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Vol. XLIV, No. 20 , WASHINGTON, D. C. Thursday, March 28, 1963 ..... I Council Passes Revision Plans Elected Class Officers Seven Voting Members · To Predominate on SC, Removed From Council; 4. Six Groups To Remain Athletics To Be Added (The following is the text of b?1 George Thibault Lambert S pro n c k 's resolution which the Student Council passed The weeks of on on Sunday and comments on the Council revision finally ended f passing of the resolution from a speech given on March 25 by Dan- in concrete action at last Sun­ • iel J. Altobello, the President of day's meeting. The Council ap­ ., the Yard. J.J.G.) proved the resolution of senior Whereas: The Student Council representative Bert Spronck should be a representative body and by an 18-7 margin, in a secret bal­ whereas The Student Council is lot vote. A two-thirds vote was l' not now such a representative or­ necessary for approval since the gan due to the presence· of more proposal involved a change in .. activity heads than duly elected Council By-laws. .., Yard and Class Officers; The text of the Spronck-spon­ THEREFORE BE IT RESOLVED sored measure is printed in the THAT: left-hand column. The essential de­ 1. Henceforth the Student Coun­ parture of this from the present t cil shall always consist of more Council structure is that seven ac­ tivity heads who are now voting directly elected Yard and Class A MOVE TO THE LEFT ... is called for as Bert Spronck, author of the Council revision, also members of the Council have been .. Officers than Activity heads. directs the photography, opting for the display of colorful councilmen. removed. The chairman of the Stu­ 0;'. 2. To protect the minority rights dent Athletic Committee wiIl join of activities, the combined Yard the remaining six activity heads and Class Officers total shall never and the eleven directly-elected exceed a 2f.I majority, but must GU Administration, Moran Nastasi Nominated members as a voting member. The always rather fall short of it. O' Seniors Assemble 'd-d seven unseated activities are: the 3. Persuant to this goal of ma­ St. John Berchmans Society, the jority rule by elected representa­ Discuss Class Gift For GU Yar Prest ency non-Resident Sodality, the Journal, tives and preservation of the rights the Band, the Mask and Bauble • of Student Activities, all activity by Dan Duff At 7 :30 p.m. last monday the student body was given Society, the Glee Club, and the In­ • heads shall be removed from the Last Thursday at 11 : 15 the a preview of next year's residents of the Yard Office at the ternational Relations Club. , Council with the exception of the senior class met in Gaston nominations rally in Copley Lounge. Only one candidate was following: 1) Sodality, 2) Wash­ As explained last week, when ington Club, 3) The Philodemic, Hall with the primary purpose nominated for each of three of the offices (Non-resident Spronck proposed his resolution, the 4) HOYA, 5) WGTB-FM, 6) Col- new Council contains a majority of discussing the Senior Class representative, Treasurer, and Secretary). There were two of directly elected members, but ~ legiate Club. Gift. Three speakers pre­ presidential nominees. Executive Secreiary of the Yard this majority will never equal the 4. The head of the Student Ath­ sented their views at the Randy Huston presided at-the two-thirds plurality that would en­ .. letic Committee be granted a seat In his brief acceptance speech, meeting: Father Edward B. Bunn, able them to act as a bloc in certain • ~ and full voting powers on the Stu­ rally. Each of the three pres­ Moran promised a further elabora­ parliamentary votes and thus sup­ dent Council as evidence of our S.J., President of the University; ent Yard Officers, Dan Alto­ tion of the specific points of his press the views of the activity commitment to the athletic sphere Father Joseph Sellinger, S ..r., Dean bello, John Nugent, and Tom platform in the near future. He heads. The selection of the activi­ of the College; and Mr. Rollins W. went on to thank the present Yard of life at Georgetown. Shields-spoke briefly on the ties that would retain seats was 5. There be set up, therefore, a Miller, Vice President of the New officers "for laying a foundation based upon the dual criteria of College Student Council consisting York Life Insurance Company. functions of his particular upon which the two candidates may "service and representation." of a majority of directly elected office and on his experiences in the move forward and make a student The purpose of the meeting was : Class and Yard representatives, to- past year. government which is more mean­ Spronck's measure was passed to further acquaint the class with after a resolution by sophomore • taling 12 and Activity representa­ Bill Moran, a history major from ingful that we have ever before tives totaling 7, thus giving the di­ the revolutionary plan the Senior had at Georgetown." class representative Tom Paukcn Easton, Pennsylvania, was the first was defeated. Pauken's proposal rectly elected Yard and Class rep­ Class Gift committee has proposed: presidential nominee. In his nomi­ The second presidential candi­ resentatives a working majority, instead of giving one lump class date is Nick Nastasi, a philosophy called for a more radical revision nation speech, Junior Nandor of the Council by transforming it • but not an all-embracing 2f.I ma­ gift, the class will draw insurance Fournier cited Moran as a man major from Springfield, Pennsyl­ jority. vania. In nominating Nastasi, John into a "student senate" of directly­ policies on each of its members who combines the necessary traits elected representatives. This group 6. If passed, these proposals of "tolerance and consideration Hempelmann emphasized Nastasi's so that at the class's twentieth or experience as a student leader who would be supplemented by an ac­ - t# will go into effect at the change­ twenty-fifth reunion they will be with imagination and intiative." He tivities council composed of eleven . over meeting of the Student Coun­ went on to say that the successful has "been honored with more ma­ able to present Georgetown with jor elective offices than any other activity heads which would act up­ cil in the Spring of 1963. a large sum of money coming from realization of next year's 175th An­ on matters directly concerning stu­ niversary .plans "is going to take member of his class." Hempelmann Respectfully submitted, the insurance plan. The plan has dent organizations. Their actions a man, no;\; with dreams, but with cited Nastasi's record as exemplary been in existence at various other of "a real effort to set up institu­ would become official unless op­ Lambert Spronck reasonable, calculated plans-above posed by two-thirds of the student Senior Class S.C. colleges throughout the nation and all a man of sufficient maturity and tions beneficial to Georgetown" and as indicative of his "great senate. Representative. has been known to work; what re- experience to deal with the less dedication to Georgetown and his ..... , Last evening in this room, the (Continued on Page 7) glamorous problems with which he Action was taken on both of will be confronted." fellow students." The highlight of these measures after each had been College Council made one of the Hempelmann's speech, at least reported favorably by the enti:-e most important advances that stu­ from the point of view of the re­ Council acting "as if in committee dent government at Georgetown tiring Yard Officers, was his refer­ of the whole." The Yard resolution, ~ has made in the past twenty-five ence to "present Yard President proposed last week, was withdrawn years. It was at that time that Dan Moriarty." in deference to Spronck's plan. The members of the Council returned Nastasi, in accepting the nomi­ Council was urged by two of its : to the elected representatives of nation, concentrated his remarks senior members-Mr. Scheye and , the classes the majority of the on the importance. of the "image Mr. Mietus-to waive redundant Council. This was done at the per­ of Georgetown College." He re­ and irrelevant debate in view of sonal sacrifice of the members of ferred to what he felt was "the the seriousness of the contemplated the Council who represent activ- most valuable Editorial statement measures and act with objectivity. ~ ities in the interest of the majority made by this year: 'We The vote followed quickly upon the of the student body. This is an at Georgetown have an inferiority dissolution of the "committee of important advance. Like other complex (Hoya 2/14/63)'." He went the whole." plans it will, however, fail if it on to say that "I believe George­ does not have the total commit­ town has the stuff to be great, Spronck, Pauken, Yard President ment of the student body. For it is but if the name of Georgetown is AltobelIo, and all who have con­ ~ ill you that the reins of govern­ to be great, its students must be tributed to the Council reform are \. ment lie. The members of the Coun- great." He concluded with the be­ sincerely and justifiably hopeful " cil who voted last night, whether lief that the students are capable that the Council will now be a r for or against, displayed personal of accepting "the task of proving more efficient, more vital, and more conviction and integrity and the Georgetown to be first rate." highly respected organ for student objectivity that is necessary for The secretarial nominee is Chris action. At present a motion to pre­ members of the Student Council. Dearie, who was nominated ,by sent this resolution in referendum Daniel Altobello NICK NASTASI BILL MORAN (Continued on Page 8) to the student body is in committee. I' "! ;' J:/ ;':. , I Page-Tw~ , , Thursday, March 28, ,1963 Editorial .CounciIRey,ision . Ro~n,':tl!-p; Letters. ,To The-Editor • ' ; ~ ',. • .. - - ': ~ 'I - : : [ ] The revision of the 'Student Council' which The HOYA For' those who enjoy hurling you; we request that you not fail it. announces on the first page this week, is perhaps the most small discular-like things over Revised Council lightly-salted twenty-food boards, Dear Fellow Students: DANIEL J. ALTOBELLO iinp~rtant story we have covered this year. There have':,been the Washington Club, which previ­ Last Sunday night at the weekly President of the Yard stories of administration changes, tuition' raises,' ~Iid class ous to this news was still on the meeting of the College Student THOMAS C. SHIELDS •. elections, but none of these is as relevant to the students' Council, has, feeling opulent after Council, the Council took the most Secretary of the Yard 1 its recent beer blasts; nonchalantly important steps and passed the situation as the Council's revision, is. It is: relevant because JOHN O. NUGENT ~ handed over ,$800 devalued Amer­ wodhwhile legisla-tion that has Treasurer of the Yard f it concerns the only organization on Campus solely concerned ican dollars for a wooden table, ex­ been accomplished in several years. with the student's welfare. Even such organizations as the travagantly called a shuffle-board, As you read on another page of Philodemic Resolves with pucks to go in the club lounge. this paper, the Council revised it­ Collegiate Club, WGTB' and ,The HOYA-each of them an Others, who enjoy hurling small, To the Editor: self, returning the majority of the On Wednesday, March 20, the f discular-like ideas in the lightly­ organization devoted to serving the student bqdy-cannot votes to the duly elected represen­ Philodemic Society considered an smoked atmosphere of a lecture tatives of the classes. In the new claim this concern, because they really cannot alter the stu­ room, are advised to catch a rye at all too obvious culinary situation set-up, the most important activity recently brought into focus by The "; dent's status. Only the Council can achieve' the kind of the Cellar Door, and whistle up heads have retained their seats and to Palms Lounge for a little HOYA and meagerly refuted by alteration and that is why its revision is so important. a new seat has been created for aNew South sandwich of words , In the past the Council has not been as effective as it session with Doctor Kearns and the the Chairman of the Student Ath­ Literary Society on Old Sal, Fran­ in last week's "Letters to the Edi­ letic Committee. The action by this tor." With overwhelming acclama­ could have been in the ideal. A great part of this failure ny, Seymour, Bessie, Zooey, and Council ends yea!rs of attempts the bananafish, friends and crea­ tion it passed the following resolu­ can be attributed to the size and organization of the Council. at reform. tion: tions of .T. D. Salinger. Kickoff at Each member of the Council, There were twenty-five seats, which meant that debate on 8:00. "Be it resolved: that the Philo- .. whether he supported the revision demic Society emphatically support )i any subject of ten became tedious and boring as each man And finally, for those who en­ or not, is to be congratulated and the courageous stand of The used his legal privilege to speak at will. Only strictly main­ joy dropping large discular-like thanked for the interest and the HOYA regarding the present dis­ bombs out of aeroplanes in an at­ objectivity with which he discussed tained parliamentary procedure could govern this sizeable grace state of the cuisine offered mosphere of light fallout, we rec­ the measures that are so important group, and, as all who have worked under it know, parlia­ Georgetown students; and "Be it • ommend attending Dr. Edward Tel­ to the "general welfare" of the stu­ further resolved: that the Philo­ mentary procedure takes as much away in imagination as ler's lecture on April 7 at 3 in dent body. demic Society object to the quality, it gives in order. Now that the Council is smaller, its action Copley Lounge. The scientist will The Council has done its job to speak on "Waiting for Education balance of diet, and presentation will be swifter and a rapport will be possible that couldn't prepare the way for a more repre­ of said food as a product of mech- .~ ~ by Catastrophe?" sentative body as well as a more anization and economic perversion; take place previously. This can be the beginning of a new That same day will begin with a powerful and more important body. and "Be it further resolved: that era in student government and from it can flow all of the Communion breakfast for seniors There remains one obligation that at 10 a.m. Mass will be in St. Wil­ The HOYA and the Journal of the benefits which will make the student situation at Georgetown rests on the shoulders of each of American Medical Association be • liam's Chapel, and fasts will be the students of the College. It is informed of this action." that of students at a first-rate University. broken afterwards in the pay-caf. a simple, yet often unfulfilled obli­ But the revision is not quite enough to guarantee that Interested seniors should wire, or gation. The new Council, as it takes The Philodemic Society is aware .. flag down Bob Dunn, who is Dan of the dictum that "better food "'~ our hopes will be achieved. The second stage of this move­ its seat in May and continues Moriarty's roommate, for reserva­ throug:l next year will need the costs more." It also realizes, how­ ment will take place this week. Now the student body must tions. undivided support of all of the ever, that the food we are getting elect the officials who will preside over the revised Counci1. College men. It has, after several is not worth the more we are pay- The HOYA wishes to ex­ years, been returned to you as a ing. The HOYA hopes that the voters will remember, as they ROBERT JOYCE 1 tend sympathy to the family truly representative body. Only Sponsor of the resolution consider platforms and vote, that the Council demands and friends of John Francis with your support can it fulfill its imaginative, interested governors. It no longer needs a Creedon, a student in the Col­ primary function - representing ROBERT SHRUM <­ ringmaster. It wants capable, intelligent thinkers who will lege, who died suddenly on you. The Council has not failed Recording Secretary ~ ti' guide discussions and issues that will be more pressing March 24. and vital than they have ever been in the past. Finally, The HOYA would like to thank and congratu­ (Continued on Page 10) late Dan Altobello, who this week enters the last stage of HEREABOUTS his Presidency. He has been the best and most effective of Company 'c' Tops by Singer & Thomas the three Presidents we have known at Georgetown. His Army ROTC Drive We would like to begin this week by acknowledging an omission. term of office reflects to an outstanding degree "the mark In last week's column, under music, we recommended the Bayou as a"· of objectivity which he counselled at nominations on Mon­ To Aid Red Cross place to take parents if they happened to want to hear some Dixie­ day night. He has acted intelligently and forcefully, all of The Annual Scabbard and land. Due to a lack of up-to-date information, however, we neglected Blade Blood Drive held on to mention that there would be a floor show, and consequently a prob­ his ideas and plans stemming from a devotion to student able increase in cover (or was it uncover) charge. Our apologies to " welfare and a concern for the history and position of George­ March 11 and 12 was a huge any parents who found themselves overtaxed. town. Our best advice to whoever holds the Yard in 1963-64 success, amassing 300 pints of Theater is that he attempt to emulate his immediate predecessor. blood from as many well­ The National Theater will present The School for Scandal for .,.~ meaning contributors, includ­ two weeks beginning April 1. Ralph Richardson and John Gielgud head the Theatre Royal Haymarket Company of London in Richard ing Father Joseph Sellinger, S.J., Brinsley Sheridan's comedy of manners. John Gielgud also directed Senior Gift Dean of the College. Ed. Note: We gladly relinquish part of this column today the play which is performed in high style and in full period costumes. Hampered by a freak snow storm The show comes directly to Washington after a highly successful run ~ _, to our Associate Editor, Tom Scheye, who writes on a matter on the first afternoon, the drive on Broadway. Tickets should be obtained as soon as possible, as sell­ surged forward on Tuesday and outs are predicted for every night. of deep concern to the college. J.J.G. topped the Red Cross estimate of In a week of big changes, the senior class has the op­ The Dupont continues its reportoire of excellent programs with • ~ 150 pints of blood by 100%. The Electra. This Greek film of the classic play by Sophocles stars Irene " portunity to change the whole concept of the senior gift, drive was conducted in New South Papas. It has received unanimous critical acclaim and is included on Lounge. Red Cross workers were the Ten Best lists of the New York Times and The Herald-Tribune, alumni giving, and even the relationship between George- ably assisted by girls from the town and its former students. ' which may soon become classic newspapers. Georgetown Nursing School, many The Playhouse Theater has a problem. It is an enjoyable one ~ ~ The plan proposed by the gift committee is not strictly of whom contributed to the drive. however. Sundays and Cybele, one of the best foreign films of the a senior gift at all. It is not given by seniors but a class of According to the Scabbard and year, is its next scheduled attraction. The current film, the brilliant ., Blade committee of Tom Bowman, alumni at their twenty-fifth reunion. And it is not strictly David and Lisa, shows no intention of leaving, however. It is still ,..... Al Eichenlaub, and Ed Weathers­ playing to capacity house and has broken every box office record at " speaking a gift either, it will be a large sum of money, bee, a sizeable amount of the dona­ the Playhouse. The only solution that seems possible to us is to show possibly as much as $275,000 if every member of the class tions were given by employees of Sundays at the Plaza, theater which is part of the Trans-Lux chain the University. Also included in along with the Playhouse. Nobody will really miss the films usually subscribes, which the class will dispose of, in the interest this total were the faculty members shown at the Plaza. of the University, as it sees fit. who contributed to the worthy Music To be frank, the biggest stumbling block to the success cause. Started originally as an Army The Blue Room at the Shoreham Hotel has booked two of the -, of the present plan are the disenchantment, the disillusion­ ROTC company competition, the sharpest acts to hit Washington in many moons for its next two two- '..... ment, and the spite which many of the present seniors harbor drive spread out to the whole Uni­ week attractions. Currently holding forth on the Blue Room floor is the very exciting Eartha Kitt. Miss Kitt possesses what is probably toward Georgetown. Granting that some of these complaints versity. Individual honors were won by "c" company, with Spraker the most piercing voice in show business, with the possible exception are valid, what is our proper reaction. We can simply deny Rifles a close second. of Jerry Colonna-but then, of course, he isn't sexy. Her voice can ~. the school our help out of spite, or we can resolve to help Despite the inclement weather best be compared to a snake charmer's flute, which makes each of the nine languages in which she sings sound like Hindu-even if the students who follow us by coming back in twenty-five conditions which hampered opera­ tions, the drive was termed a large Hindu isn't one of them. Miss Kitt will be shattering cocktail glasses .. years with some idea of what is wrong with Georgetown success by Scabbard and Blade at the Blue Room through Saturday, April 6. April 9-20 the Blue'.' and some of the money necessary to do something about it. officials. Lt. Col. James W. Davis, Room will feature the Chad Mitchell Trio, about whom more later. Speaking of shattering glass, the teen fun group now playing If this plan is retained by the classes following us, then the Professor of Military Science and Tactics at Georgetown, was at the Casino Royal (through Sunday) are the Four Seasons. We every year one class will return with another component or highly pleased with the outcome of might be able to discover some inherent symbolism in this group's. what should emerge as a continuing restatement of the stu­ the drive. name if we knew which one of the four was responsible for the tree­ frog falsetto that distinguished their two hit records, "Sherry," and ,._ dents' view of Georgetown. N ow that the blood drive has be­ come a part of the Scabbard and (Continued on Page 5) '- As students, we will never have an equal voice with the Blade's yearly functions, several ------~. administration and faculty in the government of the school. changes have been planned for next , As alumni we will-if we have the money which makes the year. Since the two day drive was . so successful this year, it has been [..) school go. Today then we are voting not only to help George­ decided to maintain this practice town with our money, but with our ideas, our experience, again. As yet, it is undetermined Thursday, March 28, 1963 our difficulties; and these elements will go hand in hand in whether there will be one day set Vol. XLIV, No. 20 aside each semester for the drive Published by the students of Georgetown College every Thursday during 1988 to begin the most significant change that students, past, or two consecutive days for dona­ che college year except for vacation and examination periods. present, or future could bring to Georgetown. T .E.S. tions, as was the case this year. Subscription rate, $6.50 per year. Thu~sday, Ma~ch .28, 1963, Weekend Features PhilodelDic To CODsider I .. · "Council Capers. Friday'~ightDanc~, COngressi·.onal'Relor.. s by John Whipple ____---I ~ Saturday Boat T TIP . '. ~ . '. ". ,. Last Sunday's Student Council meeting was the occasion of ,the last 'report of the Suggestion Box Committee. Mr. Young reported by Steve Hesse that, pursuant to the action of the Council taken upon his. recommen­ On Friday and Saturday, dation, he had removed the Suggestion Box from the Pay Cafeteria; May 10 and 11, in the midst He reported f~rther that he had found six cents in it and had kept the sum. We wonder if perhaps a knowledge. that that money was of Washington's. rio t i 0 u s waiting prompted him to suggest the removal of the thing; it is in­ spring season,' the sophomore teresting, to say the least, that on every occasion when Mr. Young has a pretext for looking into the Suggestion Box he finds money class of the College is spon­ which he,gets to keep. We would suggest that if by next Sunday the soring two days of CUltivated box has not been used for kindling it be auctioned off at the Council amusements-the annual Spring meeting. Weekend. This affair will follow, But the big attraction of the evening was the consideration of for the most part, the usual pro­ Council revision. The Council showed a very great regard for the cedure of a semi-formal dance Fri­ tidal wave of student opinion sweeping this Campus on the question. day night, and a boatride on Sat­ A few facts will enlighten those who had not noticed how strong urday afternoon. There is nothing the feeling is running. The Constitution Committee held two open officially scheduled for Saturday hearings on the question; so great was the· clamor for revision that evening this year: the Student Per­ all of four students appeared, of whom one was Mr. Shields, who had sonnel Office has decided that two submitted a plan for revision, one was Mr. Spronck, who had another events are enough for even the plan, and one-the only one to attend both hearings-was this writer. hardiest Georgetown gentleman. What Student Council would not be overwhelmed by such masses and by their outspoken support of revision? Circumnavigation The Council's concern for ·the wishes of the student body well The Friday night dance will be held in McDonough Gymnasium, "I RUN THIS OUTFIT" . . . says Terry Goggin, in his casual deserves congratulations. Is it not wonderful that they are so in­ role as Philodemic president. Merrick debaters pose, from left to terested in student opinion that the final vote which passed the whose lavish decorations are to suggest a trip 'round the world right: Joe Cohen, Goggin, John Hemplemann, Bob Shrum, and Bert Spronck Proposal was by secret ballo·t, of which Robert says, "The Spronck. main object of this form of voting is secrecy, and it is resorted to· in 80 days. The dancing music will the question is of such a nature that some members might hesitate be provided by Fred Perry and On Thursday, April 4, at 8 :30 p.m., in , the to vote publicly their true sentiments"? Hurrah for our courageous, his Society Orchestra, considered student-opinion-respecting Student Council, who dare not disclose by many to be the best in the Philodemic Society of Georgetown University will present their votes. Washington-Baltimore area; and, the 89th annual Merrick Prize Medal Debate, an event to to relieve the romantic mood from And now everybody-except the sixth of the school, by our rough time to time, Donald Leace, the which all the students and faculties of the University are estimate, whose activities lost their seats-will be better represented Washington folk-singer who has invited. . on the Council, and they will be even better represented next year been attracting much critical ac­ A distinguished panel of judges wiII hear four of George­ when one ·of the seven remaining activity heads is persuaded to go claim during the past year, and along with the twelve elected members iIi removing all activity heads who has been exposed to many town's leading debaters argue (this action requires a two-thirds vote). Hoyas through the Shadows, will the topic "Resolved: that the We might note however, that there was little chance of defeating provide a more down-home inter­ Newly Created Group United States Congress be Mr. Spronck's plan after it was pointed out that it was acceptable lude. This dance will run from 9 to Hamilton and Jefferson and, according to Mr. Maloney, in accord to 1, and as is customary, stimu­ Eases Fros" Troubles; substantially reformed." At 'with St. Paul and the early Chris,tians. (If you don't quite follow the lants will be served. the conclusion of the debate reasoning, neither did I.) Mr. Maloney also pointed out that it was Faculty Asked To Help the .fudges will pick the best not his resolution that he was called back to vote upon two weeks Saturday afternoon from 2 to ago. Let the record stand corrected: Mr. Maloney did not come back 6:40 the Wilson Line's new lux­ The Committee of speaker, who will be awarded the ury boat the Aca~i~ Merrick Medal. to vote upon his motion. Finally, Mr. Maloney wants it known that the Student Council has re­ Michael J. Maloney is not his brother. We hope to be able to publish will sail its way down the Potomac, into the heart of May's opulent cently announced that a list The debate was established in more facts about the Maloney family history at some future date. 1874, with an endowment for the splendor, and hundreds of joyous of its members will be pub­ Georgetowners will dance to the medal from Richard T. Merrick, music of Johnny and his stormy lished next week. The list will lawyer, orator, and Georgetown Glee Club Gives Best Performance Hurricanes (of "Red River Rock" make available to interested alumnus. The medal itself is struck fame). The boat will stop at Mount freshmen the names and addresses from solid gold at the United Thi~ Year} Mi-Careme Concert Vernon, and again at Marshall of the upperclassmen on the com­ States mint in Philadelphia, and In Hall Amusement Park, where a by Walter Priestley mittee who ha'l[e expressed their is valued at more than $125. (Continued on Page 9) willingness to act as counsellors in Georgetown's three singing groups, the Glee Club, the Knights, matters of academic interest re­ Senate Judges and the Chimes entertained an audience of well over five hundred Sun­ quiring the advice of experienced The judges in the past years day night in Gaston Hall at the annual Mi-Careme concert. The Glee 1789 hands. have counted among their number Club sang what was by far the finest music and gave the best over­ Formed by this year's Council, eminent public se~ants, politicians, all performance; but the other groups did not leave without hearty the Academic Committee is chaired and educators. More recently, how­ applause. Dr. Hughes Nominated by Tom Scheye, Associate Editor ever, this tradition has not been The Knights, Georgetown's answer to the Sextet from Lucia de of The HOYA; Dave Hartigan observed; but this year the Philo­ Lammermoor, showed general agreement on when to sing softly and To Representative Post serves as acting chairman. Mem­ demic plans to revive it. The judg­ when to sing even more softly. But their sound never really opened bers of the committee are: soph­ ing panel is composed of Senator up the way it should have. Their modern idiom tired quickly with its In Coming Anniversary omores George Thibault, John Philip A. Hart of Michigan, Sena­ monotonous harmonies, but they did sing a rather straight-forward Prendergast, Bill Gagen, and Ben tor Ccair Engle of California, Sen­ "Autumn Leaves" that brought out much of the melancholy in the by Jim Giammo Domenico; juniors Gregg Kepley, ator J. Caleb Boggs of Delaware, music. John Glavin, George Patrick, Bob Representative James Roosevelt of The Chimes' performance was a different story. Displaying a Dr. Riley Hughes, an As­ Flaherty; and freshmen Dan Padu­ California, Judge Charles Fahy of taste in their songs and arrangements which few unconducted en­ sociate Professor in George­ ano and Eamon O'Reilly. the United States Circuit Court of sembles ever do achieve, the group maintained a good control over town's English department, Purpose Appeals, the Honorable Michael N. pitch and volume but still sang flexibly and with good humor. As a Manatos, Special Assistant to the uleasant surprise they presented some solo singing that fell pleasantly has been recently appointed The committee was originally or­ President of the United States for on the ear and gave a good bit of variety to their renditions. the Faculty Representative ganized to prepare, deliver, and Senatorial Affairs, and Dr. George As said above, the Glee Club contributed the most to the evening, for the University's 175th evaluate questionnaires which will Henigan, Director of Forensics at probe the various phases of aca­ the George Washington University. singing in a variety of styles, languages, and musical idioms. Only Anniversary Celebration. On the occasionally did they lapse from their high standards-a compliment demic life at Georgetown. In addition to his achievements as English staff since 1946, he is At this time, a faculty question­ indeed when one considers the difficulties involved in the works they now teaching undergraduates in a politician, Senator Hart (Col­ performed. naire is being prepared which aims lege, '34) was, while ·at George­ both the College and School of at giving the members of the Uni­ The first part of their program contained several light arrange­ Foreign Service. town, the President of the Yard, versity faculty a chance to express twice the Philodemic president, and ments of standard texts. The most successful of these was the "Ger­ As Faculty Representative, Doc­ their opinions and criticisms of man Student Medley" where German, English, and Latin took turns a winner of the Merrick Medal. (Continued on Page 11) scholastic aspects. When these popping up as the language which really was being sung. Everyone questionnaires have been returned, Participants seemed to enjoy singing the German, and the consonants came out collected, and analyzed, the results clearly and crisply despite the tongue-twisting combinations and The four participants in the de­ of both critiques will be compiled bate are Terry Goggin, Joseph repetitions. and presented to the Dean of the Coan, Bert Spronck, and Bob The finest moments of the entire evening came during the Glee College, the Student-Faculty Re­ Shrum. Goggin is a senior AB his­ Club's second appearance which consisted entirely of sacred music. lations Committee, and the mem­ tory major in the College and the The first number in this section was a setting of the Te Deum by Flor bers of the Student Council. Peeters. It is a work of real beauty, and this beauty was brought out Chairman Scheye explained in an president of the PhiIodemic So­ at every turn. Particularly memorable were the reverent Venerandum interview that the questionnaires ciety. Coan is a senior AB English Verum and the In Te Domine, which was sung with the resoluteness point out the academic problems major and the retiring executive that its words speak of. Some peculiarly intriguing writing in the at Georgetown which require at­ secretary of the International Re­ accompaniment was well realized. But the tenor section showed weak­ tention, discussion, and possible lations Club. Spronck is also a ness in its forced tone, and there were even times when single voices action. In handling its several sur­ senior. He is an AB (Honors) could be distinguished. This is a weakness in most choruses in Amer­ vey programs, the committee pro­ philosophy major, vice president of ica; that it afflicted the Glee Club as rarely as it did speaks for the gresses by coordinating all student the Philodemic, and the senior quality of their training. efforts in the academic field, by class Student Council representa­ Allegri's setting of the Miserere was sung beautifully with no publicizing and working toward a tive. Shrum is a sophomore AB trace of the earlier strain, and so was the "Hallelujah, Ha-ha-men" scholastic outlook at Georgetown­ (Honors) history major. chorus from Handel's Judas Maccabeus. The two Poulenc songs were especially .through The HOYA and Judging from the performance disappointments due to fuzzy tone and pronunciation. Schuetz' ar­ by word of mouth. of these four debaters Merrick De­ rangement of the parable of the Pharisee and the Publican was nicely A report has already been pre­ bate should be excellent. In the sung, especially by the soloists, Terry O'Brien ,and Jon Ferrante, who pared by the committee on the words of John Hempelmann, Chair­ brought good characterization to their roles as Hypocrite and repentant questionnaires submitted by the man of the Debate, "The Merrick sinner. . freshmen and sophomores; a cri­ debaters have been on the teams The Glee Club concluded the evening with some jazzed-up ar­ tique is now being compiled con­ that have won five major tourna­ rangements of Broadway tunes that brought down the house with the cerning the role of the student in ments and been second in two stage business that was appropriately worked in. DR. RILEY HUGHES (Continued on Page 7) others." Page Four THE HOYA Thursday, March 28, 1963 Calliope IV To Present 6. U. Dramatic Society COlDedy In French Style Begins Writing Contest; The Magic La'ntern Prizes to Be Awarded by Bob Ba'J"one Long Day's Journey Into Night (, Georgetown's Mas k and Eugene O'Neill's gift to his wife on the occasion of their twelfth Bauble has jllSt announced the wedding anniversary was the manuscript of Long Da,y's Journey into Night. In his dedication to Carolotta Monterey, O'Neill describes the beginning of this year's an­ autobiographical drama as: "a play of old sorrow written in tears nual one-act playwriting con­ and blood, a sadly, inappropriate gift, it would seem, for a day cele­ test. In order to encourage brating happiness." He thanks her for: "the courage to' face my dead at last . . . and write with deep pity and understanding and the writing of one-act plays, forgiveness for all the four haunted Tyrones." ., prizes of $25, $15, and $10 will be This is no ordinary play and in a filmed adaptation it can be no awarded to the writers of the ordinary movie. While the obviously supercharged emotion is difficult .. original plays which win first, sec­ to transform from live stage presentation to film, the rewards for ond, and third places respectively. such a task ably performed are rich indeed. The first place will also be awarded The adaptation is a tense and powerful movie, but not totally the Rossie Medal, which is given satisfying as a transition from one medium to another. In the pros­ at Commencement. cenium theatre, the spectator has only one point of' view, but with Rules the aid of the camera he is able to move into any area, enjoy different Any student in the University vantage points, and be as close to or as far away from the action as may enter one or more scripts. is warranted. There are times when Sidney Lumet's camera takes Dramatizations and collaborations advantage of its mobility, but more often the camera stands in the are acceptable provided that all way of the drama with constant use of close-up shots. The play rights are cleared and so declared. moves as one character reacts to another, and, to understand this, it IN THE MATURE FEMALE ... there is a dramatic power. The If there are collaborators, both is necessary to watch the characters involved. A view of the char­ Napoleonic dames of "Bonaparte!" are, from left: Mary Sauser, must be members of the Univer­ acter speaking alone and dominating the screen makes the film ap­ Mary MacManus, and Mary Benninger. sity. All work must be original, pear to be more disjointed than the play actually is and because of the for translations and adaptations loose form of the original, this flaw is fatal. .' by Bob Ba1'one will not be accepted. The camera is effective when it serves to frame the characters All scripts must be typewritten in the environment, when it moves to illustrate the play of light and On April 4, 5, 6, the Mask and Bauble will present ~1-'''' on one side of standard typing shadow symbolizing the light and dark sides of the characters' human Calliope IV, entitled Bonapa'rte!, in Trinity Theater. Co­ sheets with liberal margins and natures, or adopts a perspective, setting the turbulent action inside authored by M&B president Toni Sadlak and Ken Judy, spacing; and they must be bound in the foggy world outside. In the final moments when the four char­ this historical fantasy includes a cast of 50 performers at the left margin only. Single acters seated at the table are surrounded by an expanding black bor­ spacing is to be used within der, the technique emphasizes the dream quality of the entire episode with 15 songs and the added touch of professional chore­ speeches; double spacing between which has preceded. ography. speeches. The name of the char­ Katherine Hepburn portrays Mary Tyrone in her dope addicted acter speaking is to be capitalized madness so brilliantly that she is sometimes difficult to watch. The < ... Bonaparte!, according to Three Celebrated Men and centered above the speech. changes of mood from hysterical little girl laughter to the depths Sadlak, "pokes fun at every­ (Speeches are not to be indented.) of maniacal depression are instantaneous. She makes the character body as far left as Kennedy Accept Hon. Degrees; Scripts should be 20 to 30 pages more mercurial even than Florence Eldridge did on Broadway. One in length with a maximum playing explanation for this may be that the theatre required a single three and as far right as John time of 30 minutes (normally one (Continued on Page 8) Birch." It also jibes at such Speak To Convocation page runs one to two minutes). people as Eleanor Roosevelt by Herb Kenny Scripts must be delivered to the Faculty Room mailing box of the and Herbert Hoover. People are At Georgetown University's Director of the Mask and Bauble ';'1 not the only objects of satire, how­ annual Founder's Day Aca­ before noon, April 20, 1963. Win­ 'Unbelievable' Elections ever, as advertising, gimickry, and demic Convocation held last ning scripts become Mask & Bauble the root of society, the masses, property and the author must also come in for their share of Thursday, honorary degrees grant to it exclusive production Make Candidates Wary . the fun. were presented to the Hon. rights for two years. All other by Tony Thomas Behind Stage Alan Bible, Dr. Heinrich scripts will be returned and the Although the election of both Yard and class officers is an im­ rights retained by the author or portant, serious endeavor, the campaigns preceding them are often The show is being directed by Drimmel, and James J. Sweeney. authors. just the opposite. It is not without significance that April Fool's Day Mr. Donn B. Murphy, moderator These three men represent a wide Winners will be announced on marks the middle of campaign week for this year's Yard elections. "' .... of the M&B. Sadlak has designed range of services performed in or before May 15. For further Perhaps the most famous of campaigns and campaigners was the the whole set, and this design is public life. Bible is a United States information contact Mr. Donn B. candidacy of Rumpson W. Gravenor for Yard President a few years • being executed by technical direc­ Senator from Nevada. Doctor Murphy, Director of the Mask and tor Jerry O'Berski and set direc­ ago. This fictitious character ran the noisiest, flashiest, biggest cam- I Drimmel is the Australian Federal Bauble. paign since ran for the U. S. Presidency. Gravenor, ... tor Ed DeCarbo. Producer Gene Minister of Education, and Mr. known as Whitey for short, lost by a narrow margin. The elected ., Burke will receive help from Jim Sweeney, an art critic and expert official took immedate steps to see that this situation would never be .­ Davitt. The fifteen songs, which on abstraction ism, is Director of Georgetown Elected ~ are, according to Sadlak, "a great the Museum of Fine Arts in Hous­ repeated. amount for any mt:sical" were The least known candidate ever to run for any office was Irish R. "', ton, Texas. Senator Bible attended Army, who, after successfully losing every freshman, sophomore, and written by Frank Gannon and Bob the Georgetown Law School, and Area Headquarters Fremont, a veteran of three Cal­ junior class election, won the Yard Presidency by an overwhelming Mr. Sweeney, who delivered the minority. He promptly flunked out of school and the first Yard govern­ liopes. Freemont is also musical address to the Convocation, grad­ Of Honor AFROTC director. Many of the lyrics to the ment in exile was born. uated from the College in 1922. The Arnold Air Society and J. G. Giard was the leader of the innovators among the Yard songs were contributed by Dan the Dowd Rifles participated Moriarty. The touch of Mrs. Patti 175th Theme officers. He enlarged the Yard Office to include the first floor of Cop- Hands, a professional dancer and In his brief remarks to the as­ in a regional conclave and two choreographer, will add glamor, as sembled faculty and students, Rev. drill competitions in the past will the selection of costumes by Edward Bunn, S.J., announced that two weeks. Ruth Frost from the Nursing the theme of the 175th Anniversary School. Joe Badamy, the stage of the College would be "Wisdom Frem March 15 to March manager, will see that all goes and Discovery in a Dynamic 17 the Arnold Air Society, the well behind the scenes. World". He also pointed out that honorary society of Air Force the celebration of Founder's Day ROTC cadets, held its annual Re­ .. , A cast numbering fifty has al­ gional Conclave at Pittsburgh, ready been selected. The leads of is not a time for nostalgia, but rather an occasion for the re­ Pen n s y I van i a. This meeting Josephine and Napoleon are played brought together the representa­ by Emily Michaud, who starred in evaluation of the efforts of the University. tives of the AAS units from fifteen The Visit, and Tom Callahan, star area colleges, including George­ of last year's Calliope, who played Following Father Bunn's re­ town's B. J. Phoenix Squadron. one of the leads in The Bald 80- marks, academic honors were Under the guidance of Major Wil­ P1·a?W. Madie Brown will play awarded by the deans of the vari­ liam T. Zale, USAF, the delegates Daisy Rae and Jim Brincefield will ous schools of the University. Vi­ from Georgetown included: Mi­ portray Uncle Luke. Marshall Ney, cennial medals for full-time service chael E. Marr, Squadron Com­ who is the image of both grand­ to the University were presented mander, Arthur Dederick, Ray Ma­ father and Santa Claus display­ to Rev. Joseph T. Durkin, S.J., tulis, Paul Schardt, Athan Velliani­ NO SWEAT ..• the casual look often defeats Georgetown Shop ing human w e a k n e s s which and to Margaret M. McGurk. Re­ tis, Pete Giere, and Leo Berendes. makes him loveable, will be played ceiving Vicennial medals for part­ chic as presidential aspirants contrast the two approaches of Cam­ Chief among the accomplish­ pus campaigning. by "loveable" Jack Burgess, asso­ time service were James Conant, ments at the meeting was the nom­ ciate station manager of WGTB. M.D., Louis J. Goffredi, M.D., Har­ ination of Georgetown for the loca­ ley, the Infirmary, and the Lower Field. He had planned to add the Napoleon's mother, a "pushy sta­ old M. Hobart, M.D., and Moe tion of Area Headquarters of the Marriott Motor Hotel, but it had already been snatched up by the tus seeker," is Mary Benninger, Weiss, M.D. Following the presen­ Society. Under this proposal a so­ now defunct Boston Club. The most daring suggestion was forwarded and Napoleon's sisters, Pauline and tation of these awards, the hon­ ciety member from Georgetown, by Serge Paderowskiavec, Class of '99, who suggested that when a Caroline, are played by Mary Sau­ orary degrees were conferred on Cadet Second Lieutenant John Foreign Service School was founded it should share in the celebration ser and Mary McManus respec­ Senator Bible, Doctor Drimmel, Hempelmann, would become Area of the 175th Anniversary of the College. He was the first Yard official tively. Madame DeFarge, head of and Mr. Sweeney. Commander for this region. As the FDR (Federal Daughters of ever assassinated. Mr. Sweeney then addressed the commander, he would administer The other Yard assasination took place forty years ago when the Revolution) is portrayed by Convocation on the value of an and coordinate member units of Patrick A. B. C. Ravioli, Yard Treasurer pro tem, was shot by a dis­ Florence Memegalos. education in the humanities, say­ the Society from different univer­ gruntled activity leader, Lambert Pauken, when his activity was In writing Calliope IV during i;}.g that they injected into the sities throughout a certain area shunted off the Student Council. The Student Council then passed a con­ this past year, Judy and Sadlak human spirit an order, an organ­ centered on Washington. stitutional amendment making it unconstitutional and nasty to shoot have met several problems. One ization, and a harmony without Currently, Howard University is a Yard officer. such difficulty was the need to keep which there would be no art. With­ the central office for this area. The Paul R. Peterson was the only junior elected freshman class pres­ the satire below the cynical level, out art, Mr. Sweeney contended post is held by a university unit ident. He served one semester before the mistake was recognized. He which was done successfully in the that industry is "brutality". for two years and is determined was impeached but was later successfully re-elected when no freshman final reVISIon. Another problem The processional, Pomp and Ci?'­ by e I e c t ion. Competing with could be found to run. they faced was the fact that Cal- cumstance, and the recessional, the Georgetown in the election are Remember, as the elections near, you may witness history in the (Continued on Page 10) (Continued on Page 11) (Continued on Page 8) making. The vote you sell may be your own. Thursday, March 28, 1963 rHE HOYA Page Five

Hereabouts (Continued from Page 2) "Big Girls Don't Try-er-Cry." But maybe they were just running Civil War Ghost Spooks Domesday Boss out of things-that-come-in-fours to name themselves after. Starting J Monday at the Casino is Johnny Ray-which is sad. Despite the fact t. that he started out as a pre-Elvis squirmer, Ray has a fine voice and In Time-Eating Search For Original Theme a sensitive style that dese-rves greater success than it has had. Grouping '" him with the current crop of teen idols is pretty incongruous-but by Joe F1'ede'rick hopefully he'll draw an older audience that won't scream back. At present, the Georgetown Et. Cet. yearbook staff is at work on .,. The Longest Day at the Apex . . . Days of Wine and Roses at the 1963 edition of the Ye the Metropolitan and Ambassador ... To Kill a Mockingbird at the Domesday Booke with two Town ... and Lawrence of Arabia at the Ontario. handicaps-lack of time and money-and only one advan­ tage-the fact that it will not be too difficult to surpass the 1962 edition. According to Mike Potter, double­ threat photographer and editor-in­ (Author of "I Was a Teen-age Dwarf," "The Many Loves of Dobie Gillis," etc.) chief, the publication should be out by the middle of June, if work continues at its present rate. His task is to shorten this schedule .. HOW TO GET EDUCATED by a month, and bring the annual out by the third week in May. An­ ALTHOUGH ATTENDING COLLEGE other factor working against him is the debt incurred by last year's In your quest for a college degree, are you becoming a nar~ow A NIGHT ON BALD MOUNTAIN ... or something like that, as specialist, or are you being educated in the broad, classIcal publication. Since the yearbook the Domesday staff meets deadline. Standing are, from left to right: does not generally operate in the sense of the word? Tom Bensinger, Vince Capostagno, Mike Potter, Maggie Potter, Dick This question is being asked today by many serious observers Lavigne. Seated, left to right: Joan Milton, Mo Calvy, and Ed Butler. black, the deficit was added to this -including my barber, my roofer, and my little dog Spot­ year's twenty thousand dollars, a and it would be well to seek an answer. new high with rises in engraving Are we becoming experts only in the confined area of our and printing costs. The annual's to­ majors or does our knowledge range far and wide? Do we, for College rrosh Officers tal income is derived from the $10 exampie, know who fought in the Battle of Jenkins' Ear, or fee paid at registration and the Kant's epistemology, or Planck's constant, or Valsalva's maneu­ advertising, since no appropriation ver, or what Wordsworth was doing ten miles above Tintern Repol" Class Activities Abbey? comes from the University. The re­ If we do not, we are turning, alas, into specialists. How At the beginning of this year, the Class of '66 seemed sult will be an issue twenty pages then can we broaden our vistas, lengthen our horizons-be­ much like past freshman classes. Some of its members were shorter than the previous, the cut come, in short, educated? searching White-Gravenor for the mysterious room 294, falling among the activities' cover­ Well sir, the first thing we must do is throwaway our curri­ age. cula. Tomorrow, instead of going to the same old classes, let while others sought a place known only by the name of Athematic us try something new. Let us not think. of college as a ri~id "Mac's". Once these pertinent facts were known, the frosh Another effect of a tight budget, discipline, but as a kind of vast academIC smorgasbord, With turned their interest to the more important problems facing Potter indicated, is the lack of all kinds of tempting intellectual tidbits to savor. Let's start ... sampling tomorrow . the class. They set up three pages in which to properly develop basic committees to handle all a theme. A definite theme, how­ Eminent Republican ever, does not seem to be a cri­ the class problems. Vice pres­ terion for a good Domesday pub­ ident Frank Keating, speak­ To Review Career lication, as last year and the pre­ ing for his class, said, "the vious year's models suggest. The three basic committees, social, Before Y. R. Group 1961 edition held so closely to its .publicity, and financial, can easily Tonight at 8 :15 in Copley theme that it became a short his­ handle the problems confronting tory of Georgetown and the Civil the class. An increase in their Lounge th~ Young Republi­ War, while its successor was con­ number breeds only duplication and cans present one of the oldest spicuous for repetition of layout unnecessary chaos." and most respected men in the within the various sections. As a The class then sponsored two GOP, the former Speaker of result, Potter hopes that, without .. dances, one in conjunction with the House and twenty-year a theme to integrate, the yearbook the East Campus freshmen, and the as a whole can be a more casual Republican House leader, Rep. other with the sophomore class of publication and less of a stereo­ Joseph W. Martin, Jr., of Massa­ the College. Both dances served to typed Domesday product. vVe will begin the day with a stimulating seminar in Hittite integrate the class into University chusetts. Representative Martin artifacts. Then we will go over to marine biology and spend a social life, .and also aided the fresh­ will discuss, "My First Fifty Years Potter's Field happy hour with the sea slugs. Then we will open ou.r pores. by man class treasury. President John in Politics," which is a good way to A four-year photographer for the drilling a spell with the ROTC. Then we'll go over to JournalIsm Albridgo, aided by Secretary Mike describe his .political career. annual, Potter retained his role and tear out the front page. Then we'll go to the medical sch<;>ol Scott, had the minutes of each He became the youngest news­ with the camera upon election as and autograph some casts. Then we'll go to home economICS class meeting printed and distribu­ paper editor in the country at the editor-in-chief feeling that by this and have lunch. ted on the corridors. Albrigo said age of twenty-four in 1909 and time he knows what makes a good And between classes we'll smoke Marlboro Cigarettes. This, that "the printing of the minutes three years later was elected to the picture. Since the yearbook is pri­ let me emphasize, is not an added fillip to the ~roadening of served to inform the class as well Massachusetts Legislature. In 1924 our education. This is an essential. To learn to lIve fully and as develop interest in class activi­ marily a picture book, a photogra­ he was elected to Congress and pher as editor is a logical choice. well is an important part of education, and Marlboros are an ties." has been re-elected consecutively import.ant part of living fully and well. What a sense of com­ Informed for thirty-nine years. He has been This year's photographs, he feels, pleteness you will get from 1Y:Iariboro's fine tobaccos, from In order that all freshmen be a close personal associate of every break away from the past Domes­ Marlboro's pure filter! What flavor Marlboro delivers! Through day practice of a million milling that immaculate filter comes flavor in full measure, flavor with­ well-informed, as to the activities President since Calvin Coolidge, of the other freshmen classes in and was first in line for the Pres­ faces. Instead, the group pictures out stint or compromise, flavor that wrinkled care deri?es, idency while Speaker during Tru­ have been enlarged and feature flavor holding both its sides. This triumph of the tobaCC?lllst's the University, not only was the president of the Nursing School man's first Administration. everyone in the foreground with art comes to you in soft pack or Flip-Top box and can be hgh~ed every photo identified. with match, lighter, candle, Welsbach mantle, or by rubbmg freshmen asked to sit in on class He became Republican Minority two small Indians together. meetings, but the president of the Leader in the House in 1939 and Marked Movement When we have embarked on this new regimen-or, more East Campus freshmen was also became Speaker in 1947; a post invited. In line with this policy of On the whole, the 1963 issue will accurately lack of regimen-we will soon be cultured as all which he held until 1949 and again have fewer pictures than its imme­ get out. When strangers accost us on the street and say, "What keeping in close contact with class from 1953 to 1955. During his activities and opinions, a sugges­ diate predecessors. This marks a was Wordsworth doing ten miles above Tintern Abbey:, hey?" (Continued on Page 11) movement from the myriad of tiny , we will no longer slink away in silent abashment. We wIll reply tion box was placed in the Wash­ pictures upon one page to four or loud and clear: ington Club Lounge by the class officers. At the present time a class fewer large shots. Copy has also "As any truly educated person knows, Wordsworth, Shelley, been reduced to a minimum, and and Keats used to go to the Widdicombe Fair every year for directory is in the process of being printed. the few words which any yearbook the poetry-wri~ing con~ests and thr:ee-~egge9- races.. both ?f need say are all that will be said. which they enjoyed lyrIcally. Well sIr, Imagme theIr chawm In general the freshman class This year's layout will stress vari­ when they arrived at the Fair in 1776 and learned that OlIver has spoken well for itself thus far. ation, a welcome change to past Cromwell uneasy because Guy Fawkes had just invented the Academically it is one of the best readers, who, after a few pages, spinning .lenny, had cancelled all public gatherings, including classes in recent years. In athletics felt they could predict how the the Widdicombe Fair and Liverpool. Shelley was so upset it has participated fully, not only next page would look. An artist, that he drowned himself in a butt of malmsey. Keats went to on the playing field but also in however, has yet to find his place London and became Charlotte Bronte. Wordsworth ran blindly the stands. Socially, the class is on the Domesclay staff. into the forest until he collapsed in a heap ten miles above becoming more active daily, and Tintern Abbey. There he lay for several years, sobbi~g and the plans for next year include a Senior Editors kicking his little fat legs. At length, peace returned to hIm. He very full social calendar. Since most of the editors in­ looked around noted the beauty of the forest, and was so moved cluding himself are seniors, Pot­ that he wrot~ Joyce Kilmer's immortal Trees ... And that, Winter's Tale ter is naturally biased in regard smart-apple, is what Wordsworth was doing ten miles above The freshmen are definitely en­ to the senior section. He believes, Tintern Abbey." thusiastic about the future of their moreover, that any annual should © 1963 MaxSbulman class. Mark Winter, a freshman in be slanted toward the graduating * * * the AB course, says "our class class. This year's publication will Poets and peasants, students and teachers, ladies and gentle­ unity is not something we have contain many more candids than men-all know you get a lot to like in a Marlboro-available just talked about, but something usual, and almost every senior is wherever cigarettes are sold in all 50 States. we are making a reality. Cliques represented in these photos. The (Continued on Page 11) REP. JOSEPH W. MARTIN,' JR. (Continued on Page 11) Page Six Thursday, March 28;" 1963: Meti Of 'Many Fields Lead Washington Club's . • Vacation Activities Career OpportunItIes Talks To Feature 'Dances , . ; , ' As the scent ~f spring and Our ladies De'partment" Easter vacation fills the air, '" restless Hoyas' fancies turn to their met clubs, among other ., things. In keeping with the spirit of the season, all loyal members hope to redeem the money which they have blindly shelled out for the dues-if their respective officers have not disappeared in the general direction of Bermuda :.. : leaving behind only an overdrawn bank account. Baser Needs Easter, then, has been the time for regional clubs to bring forth the first fruits of the post-Lenten social season. Despite the popular NEXT YEAR-BIGGER TABLES ... Members of the Career opinion that these festivities are Conference Committee are, from left to right: Terry O'Rourke, Jim held solely to satisfy baser needs, Giammo, Art Scutro, Joe Tiano, and Jim Montana. Seated are AI the club officers insist that they Lareau and Nicholas Nastasi. are planned solely in the interest by Ji1J~ ftiontana of camaraderie, Gemutlichkeit, Featuring a fine selection of traditional Peace on Earth, and Good Will to sportswear with a classic flair. On Saturday, March 30, the College Student Council Men. will sponsor a Career Conference Day. Under the chairman­ ship of Nick Nastasi, the Student Council means to acquaint Rite of Spring Our selection includes: The Easter dance is an ancient the students with various career opportunities available to and honorable rite, finding its ori­ Wrap-around and Flaired skirts them upon completion of their undergraduate studies or gin among the frenzied bacchanal Berllluda shorts after study on the graduate level. Government, politics, rites of the ancient Greeks. At Slacks journalism, business and pri- that time the regional clubs of all vate enterprise, publishing, the city-states would participate, Button-down and Round collar blouses with the exception of Sparta, a Head scarves and Head bands insurance, banking, science, Concert, Cocktails, fact which explains the absence of advertising, education, and most crew members at the present­ CUllllllerbunds and Belts Debating Featured day version. Although the conquer­ other fields will be repre- ••. and many others. sented. ing of Greece 'by the Romans trans­ For G. U. Parents ferred such activities to Rome, the Some of those who will attend practice reappeared again among the conference are Doctor John W. Last weekend over eight intellectuals centuries later at Ply­ Devor, Chairman of the Depart­ hundred and sixty Hoya par­ ment of Education at American mouth, Massachusetts. Here on the University; Robert Luce, editor of ents were entertained and en­ first day of spring the pilgrims New Republic Magazine; Doctor chanted by their visit to the would exhibit all the fauna which U"i'llersU)I Shop Alfred Brown, President of Harris College Campus. The weekend they had brought with them from Research Laboratories; Miss Mary was organized and hosted by the Old W orId. Over the years, Lou Werner, Pulitzer prize win­ however, due to the close proximity at 36th and N Sts.-FE 7-4848 ., ning journalist of the Evening the Parents' Weekend Committee, of Plymouth to the larger Massa­ Star; Rollins M. Miller, the Sales under the chairmanship of Joe Fal­ chusetts metropolis, the animal Open for your Convenience Representative of the New York lon, College senior. show became connected with Bos­ 9:30 A.M. to 6:30 P.M. Life Insurance Company; Victor ton. THURSDAYS till 8 P.M. K. ScavulIo, President of Legion Registration for the activity­ Utensils Company of New York; filled weekend was held Friday A canvassing of the clubs this year, however, reveals that for var­ S. Bradford Morse, Republican Con­ evening and Saturday morning in ious reasons only one club dares gressman from Massachusetts; and Copley Lounge. Some of the ac­ Doctor John Landgraf, head of the (Continued on Page 8) Office of Public Affairs for the tivities of Saturday morning, be­ Peace Corps. William E. Miller, sides 0 c cas ion a I visits to the National Chairman of the Republi­ "Breakfast Nook," included tours can Party; John Bailey, National of the Reiss Science Center, con­ Chairman of the Democratic Party; ducted by the members of the Col­ and Bryson Rash, President of the National Press Club will either at­ legiate Club, and sample classes .. tend or send representatives. at which Professors Reno, Cerny, '"' and Taylor provided lectures in .' Saturday Social English, government, and biology, The day will commence at 10:00 a.m. with a reception given by the respectively, in the new classrooms Very Reverend Edward B. Bunn, of the Science Center. .. S.J. The conference itself will con­ Mock Debate sist of two seminars. The first of these will last from 11 :00 a.m. During the afternoon, four mem­ until 12:30 p.m. Lunch and a tour bers of the Philodemic held a mock­ of the University for the represen­ debate for interested parents in tatives will follow. The second Gaston Hall. John Hempelmann and No dripping, no spilling! Covers completely! seminar will begin at 2:00 p.m. and Dick Hayes represented the affirm­ will end at 3:30 p.m. At the end Old Spice Pro-Electric protects sensitive of the day, there will be a smoker ative side, while Bob Shrum and skin areas from razor pull, burn. Sets up for the representatives and the of­ Terry Goggin presented the nega­ ficials of the University. tive side of the national debate your beard for the cleanest, closest, Each of the representatives will topic: "Resolved: That the non­ most comfortable shave ever! 1.00 occupy one of the classrooms of Communist nations should establish White-Gravenor for the seminar an econonlic community." sessions. The representative will SHULTON start his seminar with a short in­ After the debate parents, sons, '.' formal talks, acquainting the stu­ and teachers swamped the Hall of dents with his field and outlining Nations for the pre-banquet cock­ any college preparation which will tail party. The anti-climactical facilitate entrance into it. The re­ mainder of the seminar period will banquet offered a menu including be devoted to questions and an­ chicken and ham, in the New South swers. Dining Hall. Entertainment was The programs for this day will served by the Chimes. be distributed to the students next Pedro San Juan, Director of week. Included in these programs Special Services and Protocol for will be a listing of each represen­ the State Department, was the chief tative and his respective classroom. speaker at the banquet. Mr. San Although the conference is a Juan expressed his views on segre­ College project, East Campus stu­ gation and its effects on foreign dents are urged to participate. In­ visitors to the U. S. His conclusion vitations have also been sent to is that segregation makes foreign­ the Nursing School, Georgetown ers skeptical about the professed Visitation, Trinity, Dunbarton, Im­ American ideals of freedom and maculata, and Marymount. democracy. Thursday, March 28, 1963 rHE SOYA Page Seven Senior Gift Manse Elected President , (Continued from Page 1) mains is for the seniors to vote in favor of the plan. In Recent I. R. C. Contest With this in mind, Father Bunn rose before the assembled seniors by Frank Aiello and gave his full endorsement to Phil Mause, a sophomore in the Honors Program, was the gift committee. He spoke on elected president of the International Relations Club in the senior class's leadership and hailed the plan as another stride elections held on Monday night, March 11. He defeated forward for the class. They would Michael D'Alessandro, a junior in the College, after what institute a plan that could spread both candidates agreed was "a clean, conscientious cam­ through all the classes. paign." Father Sellinger then presented his views. He conceded that there was an undercurrent of bitterness lodged within members of the class against the University. He said SCHEYESTERS • . . Members of Tom Scheye's Academic Com­ there was a source of antagonism mittee are, from the left: John Prendergast, Gregg Kepley, George in the fact that a number of the Thibault, Scheye, George Patrick, and Ben Domenico. pre-meds had not been accepted into Medical School. But the fact Committee aim is to encourage more student remains that some had been ac­ interest in academics. When the cepted in the past weeks and that (Continued from Page 3) students have proven by their co­ future weeks promise more accep­ "the changing academic situation." operation that they are interested tances. Futhermore, Father Sellin­ Both of these reports, when com­ in improving the academic atmos­ ger said that if Georgetown had pleted, will be presented to the phere of Georgetown, then and only not lived up to the expectations of faculty and to the Student Council. then can their criticisms and opin­ some, it was the fault of those Scheye defined the purpose of his ions be considered as valid contri­ persons as well as the University's. committee by stating: "Our first butions." Therefore, Father Sellinger said that the gift would be true to the spirit of the senior class in that it would enable Georgetown to grow in future years. AND MAUSKETEERS ••. Newly-elected IRe President Phil Mause Insurance President with his underlings. From the left, Mike Libonati, Bill Royce, Mause. The third speaker of the morning Bob Mannion, Pat Roberts, and Frank Aiello. was Mr. Rollins W. Miller, Vice President of New York Life In­ The following week, in a ber of the Philodemic Society. He surance. Mr. Miller told the senior meeting held in Palms Lounge intends to increase IRC member­ class of the benefits the gift would ship by writing to prospective insure the University. He also on Wednesday, March 20, the freshmen during the summer to spoke of the workings of the plan: remaining officers of the IRC explain the club's function and each class member would be asked position at Georgetown. to give a basic amount of $30.50 were elected by the member­ annually for fifteen years. From PaJ; Roberts, a sophomore in the ship. School of Foreign Service, was that time on, if all members Bill Royce, a sophomore in the contributed regularly, the fund elected recording secretary. An 1. According to the Department of 2. The way they figure it, that School of Foreign Service, was international affairs major, she Labor, you're worth over $350,000 $350,000 is how much the would grow at the prevailing in­ chosen as vice president. An inter­ terest rate. comes to Georgetown from New as soon as you get your sheepskin. average college graduate will n a t ion a I affairs major, Royce York City. She is active in the That's theoretical, of course. earn by the time he retires. For the plan to succeed it is comes to Georgetown from Summit, Young Republicans, the University necessary that the senior class New Jersey. His other activities Band, and the Russian Club. I didn't even know the I'll take it right now include the French Club and the Department was thinking in a lump sum. Would fully endorse the insurance policy. Mike Libonati, the new treasurer Young Republicans. about me. I live! Penthouse. Yacht. The vote will be held today and of the IRC, is a junior in the Hon­ Bob Mannion, a sophomore in Homburg. The works. the senior officers hope that the ors Program majoring in Classics. the College majoring in economics, class will assert its leadership by He is a member of Eta Sigma Phi, backing a plan that shows great will be the IRC's new executive promise for future growth. secretary. Mannion is also a mem- (Continued on Page 9)

S. As an Eco major, I feel obliged to 4. Since you'd be only 22, you tell you what would happen to couldn't qualify for Social that bundle. First, Uncle Sam Security. You'd have to go would help himself to about 290 Gs. back to your dad for With the going rate for penthouses, an allowance. your life's earnings would disappear in one ycar. I never could handle money. You've ruined my day.

5. Fortunately, there's a way out 6. Put some money into cash-value for you. insurance, the kind they call Living Insurance at Equitable. Tell me-tell me. It gives your wife and kids solid protection and it saves for you Well, vou won't be getting all that automatically-builds a cash Does a man really take unfair advantage of women money in one year. You'll be get­ fund you can use for retire­ when he uses Mennen Skin Bracer? ting some of it each year, at a much ment or any other purpose. lower tax rate. What you should do is All depends on why he uses it. put aside a certain amount of it. You Eco guys have Most men simply think Menthol-Iced Skin Bracer is the best all the answers. after-shave lotion around. Because it cools rather than burns. Because it helps heal shaving nicks and scrapes. Because it The Equitable Life Assurance Society of the United States <01963 helps prevent blemishes. Home Office: 1285 Avenue of the Americas, New York 19, New York So who can blame them if Bracer's crisp, 10l')g·lasting aroma For infornlation about Living Insurance, see The ~fall fr0l11 EqUitable in your just happens to affect women so remarkably? conllllunity. For infornlation about career opportunities at Equitable, see Of course, some men may use Mennen Skin Bracer because your Placeluent Officer, or ,vrite \Villianl E. Blevins, Enlploynlent ~Ianager. of th is effect. - How intelligent! @ Page Eight 'J'HE HOYA Thursday; March 28, 1963

AFROTC Nominations Magic lantern (Continued from Page 4) Jr. Committee Selected (Continued from Page 4) (Continued from Page 1) hour effort every night while the film demand,s only a short sequence Howard, Saint Joseph's, and Mary­ With Broughan to Lead; Bob Flaherty. Flaherty stressed each day. While her tour de force makes the movie thrilling, it is land universities. Final voting will Dearie's qualifications as present wearing. Assisted by the camera which stays on her every minute take place at the next society con­ (iU Applications Sought class Secretary and a member of she is on stage, Hepburn dominates the film with more strength than clave to be held in Buffalo, New the 175th Anniversary and Career O'Neill imparted to this already destroyed character. In the early part of June of York in May. At that time George­ Day Committees. Dearie promised Quite in contrast to IMiss Hepburn, Ralph Richardson is not strong this year the first group of town hopes to become the new to "work to the best of my capa­ enough. There should be great power in the poses adopted by an selected Georgetown students Area Headquarters of the nation­ bilities." aged but effective actor., It was this kind of strength which Frederic wide Arnold Air Society. March pitted against Florence Eldridge in the stage version. Rich­ Gerald S i m m 0 n s nominated will head back to their old high Dowd Rifles, Georgetown's Air ardson's James Tyrone capitulates to his wife's hideous disease from Gregg Kepley for the office of schools to spread the good the beginning and his eventual destruction comes then as pratfall Force ROTC precision drill team, Treasurer. Simmons spoke briefly rather than tragic fall. message of Georgetown. Un­ has competed successfully in tour­ on Kepley's platform, and dted his der the auspiccs of thc Student naments at Manhattan College and "one major qualification-the de­ Recreating the role he played on Broadway, Jason Robards erects Council the junior class of the the University of Maryland. At sire to do the best possible job." a strong supporting role. As the older brother Jamie, he does project CoIlege is worldng on a program Manhattan the team placed second Kepley spol

Dance ./ (Continued from Page 6) to carryon the flickering torch. The Detroit Club is recovering from its attempt to promote good -will with the University of Dayton, and one Club--the St. Louis-has actually turned honest and (gasp!) at­ tempts to gain a good reputation for Georgetown. When news of this dearth of celebration reaches the underworld, Pluto may even bar Proserpine's return and plunge the world into eternal winter. Off-Beats? The Washington Club, however, in a desperate attempt to offset such a disaster presents a Battle of the Bands on Easter Monday, April 15, from 8-12 in the Pay Cafeteria. Continuous music will be provided by four bands includ­ ing the Dukes, Ronnie and the Off­ Beats, and two of six other bands such as the Roulettes, Flames, etc. Bob Judd and Ed Koepenick, dance ., -' chairman and president respective­ ly, list the prices at three dollars for members and three-fifty for those on the outside. Both prices include six drink tickets and dress will be "Heel and Tie." Those still present and able to cast a ballot by midnight will choose the winning ., band. ",

"THERE IS a hard gem inside Ameri­ cans that refuses to believe they 21 GREAT TOBACCOS MAKE can't make it, and their brain like a fist closes over that gem, and they 20 WONDERFUL SMOKES! have faitb. It is the same faith that Vintage tobaccos grown, aged, and blended mo.'es parents to leave the city itl mild .•. made to taste even milder through CHESTERFIELD KI NG order that their children might the longer length of Chesterfield King. grow up where there is air, atld grow tip into better people. At The smoke of a Chesterfield King its lou'est level, it is terrible atld mellows and softens as it flows through longer length ••. becomes sad; but it;s For the current issue CHESTERFIELD KING smooth and gentle to your taste. also capable of of NATIONAL REVIEW TOBACCOS TOO MILD TO FILTER, PLEASURE TOO GOOD TO MISS proud gestures." write for free copy, 150 E. 35 SI., New York 16, N.Y. Thursday, March 28, 1963 THE:-·HOY·A Page Nine

I.R.C. Recruiting Parent' 5 Weekencl (C~ntinued from Page 7) (Continued from Page 8) -(Continued from Page 6) the nationaf honoraxy Classical but the number has been kept down After the banquet, families re­ fraternity, and is on the Feature so, that the results can be easily tired to Gaston Hall where diges­ Staff of The HOYA. _ __ tabulated. Broughan wants -to keep tion was accelerated by the tempos Frank Aiello, a sophomore in the careful track of what happens so of the Glee Club. A German Stu­ Honors Program majoring in gov­ there will be a good basis to work dent Medley, Fantasy on American ernment, was elected Off-Campus from for the following years. He Folk Ballads, Day and Evening, Representative. He is on the News hopes "that the activity can be The Pharisee and the Publican, and Staff of The HOYA, a member of extended and perhaps even be "Nothin' Like A Dame" were some the Philodemic Society, in Eta taken over by the alumni organiza­ of the selections presented. Sigma Phi, and a provisional tion, as in the case with many other o member of the Mask and Bauble. colleges." At nine o'clock on Sunday morn­ A graduate -of Brooklyn Prep, o The East Campus group, under ing a Missa versus populum was Phil Mause brings a variety of offered for the parents and their talents to the president's chair. He the direction of Dick Porter, vice sons in Dahlgren Chapel. Follow­ is in the Philodemic Society, par­ president of the junior class in the Business School, has essenti­ ticipates in crew, and has been on ing the Mass, a Communion break­ ally the same type of program. U the Dean's List. Mause has long fast was served to all in New South Both chairmen have hopes that the been active in the IRC and recently Cafeteria. students, who will offer more or headed the successful Tunisian less informal comments and their The Parents' Weekend Commit­ delegation to the Model General own observations on what George­ tee included, besides chairman Fal­ Assembly, in which Georgetown town means, will be able to hit won honorable mention. lon, Carl Cella, Bill Kaveny, Clem the high school students from a Mause looks forward to a very Knapp, Bill Leon, and John Shea­ new angle and arouse an interest successful year. He explains with han. In addition to scheduling the that otherwise might be left un­ enthusiasm, "I will take immediate activities of the weekend, the com­ action to insure the implementa­ touched. mittee made reservations for the tion of the programs described in Chairman Broughan mentioned parents at the Marriott Motor my platform. A committee for re­ another good point in the program: HoteL Fallon stated that "both par­ "We hope that while the student Don't be a meat-head! Get Vitalis with V-7. It search on a Political Union will be ents and sons seemed to be very formed. A committee to organize is attempting to communicate all pleased with the entire weekend_ It keeps your hair neat all day without grease. .' that is exciting about Georgetown seminars on vital issues in inter­ gave the parents a chance to see Naturally. V-7® is the greaseless grooming discovery. national affairs will be created in he will become aware once again the near future. We are now be­ of all it means for himself. It will what life at GeorgetQwn is really Vitalis® with V-7 fights embarrassing dandruff, prevents like. Not only were they impressed ginning to arrange time on WGTB give him the chance to take a new with the school, but most of them dryness, keeps your hair neat all day without grease. Try it! for programs sponsored by the look, and to appreciate it more deeply." expressed a desire to return next IRC." year. I would like to express my thanks to everyone by whose co­ operation the weekend was made such a success."

Spring Weekencl (Continued from Page 3) pavilion has been reserved for dancing. The boat will continue down ~the river, pick up those who have remained at Marshall Hall, and return to the main pier of the Wilson Line at 6 :40. Refresh­ We went to the mountain to ments will also be available for make 1963 Ford-built cars this trip. go 30,000 to 100,000 Saturday night nothing has been planned, but it is expected that miles between major quite a few local affairs will be able to fill the gap-provided that chassis lubrications anyone has enough stamina to keep up the strenuous pace. The price for the entire weekend is $13, and Quite a task faced Ford Motor Company split tickets will be sold at $7 and engineers when they set out to eliminate the $7. traditional trip to the grease. rack every The co-chairmen of the Spring 1,000 miles. . - Weekend committee, Gene Bennett Like Mohammed, they went to the mountain­ and Jim Bryan, both expressed con­ Bartlett Mountain on the Continental Divide in fidence that this year's event will Colorado. More molybdenite is mined there be the best ever. Great care has than in the rest of the world combined. And gone into the planning, and every­ from molybdenite are comes the amazing one has been working hard to make "moly" grease that helps extend the chassis sure that this weekend will meet lubrication intervals for Ford-built cars. This even the strictest demands. grease sticks tenaciously to metal, stands up under extreme pressures and resists moisture, pounding and squeezing. It is slicker than "WHAT'S skates on ice! NEW New, improved seals were developed. Bushings, bearings and washers of many materials were IN THE APRIL investigated. Slippery synthetics, like nylon ATLANTIC? and teflon, were used a number of new ways. William Saroyan: The famed author of The search for means to extend chassis lubri­ Boys and Girls Together has written four playlets for The Atlantic. A real cation also led to New Orleans-where tour de force. experimental suspension ball joints tested in Randall Jarrell: A leading literary taxicabs in regular service went two years critic offers a detailed analysis of some Russian shortnovels by Gogol,Turgenev without relubrication. and Tolstoy. It took time. And ingenuity. But the effort paid Ralph McGill: A pOignant study of the effects of sectionalism, the Ku Klux off when Ford-built cars were the first to build Klan, the depression and war years on in chassis lubrication good for 30,000 miles or the South. two years-whichever came first. ALSO "Labor's Welfare State": In the first of Another assignment completed - another a series of labor union profiles, A. H. "Ford First" and another example of how Ford Raskin looks at New York's Local 3 of the Electrical Workers' union - Motor Company provides engineering leader­ first union local to establish ship for the American Road. a 25:hour workweek The pursuit of excel­ lence is the everyday job of The Atlantic's editors be it in fic­ tion or fact, poetry or prose. In ever­ increasing numbers. MOTOR COMPANY those in pursu it of The American Road, Dearborn, Michigan academic excellence ""HERE ENGINEERING- LEADERSHIP find in The Atlantic a challenging, enter­ BRINGS YOU BETTER - BUILT CARS taining and enlight­ ...... :.,.':.::.: ening companion : .... :. Get your copy today. SALE NOW Page Ten THE HOYA Thursday, March 28, 1963 The New Ashmollian Marching Songs To Finance Round-1Jp Society and Students' Conservatory Opera Group has been organized (Continued from Page 2) ~ Attention SENIOR and GRADUATE MEN Students 0 African Expedition and sings every Saturday night. WHO NEED SOME FINANCIAL HELP IN ORDER TO COMPLETE THEIR !; Those who have not yet figured Contact John Lash Whipple for in­ ~ For U. S. Students a way to dodge the draft might get format.ion. ~ EDUCATION DURING THIS ACADEMIC YEAR AND WILL THEN COMMENCE ~ some new ideas (and we don't mean a. WORK. C Tomorrow evening at 8 by becoming a father) at Military The crew -has something for the ~ Apply to STEVENS BROS. FOUNDATION, INC. ;g o'clock in the Hall of Nations, Night- Officers from all the services raffle-minded, and even if there is A Non.Profit Educational Corp. 610 ENDICOn BLDG., ST. PAUL 1, MINN. m the Association of African and will be there to tell of "opportuni­ no such person left since Gladys ties" and to answer questions. The American students will pre­ Gooding gave it up, we hope you affair, which is being sponsored by will find an extra devalued bill to sent a new and different the Scabbard and Blade and the cast their way. If our valiant row­ version of the folk-singers' senior class, is to begin at 7 p.m. in Copley Lounge. ers really want another shell to hootenanny. For only one doIIar pulI on from Great FalIs to the J"~""'~'Ji£7t2'!&~ .< this songfest wiII offer "the best A letter which was recently flung Atlantic Ocean, or perhaps Europe, ~ ~ .___ jr- ... I' folk music of two continents" and through our mail slot begins "Dear who are we to deny them? The wiII include African dances. Friend of the Natural Cultural drawing for a television set will be From Africa, there wiII be groups Center." We didn't know we were, held on Mayday. - Awaithtg yOWt AJvtivol of students from Ghana, Angola, and we're flattered. Unfortunately, Clean, comfortable and reasonable accommodations • Togo, the two Congo republics, and the feeling is not mutual, since the For Hooters and Nannies there for male students, clubs. teams, administrators and Center owes this newspaper 150 will be a Hootenanny tomorrow eve groups in the heart of midtown New York. close to . Algeria. The United States section all transportation and nearby Empire State Build- of this Afro-American affair wiII (devalued, we admit) American dol­ in the Hall of Nations. Groups from ing. All conveniences, cafeteria. coffee shop, tailor, feature folk-singing talent from lars. And while we are mentioning Algeria (mixture of rebels and non­ laundry, barber shop, TV room, tours, etc. Booklet C. Rates: Single Rooms $2.75-$2.90; Double Rooms $4.40.$4.50 ~ ~ Georgetown, University of Mary­ out s tan din g debts, we really rebels), Angola, Ghana, Nigeria, land, and a professional group from shouldn't neglect the Military Ball and other African lands will sing WILLIAM SLOANE HOUSE Y.M.C.A. -. ~ New York City. Committee, who owe us the same and dance in a Dark Continent solf­ 356 West 34th St., New YDrk, N. Y. OXfDrd 5-5133 Cnr. Penn sta.) amount. We would appreciate pay­ shoe. Admission, before or at 8 Half and Half ment before the doIIars devalue p.m., is one greenback devalued All proceeds from the presenta­ any nl.ore. dollar. tion wiII go to "Operations Cross­ roads Africa." This is the first of a series of fund-raising enterprises by which the Georgetown Univer­ sity "Crossroads" group plans to finance the trip to Africa this sum­ mer. The five delegates for the 1963 project are expected to pick up one half of their $900 fee while "Operations Crossroads" will pay for the other half. Two Months "Operations Crossroads Africa," a private, non-denominational or­ ganization, was founded in order (Continued on Page 11) Calliope (Continued from Page 4) liope is a college show and hence has certain limitations. This prob­ lem has been partially solved by the fact that Sadlak and many of the cast are planning theatrical careers and are wiIIing to devote their finest efforts toward making Calliope a great success. . '. :~~.~~~... Tickets for the performance are on sale and have been selling at a good pace. There are a few seats left for both Friday and Saturday night performances, and Thurs­ day night and the Saturday mati­ nee still have many good seats 36 DAYS THAT CHANGED THE available. For those who are interested in knowing more background and in hearing some selections from the show, there will be a preview to­ PERFORMANCE PICTURE IN AMERICA morrow night, March 29, on WGTB's Broadway Panorama from 9 to 11 p.m. In 36 days, starting with the Monte Carlo Rallye entered . . . a truly remarkable record considering in January of this year, our products have posted a that over 50% of all cars entered failed to finish. So far, things are ahead of schedule and Sadlak believes that series of competition wins that have made perform­ ance history. Here's what has happened: Why do we keep such an interested eye on compe­ "they will be perfected by show­ titions such as these? Is speed important to us? time." All in all, this will be a "show that Napoleon himself would Three, V-8 Falcon Sprints were entered in the Frankly, no. The speed capabilities of the leading be proud of, displaying all the Monte Carlo Rallye. This is not a race. It is a trial American cars are now grouped so closely together splendor of the courts from Eden of a car's total capabilities. We did it (nervously) for that the differences have no real meaning. To us, who to Elba." the experience and with practically no sense of expec­ are building cars, success in this kind of competition tation, because we had not entered an event like this means just one thing: the car is strong. This kind of before. One Sprint ended the experiment in a snow­ performance capability means that the car is so well bank. But the others finished 1-2 in their class with built that it can stand up to normal driving-the such authority that they moved the good, grey Lon­ kind of day-in, day-out demands you put your own Junior Year don Times to say: "The Falcons are part of a power car through-for thousands of miles longer than less . and performance plan that will shake up motoring in capable cars. every country in the world." That was Number One. In In tests like the Daytona 500 and Riverside, we Number Two was a double win in the Pure Oil find out in an afternoon what might take us 100,000 Performance Trials. Fords captured Class 1 and Class test-track miles to discover. We learn how to build New York 2 (for high performance and large V-8's). Both of superior strength into suspension systems, steering these trials were for over-all points rolled up in systems, drive train, body, tires. Anyone can build An ilnusual one-year economy, acceleration and braking tests. a fast car. What we're interested in is the concept of ollege program "total" performance. Then, at Riverside in California, in America's only • long-distance stock car event that is run on a road We believe in this kind of total performance Write for course (as opposed to closed circuit, banked tracks because the search for performance made the automo­ brochure JY-2 such as the track at Daytona), Dan Gurney pushed bile the wonderfully efficient and pleasurable instru­ a Ford to first place. ment it is today-and will make it better tomorrow. The latest news comes north from Daytona. There Junior Year• Program in the open test that tears cars apart-the Daytona Amencas liveliest. most care-free cars! Washington Square 500-Ford durability conquered the field. Fords FOR 60 YEARS THE SYMBOL OF College swept the first 5 places ... something no one else had DEPENDABLE PRODUCTS New York University New York 3, N. Y. equaled in the history of the event. In a competition @J;;a~ -which anyone can enter-designed to prove how FORD MOTOR COMPANY well a car hangs together, 9 Fords finished out of 12 FALCON· FAIRlANE • FORO· THUNDERBIRD Thursday, -March 28, 1963 THE HOYA Page Eleven Martin Yearbook Hughes (Continued from Page 5) (Continued from Page 5) (Continued from Page 3) underclass section will also contain ". tenure as Speaker he led the a fair amount of unposed shots. tor Hughes will have several func­ ,I House in dealing with such legis­ Potter feels, however, that the tions. Primarily, he is the medium lation as the Taft-Hartley Act, the amount of candid shots must be through which the suggestions and Marshall Plan, and the founding tempered by the awareness that views of the entire faculty reach ~ of the North Atlantic Treaty Or­ the yearbook is an historical docu­ the co-directors of the Anniversary, ganization. He also steered the ment, and as such must faithfully ·Mr. Eldridge and the Rev. George ">: first - Eisenhower Administration's allow room for traditional sections, Dunne, S.J.; in this way the needed ~ program through the House. such as faculty. assistance of the faculty will be An effort has also been made to coordinated by him. Representative Martin lost out bring order to the voluminous ac­ as Minority Leader to Rep. Charles tivities section which last year was Brochun!S Hallack in a power struggle in divided into two parts: activities Doctor Hughes will also do much ... 1959 after a number of people had and features. Organization in this of the work of editing the Anni­ #' blamed him for the Party's 1958 year's book will be a chronological versary's publications, i.e., bro­ ;:. election defeats. A recognition of ordering of events. Included with chures, programs, historical infor­ his services to the Republican Party each affair will be the respective mation, etc, His background as ~t; and to the country has been given club or organization responsible. editor of Georgetown's Peace Corps him since then though, as exempli­ This week, the final cuts go to brochures this past summer, and fied by a special statue in his honor the engraver and the die will b.e current editor of Columbia mag­ which has been placed in the foyer cast. Only time will tell whether azine give him the experience de­ .. of the House of Representatives the 1963 Domesday book will be manded for such a job. Besides ed­ Office Building. Representative punctual, and an improvement over iting these publications, Doctor Martin is one of the very few men its predecessor. Hughes will also do the general in public life ever to have been so THE DIRECTORY •.. The Freshmen Five meet in executive ses­ sion. From left to right: Frank Keating, John Albrigo, Ed Shaw, research for the actual writing; in ';. honored while still serving in of­ the compiling of data, he will be fice. Convocation Ed Leary, and Mike Scott. (Continued from Page 4) assisted by some of his under­ In his address this evening, Mar- Coronation March from The Pro- -Frosh be a true contributing factor to graduate students. University life. 'r tin will speak for a few minutes phet, were played by the Univer- (Continued from Page 5) In Touch and then answer questions from sity Concert Band under the di- The Class of '66 has based its the audience, thus affording the rection of James Lunsford. The are almost unknown in our class." future plans on a solid financial As part of his duties, Doctor audience an opportunity of sharing Glee Club, directed by Paul Hume, Student Council representative Ed plan which has concentrated on Hughes will also study and report '. with him some of the experiences sang the National Anthem, the Shaw believes that through the saving now in order to give mean­ on the anniversary celebrations of of this most rich and amazing life­ Alma Mater, and Veni, Creator Council's guidance his class has ing and direction to the place of other universities. He is in touch time in politics. Spiritus. come to a point where it will soon the class in the University. with Cornell University and Bos­ ton College, which are celebrating their centennials, and with Brown which will begin its 200th year next September. Workshop Besides his position as English professor, Doctor Hughes will be the new moderator of the East r--- Campus Courier as of its next is­ sue. During the summer, he will conduct, as Director of the George­ town University Writers Associa­ tion, the fourth annual series of lectures and workshops for poten­ tial writers; Miss Katherine Anne Play"Crazy QUDstions" Porter will again be a guest lec­ 50 CASH AWARDS A MONTH. ENTER NOW. HERE'S HOW: (Based on the hilarious book "The Question Mon.") turer at this summer workshop. First, think of an answer. Any answer. Then come up with RULES: The Reuben H. Donnelley Corp. will judge entries on the basis of Among Doctor Hughes' other ac­ humor (up to V,), clarity and freshness (up to v,). and appropriateness (up complishments are six books, one a nutty, surprising question for it, and you've done a to 'h), and their decisions will be final, Duplicate prizes will be awarded of which (The Hills Were Liars) "Crazy Question." It's the easy new way for students to in the event of ties. Entries must be the original works of the entrants and must be submitted in the entrant's own name. There will be 50 awards was recently published in paper­ make loot. Study the examples below; then do your own. every month, October through April. Entries received during each month back, and lectures in over seventy Send them, with your name, address, college and class, will be considered for that month's awards. Any entry received after April colleges and universities in both 30, 1963, will not be eligible, and all become the property of The American to GET LUCKY, Box 64F, Mt. Vernon 10, N. Y. Winning this country and Canada. He is Tobacco Company. Any college student may enter the contest, except em­ also a staff critic for the Saturday entries will be awarded $25.00. Winning entries sub­ ployees of The American Tobacco Company. its advertising agencies and Reuben H. Donnelley. and relatives of the said employees. Winners will be Review. mitted on the inside of a Lucky Strike wrapper will get a notified by mail. Contest subject to all federal, state, and local regulations. $25.00 bonus. Enter as often as you like. Start right now! r------. Crossroads THE ANSWER: THE ANSWER: THE ANSWER: (Continued from Page 10) to promote a greater understanding Ticker between young Africans and Amer­ icans through the medium of work. These work projects, which are selected by the Africans them­ Tape selves, are such that they are com­ '11°0 suaani:> 'Jasem 'I'J >JueH pleted during two months of the uOlSnOH JO '''!Un '!UeIOlJO auF.eM '''!Un ananbJel'J 'odn saLUer ,aU!40 summer. lU! daalS J\OqMOO snow lal~ue!J+ J\Jeu!pJo ue ue4l Ja~uol ·ew lIdeJ~o!PJeooJpala a4l JOl WJal -JOua ue saop +e4M :NOI.lS3nb 3H.l lsel 0+ punoq S! +e4M :NOI.lS3nb 3H.l s,uewJ\el a4+ S,leLlM :NOI.lS3nb 3H.l Pilot Group Beginning with a pilot group of THE ANSWER: THE ANSWER: THE ANSWER: sixty individuals during the sum­ mer of 1958. "Crossroads" has ex­ plained over the past few years so that last summer's delegation numbered three hundred young people who worked at twenty­ eight different projects in seven­ teen countries. While most of the l!OJlaa JO ·"!Un 'SpJOI'J or'd projects i n v 0 I v e d construction ll3 UO laq 'leo ·os JO ·"!Un 'snur;"s U40r ·4:>a.1 JO -lsUI 'ssel'J "Jr '4SJeI'J '.1 lJaqol;j (schools, roads, clinics, etc.), there U 'w 'I ')( '! '! SJanal a4+ op laqelldle lLlopeo !qeJnwweH lUJnl :ijal e leU~!S Ol asn SSOJl were a few projects concerned with L ______a4Ho uo!+oas +ellM UI :NOI.lS3nb 3H.l snSS!w P!ppeLlM :NOI.lS3nb 3H.l ·eqle ue saop lellM :NOI.lS3nb 3H.l ~ teacher training and medical aid.

TH E ANSWER IS: ,. mllt ~tllrgttOUl\t , Ihalaslalo Slarl Wilh ••• IhalaSla10 Slay ~ll11P THE QUESTION IS: WHAT DO YOU GET WHEN YOU REQUEST A PACK OF THE DRY CLEANING ~ MOST POPULAR REGULAR-SIZE CIGARETTE AMONG COLLEGE STUDENTS? REPAIRING Right! You get Lucky; you get the fine-tobacco taste of Lucky Strike. This great LAUNDRY taste is the best reason to choose Luckies . , . the big reason why Lucky smokers stay Lucky smokers. So get with it. Get Lucky today! 2 DAY SERVICE 36t" at N 5t5. N.W. @A.T.Co. Product if c.hf: ~ J'~-"J'~ is our middlr name" Page, Twelve, t ',fhursday, .. l\Iarch 2,8, 1963 ,I I .• ,t, • l

'" , [)~Mgtha'lH:igh,Victotious In~qfC Hoop Tournam'ent , I" • -!. ....; , .: '~t Aggressive defense 'paved '¥ the way to DeMatha High School's: :third straight victory '<'• in the Knights of Columbus , ':by Hodgman basketball tournament held at McDonough, Gym last week­ end. The Stags routed St. John's ~, ON CREW AND THE CRACK OF DAWN 74-60 to retire the permanent championship trophy. "Amazing" is an adjective that is overworked nowadays, DeMatha reached the final by \' • but it is the ·only word that describes ,the Georgetown crew. beating Matignon (Mass.) High in At 6 a.m., when streetlights are still shining and most the opening rou~d and LaSalle rational creatures on Campus can wait two full hours before (Philadelphia) in the semi-finals. St. John's gained the title round - deciding against their eight o'clock classes, it takes a lot by wins over Gordon Tech (Chica- to amaze anyone. My first inkling that any strenuous exer­ go) and South Hills (Pittsburgh). cise could take place at that time came when four blue-clad In the title game, Bernard Wil­ figures raced past me heading for the marina and practice. liam, 6'3" sophomore, held Bob I rode there shivering. Lewis, the tournament's Most Val­ uable Player, without a point in Assistant coach Jack Galloway, Georgetown law stu­ the third quarter. Meanwhile, Jim dent who rowed with LaSalle's Dad Vail champions in the McBride sparked the Stags' dis­ late fifties, directed me into a launch as the 325-pound shells ciplined offense to a commanding 58-43 advantage by the end of the were gingerly placed in the water. They are over 60 feet period. ( . long and about two feet wide, tapering toward the bow, The second half was anti-climac­ and must be· handled with care. tic after the Stags hit six straight Galloway informed me that this would be a "rather points to stretch their nine-.point .JIM McBRIDE . . . DeMatha ace shoots over three St. John's de­ halftime edge to fifteen. light" workout, because the varsity, JV, and lightweight fenders, including All-American Bob Lewis in Knights' tournament. crews had rowed more than 25 miles apiece the previous day Outstanding Player in two three-hour sessions. He seemed pleased about the For Lewis, the championship was ,'" weather, describing conditions as the "best ever." My hands Spring Sports To Feature the only honor which eluded him. were aiready numb in the 40 degree temperatures. He won the outstanding player award, the trophy for most re­ We pushed out into the Potomac and drew up along­ bounds, and an automatic place on , side the JV boat. Galloway barked at the coxswain to take Fine Efforts In All Fields the all-tournament tea m. He his eight through a warm-up at 28 strokes per minute, then totaled 68 points and 53 rebounds The spring sports season moves into full swing this for three games and displayed sprint 20 strokes at a 44 stroke pace. The shell lunged for­ weekend, and a host of new faces could make it the best in outstanding ball-handling ability:' ward with surprising speed and left the launch behind recent years. as well. momentarily. Galloway observed that the can cut the craft~ Coach Tom Nolan has his forces ready for their diamond In the battle for third place, water up to 20 miles per hour. LaSalle's superior height proved opener this Saturday. Dartmouth will invade Next we watched a race in which the JV was given a too much for South Hills, and the ~ with a veteran outfit to oppose a sophomore-dominated Hoya Explorers won a hard fought bat­ length and the third varsity a two length handicap over the nine. Nolan is expected to tle, 66-54. varsity. At the end of the pull to Key Bridge the varsity ment beginning this afternoon. The start sophs Dave Beatty and racketmen look very strong this had barely won. Galloway informed all three exhausted Big Ten .. Phil Plasencia at third and year but will have to be at top crews that they were not at top form and had best shape up ," short. Returning lettermen form to win the tourney. Stands Frank Gaidjunas had 19 for La- or lose to Marietta this weekend. He also emphasized that have been constructed above the Salle, while 5'9" crowd pleaser Fred Chuck Devlin and John Bro­ individuals in the boats could be replaced by eager challeng­ courts to accommodate spectators. Luvara had 23 for the Knights. gan will round out the infield. Expected to play in singles ac­ Both made the all-tournament ers, an announcement that evoked only silence from the Mike Funck and Ken (jQte, up tion are Walt Kitt, who won the team, along with Lewis and Brian • rowers. from the freshman, will join junior Cherry Blossom individual cham­ Keller of St. John's, Mike Johnson After numerous other maneuvers, the crew finally re­ Marty Vickers in the outfield. The pionship last year, John Wolf, Bill of Mt. Carmel (Chicago), Bob .. Hodgman, Jay Bowes, Bill Dolan, Banaszek of Gordon Tech, Aaron ~ .. turned to the boathouse. Coach Don Cadle, the NASA ad­ catching chores could fall to any of several candidates, while Jim Lee VanderCarr and Dean Gar­ McKenna of St. Augustine's (New ministrator who has spent so much of his time and money McMonigle and Bill Solomon will garo. Senior Jim Fay has been Orleans) and McBride, Williams, over the last four years to make Georgetown crew the suc­ form the nucleus of the hill staff. sick and may not be able to com­ and Brendan McCarthy of De­ pete. Matha. cess it is, told WGTB's Jack Burgess and me that his team The Georgetown crew, is headed is in top shape and should be able to defeat a big (6'3", for Marietta, Ohio, this weekend. ... 195-pound average) Marietta eight this weekend. The Hoya Coach Don Cadle has had his squad on the water since March 1, and, McGrath Sec.res Tille , . crew ranges in size from Pat Doyle (6'4", 210) to Fred as he predicted, there have been Vollbrecht (5'10", 170). several changes in his varsity eight. From the bow, the varsity will boat In Squash TournaDlenl Cadle also pointed out the crew's need for financial sup­ Fred Vollbrecht, Jim Mietus, Mike port. The Marietta trip will cost about $1500 out of the Mullin, Pat Doyle, Jack Hoeschler, by Jack Carter pockets of the team members. A new shell must aiso be paid Pete Blyberg, Bill Allen, and Dave The annual intramural squash tournament was com­ for, hopefully from the sale of raffle tickets for a drawing Casey, with Doug Sargent as cox­ pleted this week with Brian McGrath winning his second swain. Cadle's JV eight is also straight championship in a closely contested final match May 1. Anyone who has had first-hand experience with the strong. The surprise so far has spirit and excellence of the crew should be more than willing been the showing of the light­ with John Wolf. to help. weight crew, a new addition to the The tournament draw, arranged by Mr. George Mur­ Georgetown varsity. The light­ taugh and composed of twenty enthusiastic squash racketeers, . (Listen to Jack Burgess with his live account of the weights may enter the JV race at ~ practice on WGTB tomorrow evening at 5 :15). Marietta as an added starter, for was the strongest and best Marietta has no lightweights. balanced in recent years. ~I Great things are expected of the McGrath, a Business School largest Hoya frosh in the school history. junior, defeated Alberto De­ Cardinal and Tom Simpson to \ Practice Prior gain the finals. In the lower The unbeaten Georgetown sailors half of the pairings, Wolf, a Col­ leave for Annapolis this morning lege senior, overcame Dan O'Leary for two days of practice prior to and Tim Lanigan to reach the title the MacMillian Cup Regatta on the round. ,\~ I' Severn this weekend. The races will be held in 44-foot yawls. The Hoyas The finals were a duplication of plans to enter an eight man team last year's tournament and ap­ -I with Carl Buhr and Joe Kelly as peared to be a runaway as the left­ skippers. The crew will consist of swing McGrath walked away with Buddy Boetteger, Brian Conway, the first two games, 15-7 and 15-9. -'I Bob Lonergan, Pete Austin, Steve But Wolf rallied to take the third game 15-11 and lead in the fourth Farrell, and Pete Nicholson. The f.~IAN-Mf?RATH '~, '~1\ , MacMillian Cup is emblematic of 9-3 before McGrath came to life Eastern supremacy in sailing, and with some well-pLaced shots to end (possibly 'in the; .. projected new the Hoyas will contest Harvard, the contest, 18-15. dorms) to expand interest in this Princeton, and Navy for the honor. Murtaugh, director of George­ lightning-fast sport. Georgetown ,', The tennis team, which opened town intramurals, expressed his currently has but one squash court, -j' its season against Syracuse Tues­ saUsfaction with the tournament located at the west end of the Gym, J day, is hosting Dartmouth, George and his hope for a bigger turnout and it is often impossible to use r SOPH SHORTSTOP . . . Phil Plasencia makes the play to third Washington, and Michigan State in next year. He has suggested the it unless reservations are procured base in practice early this week. the annual Cherry Blossom Tourna- construction of more squash courts welJ in advance. Page Thirteen

I.' ~. G.··U~, f!o Face':.'Villan:C,:va ! In First lacrosse Meet

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. t, STICKS • . • fly in lacrosse action as Hoyas prepare to meet Vil- lanova Saturday. " The Georgetown University Lacrosse Club opens its sea­ t son on Saturday afternoon with a home game against Vil­ .~.. lanova on the Lower Field at 2 :30. The newly established club has made tremendous prog­ ress since beginning practice in February. The addition of r two assistants has greatly eased coach Tom Daly's task of .. whipping the squad into shape .:.- for the opener. They are Air The lacrosse team features a ~. strong defense led by Tony John- Force Major Pete Burne, a son and goalie Pete Yaple. At- former Johns Hopkins player, tac~ers Roger O:Neill, Steve Mc­ and Matt Kenny captain of AllIster, and BrIan McGrath ac- , count for most of the goals. If ,'" the 1960 Holy Cross team. the Hoyas can find more depth at r In recent scrimmages against mid-field, they should produce a ~ Suitland High School and the winning season. .. Washington Lacrosse Club, the In addition to Saturday's game, stickmen have shown considerable contests are scheduled with Towson promise. They defeated Suitland State, Randolph-Macon, Bainbridge 7-4 and 4-1; and while they lost Prep, the Annapolis Lacrosse Club, to the Washington team 9-3, they and the University of Baltimore ...... gained invaluable experience com- frosh. Other contests may be ar­ peting against several AII-Amer- ranged with George Washington icans. All indications point to a and Episcopal High. strong effort on Saturday, when At a recent meeting Roger ~ the Hoyas will be out to begin the O'Neill and Pete Yaple were elected :. ~ regulation season on a successful co-captains, John Campbell treas- note. urer, and Pete Gottsegen secretary. get Lots More from TIM A CAREER IN SALES AND MANAGEMENT WITH PROCTOR & GAMBLE more body Tide ... Crest ... Duncan Hines ... Ivory ... Outstanding men put these famous names at the top of their product in the blend categories. Proctor & Gamble, one of America's foremost product manufacturers with plants and sales offices through­ out the country, is looking for outstanding men who, in sales management positions, can keep these and future products on top. Advancement in position depends only upon proven ~~ir;:~ ~~~~ ability and performance plus demonstration of leadership qualities. All promotions are made from within the Company ~-r---b and are based strictly on merit. more taste FIL.TERS TOaACeO eo. A well developed training program makes previous sales experience unnecessary. A pleasing, forceful personality, through the filter UQiOETT & MY!_ TOa"cco co. determination to suceed, and high moral character are essen­ tial requirements. And ll'M's filter is the modern filter-all white, Starting sales position provides a good salary, opportunity inside and outside - so only pure white touches your lips. to earn substantial bonus, excellent plans for profit sharing, disability benefits, and life insurance. Car furnished, expenses paid. Enter'-the hM GRAND PRIX 50 . Interviews for interested seniors will be held on Wednesday , For college students only! 50 Pontiac Tempests FREE! April 3rd. Sign up now at the Student Placement Office, 1324 36th Street, N.W.

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34th and M Streets, N, W. Page Fourteen rHE HOYA Thursday, March 28, 1963

TIME SUNDAY TIME MONDAY TUESDAY WEDNESDAY THURSDAY TIME FRIDAY TIME SATURDAY 11:59 Sign On 3:59 Sign On Sign On Sign On Sign On 3:59 Sign On 8:59 Sign On 12:00 News Summary 4:00 News Summary News Summary News Summary News Summary 4:00 News Summary 9:00 News Summary 12:05 Invitation 4:05 Flavian's Hour Jack's Corner Penth,ouse Serenade Music Gal 4:05 Deuces Wild 9:05 The Breakfast Nook Paul Ritacco Fred Haggerty Jack Williams Michel Metrinko Mary Beth Harding Hank Durand Jack Burgess Paul Ritacco 2:00 Music from Germany 5:00 Sundown Summary Sundown Summary Sundown Summary Sundown Summary 5:00 Sundown Summary David Berger Jim Ward Bill Dobak Jim Montana Dan Fessler Kathy Mayes 2:30 Mid Afternoon News 5: 10 Local News Local News Local News Local News 5:08 Local News Larry Kulyk Stephen Hesse John Brennan Bob McCarthy Larry Hart Russ LaMantia 2:35 Variations 5:17 Sports Desk Sports Desk Sports Desk Sport Desk 5: 13 Sports Desk 11:00 Ziegler's Follies Don Mrozek Paul Taylor Mike McPeak Jerry Vanisi Vince Carlin Paul Taylor Hans Ziegler 4:00 News SUlTunary 5:27 Perspective Perspective Perspective Perspective 5:20 Ken 8< Kathy Jim Ward Bill Dobak Jim Montana Dan Fessler Ken Atchity 4:05 Sunday Afternoon Kathy Dillon Bonanza 5:30 Debriefing Finland Searching World Special of the Week John Bennett 6:00 Hoya Hit Parade I 12:00 News at Noon 6:00 Open House Evening Menus Club 901 Sans-Souci Jack Burgess Frank Keating 5:00 Sundown ~ununary Jay Ryan Torn Callahan Joe Keilp Mike Rees Larry Hart 7:00 News Summary 12:08 Local News 7:00 News Summary News Surnrn.ary News Summary News Summary Joe Flude 5:10 Local News 7:05 Hoya Hit Parade II 7:05 Mavin' Out Contemporary Sounds Sound of Jazz Green Dolphin Street Ralph De La Cruze Jack Burgess 12: 13 Sports Desk Jacques deSuze Chad Floyd Steve Hesse John Brennan Gene Cicatelli 5: 17 Sports Desk 8:00 Man on the Move 8:00 Clubhouse Congressional Report G. U. Speaks Georgetown Forum John Kelley Hank Durand 12:20 Matt's Musical Mark Saur Ralph Waddey Madhouse '" 5:27 Perspective 8:30 Georgetown-Live 8:30 News Analysis Faculty Lounge Panorama International Analysis Matt Sekella Larry Hart Butch Venable Jerry Simmons Pararnerican 5:30 Minds Meet Mike Libonati Mike Cotter Paul Adames David Hurst 9:00 News Summary 2:00 News Summary 6:00 Candle Light 8< Silver 9:00 News Summary News Summary News Summary News Summary 9:05 Broadway Panorama Peter Vivona Bill Weber 9:05 Introductions Inventions Essences Klaviermusik Torn Tini 7:00 Travel World Mary Beth Harding Rod Shields Gus Motta Rod Stine Ken Atchity .\ Doug Murray 2:05 Cincinnati ' 9:30 Spectrum Constructions Themes Span II: 00 Eleventh Hour Symphony 7:30 Let's Learn Gerrnan Karl Kamper John Pfordresher Mike Rock Henry Holman Wrap-Up Orchestra 7:45 Sacred Heart Hour 11:00 Eleventh Hour Eleventh Hour Eleventh Hour Eleventh Hour John Lee Wrap-Up Wrap-Up Wrap-Up Wrap-Up 8:00 News Summary 11: 08 Local News Ed Skender Chris Wallace David Hurst Ralph de la Cruz Butch Venable 8:05 Opera Syntheses 4:00 4: 00 Wrap-Up 11:08 Local News Local News Local News Local News Staff 11: 13 Sports Desk Doug Murray Jacques deSuze Ed Higgins Leo Berendes Bob McDermott Staff ,,' 11:00 Eleventh Hour 11: 13 Sports Desk Sports Desk Sports Desk Sports Desk 4:05 Theater of Wrap-Up 11:20 Music Out Of Larry Kulyk Pete Iorio Mark Goldin Frank Martorana The Air Randy Houston The Night 11:20 Music Out Of Music Out Of Music Out Of Music Out Of Gary Nevolo 11:08 Local News The Night The Night The Night The Night Rod Stine 12:25 News Summary 5:55 News Suznmary Gene Cicatelli Joe Flude Mark Saur Barry Dalinsky 11: 13 Sports Desk 12:30 Sign Off 6:00 Sign Off 12:25 News Summary News Summary News Summary News Suznznary John Bennett 12:30 Sign Off Sign Off Sign Off Sign Off 11:20 Music Out Of The Night Larry Shulman 12:25 News Sumznary

12:30 ~ign-Off

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Dedicated To The Traditions Of Its University ..