience. logic as a tool, not as a philosophy prei Hon of the professional spirit. Dea Ruggtero is Imparting in ua. In Hi 11 el. The Western Pennsylvania phi­ I am sure that Mr. Guerrlerl A a ilrt and tie? Think It over. Rabbi Rubensteln has introduced losophical society will hold an will accept; my "prejudice" that Ch.ui CM Organized Edward Bell, P»M and Jewish students to the functions all-day -meeting in the U Divert we have too many prejudices be­ Jo'in A Bender of Hillel. He pointed out that sity's Faculty Club lounge on Sat­ Any former members of the cause people'are black, Indigent, F.udolph j. choich Hiliei Is a means to show the urday, Nov. 9, at 10:30 a.m. chess club -or students interested uneducated, sick, sinners, etc Louis DeBooe Jewish community's concern for I Dr. Manfred Frings, of the phil­ in playing chees are invited to Yes, I* do think that th* rich Raymond Dolan the Jewish student on campus. osophy department will address Join the reorganized chess club. should hetd the poor m out of Tony DITommaso "There are three basic con­ the society on "Some Marxist In­ President Larry Hauck announc­ charity but out of Juat|ce. And Thomas Kennedy cerns Hillel Is involved with, the terpretations of the Physical The­ ed that the membership ta low and if they do not, they will condemn Henry J. Myers religious, educational and commu­ ory,* at the morning session. new members] are needed. He themselves to Uvea of utter In­ Elliott Oahry nity relations," Dr. Rubensteln Following a luncheon there will said that the chub intends to have sensibility. ; And If I use your logic, Mr. said. be a panel discussion led by three intramural as well as Intermural "The purpose of college Is to of the members on the relation­ B« 11 Trio Gives give an Intelligent atmosphere to­ ship between logic and philosophy He requests:that anyone Inter­ wards Ufa, and this must be bal­ at 2:30 p.m. ested in playing chess call 711- anced by an intelligent atmosphere Founded in 1951 by faculty mem­ 4571 between 5 p.m. and 7 p.m. Carnegie Concert towards religion. Far too often Wrtft bers of Duquesne university add before Nov. «. I the college student leaves for col­ the university of Pittsburgh, the Dr. Harold Webb, professor of Te]e Chsrles Ball Trio WIN (re­ lege and leaves his religion be­ society now includes faculty mem­ political science, is moderator. WHNNIM, live recordlnc aaaslua ua hind,* Rabbi Rubensteln stated, bers from colleges and univer­ Meeting times will be announced at Carnerle Lecture kail.' •The Jewish student must be sities all over the state. at a later date. "oti aVerdar, Now. ». at t-.X p.m given an opportunity to study his Bell's Trio will perform a religion on a per with his college T T"~ rt of contemporary lass la work,* he continued: Restaurant spontaneous style. •There is an educational gap be- AT 1-4M. ESQ.UIR E AT 1-M1I And Bar Tie Pilasters* rvmpkoav, eltow and la eaa- McK*«i tocki. Pa. I fine Music "l» pont-rreouste work at LJFEd.raM^IO^^j -T 1334 Stti Avjci. •,;!'' . • j 27?eruvia Economic

Peru's Andes mountains have cedures involved in such a visit., nothing over the B«ufl. In the Setiert room. University -Such was the jiiterpretation of publicity director George Ford, facial expressions of 27 Peruvian with the aid of Interpreter Car­ economics students as they climbed men Venturing introduced the stu­ from Rockwell hall to the Admin­ dents- to the academic and business istration building on their tour of aspects of the university. the campus Wednesday after­ Father Edmiti>d R. Supper, ac­ noon, G«. 16, L JL" ademic vice-president, told the students in his welcoming address Sponsored by the State Depart­ they would see the newest build­ ment's' Special Exchange branch, ing on campus", but added that en- and conducted by the Committee route they would also "see build­ on Friendly Relations Among For- ings as old, perhaps, ai their own elgh."studenti,\ the'party visited San Marcos university!, in Lima. New York, Schenectady, Niagara Falls, Cleveland, and Indianapolis San Marcos is the oldest uni­ before arriving In Pittsburgh. versity in the Westjern hemisphere. The group continued to Washing­ Mr. EugenejAnd from the department of continuing education, ton D.C. and wltl complete 'its-, posed several problems in edu­ one-month stay in this country: cational psychology to the visi­ on Monday in Miami. tors, one problem involved the Dr. AlfredDeLed;, assistant pr o- removal of a knotted string from fessor of business admlnlstratlonk a shipping tag" without untying-the greeted the stu- at Rockwell string or ripping the tag. hall's main en » and con- Luis Vlllamonte, professor of ducted the tour 1 Dr. DeLeo has statistics at san Marcos, solved spent several j s in the for- the problem in less than 60 sec­ eign service and'li well acquaint- onds. ed with the prob e§is and pro- Object of the demonstrations DR. ALFRED DeLEO. assistant .professor of business administration, greets economics majors froraS An Marco* university. Lima, Peru as th*v arrive at entrance to Rockwell hall.

MANY QUESTIONS were asked about (he operation of an American college newspaper as the Latin visitors toured DUKE office. * :' ft 'A%

PINK LEMONADE afld fancy cookies greet' students In Resident's cafeteria as they pause in their tour of camp

DR( AIRBED DoLEO and ¥r.j:u- (*m U. Galilean flank an ease*! on which nine dots are arranced lira square. They await answer to EDUCATIONAL PSYCHOID question. -How ess these dots be from card without untying I ls» Peruvian students. connected with one continuous to visitors | as they listen to f l wetcosslaf addressee la Ike T ;-W7 ; department of continuing • tudents EKNEB • { '. .;-. was to clarify the need for a pro- vian students found many oppor­ am of continuing education since tunities'to take pictures of them­ Sday's college education can no selves and their new friends against longer last a lifetime. the backdrop of .Pittsburgh's in- At the orientation's conclusion dust r i al complex. several Duquesne students, who *' At Resident's cafeteria, the new volunteered as guides, introduced taste of pink lemonade delighted themselves to the Latin "visitors. the visitors before they returned .The Peruvians knew some Eng­ to Rockwell hair for a discussion'* lish and the guides knew very of American and international ec­ little Spanish, but.the instant bond onomic theory with the faculty of of friendship, created by the eag­ the department of economics. erness ofboth groups tbknow more • Of the 27 visitors, 18 were about each other, eliminated any women between the ages of 21 and ; communications barriers. r 30, and all are working for their j F lrst stop on the tour was a visit doctorates in economics, to thtt e campus radio station, WDUQ, When, asked why so many young mmr e Director B Kendall Crane women are in a field which seems explained the operations of Pitts­ to hold little interest for American burgh's only college station broad­ women, the interpreter explained casting to the genera) public. the women are discussing their The offices of the campus news­ nation's problems as a whole, and paper welcomed the Latin visitors warn to participate (in, the eco­ next. Editor Susan Muto intro­ nomic development of Peru.) duced them to the paper's oper­ Dinner in the Seifert room con­ ation and provided each student cluded, the afternoon's activities, with a souvenir copy of-the" DUKE. and soon the bond of friendship Assumption hall and. the Resi­ between Duquesne and San Marcos dent's cafeteria were the next universities was sealed with stops, -but on the way the perur warm, "Hasta la ylsta!" &

estlng afternoon, Peruvian luquesne escorts gather for photographer. This 'issue it to the Peruvian students ;it to Duquesne.

roblem - try to remove knotted string K or ripping card, offers a challenge Eugene Galligan explain function of Pledge Period Begins University Gi DUOUESNE DUKE. FRIDAY, NOV. 1, 1X3 Helps Captu Counterpoint' At Gunpoint BY LARRY WALSH For Sorority Sisters Armed Fugitive Zany things happen at every campus and Duquesne Is no exception.' Duquesne Graduate Thomas Kra- Witness the following as as added frustration of a teacher above and tzenberg, B'61, now Lt. Kratien- beyond tba cal] of duty, while Helen Dawson, assistant graduate in barf, U.S. Army, recently received music, was teaching a piano lesson last Thursday to Evelyn Buckner,- a commendation for assisting A>; M«*7, 'tw o gun-totlng young men outside the 90S Bluff at- class prepared lessons, they could then ' buquerque, New Mexico police in procede to shoot the piano. They tba capture of an armed man. room window started working on the pigeon problem. couldn't miss the piano," she said Presently serving with the mill-j humorously, 'It's already crip­ tary police at Sandia Base, Al­ As described by Miss Dawson, pled." buquerque, he and PFC Raymond; "part way through the lesson I Miss Buckner, who had her play­ C. Arnold escorted civilian auth­ heard a distraction and-then it got ing of Bach shattered by the sound orities through sestricted areas louder. When I looked out the win­ of gunshots, continued her lesson of tba base. dow there were two men with ri­ after the smoke had clear d. Police were tracking a suspected fles blazing away at the pigeons For those unfamiliar with the criminal and would have lost con­ on the roof. term "counterpoint," may I refer siderable time had they not. re­ •I don't like pigeons either," you to page 189 of the 1961 edi­ ceived permission from tba she continued, "but there must be tion of Harvard's Dictionary of Provost Marshall allowing them another way.^ - . Music. Therein It states, •coun­ to cross the bass. This was tba Miss Dawson told them to leave terpoint., .a succession of notes ALTHA Ml OMKhON laces and lorfui most direct route to the foot of the and the two surprised cowpokes lava show sirn of wtlnmil and rtUaf. wall 11)1 Uu pledtas a*t what against a succession of notes, Mangano mountains wherethesus­ packed their Daniel BOOMS, clank­ ie... .melody against melody...the la la store lor than la tba two to COM. pect was last reported. ed their spurs and retreated'to combination Into a stogie musical Si nee the suspect was not a mem­ Caatvln Cat, crowoea heaell, with eater on-looker I, waa tba site their horses—-all 225 of them. fabric of Unas or parts which ol eawartnf, crylnt slaters and ber of the military, neither man Although they bad managed to wing have distinctive melodic sig­ aooa oa Monday, Oct. 2» j Retular Inhabitants of tba Cat at noon Hour was obligated to Join th* search one of the rooftop residents, the nificance." y could hardly find a place to sit or atand U th* five sororltlaa mooop- party. However, due to darkness, remaining 37 pistons laughed at Confused? So am I. Suffice It ollied the entire era ranee way. and the fact that tba police were their marksmanship. to say that counterpoint Is ex­ Michele Stetnber, and Becky unfamiliar with the rough terrain, They eluded capture by the sher­ istent In the music of Bach. Alpha PhiOmlcron aororlty wel- Kratzenberg decided to give his Wats*. iffs posse* by backing their four- Back to th O.K. Corral. eomad pladiw Aiajetla Arena assistance. , ' Now these new pledget will serve •doored, continental-tailed, red- Miss Dawson, a music graduate Katn« Brecaar,Peter Burke, Msr- Altar several hours -of t racking, their sorority sisters in avlgorous maned, chrome-shod, overdrive of Immaculata College located near Ikw Haai, Lorraine Kopchli, Ka- they found tba suspect lying on tba thy Mori, Barbara sesinl, Chlcklt two weeks of pledging. Durlnf pinto down the bluff to prevent Philadelphia, Pa., is working on Kiah, and Joanna Runtafh. these weeks, the sisters of etch anyone from taking their license her master's degree at Duquesne. sorority will hand out assignments >ata Cal Beta.aororttj created plate number. She hopes Thursday afternoons will to their respective pledge* for •Perhaps it would be more ef­ be quieter from now on and Is alotara-to-ba Joan Anne Canaan, completion before Hall Night. Nancy Hart man, Rosemary Hor- fective," the young grad assistant carrying a .45 caliber pistol to Paddles and beanies, sweatshirts stated, "If the big'game hunting make sure. ralh, Barbara Lac'ab, Carol Pace, and pizza pans, white, furry lambs, Mary Lou Peace,' Joanna Rale, duo would drop around more often. •They didn't shoot In rad headbands and silver atari, Besides unnerving those with un­ time," she concluded. and Elaanar Sacbelrt. and bright! yellow vests will now P|edt*a of Sumi Lambda Phi be frequent sights In classes and l>ecleri,Clar»FsUeuriieu, Mary on campus, aa wall as In Canevir Lou Falkauhan. Patty Holland, Cal. ISoWho Needs A Memory?! Martha Larkm, Loratta Runio. Congratulations pledges but Be­ Carol Am Sablnaay, Linda Zale- ware! Fraternity brother give With j •ky, and Mary Loo La FTanke quite a large number of merits wora coagratulatad by slatara, for any fraternity pledge who I LLQYD'S Slcma Phi DoNa pledfes Patty aw

SATURDAY, MOV. 1 - VFWban- onwt t dance i Mills • 7 p.m. to mldnlfM.

SUNDAY, NOV. 9 - Italian Sou A ' Dautnter t dinner A dance - Mills -4 p.m. lomldnlfht. . laaaaa* * TIESDAY-FRIDAY, NOV. »-•• Preparation for Pa. state Board eaams • Mills • I a.m. to • p.m. ...a... SATl'RDAY, NOV. » - Slaters' Alamoae meetlnc • Salfart - t Dl Glteomo. 1*64. MEN am. to noon •1 feel very honored and 1 hops MONDAY, NOV. II - School of to do as send a Job as those who Naralnc - Salfart- I a.m. to 10 have preceeded m«,B saldDorothy. Pari«Time Evening Work a.m. Sudan Bar Aaaoclatkm lun- Secretary of tba School of Phar­ chaoa - Mills • aooa. macy publication. -The pnorum", e • e • e * e Dorothy Is also a member of the 20 hrg. per week ' THVMDAY. NOV.14-AFROTC-I American Pharmaceutical associ­ Mills * aooa to I pn 1 ation. IOpportunities Available For Rapid Advancement

| Final W..k . Doubt* Troat MARGARET RUTHERFORD r^j£via SMI • $45 PER WEEK •f i' Car Furnished f » • '\ > FORYM.W For Personal Interview Call Mr. Ritter AT 1-8559 — • J '. I. SUaU£S£&LEiKS . HONDAY.jWOV. «• 1M1 PACE NIKE Costumes Enri ch Performances BY JAMES M'SN AK inal, but when originals aren'i tare flnishe< * continued Mis*hj available, pictures and descrip­ derson Costumes play i fjary important tions are the basis of dealt"- The sli alta matte this fear by ' role in every Tammle perfor­ •The price and time to-make Visa Ander uo include Armenian, mance. With the us* of costumes, costumes vary with each one,* Macedonia* reskota. Banjevacko. the Tammies' eastern European said Miss Andktfson Croatian Badft, Bosnian, and Tad*- I oik music, dances, and •ones ba= •OWJT 11,000 was spent o* IS hlklstan, Come more realistic and enjoyable. Bunjevacko girl *v\art iiamaa * *A| the Of these, lie Armenian costume •Costumes are very appealing to 15 •fiunjevacko boy costumes xrost stnkinc1 different from the the audience and have been a defl- less than 9100. •others bees te it is the Caucasian i ile aid toward the Tammies' suc­ *As for tlmi,' individual cos­ costume, wi 1* the Bunjevaekois cess. tumes or sets can vary anywhere the only set nade for all S8 mem­ Individual outfits total near a. a month until they bers of the. ammiei < nousand, and-over 91 different sets m In the Taramie wardrobe. At the beginning of every season, the Tammies product* their show decid? on costumes to be used, •- hen selected, MISS Lucille- An­ &(^ll^ son, wardrobe supervisor, is esponslble for having them ready. of "Haili, R*und (A* flag. rftHit" Miss Anderson has the assign­ "Harrfaat «..., II i.'k akaaf ed of preparing and repairing ivery costume, Old janes have to be I jouched up Where tjiey are worn, H0W SMALL CAN YOU GET? I nd new patterns made for .eos- umes not in storage. TiNJuiy let ui rtddrvss oiirtJlvew ijo i lh >t ha.* il»l»H rocked For two years. Miss Anderson and roiled I lie academic world: I flu (It- ill tu-r "flat • Miwll ias been making patterns for new COHCRI* tha; i at a .arm* <*^ IdEr" •ostumes. This year she has made ~~ > anew IT tW i|tK9tti«>|i it i* neoewary finf t* I new sets consisting of SO ad •? wwi i individual costumes. a i* Itiifp Kimuld hav BUNJEVACKO, are costumes of a Croatlon minority group in subotlca. The set's,""complete founded hy itnd many times sets can't, be Obtained. I Patterns for newj costumes are Obtained franvmany sources. Most t ft en they are taker from an or ig

mfetifiz do \fvwtyd

A. and M Criitweott, two bnMtan who i< Irehind in Hii\ I'i f-.cn|n' the |*»tiit.i'f:.to]tn' M|' 1K41. Ai r »ult io f their ha> Kipht, the ^rimncott hn^-hrr*' never weit,t »• li-mt potttUiev.for DIM1 -iiLgie tt«e fries, ha-ih-hnm-n-, and i Rf I n. tfley devidwl l<) -])'>•* tneir appni-iatri'ii to iln- Umntifi land of pnlat'ft"* 1'V etiaV.wm)t a .I-IICK-' Hut-their itrnenw y cc»ntained ime Kti[iulutk>n|: the tiin'ilht.eni 'if tin- mlkear i tint ne\-er eiceeil four Ktudehtf. They feJt|Uu.t only hy kit-[ ttlf NThtaol tlllH ADZH1KISTAN la designed for a "Htl Ift small (iiulii each otwlenC he ussured of the TMiiialiseil atten- olo dance with a water jug as t it m, the ram:irari«TH\ tri* exprit, that in at) •f ten Lackmi to a hown by Sharon Copsky, M'64. lancer mstitutinii- of niner Ifjiniwig . ARMENIAN, worn by Dan Daraczun, E'66, and) Jo Ann Sandretto, A'64, Weil sir,,f lhina> went JM'"*K ••WIIUIIIITIKIV til . tm th»'day ( rmi*o>U In. i fmitlml] Raine wheduleir' )a|punsi MinijpHita, it» trnditJ- rival Foot! mil, a~ you can] well ima*n»ei wan Kttrietiuni of [iroMem at *. YIIII- ' Entertainment Magic that will sweep you t-oott, what with only fugr underKrailuafceK n the entire eollece. into new realms of sight and sound! It wax ta&y enouirfi to ifjuiMcr a Iwrkfield I lit to find a jpxid liiK' or r\pi a Imd line'J I'taffl'-d- «*m ofi i nm-t miourrWid coaching nnindtt in the nation , Well hir.ion the tmiftiiM of JH-M* lug ititine Dsifiid, MinneM-ta, it* traditnfnaJ rival, a c^prirtoiis fate dealt 'rinuievtt-n cruel |hlow~iri (Tart, four rriel I4 neck- I !'• caujditf ill lii- m-rreiMi niaHniM- .\u\H Llif fulJU.rk WAX ••tolcii hy | -naiea. ; j '• 0>ntw(|tj litly. none rif^the CnmWoit team 4>owhd upnt tlie fo- ttlK*U | ine, and Mint|n-ota, it- fr-iihtioiia ri*-ai; wa« hl4r> U\ MBB^ateai at will. C'riniNCiitt wax «• rni waf w thixliuimliatuiR BANAT is a humorous Croatian defeat thai Utey, immeiliatelv !>roiii* off fi Jl nriationx with dance la which Oeorje Katklc, Mmm^itA, its tiwltionjil rival Thw later KfaiiM- knoan f J'64, clowns his way throuch. I ihe SaniaJ\8nsetti Cawel, ' 1 • I i So ynu can nee how only four xtudenU m [Jit bf top uieaftn Photos by Joseph Kirkich--Iowa inn enroUnjenl. The nun|ber tliatl per»oival - favor'i* twenty |fWhy?. yoi ask. Beca>|-«, I reply, when HI have twenty j as.mmmammaavea.mmv : ktudenU and one of thai) opecu> a pack of "k | ril •ft) ( icarf ttec, L [ there are enough to ft" around for everyl « -•, andi " n» one ha* 'SPECIAL LIMITED ENGAGEMENT FOR RENT to lie depjrivTd of Masbnro'n flavor, of \ iriltomVi Alter, o/ V '* Starts WED. Nov.6 at 5 p.m. Marihoro'p staunch anjti nieadfasT oenmpan n mahupi , and ax a II" i " t remilt youj have a sttKaw body that in lifi iniinf with -wee* | : Furniahed IOOSK— f content a*d amity and jutrmony and ooamtl and t and aott pack and Flip-ijrop boat- Sr.-MT,-:£: WARNER \ ' WifJ'iB ,1 iTtrnfaffcar. j . | WalkinoOi.tonce j SPECIAL STUDENT - FACULTY DISCOUNT | Of The Bluff. L L* mmrtworom, * This coupon end $1.00 when presented ot the a Inquiriei % Sarah's S l|nker« arej tvrntg Ane cifmrwltr* in ererneray onOMMPe otot I Boa Office will odmit onestudent or foculty member • mnd fhere are million* t>f pmck* ot MmrihaAmotMmrlhoro irfaaraat W I the Utf amlmot thr I »«m. H *. fhe nt*kr to m Wdll Disney'* "FANTASIA." lake tporuonof thUtolmmn. hop*sou Sports Beal AE's Take Leac DIQUESXE DIKE MONDAY, NOV. 4, 1963 In Frat Football vjfIAC Meet Wednesday ^Bluffites To Retain The fraternity football reached a fever pitch Monday 28, whentheonly Stirs Hope For Harriers iron man* Tradition Alpha EpallonaadPw Kappa TtMa, For th* WPIAC meet at'Westminster Wednesday, Nov. 7, Duquesne's -By PhilMusick erose-eountry team is conducting a special training program. BUI Alpha Epsilon, In winning 14- 13, Coda, A'65; Jim KJlkston, A'66; Gerry McGOugh, A'65; Ed Bote*, A'66; The gold** aseavereary ;*dttion of th* Detnaaan* university Dukes scored on a pass from Tom , Walt Marm, A'64; Stu Harrington, A'64; and Team C aptaln Larry Smith, will b*. if htlisjMj. another "iron Uu* squad. Carrylnc on in th* ler to BID Shevock, and on an A*64; are concentrating on 440 fine* of DI^IMII tradition*, which diet MM that th* Dotes have more interception by Jack Gannon.. The wind sprints and 220 inter-squad Captain Smith's optimism re­ . Aimini and tMMtfy than a all-day btcycl* f ider wtth tbt gout, Coach winning points, however, ram* on relays at Sch*nley park. * flects the' attitude of all mem- Red Mamuag will *«t*r th*eoil*g*b*jrt*tball wars wtth only 11 soldiers. a safety I • bars of the constantly Improving Absent from a gritty squad which banc up » i3-w haark after the Phi Kappa Thcta scored both of cross-country squad. tragedy, which a f*w insensitive aportswrtbtrs calked a lac injury to their touchdowns on passes On* Willi* Somerset, are fo** playert. from quarterback Sam Pezillo to •This Is the first year of de­ Hay Broko* and Frank Mlaaotes («U prey to that old bugaboo known Chuck Sued, and another on a pass finite Interest," says Mr. Smith. u Q.P.A. and ar* ineligible, at least until th* aaad o« the tail semester. from Dave McSulty to Don Adsit. "Too often In the past, conflicting Broke*, a junior from Ambrtdg* saga school, was us*d sparinery Also on Monday, Oct; 28, Phi activities and something lass than bat MtadotaarV loss could prow* serious. Frank, a 6-4, Sigma Delta won easily over Sig­ enthusiasm have prevented a de­ started last a*aaoe and was undoubtedly counted on ma Chi Theta, 31-13. ' cent record," be continues. heavily in thU year's alanaine * According to the Team Captain. Sljrma Chi Theta won a close oo* the situation has changed this sea­ - S Paul Kudelko, hampered most of last season wtth a hand injury, ovef Alpha Delta Gamma, 20-18 son. He points out that the athletic has taken leave of th* university, tran*f*rrlnc to an orthopadlc school. on Wednesday, Oct. 23. Inthesec department and team is 'lending Kuafctlko was a I—mast* of Somerset's at Farrcll high school, wh*re ond gam*, Beta PI Sigma wholehearted support to the pro­ he, Willi* and a fallow named Generakwieh lad th* st*«wra to a slat* U* Parsing Rifles 26-13 gram, the University Is offering championship f .* 1 Sigma went with just six m partial scholarships to encourage Also shsonc th* mtaatng when roU call was taken this fall waa Stu th* entire gam*. cross-country candidates, and new Hayes, a Heaver ftlfh rraduate who showed marked Improvement last Tuesday, Oct. 22 found uniforms have been supplied. season Stu will be on the sidelines for th* comma: year due to a Epsilon downing Phi Sigma kidney ailment. 14-12. Both AE acores cami With only two meets left this - Tim H*-*man rounds out the list of players who will be conspicuous passes from Semler to Ac Last year's Dukes finished last season., the team leader feels Du- by then abacw when the Dukes open.the season against American and Jack Cannon. in th* WPIAC, but Team Captain quesne will be victorious over umv*r«it> on Nov, SO. { >,''] The second game of; the Smith says, *I have no doubts both Grove City and St. Francis. , Beatnan la a transfer, isiudent, and as such, will not be eligible header saw Phi Kappa Theta w* will place much higher this year, •The team Is fired up and de­ until after this aemester, At present. Coach Mannirw Is not suri nlng over Alpha Phi Delta,' 1| possibly In the top three." termined, to win," he concludes. whethwr Hveman will play si that time. Phi Kappd Theta's scores all cam* ,R*d, .however, who la garrulous to the point of solicitude, hasn't on passes! from Sam Fezzillo. fete been heard rXneamrac for help do to th* comparative short ace of Lopusntck and BobKlrkpatrick Independent Race Tied; basketball player* on th* hoof. * were'on the receiving ends oi the While th* Duk** will lack quantity they certainly won't tack quality passes The net* to kill th* fatted calf draws near as prodigal son Willie Som- eraet returns. 4 , Playboys, Guys Out Front Willie, who will very likely spell the difference between an NIT bid Independent football began its second week of play last Wednesday or th* runaerup spot in the steel Bowl tournament, Is rated a rood Intramural at Moore Field. The first place Guys Increased their lead with a prospert to fill do* ruard slot on this year's All-American squad. smashing 27-0 victory over the Cougars. Quarterback Tom Caslin __ Th* first basketball magazine to htt the stands Includes Willie kept to the air, hitting Terry Shoo with two touchdown oasses and among the all-american possibilities wtth the notation that kW "waa Highlights Norm Schnurr with one.] ._^ ' ~~ ~~" probably the nattoola number one sophomore guard two years ago, Caslin caught a pass himself, twice on passes from captain Jer­ when he sveraged 19.5 points per ram*." Two weeks of Intramural foot­ going all the way for the fourth ry Freker, and on a 40 yard run- ball have seen a lot of action In Also mentioned as possible all-americans ware players from several touchdown". Louie Bisoardo plt- back of a brilliant interception. It the Independent circuit. There . schools the Duk** plsy (his year. cbed In to acorethreeextrapolnts. was a game of long passes and hard have been hard-fought victories, Th* Jon** bora, Larry of Toledo university and Wally of I'lllanova, C apt a in-quarterback Jim Ro- running, aa BUI Weisman took hard-to-take losses, amazing up­ are all-american darkhors**, as are Fred Crawford and Miles mtnowskt of the X'a hit Ra/Do- a scoring pass from Jerry Freker sets, hot tempers, painful | In­ Aiken of St Bonarenture, Nark werkman of s*ton Hall, who was out- lan with two touchdown passes, and for 40 yards and BUI Kyle an­ acor*d by ta* Duk**' Ron Wtllard In last year's fame, md Dave juries, and general, aU-ari Denny Lecorchick with one, in their other from Gary Wright for 25 Stallworth of Wichita excitement and enthusiasm. [The 20-13 conquest' of the Hustlers. yards;. grueling grip of the gridiron has By, the middle of neat month everyone on campus will be feverish Tony Miles scored one extra point. Friday at Herschel Field the over the coming season, '-'This la a normal occurence on th* bluff, grabbed both captains and players. Three games were played Thurs­ Cougars won their first game of and, with luck, should continue throughout th* season. The first team to feel the at: aln day as two teams moved over to the season over the last place Th* Duke* will field a well-balanced team, lacking only a real of the gams was "the Enforcers, Herschel Field, the battleground' Liberals. Dave Eberhardt scored •bii-min" Mo handle the balk of rebounding. However, Denny Cuff. who will - drop out of the lea rue of the fraternities'. Sharpshooting twice on runs. Joe lacvetti got Willie somerset and Willi* Ross should ttt their shar- of defensive because of injuries. Eoforcei Ed Tom Caslin t^rew scoring passes into the action with I touchdown rebounds and the Dukes will hav* to depend on an accurate shooMng Leahy, pitcher for the basefaalL to R'e%e Neldt rberger and Hank and an extra point before he was eye to prevent an etcess of offensive rebounds. t Dukes; broke his collarboui Cannello, and scored the extra sidelined with a broken finger. We look for th* Red and Blu* to field an lt-4 record and pull down Frtday'a game against the Htst point himself to give the Guys The Hustlers wrapped up the a bid to the NIT. This last ts not to cause Red any ulcers, but we feel lers-. In that same game, his a 13-0 victory overthe Dragons. week oo Friday with a 1S-7 vic­ that the Dukes have the material and coaching to have one of their teammate jack Becker broke his tory over the iniurv-ridden En­ better seasons. ', _ nose. • ' " Meanwhile, back at Moore Field, forcers. . Knlorrer captain JimDePhlliipa the fans were seeing another shut­ said, *we hav*, to drop out be­ out. The man of the day there The Price Is Right At cause of kll the Injuries. Ltahy was Jim McGrungle Ques passes, Dukes Down Bearcats and Keeker were two of our who threwtouchctowns toFredCraig players, and now we won't b* and Woody Trait, and extra points JOEJUMA'S to get up much of a team." .to Freddy "Myers and Ray Towers. •The injuries are mostly When th* Ques and Liberals-had Barber (n Frat Football, 7-6 to clipping,- which the rets' left the field, Jerry Freker led Shop nothing about, 4^am.,gotng to cinr- his undefeated Playboys out to t Puquesne university won its first the second half. In the fourth plain to Billy jflromple, director cruah a disheartened Enforcer .$1.00 fraternity intercoll*«ist* football quarter, the Dukes set jap their of intramural sports.' This thing team, | 39-7. Playboy Tom Kelly came last Saturday when it de- score wtth a 30-yard' pass play Is really getting out of hand." !rw took tjhe opening kickoff all the 261-3657 f**4*d St. VlnceM's Bearcats fat from, quarterback Jerry Freker ; lacvetti of the Cougars is alto way. Tor the first in a lohg series a hard-fought struggle, 7-6.' to BID Shevock. The score cam* Mag** & out for the season with a-hrejken of touchdown It wka a touch football' gam* en i pass to Ed Shields. A Frek- finger. Ron Davis scored three times Forbes played at th* SI. Vincent stadium er-to-Shevock paaa scored theea- Duquecne waa represented by all tra point. • the tralernities while .St, Vincent*a Coach Freedman said, •enthu­ team was composed of members siasm and determination ware in­ df last year's varatty ream. R*g- strumental la the victory." Hard uler football waa dropped this line play of th* Duquesn* team Treat Yttf Pate To ft* Rt«t la Italia* yaw at the Let rob* cotVag*." kept pressure on th* Bearcats. Played on a regulation field, "This fame proved that football th* came waa officiated by pro- has a* place on the Duquesn* cam­ Fovflf At A flote-To-Campuf Location feaaiooal refer***. Regulation col­ pus," said coach Freedman. - legiate rakes war* ta *ff*ct, ex­ That •veoing, a well-attended cept for th* two-hand touch rust. dance was held at taw Fsssj Al­ Duquesn* sent thr*e bas loads bert hotel ta Gr**nsburg. Schools of student a to the gam*, and many r*pr**atatsd war* Duquean*, St. more came by ear. About two Vtacsnt, Moaot M*rcy, Saton Hill, thousand psopt* attended t he gam*. Wataaorwlaad Nuratag achoot, and a f Mature of the at. Viae em home- itws uHir

Iwarn To Boxll Italian Specialties Sizzling Steaks Le*s* *e Isnll ft* * —if i In lb* art *f a*4i **«**—, Esaert Succulent Seafoods slve and def*natv*/aad tahsw th* rest «t ft*) piaywra^a resarvaa •r'crr. CM for both arils *•*• 2500 W. Libert i y Ave. Pgh. 26, Pa. at Viaceef. *cor*4 la the ftrat ~4 I. • • ijJZ^ I ] hair oa a 2«-yard and run The LO 3-1700 ^ LO 3-2555

• »••',•': . r • ™ . . • ! ! Riflers To Meet Talented DUQUESNE DUKE MONDAY. »OV, 4. 1X2 •AGE ELEVEN West Virginia Toiriorrow Diie Browne Teache* Hausa* ' Duooesne's riflemen will travel isoo. ' '!, , Africa's Tone Lang ia«je \ to M*a,rgantown tomorrow,.Sat­ Taking their positions on the urday, Nov. 1, to fire afalnat firing line against the Duquesne Hauaa Is being offered at Dsquesne for the first lew. This economic the highly-touted West Virginia riflers will be writer, James Hor- language of West; Africa is being taught by Richard . Browne, associate Mountaineers. The Dukes will at* nor, David Rush, Ralph Baker, professor of modern languages and a member of tempt to end an early season slump Ron Schweninger, Joel McCrav, Historically, Hauaa might be related to Ancient EsJrntUa,but'in modern which has brought them two losses. Charles Lyles. Leonard Graham, times It is considered a chJjdlc This match puts D.U. against a William Cifford. and Robert Nor- Frail language. team noted for excellent marks­ deck. ; •Thereaaonfor its classification manship. The Mountaineers, co­ Wall Marm; Duquesne's top with Egyptian is that Hauaa relies ached by M/Sgt. Charles A. Haley, shooter, will be leading squad Fights tne on the pronoun rather than the *erb won! Intercollegiate national members Bob Evans, Ed Glick, BY MARGARE for tense and aspect changes,^Dr. championship two years ago and Bert Moyer, Jan Schrader, Fran­ Browne said. 1 wer'e three points shy of repeating cis Herrtngtoa, Bob powers, Ross The yellow cat no longer suns * The verb remains constant ;and the same feat last year. Custer, Jay Scheffer, and'John himself on he steps of the Ad the pronoun changes, giving ap(- The Citadel ot South Carolina Kudlik in their quest for an upset. Building. Is there; a catnapper aaraM meaning (to the serteore.* stopped their effort 1160—1166, SECOND SETBACK - on campus? ' Did he lose a battle •Hauaa is primarily the name of • The nation's second-ranked, col­ with another cat, or with" a dog, a language rather than of a people. legiate rifleman, John Writer, who Indiana State college, paced by or with a car? j .i "By extension it has come to be holds a 295 average will be on the All-American Dave Cramer, han­ For all who have missed our used to describethe majority group firing line against the Dukes. He ded Duquesne's rifle team its sec­ cat, rest assured. He is safely df northern Nigerians, linked by a proved he can better this ex­ ond straight setback last Friday, recuperating, resting comfortably sense of unity based on a common ceptional average by leading his 1372-1345. in the home of Mrs. Ann urban, language, history and customs, team over California State Tea­ Walt Marm hit the targets for i English department J though ethnically there eiists some chers College last Friday with 277 mark to finish third In the Mrs. Urban took him away oa hetergeneity within this croup, and DR. 1 J. BROWNE a 297-count. match and lead the way for the Oct. 9, • unintentionally,' she religion-wise there are a few The Mounties displayed strong Dukes. Duke team captain Bob says, "because be wis sick." Christiana as {well as M< ' able to discc -er and to understand team balance in the victory as Evans scored a 270, followed by Before going home with Mrs. Hauaa*." ^' different an. complex grammati­ the six top scorers placed In the Jan Shreder's 268, John Kudlick's Urban, the cat spent three days cal for mat I' 267, and Jay Staffer's 263. •Hausa is a tone language." Dr. 280s.. The final score was 1427- at the veterinarian's office. Dia- Browne continued. •The same syl­ •Hauaa, also profitable for epoisis: upper respiratory in­ lables with a different tone pat­ , students wh ere Interested in the fection (bad bold), eye and ear tern become new words. It is also structure of Chinese, Eskimo and infections/numerous unhealed a split-level language. . 1 American IT it an languages.' cuts, and worms J 1 •A question car be asked or a Dr. Brio a making a trip to FROM COAST TO COAST The doctor placed sin. age at command can be Issued merely by' Africa lifts lummer and will visit between four and fire} years, and raising or lowering the tone ^pat­ the region Kano In northern OvTHEY ALL LOVE * weight at 12 pounds. He also terns of the entire sentence.*;-. Nlgerla>hefe classical Hauaa U warned Mrs. urban! to be espec­ Toe native language of Northern spoken^ ially careful because, even though THAT Nigeria, spoken by more than 12 . During ife latter part of the the cat was sick, he was In ex­ million people, \t has bean written sum marj hi ill go to Frleburg, cellent physical condition and could Into the constitution as North- Ni­ Switierlind where he win speak be dangerous. « geria's official; language. It is a to the toy -th Congress of ' The Urban family is no stran­ trade language! across the CoM Internal ion i Comparative Liter - ger to cats There is a motley Coast mnd southward to Angola. ature* Assoc ation at the University tf"^ group of accumulated strays who its -usefulness as the commer­ of Frteburg come every night to be fed and cial language do the wast coast sleep in the cellar. Some have of Africa extends from Dakar to been picked up hungry and ragged Braxzoville and Is considered a from country roads, one from a sacred language among the Mos­ KQV Honors shopping center, and some have lems. I - J bean adopted from bad homes. r At the present time, there Is no Mrs. Urban hasn't counted them DU 'eacher standardized Hauaa dictionary or lately, so she isn't Quite sure how grammar * Hausa was originally Miss IT Betchart, assistant y there are. • But they all have written in an Arabic script known professor ir flementaryeducation, tes - Princess Fur Pants, Puff, as ajasm. Today it is nearly: al­ was honore| as • Teacher of the Charlie. Boots, Mittens, Raggedy ways written) with the Roman Day" Oct O, on KQV. MISS If jon ean take you noae oat of that text book for jus* a | Coon Child, and Grundoon alphabet,'' explained Dr. Browne. Bet chart f ha taught in elementary , I moment, you'll notice that Yam-Tom baa emerged as the moat J One by one, each cat has been •It was not until recently, how­ schools 15 years and has been introduced to DUKEi who Is locked ever, that the people of Nigeria at Duquesne | stimulating campus sport in many a year. Who needs panty raids J 10 years. in the bathroom when the others began to print the language and to Elements: t education majors of * when yon ean Tam-Tom under a Urge tree or in a little sports \ are in tha^house. He didn't quite realize die structural problems of Tau. Delta 1 HI sorority nominated I carl Be advised, however, that on rainy days the i know what, to think of all the friend­ the language." 1 for the honor. liness he encountered iry-the Urban Dr. Browne pecame interested Tne stedeis rested in their letter I kip prefer their Yum-Yum indoors. (Res* * household, since ail he has ever in Hausa last yiear and, this past KQV. U t -she becomes the ' I rooms of libraries and empty field houses are known .is his competitive existence summer, attended the UCLA urn model of an deal teacher; one who on the Bluff. I sidered the choicest locations.) mer institute inkfrlcan languages, gives all hi | time and- energy to I But now he has] made friends Aa you've probably dedaeed by now, Yam- \ where he studljed linguistic: and without expecting any with the. family and also with sev­ Hausa language J honor for heVself." I Yam is strictly for Him and Her. And in Columbia's I eral of the other cats Mrs. Ur­ •I feel that I profited grimily They toel he elementary reading ban is able to treat his eyes and I riotous new comedy "UNDER THE YUM-YUM h Bt t'CL.A because now I have a course ofM sa Bet chart's ir" more ears with a minimum of difficulty (Columbia Pictures, Dot Columbia University) Yum-Yum J basis to process: with in the c] gge> than a dry methods course". As and.she reports that he is very room."; Joyc# pet •she gives us more I is developed into a, bujh art form by its greatest practitioner, J polite and clean. I Since' Hausa than we rehd In books and this , What win happen to DUKE? Will oral language, t i iv**i iisari al,l footing of teaching*. he again grace the front of fhe Ik Hogan, hilariously portrayed by Jack Lemmon, is a lecherous I Sign institutes •tr m quf ty.. said Barb Hrubic Ad Building? Mrs. Urban says she, government •even t houi \ all bar studenta are IJ landlord who rents apartments to attractive girls and goes from | originally intended-to bringJilm Dr* Browne college set ora and Juniors, she | door tar door with a heart-shaped passkey. One of the tenants is J back, but now he and his family may be: taken addresses hem as 'children'". are very attached to one another. I Carol Lynley. a- curry co-ed who is eopduetinf a cozy experiment l ther special! Miss Bet hart will receive two Also, he has become used to guisticsL b in platonic, pre-marital co-habitation. (It's ail in the interests \ bushels hi ipples which she. will sleeping inside and being fed reg­ •The Ung distribute • mong the children si ^ of science.) Dean Jones is her nervous wreck of a fiance and Edie ft ularly. Mrs. Urban Is worried plications, Holy Fsmil orphanage. Adams is on the premises as the inarris^e-counaeling teaeher who | snout what will, happen to him If she brings' him back when be is takes a tumble for Hogan. } finally well. Who'Mil feed him? Hogan's own apartment, happily referred to as "The Sin l I where will he go \a the winter? Sanguigni Explain; Plans Is there any group on campus who Bin," is an electronic ambush-on-virtue Oat could make etchings | would be willing to tike the respon­ obsolete. There's a violin section, for example, that emerges out | sibility for DUKE?} Could the Ad For Vollevba Pli g-pong of nowhere and plays, without benefit of human hands, "Music To Building be opened to htm at night? He might perform ja resl service Sanguigni, moderator Make Yam-Yum By." There's also a bar with I la keeping the building free of mice. Does ani interesinter t exist?" asked Miss Phalli enough whiskey to refloat the Titanic. Bat don't I Any suggest Ions or solutions wlH Df women's sports activities*. Miss Sangnigi would Uke to lattlate . sj ping-pong touraameota tor resident students. She and Bernadett- get Hogan wrong. Jack Lemmon defines Hogan I be welcomed by Mra. Urban in the English department. Martin, N*6S, are recruiting new members, ] ians tor the ptng-pong as "a man who is oatiaged at humanity. There-1 matches will include floor com­ petition first. • Branching from Sanguiiai anticipates volley- fer*v everything that seams outlandish and biaarrt 1 this, Mist SanguUmi want a to in­ ball Intram rals. Competition will to the rest of the world, seems perfectly normal to ' FRANK itiate later-dormitory gamea, Aa be among ro rit y sad indepenoVnt ham. Hogaa cannot understand why the world Is so ungrateful to a climax to the ptng-pong sea­ teams. § WALLYS \ son, plans for championship play­ M> luBat iask s that inov- off a wui be scheduled. la d each •oro'rRy form RESTAURANT Planning tor the __ Practice si MI It aa held st Has Tht time sad games will •*» schedule ;. 'Studwnt' In partlcpatiog Atmosphnra or volley-ball are - hwissrlstii Mania ^IZm^sssisssa^^^J 1206 Forbai Av«. I nnoUEfiWE DUKE MONDAY. NOV. «. 1963 PAGE TWFl.vr- Crossword Puzzle Comedy Hi^ Wandering With Walsh— — By Jom«t Gooch To Be Shown f How's Your Sister?9 At Gateway j - H ! L- ; »y Larry Wolsh

•Under tM Yum Yum Tree" U With mid-term -examinations approaching their semester rise, some Jack Lemmon's latest comedy. college students axe transformed from their usual congenial selves to The title, following a currt-nttele­ •flag wavers" who see no right in the world. Conversation drops tc vision style, comes from 4 linji more than the usual mutters over a cafeteria cup of coffee and verbaverl l of obscure poetry that Is quoted chiding from anyone may lead to during one of the scenes in the a coffee baptism. Griping comes kins..the twist, wise bartenders.. movie.' into its own and,'if nothing else self-winding watches that don't.. The movie . will be opening at can be said, a sarcastic, general chain letter s^. .trumpet players who the' Gateway theatre, downtown. phrase like "HOW'S your sister?" use mutes.. !c at nolle-"atheists" . seems appropriate. demonstrators master building More than ever, mid-term ex­ plans. ams cause everything to come The.saying "Six of one and half- under the close serutin!zatIon of the, a-dozen -^f • another"....crumpled ; disgruntled bluff climber. His cookies...table" top drummers., comments, once started, flit from' mimeographed Christmas greet­ one area to another and are char­ ings that tell what "happened" to acterized by "I .don't like..Down the whole family lastyear..foreign with....and Who says?" . movie buffs..:grjey'shoes. ..people You're sure to recognize some who punctuate their sentences with of the following pet peeves. "You know"...home movies/ Lost notes....limp handshakes., "Canary swaUowers" who want women in curlers., sports c9 to know your test mark and Q, p. A. .. snobs....substitute teachers....un­ "camera shy" photographers...frat happy people... ."professional" stu- feuds...GDI's that ride thecaf line.. dents„ .Judy Garland....sad Sack.. streetcar transfers...Student Con­ 'Cuba invaders,...Pittsburgh Rail­ HOK1/ONTAL 64 aYfirmative reply gress standing! committees that 45 assistant (atir ) ways....Reader's Digest. slt....AUG20 fans., frustrated PT Bluff ticket giving cops. ..col­ VERTICAL boat followers....storaged wheat.. , 8 health resort lege book stores....asinine cam­ Liz and Dick;..crowded bars... B German river 1 employ i paigns, inveterate campaigners^., TWO HEADS ARE BETTER guys wlio say, •You better believe IS notion 2 poems •' mid-terms, t e 1 e v i s i on...short THAN ONK.. Jack Lemmon[takes it'...standing in line for anything... 13 that MM 3 smaller skirts, .dimpled knees....library a statuesque pose outside his movies with "a cast of thousands"., U burden 4 palm fruits cops, .expensive back doors that ments in "Under The Yum! Yum han&ver cures .that don't work.... IS relax ; aren't open, books on the-mdex.. 5 smash. Tree./ smiling professors who say •Tfcir . If. malt beverage^, 6 heap indexed Frenchmen.""" . • • • i isn't important, but..." inside 17 doker stake 7 correct People who shout "Go!* at jazz jokes. . j PLAYHOUSE 18 being 8 resilient musicians... funny cocktail nap- Professional New Yorkers IB number 8 solitary The Pittsburgh playhouse will be showing one of the finest mus­ record pantomlmists...the top for­ 20 observed 10 tanning bath ty songs about teen-age ro­ *t past of sir «L1 paradise * icals of modern theatre on Satur­ day, November 2 through January. mances....electric eye doors..'... 23 iperk 22 exclamation Father Rice • The Playhouse will reverberate non- professionals who wear as- •25 hat, 24 preposition tothe"rumble" and pulsating music1 cots. .ash trays that are too small.. ' 28 dress edge 25 male swan" of 'west Side Story." F%r those long "-winded publicity men...dirty SO wall recess.*r: 26 drink of old To Lecture who have seen the movie pro­ old men:from the "Friendly Inn." 34 oil (comb, forte) 17 rate ' duct ion, the st age show should make Hand-written menus...uncooked 29 males 36 thing (Law) r an interesting comparison. On Thursday vegetables...tough roast beef 38 to masticate 31 Greek letter dirty tables....cigarette ashes on 39 gem 32 that woman A cast .of 35 performers will The Rey. Charles Owen Rice, I bring life- to the classic book and dishes. 41 nothing 33 female sheep pastor of immaculate Conception These are just.a few mutterings score which is one of the most Church in Washington, pa., will 43 surer 35 mollusk of the "down" man. If you have ambitious projects ever under­ speak on "Christianity andCapital- 44 whimper •k 3? afternoon naps some of your own (and who doesn't); taken at the Playhouse., I, ism* at the theology seminar on 48 devour 40 Behold! send them in and we'll compile 48 level 42 French article •At the Hamlet street Theatre, Thursday, Jiov. 1, from 1 to 2 1 •fake Her, She's Mine" will con­ another list. , ".i imtted states 9tee)(abr.> 43 hare I p.m. In 508 Rocxwell hall. • % tinue to play until Sunday, N ivem- 33 Persia 47 leg bone ber 17, with sterling Yatai and -' General discussions or* "Con­ 57 misplace 48 flutter Doris Hackney. . r temporary Christian Social Issues" 38 negative word 49 easy gait will follow. Soon to be opening at the Theatre 58 drill 50 on the ocean Active In many of the labor Upstairs, will be 'Do You Know 80 tmltatef * 52 painful issues in Western Pennsylvania, The Milkey Way." It will play 61 National Recovery Art (abtCf 54 steals Father Rice writes a weekly column from Saturday November 23 to 62 wild goat 55 Creak war god discussing Christian social Issues Sunday December 22. 63 leguminous plants 56 nearest for the "Pittsburgh Catholic," and '*.' * SYMPHONY conducts a weekly radio program The Pittsburgh Symphony will over WWSW at 10:45 p.m. on Sun­ be presenting a smell diversion days. from their usual fare on Mi Editor of the DUKE In 1930, November 4. Jack Benny will Father Rice' taught at Duquesne's appear with the Symphony Oi Labor institue in the late 1940's. tra as the featured soloist st the All faculty members and students 8:30 p.m. concert. are Invited to attend Gateway Recording Inc. Presents Live Session In Concert Starring The Internationally Acclaimed Charles Bell Trio ! Heed the still, tmall volet of consctenct Cornegie Lecture Hall Sat., Nov. 9, 8:30 p.m. ' In . . •- QUCaJIhomI kme no* I b'l tesy. it'i inejpemm. tad ta* folks-11 |ov« you for it! Ticket! .- $1.75 • $2.00 Night of leuion. Price includes coupon for free I concert recording redeemable ot all Notional Record Mart*. | • TiDTickoc h available ot all Notional Record Marti, lomalrin., and at the L LDuk: e Office from 2 to 5 p m. on Mon., Wed., and Fri.