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1 1 :! 1 1 ,1 I 1 " '~~~~I ______~ ______~~~~~~ 1 Vol. LI, No. 21 , WASHINGTON, D.C. Thursday, May 2, 1968 ICollege May Admit Girls; ; S~~h~e~to the all-male College~_~d of Arts ~of Directors. ~o ifu~n~~y~a~lUdi~~a~~n~! controversy, he remarked, "In no and Sciences come September of According to the Rev. Thomas sense are we going to say, 'This 1969. The College's faculty has in- R. Fitzgerald, S.J., academic vice is what we've done.''' He added formally agreed to the proposal, president, "a reasonable amount, "We will also have the alumni to but students and alumni are yet not just a handful" of girls would cope with." to be consulted. If reaction is be admitted to the Class of '73, The Rev. Royden B. Davis, S.J., favorable, a study will be con- perhaps 50 to 100. He noted that College dean, indicated that he ducted during the summer to as- discussion is being taken up at and Fr. Fitzgerald had discussed , certain the effect of an increased this point so that the admissions the possibility of College coeds for College enrollment On classroom office would have ample time in some time. Fr. Davis brought up and dormitory space and student- which to process applications. Fr. the question to his executive teacher ratios. The College's exe- Fitzgerald emphasized the role of faculty last Thursday. The execu­ cutive faculty will then formally present College students in reach- tive faculty, while agreeing in pass upon the proposal and for- ing a final decision. Possibly al- principle, preferred not to take formal action until the entire Col­ lege faculty had been consulted. Faculty members, at a general Controversy Erupting meeting last Monday in Copley Lounge, also informally 'agreed to the idea in principle. This morning in , Over E. C. Elections Fr. Davis will seek the opinions of . College freshmen at their class by Joanne Peartree ough's preliminary expense report meeting. He will continue to probe "Steve Sanders The Tree marked the Hoyas' favorite meeting place until a storm and Thursday, April 4, the day be­ since Wednesday morning. individual and group reactions of The evidence used i n Joe students "because they are my dead roots began its demise to the Stump ana finally the Hole. The fore Walsh Area elections, Joe Mc­ McDonough's disqualification was chief concern." The proposal will CoJIegiate Club began the process all over again when it planted a Donough, one of the candidates, presented by Andy Grimstad. He be forwarded to the Board of Di­ new Tree last week. for treasurer of the East Campus questioned the cost of the first rectors for a final decision, how- council, was disqualified for mis­ (Continued on Page 10) ever, only if the College's execu­ tive faculty approves. And while representation of campaign ex­ all may agree in principle to coeds Dean I(lein Defends penses, then reinstated, and later in the College, classroom and disqualified for over-spending. dormitory space and stu den t­ The manner in which the elec­ teacher ratios must be considered. tion committee, composed of Sue Fr. Davis states, "We can't realis­ tically do it without knowing what Drug Investigations Mooney, M i c h a e I Campilongo, John Dagnon, William Clin ton, the implications are." Andrew Grimstad, Michael Osaj- Fr. Fitzgerald states that class­ by George E. Condon secret that serious doubts exist , da, John Spotila, and Peter Ryan, room space will be available in Concern is being expressed this and a score of rumors are spring­ disqualified McDonough and the Healy by September of 1969 since week as to the possible ethical ing up on campus. Expressing con­ validity of the committee's the library will have since been ramifications of the 48-day old cern on the issue were Dan Hur­ charges were questioned by many. moved to its new quarters. In an drug investigation currently being son, Yard president-elect; Tom Numerous stUdents were dissatis­ address to the Walsh Area Stu­ conducted on campus by the Stu­ Kelly, president of the Philodemic fied with the decision-since 41 dent Council last December (in dent Personnel Office. Society; and Rich Banchoff, presi­ which he stated, "Any assumption percent of the students voting Three students connected with dent of the College senior class. either wrote in Joe McDonough's that the College is 'stag' is ana­ Dean of Men Edward R. Klein, chronistic."), Fr. Fitzgerald noted the investiga tion have already de­ name or simply refused to vote for parted from Georgetown. A fourth Jr., dismissed the criticism as a Dave O'Neill that a new women's dormitory the office of treasurer. Several student has been ousted but his by-product of a HOYA story April members of the newly-elected stu­ JOE McDONOUGH (Continued on Page 17) case is under appeal this week. 4. He said the story "hurt the in­ dent council which includes Vice­ But the important result of the vestigation and was filled with President Tom Kuna, Secretary probe thus far has been a new quasi-evidence that we were not Carol Kilkenny, Treasurer Dennis realization by the authorities of being very ethical." He said the Curley, SFS Academic Rep. Fran­ GU Students Support the extent of drug use on campus. probe was being conducted with ces Ficara, and SBA Academic One-third is the figure currently the highest ethical standards in Rep. Robert Sailer, have voiced being bandied about as the per­ mind at all times. Mr. Klein warned the student their dissatisfaction with McDon­ centage of Hoyas smoking mari­ Poor People's March body that drugs were an increas­ ough's ouster from the campaign. juana. That figure was reported' ingly bad situation on campus and There is no evidence that A group of Georgetown Univer­ the raise, 12 scholarships for recently over radio. said "unless students are really McDonough's disqualification was sity students and faculty mem­ Washington students each year for A veil of secrecy surrounding concerned about this I don't think in any way a planned plot by any bers has requested a $45 tuition a total of 48 to be granted over the proceedings of the Discipline the University can rid itself of this • group on campus. However, as increase for all students. The or­ a four-year period, and $280,000 Board has prohibited an open air­ McDonough states, "Once the elec­ ganization, formed under the title for a $30 per hour raise for each problem." ing of comments concerning the He decried the fact that stu­ tion committee did .have an op­ of the Georgetown University (Continued on Page 8) drug investigation, but it is no portunity to get me they were Committee in Support of the dents "just don't seem to be con­ very happy to have it." Poor People's Campaign, an­ cerned." Thursday morning H a r old nounces its aims as raising money, "If someone knows something, Snider, Party for Student Action food, and resources for the Poor his refusal to answer means he candidate for treasurer, and out­ People's Campaign itself; supply­ knows what is going on and he going President Terry Modglin ing 12 scholarships for poor peo­ doesn't want to do something to submitted a letter to the election ple from the District of Columbia; combat it," he continued. committee de man din g t hat and increasing the wages of non­ He blamed in part for McDonough be disqualified be­ academic workers. the "we-they" attitUde he has run cause he had overspent by the into. He said that students don't amount of $135. There were many A member of the committee, seem to want to trust him with alleged errors in this accusation: Joe Gerson, stated that "We be­ information on drugs and fear 1) the letter cited an impossibly lieve that wages and benefits at what he will do with it. He said he large amount of campaign mate­ Georgetown are inadequate. We was not a policeman and was try­ rial, 2) Modglin and Snider re­ believe the educational oppor­ ing only to help the students. He ferred to signs that never existed, tunity extended to the poor by expressed a desire that some stu­ 3) they stated that offset printing Georgetown is inadequate." He dents would "start telling the of McDonough's platform cost continued by saying that examina­ truth in this investigation." $125, when it was actually mimeo­ tion will bear out the group's "Maybe I'm expecting a lot to graphed for $31.40. contention that the figure of $24,- expect a stUdent to tell the truth. Sue Mooney called a meeting of 000 represents the median, rather I hope not, but I guess I am," he the election committee to con­ than average, income of George­ said. "1 just find it difficult to be­ sider charges against McDonough town families. lieve that when two people are for misrepresentation of campaign According to information sup- Steve Sanders good friends and one smokes mari­ funds. The meeting was not called plied by the committee, the $45 While ROTC cadets marched in military fashion on last juana the other knows nothing until four p.m. on Thursday, the per stUdent would be broken down Friday, others lounged in civilian fashion on Copley Lawn. And while about it." day before the elections, even into $22,000 for 490 grants to G.U. the cadets watched a mock Viet Cong ambush, these watched a demon­ Mr. Klein supplied little new in­ :: thour~h the committee had McDon- students who could not afford stration for peace in Viet Nam. (Continued on Page 14) -di. Page Two THE HOrA. Thursday, May 2, 1968 Met Club's Chorba Named Recipient 'War Is Not Hell' Declares Of Fulbright Grant Timothy A. Chorba, senior gov­ Observer Of Military Games ernment major, has been granted a Fulbright scholarship for study by Peter Metrinko hibition. He was captured and led question "Why?" was placed in International Law at the Uni­ Continuing in the fashion of from the area by the campus Rmong the tombstones. The R.O.­ versity of Heidelberg. Chorba, of previous wars of attrition fought police. T.C. Band came to the rescue with Regis High School in New York, over the "morality of war" issue, The second part of the ex­ renditions of "The American has served both as president of Georgetown University last Fri­ hibition was a demonstration of Patrol" and "Que Sera, Sera." the New York Metropolitan Club day was witness to both Military karate and judo self-defense meth­ Phase two of the battle, by now and as a sportscaster for WGTB. Day, and for those who were so ods replete with the traditional reaching massive proportions, was Following his stay at Heidel­ inclined, Peace Day. crowd-pleaser-board breaking. happening before White-Gravenor. berg, he hopes to enter Harvard Peace Day was billed as a "hu­ Action with the enemy resumed A few refugees from the military Law School and complete his man be-in" on Copley Lawn and during the third demonstration were sitting in, a campus rock ROTC requirements after gradua­ "an alternative to the R.O.T.C. when a counter-insurgency exer­ group was entertaining, and re. tion. war games ... and the militarism cise, conducted by Ranger company freshments were available. The in pseudo - darkness, was aug­ Peace army relaxed, swelling to In order to get the Fulbright . of American society." Military , Day, the 38th in the history of the mented by a small force of peace about 550 through the aid of a grant he first had to apply for a troops attacking from the rear. sunny day, and around a hundred TIM CHORBA University, was a more restrained grant from West Germany and The action ended inconclusively outside allies. affair. then was assigned to setting up studied at the University of when the demontsrators pitched An evening reunion of the anti. a study plan on the "Effect Which Vienna and spent one summer in The initial action occurred on in 10 help the "wounded." A "war militarists largely failed due to Current German Trends in Inter­ Sweden working for Multi-Market Copley Lawn at about 1300 hours. is no game" sign was met by a cool weather, a peculiar institution national League Thought are Hav­ Corporation as an executive The first significant encounter, shout of "Good-by girls!" from the known as "Friday Night," and ing on German Foreign Policy trainee under the auspices of the however, took place a half hour crowd. The anti-war Hoyas used red and green smoke bombs dis. and ," A.I.S.E.C. He recently captained later on Kehoe field, where the the pseudo-darkness to their ad­ creetly placed by several unidenti. which was judged by panels of Georgetown's team. military entertained while under vantage, constructing a cemetery, fied Hoyas. Nonetheless, in the end judges both in the United States Reflecting on Georgetown, Chor­ ambush by about one dozen hostile with crosses, on the large mound most everyone was happy-the and Germany, and finally came to ba said, "Georgetown gives the peace forces. of dirt overlooking the field. The Military had a splendid program, be selected as one of 50 Fulbright individual student a wonderful The first confrontation of a mi£sing piper was once again in the "Multi-Media turn on" was a scholars going to Germany. opportunity for personal advance­ direct nature took place during a evidence, this time playing funeral hapy affair, and the general feel­ While at Georgetown, Chorba ment, growth, and development." precision marching drill by the music, while a lone sign asking the ing was that "War is not hell." Sparker rifles, when a lone pro­ tester, playing a rather tuneful Student Bill 01 Rights bagpipe, chose to join in the ex- At AUSTIN-HILL To Undergo First Test your A newly completed student bill between the student committee newsstand of rights will undergo its first test and Dr. Fort's group. NOW of acceptance in May when it will . Presumably, any difficulties will go before the three undergradu­ have been resolved by the time ate student councils, who will vote the student councils vote upon the on whether to approve or reject bill. the present draft of the docu­ The student bill of rights at­ ment. tempts to reaffirm and in several The student bill of rights was instances b r 0 a den Georgetown drawn up by a committee repre­ University's recognition of "ac­ senting both the Yard and East cepted standards of our academic Campus student councils. The community . . . and the liberties Nursing School Student Council guaranteed to all citizens of the agreed to play a "consultative United States of America." It con­ role" in the deliberations. sists of 10 articles and a Preamble If passed by the councils, the which declares that "academic in­ student bill of rights will need the stitutions exist for the pursuit of endorsement of the University truth and for the development of Senate, the University president, the students as mature and re­ and the Board of Directors before sponsible individuals." it can be established as University The 10 articles of the bill deal policy. with student rights pertaining to The Student Bill of Rights Com­ admissions procedure, academics, mittee has been meeting with the student records, and co-curricular PLUS University Senate's affairs com­ affairs, which include "student or­ IIFREEDOM: WHO NEEDS 111" mittee, headed by Dr. Keith Fort, ganizations, publications, and gov­ by Richard Rovere asst. professor of English, since ernment." Other areas considered early February in an attempt to in the bill include the rights of SOREL'S UNFAMILIAR prepare a final draft of the bill. students as campus residents, the QUOTATIONS Andy Hendry, College junior class University's proper disciplinary A new feature combining Hip Hugger Slacks president and a member of the procedure, student roles in Uni­ student group, stated that there versity financial policy, "retained slightly distorted yet exist certain "inadequacies rights", and the enforcement and quotations with Austin-Hill "Natural Shoulder Slacks" enhance your and minor points of disagreement amendment of the bill of rights it­ irreverent drawings that have not been worked out" self. appearance. The cut is our very own, designed to fit all men comfortably ... precisely tailored to each size. They rest securely on your waist and the stride is easy ... They are neatly narrow in the leg. The fabrics are carefully selected in the choicest colors and patterns. Own one. 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DON'T FORGET YOU CAN DANCE DURlNG THE DAY 36th & N Streets, N.W. NOW APPEARING THE CHARTBUSTERS FEDERAL 7-8100 Thursday, May 2, 1968 THE BOYA Page Three ... Perry Wins Merrick Medal In Selective Service Michael J. Perry, CoIl. '68, won Medal bears two seals-the PhiIo­ the ninety-fourth annual Merrick demic Society seal on the front Medal Debate, Thursday, April 25. and the College seal on the re­ The annual event, sponsored by verse. the , attracted Participants were selected by over two hundred spectators. general election among the Philo­ Perry defended the affirmative demic membership. Winning the position on the resolution: "That debate traditionally symbolizes the Federal Government Should ora tori cal and forensic supremacy Replace the Selective Service Sys­ at Georgetown. tem with a Program of Compul­ One sidelight of the debate was sory National Service." that the negative team was com­ Other participants included two posed of two Philodemic presi­ se:niors, Thomas E. Kelly and dents. Tom Kelly, the first nega­ RIchard D. Chema, and one junior tive, is concluding his term, P. John Owen. The debate wa~ whereas his partner, John Owen, chaired by John P. Bellassai. has recently been elected presi­ Dave O'Neill The Philodemic was uncom­ dent a.nd Raymond Wagner, cor­ The Rev. John Haughey, S.J., addresses several hundred students J?only successful in procuring responding secretary. gathered in the Quadrangle. The ~[ltSS was offered on Friday, April Judges for the . Heading For the remainder of the year 5th, to honor the memory of Dr. Martin Luther King. the panel were Philip A. Hart the Philodemic has scheduled its United States Senator from Michi~ annual banquet, tentatively set for May 12. On that evening members gan, and L. Mendel Rivers, United MICHAEL PERRY States Representative from South forsake the seriousness which marks most of the year's activi­ McCarthy Edges RFK Carolina and Chairman of the Reynolds, Georgetown's former ties. House Armed Services Committee. director of Debate, returned espe­ Hart is a Georgetown alumnus cially to judge this year along The Merrick Committee was (College '34) and a former Mer­ with Prof. George Henigan, newly composed of Bellassai, Andrew In Choice '68Balloting rick winner, in addition to serving appointed chairman of George Hendry, Michael McGovern, Paul two terms as Philodemic Presi­ Washington's Speech Department. Lee, Ralph DeFour, Robert by Stephen Pisinslei thy emerging the victor, though dent. Joining them were John "E. The Merrick Medal is struck Thoms, James McDonald, and Georgetown University students Senator Robert E. Kennedy was Moss, United States Representa­ from solid gold by the Philadel­ Raymond Wagner. Owen has ap­ voted in the National Collegiate close behind. The mock election tive from California; Roger Mudd, phia Mint and is extremely valu­ pointed McDonald to run the Presidential Primary last Wednes­ was sponsored by Time-Life Inc. CBS News; John R. Blandford able. The die for the medal was ninety-fifth Merrick. day with Senator Eugene McCar- and conducted at Georgetown by Chief Counsel of the House Armed engraved in Italy and is consid­ a Choice '68 committee headed Services Committee; Richard Wil­ ered to be one of the finest ex­ by Foreign Service freshman Don­ son, Director of the ' amples of metallic art known in ald Twombly. Undergraduates of Philippine Division; Dr. William the United States. The Merrick Progralll Of Parietals all the schools, graduate students and even students overseas had a chance to cast their ballots. Georgetown was one of 1,500 col­ In ExperiIllental Stage leges and universities participat­ by Norm(m Roger which lauded the previous experi­ ing in the student poll. The question of parietals, or in­ mental weekends as more success­ Thirteen choices for president ENGLISH-SPANISH tervisitation hours, is still open full than anticipated. and indi­ were listed alphabetically on the after more than four months of cated that they should be insti­ bal10t which included candidates action and debate. The program, tuted on a permanent basis. and non-candidates alike. The fol­ which all were led to believe would Dr. Tripp went on to say that lowing results of the presidential either he rejected or adopted by the Board appeared to him to race represent first choice votes the Board of Directors at its have "grave doubts about the only. GERMAN-FRENCH-ITALIAN McCarthy led all other con­ April 5 meeting, was granted an program." He said "they felt that extension in the form of "experi­ the residence halls were not good tenders with 483 votes. Kennedy mental weekends." The Rev. places to entertain guests. How­ was close behind with 442 votes. Do you need to ilnprove it? Thomas R. Fitzgerald, academic ever, as has been indicated to me Third place was taken by New vice-president indicated in a letter by the students, there really are York Governor Nelson A. Rocke­ to Dr. Philip H. Tripp, vice presi­ no other places on campus." feller with 290 votes as he beat dent for student development, that When asked to evaluate the out Republican rival Richard the matter would not be con­ previous three experimental week­ Nixon who could manage only sidered again until June after a ends, Dr. Tripp described the 184. President Lyndon B. John­ MONDINO full report had been submitted. first a.s "a growth experience," the son received a surprising total of Dr. Tripp, who was the sole second as a "bust." "Some bad 107. slips were made," and the third Other candidates and their 1000 16th St., N.W. witness for intervisitation hours at the April 5 meeting, said that as "working very well." totals arc: Vice-President Hubert "the board worked me over, but Communication, however, broke H. Humphrey, 74 (write-in); there was a general reluctance on down somewhere along the line. New York City Mayor John V. School 01 Languages 659-3455 their part to approve the pro­ Dick Gregorie, president of the Lindsay, 66; California Governor gram." Dr. Tripp, besides present­ Harbin House Council, indicated Ronald Reagan, 41; Alabama Gov­ v. o. Mondino, Direcior 659-8067 ing his own views, also exhibited that he. alonlS with the other ernor George Wallace. 13; Illinois to the Board letters from the members of the house councils Senator Charles Percy, 11; Social­ housemasters and house councils thought that the Board was going ist Fred Halstead, 8; Oregon to consider intervisitation hours Senator Mark O. Hatfield, 4; and on a permanent basis. He added Martin Luther King and former "However, I guess they changed Minnesota Governor Harold E. their minds." Stassen, 3 each. When asked to give the Board's People other than Hubert Hum­ findings on the three experimental phrey receiving write-in votes in­ weekends, the Rev. Paul P. Harb­ cluded ex-Saigon ambassador The Georgetown Chef recht, S.J., dean of the University Henry Cabot Lodge, Barry Gold­ of Detroit School of Law and water, Michigan Govern9r George Board chairman, commented. "vVe Romney, Governor invites the students to didn't make much evaluation we Spiro T. Agnew, Negro comedian thought there should be ~ore Dick Gregory, gadfly William F. experiments." He went on to say, Bukley Jr., the Rolling Stones' "We didn't consider permanent in­ Mic Jagger, and J. Frank Wilson. stitution of parietals because that In the party preference ques- was not the form of the proposal (Continued on Page 19) An Outdoor Barbecue made to us, and a final deciSion will only be made pending the out­ come of these experimen ts." This Charcoal Broiled Strip Steaks means that if a decision is handed down, it will only come in June Baked Potato and Sour Cream after students have left for their summer break." Tossed Salad and Dressing Dick Gregorie suggested that the Board's action was not with­ French Bread out a real purpose. He pointed out that, in the past, all major disci­ Ice C1'eam and Beverage plinary decisions, such as that on liquor in the dormitories, were made over the summer, and that the ~oard might be extending All for $2.50 experIments to the break in order to give itself a chance to rewrite the G-Boole. \Vhen asked to go into the gen­ Friday, May 3 eral trend of discussion and the feelings of the Board on the pro­ Served in the Grill Area posed program. Fr. Harbrecht said, "It was unfair to go into the feelings of others." However, (Continued on Page 19) SENATOR McCARTHY Page Four THB HO¥A Thursday, May 2, 1968

" Rostrum "

Budgeting G.U.'s Wealth by Dayton P. Morgan Vice-President for Business and Finance Contrary to possible erroneous assumption, G.U. is not a financially wealthy institution nor does it possess significant reserves to underwrite deficits or subsidize costs of education. A balance sheet which will show over $100 million of assets this year may readily be misinterpreted. Better than 65 percent of this total is bricks and mortar, useable only for institutional pur­ poses. (I have heard of a variety of conglomerate merg­ ers during the past few years, but educational corpora­ tions seem to be retaining their individuality. Do I hear any offers? Even Yale and Vassar called off negotia­ tions-I wonder- was it the parietal problem?) Some 25 percent of the total assets will be in an investment SURPRISE! portfolio, the major portion of which cannot be cashed in for current operating problems because of restrictions established over use of the funds by the donors. The remaining 10 percent is invested in operating assets such as accounts receivable, inventories, prepaid insur­ EDITORIALS: ance, etc. Undoubtedly cash on hand will be no more than 1 percent-or enough to meet payrolls for a couple of months. What about all this construction going on-where is Les Femmes Fatales the money coming from to pay these bills? Approxi­ The idea of girls in the College is not one to study liberal arts where there is a more mately one third of these expenditures will be financed which has heretofore been unthought of or viable admissions standard. by government grants, expendable only for the specific even undiscussed. It is a rare person who Actually, the College is all male only in a project. Possibly another one-third will be financed by has not either raised the question himself or limited sense. Already most classes have girls government loans to be re-paid from future earnings responded to someone else's suggestions. But, in th~m, usually from the East Campus, or contributions. (There are some $10 million loans pay­ as such ideas are apt to be, this one has, until something that amounts to a kind of under­ able on existing facilities.) The balance, a substantial now, been considered a primarily academic ground co-education. And those who berate amount, must be raised by the development fund or one. Indeed, when the Walsh Area student the "distracting presence" of girls in a class­ possibly commercial loans. Your Administration is as­ council suggested co-eds be admitted to the room situation are often the first to tell suming a risk in order that G.U. will continue to be a College, the Yard council was opposed not to their non-Georgetown friends about the fair leader in the educational field and an institution which the idea itself but to the "impertinence" of maidens in their various classes. its alumini will be proud to support. the East Campus for having suggested it. It Maybe this is all of what an administrator If you look at the liability side of the balance sheet was held that the College should decide called our "element of make believe," but you wiI not find any "undisturbed earnings" or "reserves when it would or when it would not admit the fact is there are girls here whether one for current operations." You will find a number of re­ girls, and now it shall do just that. likes it or not, and that is not to infer that serves for specific purposes which the Administration Although the social value of co-education some don't like girls but only that some don't can only use for such purposes. Every dollar of assets will undoubtedly enter into the discussions, like to study with them. If for all practical is committed to some purpose other than subsidizing of the merits assigned to either side of this purposes, they are here, and they are, then operating costs. Or you might say some "creditor" has issue tend to solve few problems, let alone the College should go ahead and accept girls prior claim to the assets when and if converted to cash. create a final answer. Thus, the obvious so­ formally. Following the loss of control over financial reporting cial benefits should be put aside for the mo­ It is a paradox t hat Georgetown can and forecasting during the latter half of the 1966-67 ment, and a more pragmatic line of reason­ have girls in graduate biology but have no college year, your G.U. administration has taken a major ing should be pursued to determine what the undergraduate female biology students. It step forward by aiming to strengthen the accounting admission of girls will mean to the College. seems strange that Georgetown can have and data processing staff and by emphasizing the need In recent years it has become increasingly girls in graduate mathematics but have no for more accurate and more timely reporting of finan­ difficult to exclude girls from the College. undergraduate female mathematics students. cial information. In order to minimize the effect of out­ Reports of girls applying to get in or, what The College faculty has approved the prin­ side pressures in financial results of operations, good happens more frequently, asking to transfer ciple of admitting girls, and it remains for forecasting and timely tracking (measurement of actual into liberals arts from a foreign service or the students and alumni to express their performance against forecast performance) and early language program verify the increasing at­ respective opinions. The College must re­ detection of trends is essential. tractiveness of the College to the ladies. spond favorably to this question so that the Significant strides have been made during the past Many young ladies, unable to transfer into admission of girls to the College can become few months in developing a reporting system that will the College, leave Georgetown altogether- a part of University growth. produce the required comparisons. On April 16, we ob­ tained the first complete monthly operating statement directly from our data processing equipment, (this, des­ pite the interruptions in scheduled work programs caused by the civil disorders). This program was achieved only because the basic concepts of good re­ cording procedures had been established by my prede­ (Est. September, 1920) cessor and his staff. Our forecast of ultimate results THE BOARD OF EDITORS for the current fiscal year are still viewed with skepti­ Editor-in-Chiel ...... Gene Payne cism, since we are still uncovering surprise adjustments Managing Editor...... •...... Joe Collins News Editor...... uo n Casper Exec. Secretary ...... Jo Garaventa to our updated forecasts. At this point we expect to Feature Editor...... Alan Cariddi Circulation Manager ...... Chip Hogan Sports Editor...... Larry Finefrock Advertising Manager...... Neal Zimmermann cut last year's deficit in half, (optimistically-possibly Business Manager...... Rich Williams Photography Editor...... Joe Riener Copy Editor...... Denise Belanger LaYout Editor...... Don McNeil more). Next year we must strive for a break-even op­ Headline Editor...... Charley Impaglia Rewrite Editor ...... Ron Henry , Moderator.,. .. ,. ... ,.,..,.,..Edward W. Bodnar, S.J. eration. THE STAFF It is next to impossible to project a realistic budget Assistant to the News Editor: Stephen Pisinski. into 1968-69 until you have established the :firm base News Staff: Tom Tobin, Harry Gerla, Barb Benzies, Frank Charron, Barry Rubin, Brian O'Con­ nor, Tom Stoddard. Phil Cardinale. Norman Roger. Paul Genega. Ralph DeFour. John of current operations from which to launch your ­ Reale. Joanne Peartree, Bob Boege. Bruce Bavinger, Vic Forker, Jim Tannnebaum, Paul Metrinko, George Condon, Mike Gilberti. P. Mark Hansen. III. Peter Erskine. ellite. In addition to this internal problem, your Admin­ Features Staff: William Helzlsouer. Louis Pangaro. Terrence Odlin. William Niederkorn, Walt Foody, Sixto Aquino. istration is faced with speculation as to the ultimate Sports Staff: Don Finnerty. Rick Komson. Phil MoUer. Chip Butler. Steve Stageberg, . Jim Vaughan. Dan Reynolds. John Cordes, Roger Geiss. Ken Hoch, Steve Dean, Mark effect of a number of problems beyond its control: Davis. John Przylucki. Bob Fulton, John Dwyer, Phil Yellman, Pete Silverman. Layout Staff: Rick Schulte, Phil Leas. Steve Wilkins, Greg Russo. W hat effect will the recent civil disorders and the Headline Staff: Matt Bosson. J. Ward Amberg II. planned Poverty March have on enrollment in the Sum­ Photography Staff: Dave O·Neill. Rich Hluchan. Joe Hayes, Steve Sanders. Business &; Adv. Staff: Pat Antonelli. mer School programs? What effect will revisions in the Copy Staff: Betty Datig. Marsha Dobrzynski. Karen Erickson. Sue Napolitano. Marie McConville, Peggy Kelly, Marianne Popovich, Claudette Guimond. draft law regulations have on enrollment in the law Cartoonist: J. C. George. Cartoon Staff: Mike Wehrstedt. school and the graduate schools? What effect will the Circulation Staff: Bill Griseau. The writing, articles. lay-out. pictures. and format are the responsibility of the Editor and the significant slashing of federal funds available for re­ Editorial Board and do not necessarily represent the views of the Administration, Faculty, and Students unless specifically stated. The University subscribes to the principle of responsible search have on G.U.'s research programs and the con­ freedom of expression for our student editors. tributions that these funds make to our fixed costs? Vol. LI, No. 21 Thursday, May 2, 1968 If any or all of these potential disruptions of our in- Copyright © The HOYA (Continued on Page 23) ) d Thursday, May 2, 1968 THE HOrA. Page Five

Tighe has not been paying at­ Fortunately, Fr. Byron Collins tention and does not know this. listened to the students' argu­ ments and they listened to his rea­ Letters to the Editor Professor of History sons. Both Mr. Stangert's letter • • • and Fr. Collins' expressed concern that the "Educational Witness to RASH JUDGMENT ant. The Senator's personality is made the decision to refrain from WITNESSES Peace" on Copley lawn might dis­ nothing like what Professor public statements on matters on To the Editor: rupt the Parents' Weekend regis­ To the Editor: McTighe seems to believe. The which he had decided to be ig­ I wish to commend the Admin­ tration which was being held at In a democracy every citizen professor may know nothing norant. The worthy professor istration of the University, espe­ the same time in Copley lounge. has the right to have and to ex­ about the Senator's personality. asks, "Has Senator Kennedy any­ cially the Rev. Byron Collins, S.J., The peace witnesses led by Henry press his political opinions. It is, If so, he should recognize that thing solid to offer on the ag­ for refusing to go along with the Topper and Chris Fallon agreed however, incumbent upon teach­ fact and keep quiet on a subject onizing problem of Viet Nam?" I cancellation of the "Educational to cancel the event in mid-course ers, and, especially upon those on which he is ignorant. The am astonished. Does he not know Witness to Peace" on Copley lawn if it proved disruptive. who call themselves philosophers, professor also knows nothing that the Senator has offered de­ on the evening of April 26. The to practice self-restraint in the Until there is some University about the Senator's views on the tailed plans on this? As one who witness to war on that day fea­ sponsored peace day, until there is exercising of these rights. By that has read millions of words on this issues and says, "About all he has tured the methods of killing equal witness to peace through I mean that no professor, es­ subject, I am prepared to say come up with arc tired general­ learned at Georgetown, displayed University facilities as there is to pecially when he is advising stu­ that the chapter on Vietnam in ities and absurd accusations blam­ before the parents of Georgetown war through the use of University dents, and above all when he is a ing Johnson for all the ills of Senator Kennedy's book, To See7c students. philosopher, should allow himself society." a Newer World, published last facilities by the R.O.T.C., I think In the morning Mr. Stangert, it would be very unwise for the to appear in print when he is in a Professor McTighe should be year, is the best brief statement Director Student Activities, ac­ University to attempt to suppress state of purely emotional reaction told that no person mentioned to­ (in 30 pages) on what went wrong cepted ~y explanation, that our on a subject of which he is ob­ day for the presidency has given in that area and what should be the non-violent witness to peace "Educational Witness to Peace" that many students feel obliged to viously ignorant. Pro f e s s 0 r his views on more issues and in done about it. On this and other was not a social event. It did not McTighe's article in The HOYA more detail over the past five matters, the Senator's knowledge offer. When you make non-violent require reservation of a facility protest impossible, you begin to of 4 April, was written, he says, years than Senator Kennedy. If of spccific detail and his willing­ for Georgetown students and their while he was boiling with anger Professor McTighe ignored these ness to express frank opinions on make violent protest inevitable. friends to meet on the lawn and Rev. Richard T. McSorley, S.J. (for a week!). His personal re­ statements, that is his right, but, his views are matched by few help themselves and the rest of marks on Senator Kennedy are when he made the decision to ig­ public figures in this country. It the University. both non-philosophical and ignor- nore them, he should also have is a shame that Professor Mc- I explained to Mr. Stangert that SENIOR WEEK I considered it would be very un­ Final plans for the College Class wise of the University to block of 1968 Senior 'Week were an­ students seriously concerned about nounced by Bob Crowley, vice­ the immorality of the war and the president of the class. The week, militarization of the educational lasting from June 4 until com­ institution through the R.O.T.C. mencement on June 9, is the big­ from manifesting in some visible gest Senior Week at Georgetown THE NEW SCHOOL COLLE6E way their opposition. I considered in recent years. The six-event it unwise because opposition which week begins Tuesday June 4 with is a senior college. It offers the third and fourth years of the undergraduate cannot be expressed in a rational a catered Luau on Kehoe field. , leading to the B.A. degree. We accept liberal arts student~ non-violent way will inevitably Wednesday brings the traditional who have completed the equivalent of the freshman and sophomore year~ show itself in other ways. Wilson Line Boatride Dance on elsewhere. We offer two programs-Humanities and Social Science. Half I think the University should the Potomac with a stop at Mar­ the work in each program is done in DIVISIONAL COURSES which span realize that there are hundreds of shall Hall Amusement Park. On the traditional departmental boundaries in order to study the basic con­ seniors and graduate students con­ Thursday the seniors will move cepts, methods and principles of the larger discipline. In addition to the fronted with the draft when June Divisional Sequence of courses each student works in a specialized area to the Main Ballroom of the Wil­ arrives. Some of these students lard Hotel where Chuck Berry will and engages in a tutorial leading to independent study. The program cul­ are so opposed to this war that minates in an Inter-Divisional·Senior Seminar, which examines the rela­ provide the entertainment. Friday, tionships between the disciplines of Social Science, the Humanities and the they will choose to witness to June 7, will mark the arrival of Natural Sciences. their opposition by going to jail the graduates' parents and an rather than by violating their con­ afternoon open for cocktail party sciences. This is why these stu­ will be given in their honor. On dents publicly dissent from the Friday night the Senior Prom will The juniors in the Social Sciences take The juniors in the Humanities also take three year long build-up of the psychology of the three Divisional (year long) courses. courses. Working with materials from all of the arts and be held on Copley Lawn where philosophy these courses engage the student in various acceptance of war which is done Meyer Davis and his Orchestra In the first course the emphasis is on by "Military Day." a systematic analysis of a large (mac­ modes of critical and interpretive analysis in order to will provide the music for dancing ro) social order - in this case the maximize the possibilities for significant discoveries in At about 5:30 p.m. April 26 I under the stars. Complimentary American culture. Readings include: confronting the vast range of works created by man's received a written statement from refreshments will be served at the Paul Goodman, Drawing the Line: intellect and imagination. Mr. Stangert saying "I have been Prom and at a Parent-Faculty Luckman and Berger, Social Mobility Here, as an example, are excerpts from last year's com­ authorized to order you to cancel Cocktail Party on Saturday after­ and Personal Identity; C. Wright prehensive examination. "The following texts all concern the event you planned for this noon at which the Georgetown Mills, selections; Parsons, The Link themselves to a greater or lesser extent with the question evening." The letter also stated Chimes will sing. Between Character and Society; Car­ of human history, and the correlative question, the possi­ "I feel these planned events should The Cohongoroton address will michael, What We Wallt; de Tocque­ bilities for progress. Choose three of the following texts reserve the facility through my of­ be delivered in the Quadrangle on ville, Democracy ill America; San­ and compare and contrast their treatment of these ques­ fice." (He was talking about the Saturday night during the Tropara tayana, Character and Opinion in the tions. Communist Manifesto; Reason and Experience use of Copley lawn.) Here was a night exercises. Sunday will pro­ United States; selections from Freud (Dewey); Structure of Scientific Revolutions (Kuhn); University official attempting to vide the highlight of the week with and Skinner; economic analysis by Genesis; Antigone; Caesar and Cleopatra; The Sound alld cancel an event dealing with hun­ morning Baccalaureate Mass and Knight, Samuelson and Marx; and the Fury." . .."2. One factor which would seem to distin­ dreds of students on notice of one afternoon commencement. political analysis in the terms of guish indisputably the modern temperament from the past hour and a half. The Senior Class Hume, Aristotle and Dewey. The sec­ is the drastically shifting conception of the heroic-not ond course is in micro-analysis, i.e., only in terms of what the heroic indeed is, but also in terms an examination of subcultures seen of what possibilities for heroism stilI exist. Discuss this in relation to the larger community. quotation drawing evidence from lob; Phadre; The Strang­ We read Glazer and Moynihan, Be­ er; Hippolytus; Marat/Sade; The Balcony; Billiards at yond the Melting Pot; Malinow.ski, Half Past Nine." . .."3. Using one of the following films, Tomorrow. .. Kroeber, T. S. Eliot (Notes Toward 8~, Wild Strawberries, Last Year at Marien bad, The Tomorrow, and tomorrow, and tomorow, the Definition of Culture), Weber Knack, Ulysses, discuss in what sense the material (i.e., Creeps in this petty pace from day to day (The Protestant Ethic), Erik Erikson, cinematic technique) affects the value judgments you make (Macbeth V.v. 19) Malcolm X, and more readings and of character, incident, and theme ...... "4. How do partic­ field work on such subcultures as the ular words or images control aesthetic responses in the 2 hippies, the poor and the bl~ck na­ following poems: Leda and the Swan, The Lovesong of THURSDAY, MAY SUNDAY, MAY 5 tionalists. The third course IS con­ I. Alfred Prufrock, A COlley Island of the Mind." . .."5. Tennis-GU vs. William and Sailing-Shields Quadrangu­ cerned with comparative analysis­ Compare the role of coincidence in King Lear and Tom Mary. Home at 2:00. lar at Navy. specifically a comparison of US­ lones, indicating to what extent the nature of that role is Sailing-Jesuit Cup. Home. FRIDAY, MAY 3 USSR, largely in terms of the social, determined by the tragic structure of the one and the comic Judo- In­ political and economic dimensions in structure of the other."... "6. In reading both philosophy Diplomats Ball-Copley Lawn. vitational. Away. the process of industrialization which and arguments, language has been one of the most recur­ Track-Q u ant i c 0 Relays. have taken place, east and west. The rent topics: Aristotle on diction in the Poetics, Plato on the Away. MONDAY, MAY 6 readings include case study material living word, Augustine on the Word that was in the be­ Golf-GU vs. Univ. of Penn­ Golf-GU vs. Univ. of Mary­ as well as complex conceptual anal­ ginning, Unamuno on the birth of language in relation to sylvania. Away at 1:30. land. Home at 1 :30. yses: Henderson, Ashton, Bendix, the tragic sense, Wordsworth and Coleridge on the rela­ Nef, Moore, Schumpter, and more. tion of language to the minds of men, Freud on verbal SATURDAY, MAY 4 TUESDAY, MAY 7 All Divisional Classes for all students slips, and Heidegger, Camap, Wittgenstein and Chomsky Diplomats Ball-Washington Hilton. Tennis-GU vs. Mar y I and. are small. The major concern of the on philosophic issues bound up with language. Using at Away at 3:00. classroom is to analyze the readings. least four of the above, write a brief essay on language Tennis-GU vs. For d ham. Baseball-GU vs. Gallaudet. Teaching is by discussion - a syste­ by indicating some key insight of each of the four and Home at 2:00. Away at 3:00. matic approach to each text. discussing the scope of the problem (or values) language Crew-GU Heavyweights in presents us with." Area Regatta. Home. THURSDAY, MAY 9 Crew-GU Lightweights vs. Baseball-GU vs. Maryland. ------.. ----r------, Rutgers and Columbia. At Rut­ Home at 3:00. We're located in Greenwich Village - coffee gers. FRIDAY, MAY 10 houses, but no football. We don't even have a I, ~~~ ~;;iNEc;ceSCHOOL I, Sailing - Shields Quadrangu­ Military Ball- gym, but only a city full of conce~ts ~nd cul­ 't. 'if: COLLEGE ture. And we don't operate dormItones. We I NEW SCHOOL FOR SOCIAL RESEARCH I lar at Navy. 66 West 12th Street I SATURDAY, MAY 11 don't count credits or grade points. You earn New York, N.Y. 10011 Sailing-Jesuit Cup. Home. C r e w - GU Heavyweights. the degree when you pass all of the compre­ I I Please send me the Bulletin and application for the I Baseball-GU vs. G e 0 r g e Dad Vail. At Philadelphia. hensive examinations and have made a success­ I New School College. I Mason. Away at 2:00. Crew-GU Lightweights in ful oral defense of your independent research. Track-Qua n tic 0 Relays. Eastern Sprints at Worcester. Our faculty is committed to teaching, our stu­ I I am now attending ··'(coiiigi·o; 'ui1i,:i;:Sity) I Away. Sailing-MAISA Spring Mon­ dents are committed to learning. It costs $1700 I Name ...... _...... I otypes. At Navy. per year. If you're interested write or phone the Golf-GU vs. Univ. of Dela­ Director of Admissions, Mr. Ralph Herrod at ware. Away at 10:30. Baseball-GU vs. G e 0 r g e ORegon 5-2700,66 West 12th Street, New York Lacrosse-GU vs. Villanova. Mason. Home at 2:00. City. Fall 1968 applications are still being Home. Golf-EICA at P r inc e ton. 9:00. accepted. l;;~~~~~~==~~~~~J Polo-GU vs. Yale. Home. Tennis-GU vs. Penn State. Rugby-GU vs. John Carroll. Home at 2:00. Home at 2:00. Polo-GU vs. Cornell. Home. JUdo-Cornell University In­ Rugby-GU vs. Col u m b i a. vitational Tournament. Away. Away at 2:00. Page Six THE DOrA Thursday, May 2, 1968

If these kids don't make it, neither do we.

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These are big city school children. They are partners of all who try to build and keep our cities alive with hope and promise of personal dignity. If we fail these partners, they will fail, as finally will we all. To the Bell System, they also are customers and, prospectively, many are fellow employees. Those we hire will bring with them attitudes and skills produced by city life and city schools. Their qualities will help shape the quality of our service. And service" is our product. Bell System companies and people are increasingly engaged to help meet the problems of the cities, especially those concerning education and employability_ In these areas our skills and other business resources may have extra value. We shall try to keep our deeds outrunning our words. ,.,.. I. Thursday, May 2, 1968 THE HorA Page Seven The King Funeral: A Sad Day In Atlanta

by Richard McSarley, S.J. yelled a warning! The line opened in my heart, I do believe that we and the car sped through. As it shall overcome someday." "Black As I walked in the crowd of and white together, we'll walk 250,000 people, behind the body did, the National Guard along the road turned their guns on us. King hand in hand." And the words that moved ahead of us in a don­ yelled to them, "You turn your were made up as the verses con­ key-drawn farm wagon, I saw the guns on us, but do not stop the tinued. "God is on our side, deep sign printed in red above the front car that would kill us." in my heart, I do believe that God That day King seemed to me is on our side today." Freedom door of a church that read, "Our songs, one repeating the word Slain Leader, Martin Luther King like the true Christian leader. He walked in the dust, he faced dan­ freedom over and over again. It Jr." That sign told of the sorro\; was like all funeral processions­ and inspiration that blended to­ ger, he charted the path, led the way. He tried to protect even sad. It was unlike all others that g~ther during the funeral of Dr. I have ever seen, because the peo­ King. with his own life, those who fol­ lowed him. Now he lay here silent ple sang as Martin used to sing . I arrived in Atlanta Sunday just ahead of us. to keep his spirits up, because it mght. It seemed to me a city of I. asked a young colored girl, in looked to the future, the fulfill­ luxury and death. New beautiful a lme near me, "Did you know ment of Martin's dream of broth­ buildings downtown, with a o~e Doctor King?" "No, not personal­ erhood. revolving dome in which a restau­ ly," she said, "But I know what hA Governor in Capitol rant moves to give changing views did. I know him." - of the city. It symbolized America It was sad to walk by the State -its wealth and its violence. Inside the door of the church a Capitol of Georgia where Governor glass-covered casket held his body. Lester Maddox still blindly refused Visitors in Cars The glass cover was opaque J to see the opportunities that were Courtesy cars with the sign around the edges. You could look passing him by. He refused to in directly and see the length of "S.C.L.C. (S 0 u the r n Christian I shall not bear ill will towards The high point of the funeral come to the funeral. Inside he was Leadership Conference) Courtesy his body. He looked small in guarded with a hundred and sixty stature, but very big in meaning. anyone ceremony was the taped record Cars," cruised the city. They of­ men. In power and in loneliness, I touched a copy of his book with his voice telling the meaning fered service to the visitors; they I shall not submit to injustice he sat in fear, a fear, that Martin Why We Cannot Wait, to the of his own life. were necessary. I found that the cof~ from anyone never shared, though he never had ordinary city cab would not take fin. I think King is a martyr. This Other voices had been very elo­ book is hoI i e r now because it I shall conquer untruth by truth quent, but when his with its dy­ one hundred armed men around me to the colored section of the him. It was sad that Martin's town, where King's body lay. Here, touched his coffin. namic range and its rolling tones On Monday morning, Mrs. King And in resisting untruth, I shall came through the TV the people in love which went out to him had even on the night in which he lay put up with all suffering. never been accepted. dead in his struggle for justice, left Atlanta to take up the un­ the poor home where I listened By two in the afternoon, the the cab stopped at the bridge finished march of her husband in Mahatma Ghandi-1869-1948 were magnetized. They responded giant crowd was marching into which marked the entrance to the Memphis. In Memphis he had b~en to his remarks after almost every colored section of town, and killed as he joined in the efforts Along one wall in the kitchen paragraph. Moorehouse College, where Martin radioed for a colored cab to carry of 1,300 garbage workers to gain was a series of pictures, happy In his own prophetic way he King had been a student. A plane us i,he remaining distance. human working conditions. scenes with his wife and children. foresaw his own funeral and he from Washington brought 24 more Mixed with them were some front Senators and more than fifty Con­ dr, Sunday night King's body Mrs. King Speaks asked that no one mention. that lay in the chapel of Spellman Col­ covers of magazines showing pic­ he had received the Nobel Peace gressmen. Most of the Congress­ lege, about four miles from center Despite her grief, Coretta King tures like Dr. King and his wife Prize or where he went to college. men and Senators stood unrecog­ Atlanta. We reached there a half lead 30,000 marchers to the city at the head of the march in Wash­ They should say here was a man nized in the vast crowd. hour after midnight. For two hall where she joined her plea to ington in 1963. who tried to love others, to serve On the lawn, near the back of hours we moved slowly through theirs that the city government What a home environment for others. Here is a man who visited the large crowd, I sat with Sen­ the long line about a half mile recognize their just demands for the instruction of children! The the prisoner, who tried to clothe ator Phil Hart of Michigan. Many long and two or three deep. We a salary of more than $2,100 per symbols and ideals so clearly put the naked, who tried to feed the Senators,.no doubt, had been to­ moved across the peaceful campus year. She explained that through­ before them, both in the example hungry, and who left behind him gether at other funerals, but how to the pillared chapel. above out her life, she had supported her of their parents and in atmos­ a committed life. This is his own often, had they just been lost in us reflected window lights on the husband's struggle for Justice pheres of the home, recalled what summary of the Christian life. the crowd? How different was this Dogwood blossoms. Above us that occasionally he had asked Mrs. King said in her speech the These are also the norms for ac­ funeral, where the lowly and the hung a hazy moon. Slow, organ her to substitute when he could day before in Memphis. She said tion laid out by in the Ser­ humble were exalted. And the tones amplified across the campus, not be in a certain place. She felt that because her husband was so mon on the Mount. By these norms great ones of the earth were hum­ played the hymn identified with that he would want her to be in active in the service of others he King is a great Christian man. By bled by the example before them? his struggle, "We Shall Over­ this march. was often away from home. But any Christian norm he is a close When Mahalia Jackson began come." In the darkness I reflected. With her were three of her four although he did not have much imitator of Jesus. to sing, "Take me by the hand," Springtime and death. Death and children. How well they must time with the children it was the an old colored woman near me, new life. King's death meant new have learned the lesson of courage quality of the time that counted. Vice President in Church began having convulsions, scream­ life for America. Black America and interest in the poor, from par­ And the quality was good. This, it Inside the church the Vice-Pres­ ing and crying. Three or four peo­ and white America now had a new ents like theirs! seemed to me, applied to his short ident, govc:rnors, mayors, and na­ ple tried to hold her, quiet her martyr; a martyr for social jus­ Back in Atlanta that evening life of 39 years. It is not so much tionally known people listened to down. In between screams she tice. His life and death connected I visited the home of Dr. King: the number of years we live, but the assistant minister at Ebenezer called for Jesus to hold her hand., the ethic of Jesus with the social It was on Sunset Street in the the quality of the life in those Church say, "Martin spoke to the I took her hand and said, "Jesus and economic life of America. colored section. It was not the years. The quality of his life was pharaohs of this land, and said, takes you by the hand." She re­ Here was a life and death based slum section of the city, but a very good. 'Let my people go.' " They and the peated what I said, and began to segregated section. Inside the on belief in the brotherhood of Funeral on TV one hundred and twenty million quiet down a little. Those holding front door some wood-cuts showed who listened on television heard man. On Wednesday morning, the day her, seated her on the chair. I the faces of Negro men in struggle him call as Martin did for the end As I moved slowly with the of the funeral, I went to the knelt beside her. "Martin Luther silent, grieving people, I recalled and strain. In the parlor, mem­ of violence in Viet Nam. King walked hand in hand with bers of the Southern Christian Ebenezer Baptist Church. marches I had made with King, I They heard this call repeated Jesus," I told her. "We must do recalled the Selma to Montgomery Leadership Conference invited An hour before scheduled time the same." "Yes," she responded. visitors to sign the guest book and by the Reverend Harold De Wolfe, March. There at the front of the of starting, thousands crowded Her convulsions began to subside. partake of a buffet supper. a friend and disciple of King for line, he gave unity and confidence outside the church. Only 1,300 "Martin King believed that God Everything about the house the last thirteen years. They heard to all who followed. Now he does could go in. The thousands outside was his father," I continued. "He spoke of his commitment to jus­ made it next to impossible to see Ralph Abernathy, the new Presi­ this for America. walked, as a child, hand in hand tice. In the parlor was a painting what was going on. I stopped in dent of the Southern Christian with God. He has taught us how King in March of Mahatma Ghandi. Decorations at the house nearest the church Leadership Conference, say that clearly identified his interest in and asked if it were possible to he had been to jail seventeen to walk. We must follow now that I remember him walking up a Negro art and culture. In the watch the funeral on TV. The times with Martin, and that each Martin has marced on with God. dusty hill in Philadelphia, Missis­ kitchens I saw a large plaque colored lady of the house invited time, the two of them spent the We must place our hand in the sippi. He had taken time out from carved in wood with the words of me in and offered me coffee. first day in prayer and fasting, so hand of God our Father for time the Meredith March to return to Mahatma Ghandi, a resolution for Throughout the morning many that they would bear no bitterness and eternity. Martin has showed Philadelphia, Mississippi. He had each day! others came in for a glass of in their hearts toward t!H!ir jailors. us the way, as Christ did. We must been attacked and driven out of water, I wonder if the case had They heard the Reverend Aber­ follow." She was quiet now, she town two days before. He had re­ Let then our first act every been reversed, and a colored man nathy say that he had been fast­ thanked me and blessed me. She turned to overcome fear. I walked morning be to make the fol­ had shot a white leader, would the ing ever since his last meal which symbolized to me both the sorrow by his side, as we moved up the lowing resolve for the day: ordinary white person welcome in he shared five days before with and the love of Martin Luther hill, w hen suddenly a car with an unknown Negro who wished to Martin Luther King. His fasting King. She personified the agony so m e in it roared I shall not fear anyone on earth, and the inspiration his life and I shall fear only God see the funeral on TV? Yet I felt was a plea and a prayer that God down the hill, straight at King. He at home and 'welcomed in this would direct him as he took over death brought to all of us...... " .. "'!\'."-,,...,..,~"""'/{.- household, perhaps the constant where Martin left off. ~~~~~~~'~ ~~, endurance of suffering and op­ The body was carried out to pression make people more the noonday sunlight and placed in human, more friendly. the back of a farm wagon drawn As I listened to the funeral cere­ by two mules. The wagon sym­ monies, the conviction deepened bolized Martin's identification with in me how perfectly King had lived poor. It symbolized his identifica­ out in his own life what he had tion with the farmer who develops taught. Like Christ, there was no life, as opposed to the destruction separation between theory and of life symbolized by guns. practice in his life. Like Christ A great march of two hundred his life showed personal identifica­ thousand people followed Martin's tion with the poor and the op­ body, no police, no military, pressed. What a record he had put marched as part of their official before the world. Thirty-two times duties. But many walked in sor­ in jail to suffer for the injustice row among their friends and with­ of others. Bombed in his own out their guns. home, threatened with death con­ Four miles out from the city, stantly for thirteen years. He was the quarter million followed Mar­ beaten, stabbed, and stoned. He tin's body for the last time. As was accused of being a Commu­ they marched they sang the songs nist, betrayed by those he loved that many had sung marching and trusted. How like Jesus and with Martin. The words told their St. Paul! story, "We shall overcome. Deep 'Page Eight THE DOrA. Thursday, May 2, 1968 SFS S'opho:lno~e F,asts Atop 37th Str,eet Wall by Harry Gerla tos, an the death of Dr. Martin Luther King. graduate Last week, Georgetown students Siegler also engaged in a partial were surprised to see a lonely fast, consisting of a few apples figure keeping a full-time vigil and oranges, a couple of bowls of to greatness ... atop the 37th Street wall, He was rice, and two doughnuts. In addi­ i ''', Larry Siegler, a sophomore in the tion to being on the wall to ex­ ", pound the doctrine of non-violence, become j Foreign Service School. He broke Siegler was also there to protest his vigil only for a brief visit to what he feels are dangerous :~ the Rev. Richard T. McSorley trends in America. He mentioned usomeone special" S.J. and for an interview on WGTB the use of "double think," which he said was practiced by the gov­ in order to promote the doctrine ernment when it talked about its Make the most of non-violence. He feels that non­ the new york city nursJ!! ViE"tnam policy and by certain ele­ productive use of your education and your abilities by starting violence has been displaced by ments in the peace movement violence because of the war in who, in his words, "want to geno­ your career as a New York City Nurse. You can select your area Viet Nam, the rioting in the ghet- cide the genociders." Siegler also of clinical interest from among 19 general and specialized hospitals, learn strongly objected to "all the talk about the Vietnam war," the lack new skills and techniques as you prepare for professional POOR CAMPAIGN of clarity in covering it by the advancement, and make an important contribution not only to your particular mass media and the general pro­ (Continued from Page 1) pensity for violence shown by the job but to the entire City of New York. of 450 non-academic workers. mass media. You can be a good nurse The movement in support of Siegler, who claimed he had no r------·Gf~~-- the Poor People's Campaign gained affiliation with any organization anywhere, but you can become I Professional Recruitment Division, ~ I force following the Memphis mur­ ended his vigil on Military Day, I Room 608, Dept. C·10 I last Friday, in order to take part a great nurse in New York City. I DEPARTMENT OF HOSPITALS der of Dr. Martin Luther King I 125 Worth Street, New Yo,k, N. Y. 10013 I on April 4. On the Friday after­ in the anti-war protests scheduled Write today for more for that day and to prepare for I Please send me your brochure about nursing in I noon immediately following the I New York City. I death of Dr. King, a memorial taking part in the support opera­ information on how to become mass was celebrated in his honor tions for Washington's Poor Peo­ "Someone Special", .. I NAME______: at Georgetown. During the well­ ple's Campaign. : ADDRESS ______: attended Quadrangle mass, a plea Siegler said that approximately The New York City Nurse. I CITy ______STATE _____ ZIP__ I was made for support of the Poor 170 people had come by to see People's March which Dr. King him during his five day stay on the SCHOOL______,GRAD. DATE ____ } wall. Of these, he said that about I was to have led. Because the ______-1.. ______An Equal Opportunity Employer / / march, which begins in Memphis 100 had come to scoff and view the Tuesday, May 7, and final exams curious sight while 70 had come coincide, most students will be and stayed to hear his ideas. unable to participate. However, those students and faculty mem­ bers in sympathy with the Poor People's March on Washington began Monday to support their cause actively. A fast of three days and a teach-in under the auspices of A journey of a thousand miles GUCAP opened at 12 :00 on Mon­ day with a speech by the Rev. Gene Baroni, the Executive Sec­ retary of the Archbishop's Com­ mittee of Community Relations. begins with a single step. The participants in the fast ate bread and drank water twice daily in sympathy for "the poor. All the money which they might have spent on food will be donated to the marchers upon their arrival \ in the city. The teach-in, which took place continuously in the Hall of Na­ tions, was an attempt to educate the unaware concerning the mag­ nitude of the poor person's prob­ lems. Of special interest were a talk by the Rev. Richard T. Mc­ Sorley, S.J. on Dr. King, a talk on the Negative Income Tax by Dr. Thomas Burke, a tape on Vietnam and Civil Rights by the Rev. William Sloan Coffin, a lec­ ture by Dr. Arthur Waskow, Di­ rector, Institute of Policy Studies. concerning the Response of the White Community and a run­ down on the Kerner Report by Dr. Richard Rupp. Chuck Stone. a member of the Southern Chris­ tion Leadership Conference, also spoke. Actual Hoya participation in the :"';l march, on an entirely personal and individual basis. will be limited either by finals or summer I recess. I ( It is hop e d that the fast and teach-in especially will en­ courage students to carry their concern for the poor home to their own communities. There will un­ doubtedly be some who will par­ ticipate here in Washington, help­ It is hard work. Sometimes it is tedious ing to locate food and money fo~ He took that first step and he took the tered America's course. In Wisconsin, the marchers. The use of the step first, when he went alone into New ten thousand of us came to work. A new and exhaUsting. But it is the work that Jesuit kitchen has been granted Hampshire. politics of participation was born. An must be done to insure our future and for the preparation of such food. unchangeable mind was changed. that of America. Some students will be providing But he was not entirely alone. Three thousand stUdent volunteers, an actor If your help, your commitment, was im­ transporta tion, while others will But our task is incomplete, our journey and a poet were with him. portant before, it is vital now. head delegations to the offices of unfinished. Thousands of volunteers are various senators and representa­ We have promises to keep, and miles to Together they went into the countryside needed during the coming weeks to do tives. go before we sleep. to talk to the people. The students the telephoning and canvassing, talk­ talked; the people listened. And then ing and walking, that must be done to Field Hockey Coach in New England they cast the votes win again in Indiana on May 7, and in Students for McCarthy needed for Women's Team that were heard around the world. Nebraska, Oregon and California after Claypool Hotel, Indianapolis, Indiana Fall 1968 As students we made it happen. We al- that. Call your local group now. Please contact Mrs. Paramskas ext. 265 or home FE 7-5922 ~------!\ , '~ Thursday, May 2, 1968 THE HOTA Page Nine Freshmen Take A Critical Look At G.U. The following article is the re­ "Georgetown's mostly known the discussion to Georgetown's sttlt of a discussion with a group for its Foreign Service school" a social life. "Don't you spend a lot of first year nwn from different boy from the College offered.' more money on dates here? A schools and living on different The Foreign Service student date around here is ridiculous. campus dormitory f/,oors. The continued, "If you abolish that You go out and you have a choice freshmen were asked to give their Foreign Service School you'll of drinking in a bar or drinking impressions of Georgetown after have Georgetown U n i ve r sit y, in five different bars. It's not that f!' year and were read the foZlow­ Catholic College of the East, and there are lushes, its just that a ~ng statement made by one of the I know I wouldn't have come here lot of the girls, at least on the deans which appeared in The if I knew that's only what it was." first couple of dates, expect you The Endless Summer HOYA on the day of their arrival: Another Foreign Service student to spend a hell of a lot of money j "Beginnings are always difficult, mentioned his roommate. "My on them." However, his main com­ but all too soon the Class of 1971 roommate is really disappointed plaint was that "there's not a wide will be adjusted, oriented, and that there's no challenge at all, enough variety of people here." ready to partake of whctt George­ may be an hour a night homework Explanations town has to offer. It is my hope and he got a 3.4. He thinks his that they will very soon begin to freshman year is too easy." A College student, whose father contribute their spirit, collectively graduated from Georgetown and and individually, and present to This prompted a previously later taught at Georgetown and Georgetown the best that they silent freshman to make a re­ who was born in the University have to offer of their tctlents, their mark that was greeted with gen­ hospital, offered this explanation, hopes, cmd their drectms." eral laughter, "I'd like to meet "Maybe that's because it is not your roommate." "I don't think there's the frame­ a large school. It seems to me work where you can work out In a more serious tone, one that everybody in Georgetown seems to know everybody else; your aspirations, especially in the philosophized, "Isn't he trying to and maybe thats the reason for East Campus. Our whole campus find any other way to try to chan­ nel his energy? He's not being it." is completely unorganized, we didn't know anybody, apathetic, fair to himself if he's not looking Another offered a different rea­ we got two guys for officers who for something else to do-after son, "Everybody I know at this all The HOYA could use people. total wastes, you get absolutely to do-administrate. I think the didn't do anything." Thus, a University went to a Loyola or a "The pressure is not as great St. Ignatius." nothing out of the course. The faculty and students should de­ freshman began the discussion freshman philosophy courses are cide what they want, and the ad­ as its made out to be. If you do A College student thought that and although one college man of~ just lousy." ministrators will implement what fered, "It takes a while to sort the work and study for the tests "the College is a little more stereo­ and don't really put out too great "The teacher himself is sup­ the faculty and students want, out your leaders," he went on to typed than the East Campus," and not the other way around." say, concerning the School of an effort, you can get through a freshman from third Loyola posed to guide you and to show with a C without really killing agreed. "I think we've got a num­ you where to look for certain "Maybe we can be the most ex­ yourself at all. It's fairly tough to ber of individuals. It would be things. They don't do it. They've pensive college in the country if get B's in courses and it's very difficult to find an East Campus got everything mapped out so we really try," said the freshman hard to get A's." type, at least in the freshman neatly and it looks so good on from the large family. "They're One boy hailing from Los year." paper," said one before another putting this place out of the replied, "Don't always blame the Angeles felt that his biggest prob­ "You could find a Business range of a lot of middle class stu­ teacher. It's easy to blame the lem was one of adjusting to the School type," said one College dents who are good students but differences of living on the east man, "look for the three piece teacher." who can't get scholarships. They're coast. suit." The discussion t urn e d A former student body presi­ going to make the student body dent changed the subject, "A more stereotyped." Lost Preppy? quickly to teachers. The boy hail­ ing from the west coast proffered, lot of students had an identity The conversation turned to a Georgetown's social life brought ''I'm disappointed. They're not with their high school, when you a variety' of comments. "I think discussion of the students at worth the trip. They're all right, come to college, its not there any­ Georgetown. "I'm not saying that there's almost a social pressure but I'm sure that I could get as more and you feel kind of alien­ I'm a lost preppy or something, here, that you've got to go out, good an education, if not better, ated." you've got to go to the Oktober­ but a lot of people talk about go­ closer to home and cheaper." ing to school, and whenever they Jesuit Power fest or whatever the weekly fling is down at New South." say school, they don't mean here. The freshman with the George­ "I think that there's a general They mean prep school, and that's town background, who also con­ attitude or feeling that there's "There's something I call the the big thing." fessed a strong interest in surfing, something wrong somewhere," Hoya attitude, towards a date," Atlantic Ocean style, said, "But said an East Campus freshman A freshman from Winnetka, Il­ there again you get into the idea linois, one of Chicago's more afflu­ who described himself as an "Air of money. Of course, everyone Force brat," amI whose father ent suburbs, observed, "I get the knows that Georgetown is kind of impression that this place is a was graduated from Harvard Col­ backlogged in the finance depart­ lege and Harvard Law. Another middle class, upper middle class, ment." He continued in defense of upper class school. There are al­ freshman said simply, "People are Foreign Service, "I think the the teacher situation, "I think the yelling, griping and screaming and whole school has a problem with most no people who are really in approach now with most of these financial binds to stay in this then don't do anything about it. identity and morale." younger teachers is to let the stu­ Talk is the greatest thing on school although there are some." dent try to do the things himself, A College man from Loyola campus, it's also the cheapest The southern Californian added, let the professor stay in the back­ thing.'· Academy in Chicago compared his ground. He wants to be the high school experience to his ex­ "What's frightening is that there "I think that if they get rid of are people who take the attitude teacher but he wants to be the perience at Georgetown, "I came instrument to bring things out of the Jesuit power structure," one out of a real go-go high school. that they're upper class and freshman from a Jesuit high they're really not." you. Most of the older teachers We all came here and you went here seem to stick to the tradi­ school began until a boy who had to football games and nobody The Winnetka freshman ob­ tional way of teaching." gone to public schools since the could really give a damn, sitting jected to the situation, "You can't fifth grade interrupted, "I think "It seems to me that in most of there getting drunk and falling go through life knowing only that if they got back to it, we 1!!!!!Ij~+-­ the subjects around here you get out of the stands, the team was people who don't have really bad might be a little better off." The what you go after," observed running around and nob 0 d Y financial trouble." other replied, "You know who's really cared. The team another student. "You can sit running the school now. It's not -everyone started out cheering, A College freshman fro m back and have them spoon feed Campbell, it's Fitzgerald." Chicago said, "A lot of people put then they lost a few so everyone it to you, but you get what you on big fronts here. Everyone is go after. And if you want to learn A student whose uncle is a would go down and cheer for the Jesuit priest remarked, "I grew cheerleaders doing cartwheels. out to impress everyone else." a little more, then you just can't However, a Foreign Service stu­ sit around." up with Jesuits and they aren't said one. "It's almost like a battle We just kind of gave up on the all that impressive. The Jesuits that you plan in advance, then basketball team too. Its easier to dent who lives in Maguire dis­ One boy, who will be a student­ agreed, "I don't really run into I've come across, though they are the great war is about to begin, back a winner, but everyone is teacher at his high school this good men and they are very in­ too many of those guys." summer, said, "Most kids have and you go out about 8:30 on more interested in themselves than telligent, they have their set Saturday evening and you come one or two teachers that are just their school." A fifth Copley freshman turned viewpoint and they aren't willing back at two. Then you relate the Another College freshman who to change that if something comes saga of the evening. You go out had attended a co-ed Catholic up. There is the Jesuit way of do­ on a date and expect some great high school was more optimistic. ing it and the wrong way of do­ conquest, and if you didn't make "It seems that this year's fresh­ ing it." it with a girl, you know you're man class has more spirit. Almost Another student who had al­ sunk." everyone at the basketball games ways gone to Catholic schools Someone else put it this way, was a freshman, maybe because and is the oldest of six children "If you don't blow $24 at Clyde's it was a novelty, something new. observed, "What this place needs or some other chic bar the n Usually every basketball game is somebody dynamic to get this you're not in with it." He added, you went to you saw the same place rolling again. Unless they ·'Another thing that really irks faces there. I think this class does do something for the alumni me about this place is that it's in have spirit, it just has to be give them something to be proud Washington, and it can't get good brought out more." of, the alumni aren't going to give speakers." Disenchantment money/' A College freshman in­ terjected, "I think the University One freshman, who confessed One Foreign Service freshman has to be radical." The other con­ that having a girl friend at home was obviously disenchanted: "I tinued. "If Georgetown could get made him feel better about his applied to a school that was some publicity and get some of relatively infrequent dates at around ten years ago but isn't the alumni interested, maybe Georgetown, said, "The only girls now. It's kind of a disappointing they'd solve their financial prob­ you meet are on dating terms, situation, and I've made up my lems." you don't have any girls just for mind that if things don't improve friends. I know maybe three or next year I'll get out. I look at it A Foreign Service freshman who four girls that I can sit down and said he came from a "conserva­ " this way: I have an obligation to chew the fat with without them get myself an education, and I tive" town in the midwest where expecting me to spend money on have an obligation to get myself there was a "Republican strangle­ them or something." hold," offered another solution "I the best education I can, and if Student activities were the sub­ Georgetown can not give it to me, think that the administrators then I'll go elsewhere." should do what they're supposed (Continued on Page 19) Page Ten THE HO¥A Thursday, May 2, 1968 Candidate McDonough's Practices '1 While you were away! I Create Walsh Area Contr'oversy I We re-stocked with the season's best ! (Continued from Page 1) the same type of sign last year shouldn't be disqualified." Jim and reported it at $10). The elec­ Scott said, "I don't think the page of McDonough's platform, tion committee ruled that since reasons for Joe's disqualification Colors and Styles. which has been lis ted at $17. the painter was a professional, he were sufficient since there was so Grimstad contacted a Mr. Knud­ "donated" his services as a "gift." much doubt about them. I could son at Old Dominion Printing Co. And so, according to election rules see more questionable points in He reported back to the commit­ concerning gifts the sign would other directions. The decision of tee that, in his presence, Knud­ have to be revalued. Since it was the election committee was in di­ son had called Ayers Printing Co., by now 1:00 a.m. and too late to rect opposition to the feelings of which had actually done the job get an estimate from a profes­ the student body. They made an for McDonough. He said that sional, the committee came up arbitrary decision. The whole con­ Knudson told him that Ayers said with the figure of $15 for labor, cept of the election committee he had charged McDonough $25, bringing the cost of the sign to should be reconsidered." gentlemen's fashions • •• faithful to tradition but had made out a duplicate false $25. Along with other minor receipt for $17. On such evidence In the face of such doubt con­ changes in the report McDon­ cerning the election committee's Joe McDonough was disqualified ough's new expenses were esti­ for violation of election rules. And disqualification of Joe McDon­ mated at $111, $11 over the limit. ough, a re-examination of his dis­ McDonough would never even McDonough was disqualified again. have known that the committee qualification might come about. If Conveniently On Campus--at 35 and N st. was considering charges against Concerning McD 0 n 0 ugh dis­ the grounds for his disqualifica­ him if he hadn't called Sue qualification, opponent Den n i s tion were considered to be in­ Open Toniteff Mooney to check on another can­ Curley stated, "I thought it was sufficient, the only recourse would didate's report to him that he had really sad because Joe would have be a new election for the office of been disqualified. won." John Kelly said, "At the treasurer of the Walsh Area Stu­ McDonough went to Ayers and time of the election I felt that Joe dent Council. got a signed affidavit stating that "the bill for printing one-thousand flyers for $17 and made out to Joe McDonough, dated March 30, 1968 is a true and accurate one." The printer at Ayers added that, "If I can do printing for less than others ( can), it is mainly because I own my own equipment, including building and have practically no overhead." Concerning the phone call with Knudson in Grimstad's presence, Ayers s tat e d that ow 10 lop 0 "prices were discussed but no facts were given. . . . I certainly did not quote the price of the job for Joe McDonough." (and tie into the best reason in the world to drink beer) A member of the council then called Knudson and recorded what the printer told him over the phone. Knudson stated that "in some types of printing Ayers is the cheapest in the county." He said that Ayers never stated what , Just before the party begins, tap rate he had charged Joe McDon­ your beer. First, make sure the ough. Knudson ended by remark­ \iI 2 ing how ironic it was that last beer faucet is closed (you wouldn't year's winners were checking this Pick up a half-barrel of Bud® want to waste a drop of Beechwood year's candidates for the very 1(good for about 245 12-ounce cups Aged Bud !). Then, insert the faucet­ same falsifications he had so will­ ... with foam) and the tapping equip­ ingly collaborated on last year. and-pump unit into the upper valve In the face of this new evidence, ment on the day of the party. Just of the keg, give it a quarter turn coupled with a strong protest by set the beer in a tub of ice to keep clockwise, and lock it in place by John Lee, president of this year's it cold. senior class, a new meeting was tightening the lower wing nut. held at ten o'clock that night. The election committee was reluctant to accept information from Knud­ son because, as one member put it, he was known to be a "shady dealer." But why had the election committee reI i e don s u c h a "shady dealer" in the first place Next, insert the lager tap for their information rather than 3 in the lower valve of the on McDonough's printer? McDon­ ough was reinstated and im­ keg and give it a quarter turn. mediately charges of over-spend­ Now, set the keg upright in a ing his $100 campaign fund limit tub and pack ice around it. were established. The committee proceeded to re­ evaluate McDonough's expense re­ port of $76, giving it a value of $111. They raised the cost of the cover of his platform to $25, right after they had accepted evidence stating that McDonough had paid You're now ready to draw $17 because they said he had an 4 beer. Pump pressure to the unfair advantage in receiving a proper point for good draw, discount. Yet five other candi­ dates who used Ayers, low print­ usually about 15 lbs. That's all ing rates we r e not contested. there is to it, but there's no rule When McDonough had turned in against sarrtpling just to make his statement he told the commit­ tee that he was not sure of the sure everything is perfect. price of two electric stencils-so Ahhhhh! It's no wonder you'll he had given them the price of a find more taverns with the regular stencil, 20 cents. He in­ dicated that they co u I d r e­ famous "Bud on Draught" sign evaluate the stencils. They as­ than any other! sessed them at $3 each. John Kelly also used two electric sten­ cils but reported them at $2.50 each. McDonough had a sign pictur­ ing a $10 bill hanging in the Walsh Area courtyard, for which he had paid only $10 because a professional painter had done it for him at cost. (McDonough used

Two female students seeking summer SUb-let 1 or 2 bdrms. air-condit, Georgetown or Arlington areas. ANHEUSER·BUSCH, INC.• ST. LOUIS. NEWARK. LOS ANGELES· TAMPA· HOUSTON preferably new apt building $130-160/month. S. Klein, 517 Wyeth, Harvard. Cambridge, Mass. Thursday, May 2, 1968 THE ROTA Pair" Eleven The Hidden World Of Campus Drugs The following in-depth analysis portunity comes when a friend tension, anxiety and fear that of the drug scene on the George­ gets some grass and offers to turn reality as such will never be re­ town campus hets been prepared him on. The pot probably comes gained. This has precipitated ter­ by and expresses the opinion of a in a small envelope. It could be ror and psychosis in some in­ concerned college student. rough uncrushed tops or finely stances. Recent investigation has The drug scene at Georgetown ground powder, and ranges in also indicated that LSD causes was finally brought into the open color from dark brown to shades damage to chromosomes in the early in April when three fresh­ of green. Every batch has its own human body, and this has lead to men and a sophomore were called characteristics. The only factor a decline in its popularity. before the University disciplinary which remains relatively consist­ AMPHETAMINES are a class board for the sale of illegal drugs. ent is price-$15-$20 an ounce. of drugs which stimulate the cen­ This action followed a confused The beginner gathers with his tral nervous system, pushing the J investigation by housemasters, '~ friends around the source. The body beyond its natural point of prefects and others who made marijuana is prepared for smok­ endurance. Benzedrine, Dexedrine themselves appear ridiculous try­ ing. Small pipes can be used or and Methedrine are the most ing to act as Georgetown's own the pot may be rolled into joints common varieties, available in Narcotics Squad. The University using gummed paper. As the lit capsules, tablets or powder. Stu­ was accused of using unnecessary joint or pipe is passed ceremoni­ dents at Georgetown occasionally and outrageous tactics in its ef­ ously from person to person in use these stimulants to keep them fort to confront the potential drug the group, each inhales long and awake for extended studying. problem, and it became obvious deep, holding the sweet-tasting Taken infrequently for this pur­ that many officials were very un­ smoke in their lungs as long as pose, amphetamines are not harm­ sure of what drugs were involved possible for maximum effect. Mari­ ful to a healthy person, but push­ and which students were using juana intoxication is subtle at ing the body too far or too long them. first. The inexperienced smoker is dangerous. Sleep and food are Many students are also unaware must look for different phenomena Georgetown have smoked at one ing up to 12 hours away from absolutely necessary. They can of just what is happening with caused by the drug as it begins to time or another. It is usually done reality into the unknown depths not be replaced by a couple of drugs at Georgetown. What drugs work. After eight or ten good quietly in off-campus apartments of the psyche. They are different dex caps. Amphetamines also may are used here and in our society? tokes he is high and fascinated at night, though smoking in the in various ways, but given the be used to get high. What effects do they have? What by the unique changes around him. dorms was not uncommon before correct amount of anyone, a per­ Dropping a large dose or injec­ dangers? Hopefully a factual look Some of the more common effects the University redefined its regu­ son can undergo a mind-shaking tion of the potent drug directly into this obscure world of drugs are: flights of ideas, fanciful and lations concerning the use of drugs experience that will not be soon into one's veins brings on a series will help the Georgetown com­ silly, accompanied by a feeling of on campus. Now, turning on in forgotten. At Georgetown, some of sudden nelve-jolting rushes and munity meet its problem more ra­ extreme well-being; laughter at the dorms is on the decline. A students have undergone "good" a feeling of complete euphoria. tionally than it bas. the slightest provocation; height­ first offense for the use of illegal psychedelic experiences, others Heartbeat and blood-pressure in­ ened sensitivity to sound, touch drugs will bring disciplinary pro­ have not. A very, very few of crease greatly, while hunger Clearing Up Terms and taste; noticable loss of mem­ bation. while sale of drugs will these students can be called acid diminishes to nothing and sleep is MARIJUANA is a word that ory and problem solving ability; result in suspension from the heads-those who trip a number impossible. A small number of has been tossed around a great lengthening of time and distance University. of times and enjoy it. For the students at Georgetown get high deal in the U.S. ever since Mexi­ making a three-block walk see~ Georgetown also has a few pot students who have taken LS,D or with speed. The comedown is often can migrant workers introduced like a small journey; feeling of smokers who try to keep the drug its equivalent, one or two trips very unpleasant after hours and us to their uncanny mixture of aloofness as if one is looking in readily available, and use it off is usually enough. Acid is the hours of flying high on amphe­ green weed. To some it is a dan­ on the world from a small win­ and on whenever the occasion is most powerful hallucinogen known tamines. The speed freak is gerous illegal drug-base, evil, dow; sensitivity to the speech and right. They may smoke before to man, and nothing to fool around strung out especially after a dose poisonous to the mind and will, nuances of others to the extent bedtime, before going to a movie, with. Last January in one of the taken orally. Before his weakened and a horrible breeder of crime. that personality and intent are before a date, before class, or at dorms at Georgetown a curious body can rest and be revitalized, To an ever increasing number of revealed. True hallucinations can any other time. Some average student decided to make the acid the drug -must wear off entirely. others it is as natural, harmless not be experienced from pot three or four highs a week, others trip. He had acquired several LSD Shooting meth is becoming a new and desirable as their morning smoking, but one's environment six or eight. Their smoking is not tablets from one of the many kick in the US, but the taboo and coffee. Marijuana consists of the often takes on a quite unnatural really regular or planned. They street-people who flock to M St., danger of using a needle keeps crushed tops of the female h\?mp and bewildering appearance. Mari­ may turn on frequently during one Britts and Peoples' every night of most students from trying it. plant (Cannabis sativa), varieties juana adds nothing new to a per­ weekend, and then go for two the year. LSD is expensive in of which can be found in nearly son; it acts only on one's state of weeks without a single puff. They Washington-$4 to $10 a dose. Dealing In Danger every country of the world. Hemp mind at the time of smoking, like pot and enjoy the way it This student swallowed two blue NARCOTICS-heroin, morphine, is a tall hearty weed, and the bringing out happiness or boredom makes everything just a little tabs about midnight. By 12:30 he cocaine and opium-are not used potency of its drug is determined according to how a person is dis­ pleasanter. They are expert spoke of utterly fantastic illusions a t Georgetown. They are very by the climate where it grows. posed. smokers who can attain the exact and vividly colored images which different from the psychedelic Africa, India and Central Ameri­ The physiological changes are high they desire. raced through his' mind at lighten­ drugs, and the addicts who depend ca produce wonderfully strong also important. One's heartbeat Marijuana is not addicting. The ing speeds. He was surprised, rest­ on them are a completely different varieties, while wild marijuana in increases; the eyes become blood­ body does not develop a physio­ less and nervous at first, but soon group from those who get their the U.S. is of very poor quality. shot; the mouth and throat are logical need for it as in heroin began to find his condition more kicks from smoking grass or Hashish is a specially-prepared dry; hunger increases tremen­ addiction. In fact, it is safer in pleasant. For hours he listened to derivative of hemp popular in the dously; and a feeling of peaceful this respect than alcohol or cigar­ the Beatles and could see, instead Near East, India and North Afr­ lethargy passes over the entire ettes. Pot is pleasurable and can of hear the music; the campus ica. It is made from hemp's sticky body. It is very important to note develop into a regular pursuit like outside his window whirled wildly leaf resin where the active chemi­ that the effects are directly re­ chewing gum or kissing girls, but and melted away into brilliant cals are concentrated, and can be lated to the personality and mood a student who smokes a great lights; his body became transpar­ • from five to eight times as potent of the subject, allowing for a deal will soon discover that al­ ent and fluid. This was the first as regular marijuana. Hash is a wide range of possibilities. The most nothing is accomplished stage of a psychedelic experience dark green or black solid worth beginning smoker will often fall while high. One can get hung up -the sensory hallucinations. Most up to $100 an ounce on the U.S. into a quiet dreamy sleep as the for a while on pot, but continuous people do not go beyond it to the market. drug wears off and awake with no indulgence will eventually make more profound symbolic level or A college student usually reads after-effects. one tired of the same old high the most profound experience of again. the absolute creator-the God and hears something about pot Pleasant Experience long before he ever smokes it. Pot is smoked by college stu­ trip. An intense acid trip leaves Curiosity and imagination are Most students regard marijuana dents, hippies and straight mem­ one breathless and doubtful of all stimulated, but the illegality of smoking as a pleasant and inter­ bers of our society. It is popular reality's soundness. A good ex­ marijuana smoking is fully real­ esting experience to be enjoyed everywhere in the U.S. where it ample of the shattering new per­ ized, and most students chose and remembered, but not persued has been sampled and discovered spective which LSD gives is the right away to avoid any difficulty regularly. The majority of stu­ to be quite undeserving of the Neo-American ChurCh, where acid by steering clear of pot. Convic­ dents at Georgetown fit into this terrible reputation it acquired. is the only sacrament. In the tion for possession of marijuana category. They smoke once or Because marijuana is illegal it is young mind convinced time after dropping acid. The rumor that is generally a felony. Others may twice when the opportunity is associated by many with the black time that God has been revealed opium and marIjuana mixtures decide that they'd like to try the there, but have no further desire market and hard drug traffic. Any­ on an acid trip, religion becomes were being sold to unknowing • mysterious drug they've heard so to turn on. Probably 30 or 40 per­ one connected with it is consid­ nothing more than a chemistry of students is unfounded and ridic­ much about. A student's first op- cent of the male students at ered a criminal, when actually the brain. It is a perplexing ques- ulous. Narcotics are dangerous pot per se is no worse (or better) tion for modern radical . addicting drugs which are avoided than alcohol. One of the greatest Tim Leary has spread his LSD by all except those foolish few dangers a student pot smoker cult throughout the U.S. with the in the slums of our major cities takes is breaking the strict law sermon that this chemical will who escape from their despair making marijuana illegal. Getting help everyone to discover them- into the terrible more hopeless busted is no joke. Parents, em­ selves and the true meaning of world of the addict. ployers and educators tend to take human existence. Even before Dealing drugs at Georgetown it very seriously. There is no ques­ Leary, Aldous Huxley wrote how is a much smaller operation than tion that Georgetown University mescaline could open the marvel- is probably imagined. There are must respect this law, and the ous Doors of Perception for those no drug pushers on campus. Users idea that students at Georgetown, who dared to enter. There is little buy their grass, speed or acid either on campus or off, are pro­ question that hallucinogens are a from contacts at home or in the tected by the University is false. very impressive experience which Washington area. Psychedelic The other real danger is that a can bring a new awareness to drugs, in fact, are not sold by student will enjoy marijuana so some, but they are certainly not pushers. but by people who Simply much that more drugs will be the wonder drugs that Leary like to turn on, turn others on tried. Pot is very mild and in­ prophesies. Pop musicians like the and make money all at the same nocuous compared to other drugs Beatles, Simon and Garfunkel, time. A dealer is anyone who gets in popular use today. Donovan and the Doors have tried enough of any drug to distribute drugs, but only for a while. The ~'.: to friends, and the excitement Psychedelics drugless world of meditation is, and intrigue of handling whole­ LSD, MESCALINE, PSILOCY­ currently more popular. LSD and sale quantities are often as attrac­ BIN, DMT, STP-these are the the other hallucinogens are dan- ti'le as the profits involved. A drug true hallicinogens, mysterious gerous. They can be detrimental distributor meets all sorts of in­ powerful chemicals which have an to mental health in certain cases. teresting and colorful people, almost unbelievable effect on the No student can ever be sure just makes friends, transfers lots of mind. Anyone of them may be what will happen after the dose money, feels imp 0 r tan t and used to take a profound trip last- is taken. A bad trip brings severe needed. Page Twelve TIlE IIOrA Thursday, May 2, 1968 Theatre: Overflowing Fruit Juice INSIDE OUT: A MUSICAL EX­ Going from producer to producer, William Shakespeare. The draft is PERIENCE. Starring Louis W. he finds that unfortunately there submitted, the production begins Scheeder, Robert R. Reilly, An­ is little demand for the revolu­ and altruism seems to reign. But drf'a Oram, and Gerry Donnelly. tionary, and the commercial suc­ altruism is a perishable quality, At Trinity Theatre. cess of a work is the most impor­ and when the good reviews in To lose the battle and win the tant issue in the decision to begin Boston fail to materialize in the war may be one of the many production. Finding the road to form of box office lines, its death themes running through this musi­ acceptance more difficult than ex­ becomes inevitable. Changes are cal extravaganza. The Georgetown pected, he demeans himself by made, and Manny, a glib-tongued University Mask and Bauble, in going to Mr. Richard Bryson, the Texan is called in by Byron to its final production of the season, head of a New York concern will­ transform the revolutionary work has brought to the stage a musi­ ing to sink one million dollars into a contemporary box office cal of immense magnitude. The into the production of a play of favorite. Rachel Scott, Bryson's plot is simple, the story of a play­ the revolutionary character which ex-wife, is given her walking wright, who has come to New Brian Michaels believes his work papers, and Michaels asks that his York to seek his fortune and com­ to be. authorship be withdrawn from the municate his thoughts to the Bryson likes the work, and gives work. It is this rejection of his American public. He is the ideal­ Michaels two weeks to write a now emasculated work which ist, the one whose work will revo­ rough draft on another play-a brings out the role of the orange, lutionize the American theatre. musical adaptation of Hamlet by a role previously unknown to the audience, in this final production by the Mask and Bauble. Michaels The night before they read the reviews reveals the difference between the juice of the real orange and arti­ many more bars than they should development. The performance is ficially flavored orange drink, be. The choreography of Louis lackluster. Andrea Oram, in the drawing ananalogy between this Scheeder's numbers seems more role of Rachel Scott, creates a ~~[' and the situation his play is now worthy of a junior high school pro­ character well known to the au­ in, and questioning the tastes of duction. One-line jokes may be the dience-that of the temperamental Bryson. The play goes on, but the most common in night-club mono­ actress. She successfully brings I question of how it is to end is logues but the ones used in this this characterization to the audi- i placed in the lap of the audience. production fail because the audi­ enee, and it is the best perform­ Thumbs up is the verdict, and ence becomes inured to their repe­ ance of the production. Gerry Hamlet is resurrected by his erst­ tition. Donnelly, as Robin Blake, follows while father-"Pop", appearing in Louis W. Scheeder, in the role the example of Scheeder and Reilly the form of a ghost. Michaels re­ of Brian Michaels, exhibits little turning in a performance below mains the idealist, and Bryson talent in the field of dancing. His the level of talent expected. Her continues to remain the paragon interpretation of the qualities of talent is neither in the field of of commercial success. the dejected playwright lacks the dancing, nor singing, and she is Whether the Mask and Bauble development of characterization unsuccessful in her handling of was indulging in a bit of personal necessary for the success of the dialogue. commentary or not is a question role. Like many of the other If the Mask and Bauble was in­ which will probably remain un­ characters Scheeder does not dulging in personal commentary, answered. But, it may be well for possess the voice required by such then it must be said that the them to take this question to a role in a musical. Robert R. revolutionary character of this heart. The play Inside Old; A Mu­ Reilly, as Richard Bryson, is well production is slated to set college sical Experience suffers in many known to Mask and Bauble au­ dramatic productions back eons. areas. The most blatant of these diences for his work in last years As in the play My Son Hamlet by is the first act. It may even be Richard III prodllction. Bqt the Brian Michaels, where the box said that the act is unworthy of performance in this work bears office lines did not materialize, the credit the Mask and Bauble little resemblance to the skill so also the Mask and Bauble's takes for it. Several of the tunes exhibited in Richard III. As Bry­ revenues should suffer severely jf are catchy, but unfortunately the son, the Merrickesque producer, this is the best orginal musical director never gave the players in­ Reilly is not given the opportunity production which they could structions when to stop. The view­ for character development, and bring to the public. In search of fmne and fortune . • . er is therefore subjected to tunes he makes little attempt at this W. J. HelzlsoHel" Potted Pipe Dreams THE ICEMAN COMETH. Star­ their past and what delusions they of the plans he has to bring them ring Ned Beatty, James Kenny, hold. Larry has become the spec­ to a peace from within and how Richard Mclienzie, and Richard tator-philosopher w a i tin g for he has stopped drinking. After a Venture. Directed by Edwin Sher­ death, but seeming to see the series of cajoling and browbeating in. At Arena Stage. delusions of all others, he fails to sessions, Hickey succeeds in bring­ realize his own dreams. After ing them out of their shells, but Pipe dreams and self-delusions each has revealed his nature, the unfortunately he merely produces are the specialty of the house at conversation turns to the subject other delusions to replace the ones Harry Hope's saloon and rooming of a one Theodore Hickman, from which they originally suffer. house. Eugene O'Neill's play "Hickey"-a hardware salesman. It is this failure which indicates to brings together an odd collection It is Hickey's practice to return to the audience that Hickey is of people, taking in all of the Harry Hope's saloon once a year fraught with many more delusions varieties of people. Yet, each to treat all "the boys" to drinks than those he is trying to aid. As member of this group has one on-the-house and spend a few days the play ends, all is revealed and thing in common: pipe dreams. All in the celebration of Harry's the viewer comes to realize that of these have been brought to­ birthday. these men cannot throw off these gether under Harry's roof, each It has been Hickey's perennial delusions and Hickey is not as hoping to protect his delusions praetice during these sojourns to well off as the other characters. through the effects of alcoholic perpetrate a prank on the boys. He has spent a dissipated life on stupor. As the play opens, the It is one of these from which the the road as a drummer, and could A not so happy reunion audience sees the proprietor and title of the play comes. Hickey had not accept the forgiving nature his guests in varying degrees of spoken of the "iceman" commit­ of his wife. It is this inability the pipe dream itself is not evil, Richard Venture, as Larry Slade, i inebriation. From Larry Slade, ting adultery with his wife, only in which drives him to murder her. it is rather the control it exerts tUl'ns in a fine performance as the I: one-time Syndicalist-Anarchist, to a joking manner. It is because of This final revelation succinctly over the individual which is dis­ antithesis of Hickey. As the spcc- ,i Pat McGloin, one-time Police this background that he is not capsulizes the theme of the work, astrous. tator-philosopher, Venture brings ~i Lieutenant, the characters reveal taken seriously when he speaks and each man comes to know that The Arena Stage has placed a to the stage a character who truly lL.­ most difficult play in its reper­ has myopia, seeing the faults in tory, it is to their credit that others and not his own. The man the production is somewhat more who philosophizes from the bottle, than a minor success. One of the is seen in Venture, and one inevit­ reasons for failing to reach the ably begins to see through hiS success expected may be casting. eyes. The faults of Hickey take on The performance by Richard Mc­ a new light, but he successfully Kenzie, in the role of Theodore avoids the failure of many in a Hickman, is not of the quality similar role - that of becoming normally found by leading charac­ one who views the action out of ters in Arena's production. He ex­ the context of the play. Ned hibits a hesitation to follow Beatty, as Rocky Pioggi - the through on his lines, and at times night bartender, has transformed it seems as though he is being this character into that of one held up by the performance of who gives the values which under­ James Kenny, who plays Harry lie the whole production. He suc­ Hope. McKenzie does not have cessfully brings out the subtle the command of the role or audi­ differences which each of the ence necessary to bring this play characters hold as their basiC to the point of perfection re­ tenets. quired to make it a success. James The Iceman Cometh is a long Kenny has overcome those prob­ play, running four and one-half lems which plague McKenzie, and hours, and is only for one willing is one of the most convincing to take the time out to view a ~ characters in the production. He thorough discussion of delusionS [,Ii, has shown his capabilities in and self-deception. The Arena , affecting an accent and bringing Stage, while not bringing the worK forth the quality of vacillation be­ to complete fruition, has pre­ tween the pipe dream and the sented a production of merit. Free booze but no pipe dreams . . . real expectations of a man. W.J.EI· ~ Thursday, Hay 2, 1968 THE HO¥A. Page Thirteen Movies: Moses Goes Simian Enough PLANET OF TIlE APES. Star­ in futuristic conjecture are now ring Charlton Heston, Roddy one cannot expect a classic work, liberated from slavery to the and the screenplay's own weak­ McDowall, Kim Hunter, and special effects department (2001: Maurice Evans. At the Loew's nesess just might have dragged A Space Odyssey notwithstand­ Apes down to the inglorious level To Gag Palace. ing) and are free to seize upon The essential probelm with of Rodan and other disasters of any of the cornucopia of stories that ilk. But disaster is not the Planet 0/ the Apes is that the inter-galactic travel offers simply viewer sits there wondering what result and Apes' major accom­ A Buzzard to make a statement, not to plishment is avoiding its potenti­ the most obvious next step in the dazzle the eye or jolt the senses. plot's progression would be, and alities for ludicrousness. The statement Planet of the Among the few plusses are the THE PAGAN EYE/Alan Cariddi then suddenly, faster than a drop­ Apes comes ever-so-close to actu­ performances-competent but not ping cliche, exactly what he fore­ ally making before it gags on its spectacular. Charlton Heston as told unfolds on the screen in stun­ As usual, more things were pathetic tbis week than not. own failings to something to the the rebellious leader of the ilI­ Indeed, although competition was rather severe, George­ ning technicolor. Yet, this pre­ effect that man is a hopeless starred space voyage still displays dictability in the extreme is not as species, intent on destroying him­ a tendency to wrap himself in town's own entry-variously known as The Shrub, The Bush, much of a fault here (or at least self. This not terribly unusual messianic robes when the role's and Cotter's Fungus-emerged as the unrivalled (as usual) not as aesthetically disturbing) as moral underlies all the events of demands verge on overcoming it was in, for example, Guess source of campus lamentation. And while most of us haven't Apes-events which can be sum­ him. Ape sci e n tis t Rod d y been so privileged as to have witnessed the entire miraculous Who's Coming To Dinner? where marized as astronaut and crew go McDowall, scarcely recognizable the credits eliminated the last to planet, crew is gradually behind some incredibly realistic metamorphosis from "tree" to "flaming bush," we are now shreds of suspense. The difference eliminated, brave astronaut con­ make-up, handles his task with honored to observe embodied here the grand culmination of lies in the fact that Planet of the fronts ciVilization ruled by apes. the easy sophistication that has Apes is a novelty, hardly a note­ almost two centuries of staunch university tradition. But how Too pat? Complication #l-all become his trademark. Maurice altogether absurd! Certainly we could have offered ourselves worthy cinematic advance, but an humans on this planet are dumb Evans has seen better days than interesting divergence from what and treated as beasts of burden his moments as Dr. Zaius, high the dubious luxury of a more fitting specimen of arboreal the isolated filmdom niche of (Heston is thus viewed as a mu­ priest of apedom, but if one can splendor. In time, it'll give us all more of an inferiority com­ science fiction usually tosses out. tant). Complication #2--All good ignore his Shakespearean past, his plex than we labor under even now. As it is, this unabashed Nolo n ger a re prefabricated and true apes who keep the faith simian present is commendable. puny and anemic (but obviously trying) "red maple" is the J a pan e s e tyrannosauruses 0 r must believe in The Book, which Kim Hunter, as McDowall's part­ whirring, inteIIectual robots or denies the existence of literate ner in semi-Darwinian heresy, source of numerous uninspired epithets among Georgetown even suave aliens with pointed humans. amply fills a not very challenging gentlemen, the most common being the following: "Be mer­ ears a necessity. Those who deal Obviously, with a basis like that part. ciful, put the thing out of its misery," "Give it the ax!" "We Visually, Planet of the Apes is want the Stump!" "Give us back our Hole," and "Don't look a triumph. Sweeping glimpses of dehydrated cities and blazing at it, you'll kill it!" And certainly not without abundant skies compensate for dreary di­ reason ... alogue that often leaps for laugh­ True, collegiate tradition may have its fine points, but ability but scores only as low when carried to such ludicrous lengths it unfailingly be­ humor of the Saturday morning cartoon type. Even a ridiculous, comes little more than a grotesque display of an egregious for want of a stronger word, lack of any refined sense of propriety. This "tree" hardly chase scene rises to a quasi­ does credit to our noble aspirations or to our glorious "tradi­ mediocrity since it is at least tion." Even a concrete "stump" would have been more inspir­ pleasing to watch. if It would be no great task to ing, not more useful for "gathering under," so to speak. In find more faults with Pl£tnet of conscious deference to our noble past, it's really a wonder the Apes (among the more glar­ we should do else but send it back to Woolworth's. Where it ing ones-the totally maudlin belongs. Right Away. ending) but it survives even its But, if once we manage to drag our:,selves away from our more outrageous lapses-possibly because it is just about the only own sordid versions of Charlie Brown's fantasies (witness one of its genre in general re­ our delightfully winsome--not winning-baseball team) we lease. Amateurish, often clumsily find we can easily luxuriate in those of others. Indeed, the self-conscious, it nonetheless ful­ world abounds in them. The Academy Awards, f<:>r example, fills a need some cinemaphiles have that Lost In Spctce and Star­ very closely rivalled election prognostications in the realm Trek are incapable of filling-in­ of fatuous exercises in futility. Candidates we thought were terplanetary derring-do on a gran­ at their peaks reached new levels of gross excess and super­ diose scale, no matter how remi­ fluity. Hubert Humphrey doubtless disappointed a great niscent of an extra-terrestial Tar- zan. many of his supporters by announcing his candidacy before Low humor for the Saturday morning set . • . Chctrley ImpagZia Mother's Day; but, of course, it's not too difficult to sympa­ thize with him-he may have to contend with "tricky Dick." .. To be sure, the elections have taken a turn for the worse for Books: liThe Louder Whitey Yelled • • • AN AUTOBIOGRAPHY OF carry three guns at a time. His devote the rest of his life to MALCOLM X, by Malcom X, with friends were fellow hustlers, the spreading it. In prison he taught the assistance of Alex Haley, heroes of a society where every himself to write (he copied the Grove Press, $1.25, 460 pages. man is for himself and the cops entire dictionary to improve his take the hindmost. He was finally vocabulary) and to speak. He The vast outpourings of sym­ imprisoned when a burglary gang taught fellow inmates about the pathy and grief which followed the that he led was captured. He new religion and even sent letters death of Martin Luther King were claims he received his extra long to his old hustler friends in Har­ possible only because White sentence because there were white lem. After he was paroled from America was never really afraid women in his gang. prison it was his own dynamic personality which was responsible of the man. He had learned, as In prison he received a letter most candidates, and have consequently become more inter­ had the rest of our house niggers one day in which his brother for most of the growth of the for the last three hundred years, Reginald told him that he knew Muslim religion, as he set up esting to the customarily apathetic. Kennedy supporters are never to force the white man to a way to get out of prison and temple after temple in various suddenly finding themselves bewildered by unforseen re­ think of him as a male. His refusal that he should not eat any pork. cities. But he never took personal sistance, McCarthy seems to be perceptibly running out of to strike back when hit is just Malcolm went along, thinking his credit and emphasized that he al­ brother had worked out a new ways spoke of himself as only a steam, and Humphrey has a rather surprising degree of sup­ what White America demands port in the party despite his lap-dog image-not altogether from the good "darkies." hype to put on the warden. But follower of the prophet, Elijah what Reginald told him was that Muhammud. After the assassination of Mal­ free of pharmaceutical odors-among others. The vultures, there was a new religious group, the But in time Elijah grew jealous notably "happy Rocky"-wait eagerly to pounce on Nixon. colm X there was, of course, no , and that the basis of of Malcolm's prestige and of the similar reaction. For Malcolm had their teaching is that the white publicity which he was receiving. Then too, imagine another winning Kennedy-Johnson com­ made quite clear to the whites man is the devil. Malcolm eagerly ExperiC'nce on white campuses had bination. And what, oh what, would we do without the very that he would defend himself, and accepted the new religion. As a convinced Malcolm that there tangible if not odious prospect of having George Wallace de­ this is the sin for which there is matter of fact, he admits that he were a few whites who were not prive either final candidate of the requisite 270-vote Electoral no forgiveness. But though white even believed whole-heartedly in devils and revelations about America does not want to hear it, the amazing myths told by the Elijah's private life shook his College majority ... the salvation of our nation lies Muslims to explain how the white faith in the prophet. Malcolm Sadly enough, however, not even one of our contemporary much more in the hands of the man was invented by the evil came back from a pilgrimage to statesmen has the national posture and inspirational appeal Malcolm X's than in those of the scientist, Mr. Yacub. But what Mecca, speaking of the possibility of a Roosevelt or a Wilson or, at the very least, of an Eisen­ Luther Kings. Only the children of Malcolm X emphasizes here, but of love between blacks and whites, the slums can speak to the mass what Martin Luther King never but he was speaking even more hower or even a Johnson. All of which unfortunately tends of American Negroes and expect told you, was that it was easy to loudly about the need for blacks to alienate a significant portion of the more responsible elec­ to be heard. j beHeve 'that the white man is the to organize for "self-defense." He torate. Psychologically, this unconscious apathy as to whom In this "as told to" autobiog­ devil, because as far as the black set up an organization of his own becomes President is quite perilous (even though the country raphy, Malcolm X gives white man is concerned, he acts like the in New York to foster black mili­ is alTeady falling apart) and quite contrary to what most of Americans an honest picture of devil. The Muslims teach that a tarism, but before he achieved life in the black ghetto of our black man should not use skin anything concrete he was assas­ our well-known pundits (who claim that most people never country. The ghettos as he sees it lighteners, wear processed hair, or sinated by a group of Muslims. cared anyway) might say. Why who knows if we'll always a seething mass of despair and do anything else to make them­ Malcolm X s,lid that the reason have a Humphrey handy "to keep our honor clean?" Indeed, self-hatred, where the quick live selves look like the "white devils." for his success in organizing black it's rather deplorable to find so many Americans lacking any off the slow, where everyone has They further teach a strictly Puri­ people was that he spoke their a hassle, and where violence is a tan sexual morality and a rigid language and that they knew that political convictions whatsoever; for these, after all, were way of life. He gives a faSCinating honesty in dealing with fellow he was not hustling them as their the origina 1 and most prominent bases of our society. Actu­ account of the life of a hustler in blacks. In short, the Muslim is the Christian preachers were. He al­ ally, the tongue-in-Cheek charade has probably gone on only Harlem, where he worked as a antithesis of the hustler that ways said that the louder whitey too long. If ever a Wallace were to rise to a position where­ numbers runner, dope peddler, Malcolm Little (his "slave name") yel1ed, the more he knew that he pimp, and armed robber. He was so admired. was saying the right thing. Read from he could dictate policies contrary to the general will of nicknamed DetrOit Red because of Malcolm was so caught up in the this gook. You'll yell. the people, well ... that might even be more pathetic than his hair color and was known to new religion that he decided to Walt Foody our shrub. Or would it? Page Fourteen THE BOrA Thursday, May 2, 1968 Hurson, Warn I{lein Virginia (1.) and Frank(r.) are: A. Interviewing an African couple. B. Visiting a Nigerian University. Of Federal Actions C. Exchanging ideas with Nigerian University students. (Continued from Page 1) assurances from the dean that due ,::' Actually, Virginia Blount and formation and was trying to un­ process of law would be observed : Frank Ogden are doing all these derplay the investigation at the in all proceedings. things. As members o( the 500- same time he emphasizes the "I would be willing to bet," said student World Campus Afloat­ problem. He called drugs "just one Hurson, "that the psychological Chapman College, these two of my problems." services department has not even Arizona college students had the Other segments of the Univer­ been contacted by the dean's of­ opportunity to talk with students sity community were reacting to fice. They should be working close­ at the University of Ife, Ibadan the probe, however. Vice Presi­ lyon this matter." branch, . dent for Student Development He called for a statement of With the help of Nigerian Philip H. Tripp sent copies of a university policy and discussion students and professors, the Amer­ drug code he helped develop for of the drug issue on campus. He icans compared religions, art, Oberlin College to members of the hinted at a possible Yard com­ anthropology, educational systems, Student Affairs Policy Advisory mittee on drugs. economic developments, geog­ Committee (SAPAC) this week. Mr. Klein discounted discussion raphy, drama, music, and dance of The committee will discuss a pos­ of the issue. "It doesn't make any , the two countries. This is the sible code for Georgetown this difference whether a person be­ regular course work aboard Chapman's shipboard campus, the s.s. Ryndam. week. lieves marijuna to be morally or Virginia and Frank transferred the credits they earned back to their home colleges, medically okay-pot is illegal. We Arizona State University and Northern Arizona University, and are going on for their Hurson expressed concern over cannot be selective about the laws baccalaureate degrees. Chapman College is currently accepting enrollments for the certain sections of the Oberlin Col­ we enforce or we descend to a gut­ 1968-1969 academic year with the,World Campus Afloat program. lege code stating that they gave level society. Students will say too much leeway to officials in se­ that if their guts tell them pot is ITINERARIES lection of "suitable" punishment fine, then they have no obligation Fall 1968: Dep. New York Oct. 10 for Dublin, London, Copenhagen, Rotterdam, Lisbon, for small offenders. Hurson also to clean this thing up. It is a poor Rome, Athens, Haifa, Catania, Barcelona, Las Palmas, Freetown, Rio de Janeiro, Buenos said he wanted to get a clarifica­ position they place themselves in." Aires, Montevideo, Punta Arenas, Santiago, Lima, Acapulco, arriving Los Angeles Jan. 29. tion on Dr. Tripp's views. Hurson Hurson and Klein gave almost Spring 1969: Dep. Los Angeles Feb. 3 for Honolulu, Tokyo, Kobe, Hong Kong, Bangkok, left the SAPAC meeting with the identical statements concerning Kuala Lumpur, Colombo, Bombay, Mombasa, Durban, Cape Town, Dakar, Casablanca, impression that Dr. Tripp encour­ the possibility of federal interven­ Cadiz, Lisbon, arriving New York May 27. aged students informing on others tion on the drug problem. Hurson The coupon below, if completed and mailed at once, will provide the first step in as members of a community. said he did not want another reserving space for your fall 1968 and/or spring 1969 semesters with World Campus Afloat Hurson, meanwhile, described incident (nar­ where you can take full advantage of Chapman College's unique three-year experience in the situation as "a real mess," and :::otic agents raided AU last month) effective teaching aboard ship and in world ports. issued warnings to both the ad­ but said there was nothing he ministration and the student body. could do to stop it. Klein agreed To the administration he said he and said federal agents were not rlf~~~~~M~~=~~==~-~~~~~' would continue to watch out for wanted on campus but he could I Chapman College Orange. California 92666 I student rights and promised he not stop them. Klein said some I M~ I would seek answers to charges of "students have a sick idea that Miss Mrs. DATE I unethical behavior in an effort to they are special and we should I LAST NAME FIRST INITIAL still rumors which have frightened protect them but they are only Campus Address CampusState' ______I many students. He assured stu­ special academically and if they I City State Zip Campus dents that there were not and will break the law we can't stop their Phone______I not be any students "planted" on arrest. I Name of School Year in School ______I campus to catch drug offenders. He said both the police and the Approx. GPA on 4.0 Scale ______Hurson said he considered the university were in accord in their I spirit of the bill of rights to be in desire for stopping drug traffic I Home Address Age I effect at Georgetown and would Home but they differed in that the po­ I City State Zip Phone______I meet with Mr. Klein to investi­ lice "are not nearly as concerned gate how evidence is being com­ for student's benefit as we are." To which address material should be sent: Campus 0 Home 0 Parent or Guardian I piled. He promised to look into Meanwhile, lacking any official I I am interested in 0 Fall 0 Spring Semester 19___ 0 land Campus 0 Floating Campus 0 Both charges brought by one student statements from UniverSity offi­ I SAFETY INFORMATION: The s.s. RYNDAM, registered in The Netherlands, meets I leader that the whole investiga­ cials and silence from the office tion resembled the inquisition. He of the President, the investigation l~=~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ _____ ~ also promised that he would get into drug use is continuing.

~':,

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Tickets Thursday, May 2, 1968 THE DOrA Pae:e FIfteen The Changing Role Of The Modern Jesuits

This is the last of a three-part present. And Georgetown, while The 1948 annual explains how educational system" by Fr. s~ries. In the first article, pub­ occasionally producing a pioneer, the 1599 Ratio could be taken Martin, has gone the way of most l~shed on March 1, the Jesuits' contmues to grind out men and quite so seriously in the forties or traditions nowadays. And at changing role was examined in its now women who are known, for even fifties. The yearbook cites Georgetown, as at many another overall forms. The second article better or worse, as Jesuit prod­ the Very Rev. Gerard Martin S.J., "Jesuit university," blackrobes published on March 21, took u~ ucts. Georgetown is even known once General of the Society. He administer the institution only in the Jesuit's changing legal statt~s as a Jesuit university-save for wrote a treatise of the Ratio-in tha t they find themselves in certain within the University. This fol­ the simple fact that it is no longer 1892. administrative positions. And with lowing discusses J esuit edt~cation Jesuit. the continuing introduction of lay­ at a University which is no Zanger "According to Fr. Martin . . . men to the Board of Directors, Jesuit education was founded on the Ratio's distinction lies in its Jesuit-at least not in the tradi­ the Ratio Studiorum, a blueprint Jesuits, and only Jesuits, no longer tional mode. spirit and its methods. By 'spirit,' set the policies which the admin­ for liberal education published in he signified the animating prinici­ by Don Casper final form by the Society in 1599 istrators follow. Blackrobes staff pIes of the R(~tio. And the first of News Editor and never formally replaced. The Georgetown only in that a few, these principles is that the mind and very few, are faculty mem­ Jesuit education, in strict accord 1959 catalogue of Georgetown Col­ and will must be trained in their with Jesuit logic, lends itself to lege offers the Ratio as proof thnt bers. In fact, Jesuits comprise less historical relation to each other. than two percent of the total many interpretations. In fact, not the school is Jesuit. "The College While it is true that the framers even the blackrobes themselves of Arts and Sciences is the oldest faculty. of the Ratio strongly advocated In terms of brute manpower, seem to agree on just what sets of the thirty Jesuit colleges in the full development of the intel­ Jesuit education above and be­ the United States, where the prin­ some 121 Jesuits reside at George­ lect, they regard this as incom­ town. These are 101 priests, 15 yond-or perhaps simply apart ciples and methods of the Rati.o plete, even dangerous unless the from-education in the secular Studiorum are used to educate scholastics, and five coadjutor will were likewise strengthened in brothers - seemingly quite an ar­ order. 97,000 American students." the good. They desired to train men Jesuit Education Differs Undergmduate Entrance Bulletin ray. However, only 70 Jesuits are and boys who were not only connected with the University- In the previous century, certain does mention that the Ratio was learned, but who were men of Americans undoubtedly set Jesuit formulated in the 16th century 67 priests, one scholastic, and two virtue and charity. Since the stu­ brothers. The rest are the com­ through Georgetown without hav­ education apart. " How we can let but dares not say that it is in use dent of every age is a rational munity's religious superior and the ing met Jesuits." But the Rev. them train our children, when the at Georgetown today. In fact, the being, whose end is God, this prin­ minister, st u den t s attending Frank L. Fadner, S.J., bushy­ great French nation across the bulletin's short commentary on ciple must and will ever remain Georgetown and other Washington browed regent of the School of water have decided that they are Jesuit education begins and ends the foundation stone of the Ratio.·' with the 16th century. The Rev. universitys, retired priests( four, Languages and Linguistics, in­ unfit to control the instruction of The ratiocination continues, sists, "I expect Georgetown to be its youth, it is not easy to tell," to be exact), and priests associated "The second principle of the with the Jesuit Educational As­ a Jesuit school indefinitely." He reads one popular diatribe con­ Ratio follows as a corollary from adds "But not in the formal cerning the Jesuits. socia tion's national office (exactly the first, namely, that the two). One priest residing at sens~." Now for Georgetown to Years before, the Parlement of classics and scholastic philosophy remain a Jesuit school "in the Paris gave its own interpretation Georgetown teaches at the George are 'constants in any educational \Vashington University. formal sense," blackrobes would to Jesuit education. In a decree of planning, because they offer abid­ not occupy Healy's wall space as March 5, 1762, the blackrobes' ing and universal values for hu­ Few Teachers portraits of past presidents but classroom endeavors were called man training.' The former offer Of the Jesuits whom the Uni­ all Healy's office space and all "the teaching of secret compensa­ lofty human values for everlast­ versity has espoused, only 37 other offices and class rooms as tion, of equivocation, of moral re­ ing works of art and literature, teach. The rest are administrators well in the form of flesh and strictions, of proballism and philo­ as well as social and political of one form or another. Thus blood administrators and teach­ sophical sin." Such learning, the theories and movements, while about 37 Jesuits, among a fuIl­ ers. Parlement declared, lent itself to scholastic philosophy is the time faculty of 672 and a part­ According to Fr. Fadner, "Origi­ "theft, lying, perjury, the most crowning point of the liberal arts. time faculty of 861 have much nally, a Jesuit university was one criminal impurity, and generally For it provides a solid foundation of a chance of working any direct that was run by Jesuits-anyone all passions and all crimes." For for a proper and adequate under­ influence upon a total student of any importance was Jesuit. good measure, the Parlement in­ standing, interpretation and appli­ body of 7480 at last count. To Strictly speaking, that is what a cluded regicide among all those cation to human life of the these blackrobes might also be Jesuit university should be. But passions and crimes. sciences, both natural and social, added the University chaplain and it isn't anymore. For one thing, In our own century, one E. and 'by providing a rational basis the student counsellor. And out­ it is too big. For another, you Boyd Barrett discussed Ignatian for faith, it becomes the hand­ side the purely pastoral, Jesuits have to do more than just toler­ education in The Jesuit Enigma. maid of religion, which is the can no longer rely on the old ate laymen since we don't have "One finds in the educational Royden B. Davis, S.J., dean of the proper and supreme integrating standbys of philosophy and the­ enough Jesuits." And when one works of the Jesuits ... uniform­ College, says quite offhandedly, principle of religion.' " ology to work their influence. Only thinks of the 1496 lay teachers, ity of method; conservatism; "There is nothing in the Ratio But there is an even greater, three Jesuits teach philosophy. one realizes that Fr. Fadner isn't self-interest; a mixing of worldly tha t is of any use to a modern uni­ more practical supposition to the While there are. ten Jesuit the­ just talking through his black wisdom and piety; snobbery and versity." Ratio-namely, that there are ologians, certainly not every stu­ biretta when he says that "you arrogance." And if this was not In short, it is a somewhat be­ enough Jesuits around to imple­ dent enrolled in a theology have to do more than just tol­ quite enough, "Everywhere appeal labored verity to say that the ment it. course has a blackrobe teacher. erate" them. is made to the practical rather Rcttio, once thought to be the cor­ Thus for the first few eras, As for the rest, four blackrobes Fr. Fadner's definition of a mod­ than the ideal in man. There is nerstone of a Jesuit school, is no give or take some, a Jesuit school are members of the history fac­ ern Jesuit institution is "one that haunting fear and suspicion of longer a factor at Georgetown. was characterized by a dual stand­ ulty. Three are in the biology de­ is led by, informed by, directed what is new, unusual, adventure­ The Ratio concerned itself with ard. First of all, it was adminis­ partment and two in government. by, and characterized by the Jes­ some, or at all progressive." all phases of education. It laid tered and staffed by Jesuits, of One Jesuit apiece is allotted to uit spirit of education." Barrett himself had quite a dose down hours of study, gradations course. Secondly it adhered to the the chemis-rry, psychology, astron­ The 1953 Domesday Booke des­ of this sort of thing-he had been of courses, texts, and methods of Ratio Studiorum. When many v[ omy, sociology, economics, and cribes this "Jesuit spirit of edu­ a Jesuit for some 20 years, teach­ conducting classes-and in detail, the Ratio's guidelines, called laws, c I ass i c s departments. In the cation" in terms that seem some­ ing at Georgetown for a spell. A at that. It prescribed courses of were no longer feasible (to put it School of Languages and Linguis­ what quaint if not downright ante­ psychologist of some note, he action for the provincial, the rec­ mildly), a Jesuit school became tics, two blackrobes serve in the diluvian only 15 years later. doffed cassock and collar to be­ tor, the prefect of studies, and an institution administered and linguistics department and one Among the traits which the year­ come a rather acid critic of the the instructors of the individual staffed by blackrobes, sure enough, apiece in the , Spanish, and book ascribed to Georgetown's Jes­ and the Church classes. while following the basic tradi­ Chinese departments. Three Jes­ uit spirit were "chivalrous love of of Rome. The 1953 Domesday Booke gen­ tions of the Ratio cited above. uits are associated with the Law C h r i s t, supernatural optimism, Familiar Conclusion erously allows for the fact that Lay teachers, according to one Center, one of whom is professor manliness of character, and an Reflecting on Jesuit education's some centuries have passed since Jesuit who well remembers, were emeritus. There are two Jesuits apostolic love of God and man." impact, Barrett drew a familiar the Ratio was first promulgated. at this point "tolerated," usually on the Medical Center's faculty, But when Ye Domesd(tY Booke's conclusion. "The education by the "New discoveries, new deeds, new filling positions for which no one of whom is a research asso­ language is dusted away (namely Jesuits is not vital or organic. demands have made museum competent Jesuit could be had, ciate. Two Jesuits are hospital the adpectives), one can see how In no true sense is it inspiring. It pieces of some of the accidental which does on occasion happen. chaplains. these traits might possibly be aims at safety and mediocrity, features of the Ratio Studiornm." However, the second basic tra­ According to the Rev. Charles applicable to a Jesuit institution and is unsuited to produce pion­ One such feature was the Ratio's dition of the Ratio, the place of L. Currie, S.J., asst. professor of today. eers of thought." sixth rule for philosophy instruc­ the classiCS and scholastic philoso­ chemistry, "there's no doubt that The Rev. Edward B. Bunn, S.J., But Jesuitry has indeed pro­ tors which prescribes how they phy, called the "constants in any it's possible for people to go University and Healy's duced "pioneers of thought." One should cope with the works of resident grand old man, states such, of all people, was Voltaire. philosophers not of an upright that a Jesuit school is "consti­ But the blackrobe's effect on Vol­ scholastic bent. "If any good in tuted by its objective." He says, taire was dubious to say the least. them has to be mentioned the "The Jesuit university has always Will Durante wrote, "The Jesuits Teacher of Philosophy must do so sought that the whole man should gave him the very instrument of without any words of praise, and be developed for assuming lead­ scepticism teaching him dialectic­ if possible he must show that it ership in whatever field he en­ the art of proving anything, and is derived from some other ters. The whole man must use all therefore at last the habit of be­ source.". This particular feature his talents and resources of per­ lieving nothing." is certainly a museum piece-but sonality which come into play in Ye Domesday Booke once proud­ it is not accidental. the exercise of that leadership." ly proclaimed, "The philosophy of Fr. Davis indicates that the Fr. Bunn continues in Teilhardian Jesuit education pervades the Ratio "has never been applied fashion, "This is built on the fact classrooms and the campus of rigorously." Another Georgetown of the incarnation of the Son of Georgetown." Now if one actually blackrobe mentions that he had God - when everything human believed that and also happened once read the Ratio but has since could be potentially sanctified." to believe, say, the 1762 decree forgotten what it said. Yet the He notes, "And this idea didn't 1953 Domesday Booke unabash~d­ of the Parlement of Paris, he begin with Teilhard." ly points out that "the essentIal would no doubt think that "theft, This, oddly enough, echoes the lying, perjury, the most criminal features of the Ratio Studioru1n first basic tradition of the Ratio impurity, and generally all pas­ are a philosophy of lif~ and ed~cc:­ Studiorum cited above - without tion a set of educatIOnal prmcI­ sions and all crimes" were ramp­ mentioning the Ratio at all. It is pIes' and a basic methodology. because Fr. Bunn's idea of a Jes­ ant on the Hilltop. And if ~e And' these have remained green also took E. Boyd Barrett for hIS uit university's objective has its through all the years and all word he would be forced to con­ ~he roots in an Ignatian tradition. old­ centuries, for they are perenmal. clude' that Georgetown University er and more basic than the Rettio, Take these three features to­ is "unsuited to produce pioneers Loyola's Spiritual Exercises. In gether and you have the essence Exercises, I of thought." . the the first Black Pope ns of Jesuit education, the clue to wrote, "Man was created for this But all crimes and all passlO that which makes Georgetown are not present on the Hillt?p. (Continued on Page 23) J e sui t s, however, are qUlte what it is." Page Sixteen THE DOrA Thursda.y, Ma.y 2, 1968

Maharishi Mahesh Yogi Set For Study This Summer At Washington Debut Appearance Georgetown University Summer School The Yard has booked the pre­ trum to the other in terms of gram were sent to make an Two SeSJio11S miere appearance of the Beatles' price and style. Among those official proposal, the agent was Guru, Maharishi Mahesh Yogi, suggested as possibilities were almost sure he could get them First: Junes 17-July 24/Second: July 25-August 30 and the Beach Boys for the Spring Simon and Garfunkel, Wilson and would call Manzo inside of Concert to be held May 3 at the Pickett, and Spanky and Our twenty-four hours to let him Washington Coliseum. Gang. The poll, although it did know. The telegram was sent im­ $47 per credit hour According to event chairman not decide which group would be mediately, and two weeks later Thomas Roberts, the Guru will contacted, did indicate to Manzo Manzo found out they couldn't Registration for the First Session June 17 demonstrate his method of trans­ that people were willing to pay come. cendental meditation which has money for a good show. At that point Manzo discussed New South, 10:00 A.M.-7:30 P.M. inspired such notables as the In January, before the break, the situation with the Yard Beatles and , and the he contacted an agency that was Finance Committee, and it was Registration for Second Session July 25 Beach Boys will play their old to get hold' of Ray Charles for decided to call off the concert and Hall of Nations,.. 10:00 A.M.-7:30 P.M. and new hits. "We hope that a March 23 date. When he re­ sponsor a Spring Boatride in its everyone will take advantage of turned the contract still had not stead. However at that moment this opportunity to see what we come through, and the agency Mr. Anthony Stangert. Director of FOI" informatioll, w1·ite 01" call feel is the event of the decade." told Manzo that Charles had de­ Student Personnel saved the day. The Coliseum, seating 8100, was cided to go into a recording ses­ He recommended Manza to a Dean, The Summer School, Georgetown University chosen because of the Maharishi's sion on that date. friend of his in another New York drawing power and the publicity Manzo then called a New York agency where he was told that Washington, D.C. 20007 attached to the premiere. agency and tried to arrange for the Beach Boys would be available Tel.: 337-3300, Ext. 7025 For the past few months the Simon and Garfunkel to come for the first two weeks in May if names of some of the most well down. He was told that if a tele- he wanted them. known bands and vocalists in the country have been making their way around the Georgetown cam­ pus on the wings of rumor as pos­ sible entertainment for the Yard's Spring Concert. Names like the Yardbirds, Spanky and Our Gang, the Cream, and Ray Charles were Miles and miles of just a few words and holding hands. tossed around in all circles, and if the frequency with which new pronouncements appeared is in­ dicative of anything, obtaining the Beach Boys for the concert was no easy task. In December it was supposedly decided that The Yardbirds and the Cream would be contacted for the concert. Some committee members, however, felt this was not a good choice; and it was de­ cided to take a poll of the classes through the Student Councils. The groups represented in the poll ranged from one end of the spec- j COLLEGE MEN ~l SUMMER JOBS FULLTIME WORK THIS SUMMER FIFTEEN $1,000 CASH SCHOLARSHIPS EARN IN EXCESS OF $133 PER WEEK PLENTY OF TIME FOR BOATING, SWIMMING AND GOLF. WIN ONE OF MANY ALL EXPENSE PAID TRIPS TO MEXICO CITY-ACUPULCO SOME QUALIFIED STUDENTS MAY WORK OVERSEAS NEXT SUMMER BASIC REQUIREMENTS 1. MUST BE OVER 18 2. SIX MONTHS OF COLLEGE -... ~ 3. NEAT APPEARANCE Summer is following good vibrations ... feeling happy ... talking THOSE STUDENTS WHO about things that matter and things that don't ... running around SUCCESSFULLY COMPLETE with friends ... using TWA's 50/50 Club card to discover new places I THE SUMMER MAY all over the US for only half fare ... CONTINUE THEIR Meeting people ... the surfers at Malibu ... stomping and yelling ASSOCIATION WITH US I NEXT SEMESTER ON A at the Monterey Pop Festival. .. and the Newport Folk Festival. .. PART TIME BASIS dancing all night at the Salvation ... drinking beer at the Dodger's ga!TIe ... INTERVIEWS BY Folk singing Sundays in Washington Square ... the artists and wnt~rs APPOINTMENT ONLY at Big Sur ... the big guys and the little guys ... the people who agree With CALL MR. COOK you and the people who don't ... just being together. .. all the people at TWA who want you to have a good summer ... Find them ... Find you. ~ WASHINGTON, D.C. 202 393-6724 Summer is a finding-out time. Check your travel agent, TWA BALTIMORE, MD. or your nearest TWA office! daway* 301 837-7905 SILVER SPRING, MD. ___....-S85-3772 Up U~'~'W"d =,.".01, b, T"•• W.dd Ai,U.,", r," ARLINGTON, VA. 202 393-6724 9 A.M. to 2 P.M. ONLY Thursday, May 2,1968 THE HOYA Page Seventeen

SUMMER WORK Cformal attire, oLtd. A national sales company with C.D. Jewish Scholar Lipman established offices in 177 cities in 1416 H Street, N.W. the U.S. has adopted a scheduled Phone 638-3300 colJege training program for Discusses Judaism Of Today summer work. Training and income Tuxedo Rental & Sales starts immediately. No cold by Paul Korslltnd to ideas of a narrow, punitive, and tians and seem to be ex­ vengeful Jewish God, and a lack tending beyond mere toleration canvassing required. All leads Hours: 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. Eugene J. Lipman, the of universalism in the Jewish out­ of one another to the develop­ furnished. Call Mr. Johnson outspoken Jewish scholar from look. "Man is given more re­ ment of a healthy theological di­ Catholic University, addressed an alogue. Observing the evolution in 532-3402 Student Discounts sponsibility in Judaism than in audience of no more than 20 in most other religions and must Catholic thinking, Lipman finds the lecture room of the Reiss reach up to the Divine. The Di­ himself fascinated by his class of Building last Thursday night. The vine radiates out like the spokes some 30 seminarians. Completely designated subject, He h r i s t ian of a wheel to all of reality. Jew­ unorthodox and open to ideas Myths About Judaism," was soon ish mysticism is pantheistic." from and Judaism, dropped in favor of an informal These were among the unambigu­ these future professors will "make conversation which seemed to ous remarks Lipman made from some fur fly" exclaimed an ex­ center around the significance of his seat at the lecture room uberant Lipman. On .ii. Judaism today_ brnpug table. Hopefully Rabbi Lipman's talk Such Christian prejudices as (By the author of "Rally Round the Flag Boys!" is evidence of a changing attitude the accusation that Judaism has Various aspects of Judaism "Dobie Gillis," etc.)' , on the part of both Christians and not changed since biblical times were touched upon from the diffi­ and remains a static, inflexible culty of changing Jewish liturgy Jews that dialogue will result in religion were vigorously attacked to English to the significance of learning and appreciation of all religious experiences in their so­ WAS KEATS THE BOB DYLAN by Lipman. "The only change Chris­ the Jewish belief in the coming tians would view as constructive of a completely human messiah. cial and cultural contexts. Hope­ OF HIS DAY? fully too, the number of events Who was the greatest of the English Romantic Poets­ would be Judaism's acceptance of Comparing recent attempts at Byron, Shelley or Keats? This question has given rise to the Christian covenant," declared liturgy translation to the impres­ that night might account for the many lively campus discussions and not a few stabbings. Lipman. He pointed out that the sionist movement in painting, Lip­ small audience. Opportunities for Let us today try to find an answer. "Christian founders" were well man said, "Many of the impres­ forthright dialogue at Georgetown First, Keats (or The LouisviJle Slugger as he is com­ aware of the Jewish system of sionist paintings were bad, but should not be missed. monly called.) Keats' talent bloomed early. While still a expansion and reverted to biblical they were a breakthrough." schoolboy at St. Swithin's he wrote his epic lines: Judaism to find refutable material. If I am good I get an apple, It is significant that communica­ GIRLS IN COLLEGE So I don't whistle in the chapel. A short discourse on Jewish tion of the kind exemplified last From this distinguished beginning he went on to write mysticism was Lipman's response Thursday is taking place. Chris- (Continued from Page 1) another 40 million poems, an achievement all the more re­ would be constructed on land be­ markable w?en y~lU consider that he was only five feet Translate the date! tween Reiss Science Center and tall! I mentlOn thIS fact only to show that physical prob­ Darnall Hall . lems never keep the true artist from creating. Byron, for • RokugalJu 17 e~ample, was lame. ShelJey suffered from prickly heat all • 4 T hermidor If coeds are admitted to the wmter long. Nonetheless, these three titans of literature • die octavo ante Kalendas Tulias * College, they will augment the never stopped writing poetry for one day. $ Opening dates for SUMMER total enrollment rather than dis­ Nor did they neglect their personal lives. Byron, a devil SESSIONS 1968 at MANHATTANVILLE COLLEGE place male applicants. As for the with the ladies, was expelled from Oxford for dipping principle itself, Fr. Fitzgerald, Nell Gwynne's pigtails in an inkwell. (This later became UNDERGRADUATE AND known as Guy Fawkes Day.) He left England to fight in GRADUATE COURSES states, "Our practice in this mat­ the Greek war of independence. He fought bravely and FOR MEN AND WOMEN ter is somewhat outmoded. I think well, but women were never far from his mind as evi- arts and sciences we ought to make available to denced by these immortal lines : ' master of arts in teaching those girls who want it the liberal How splendid it is to fight for the Greek, music school education -that the College offers." But I don't enjoy it half as much as dancing cheek to graduate programs in religion Fr. Davis notes, "I think that girls cheek. re5idence facilities can add an awful lot to a uni­ While Byron fought in Greece, Shelley stayed in Eng­ air·conditioned classrooms versity today. For instance, we land, where he became razor sharpener to the Duke of * TIVO 5-lJ7EEK SESSIONS: JUNE can secure excellent students who Gloucester. Shelley was happy in his work, as we know 17-/ULY 19; JULY 22-AUGUST 23 wish to major in subjects that are from his classic poem, Hail to thee, blithe strop, but no 6-lJ7EEK SESSION: JUNE 24- not overcrowded, such as theology matter how he tried he was never able to get a proper edge AUGUST 2 on the Duke's razor, and he was soon banished to and fine arts. Georgetown has for brochure and application forms: been too strongly identified as a Coventry. (This later became known as The Industrial DIRECTOR OF ADMISSIONS Revolution.) professional school. Girls in the MANHATTANVILLE COLLEGE College would add a new dimen­ One wonders how Shelley'S life-and the course of Eng­ PURCHASE, NEW YORK 10577 lish poetry-would have differed if Personna Super Stain­ sion." less Steel Blades had been invented 200 years earlier. For Personna is a blade that needs no stropping, honing or whetting. It's sharp when you get it, and sharp it stays through shave after luxury shave. Here truly is a blade tit for a Duke or a freshman. Moreover, this Personna, this jewel of the blade-maker's art, this boon to the cheek and bounty to the dewlap, comes to you both in double­ edge style and Injector style. Get some now during "Be \ . Kind to Your Kisser Week." But I digress. Byron, I say, was in Greece and Shelley in England. Meanwhile Keats went to Rome to try to grow. Who does not remember his wistful lyric : Although I am only five feet high, Some day I will look in an elephant's eye. But Keats did not grow. His friends, Shelley and Byron, touched to the heart, rushed to Rome to stretch him. This too failed. Then Byron, ever the ladies man, took up with Lucrezia Borgia, Catherine of Aragon, and Annie Oakley. Shelley, a more domestic type, stayed horne with his wife Mary and wrote his famous poem: [love to stay home with the missus and write, And hug her and kiss her and give her a bite.

Mary Shelley finally got so tired of being bitten that she went into another room and wrote Frankenstein. Upon reading the manuscript, Shelley and Byron got so The desperate hours scared they immediately booked passage home to Eng­ land. Keats tried to go too, but he was so small that the clerk at the steamship office couldn't see him over the top and how to survive them. of the counter. So Keats remained in Rome and died of shortness. Byron and Shelley cried a lot and then together com- The desperate hours come around mIdnight when you've posed this immortal epitaph: got more to do than time to do it Good old Keats, he might have been short, The hours when you have to stay alert or face the music But he was a great American and a heck of a good sport. the next day. * * .. @l968.l4ax Shulman . Those are NoDoz' finest hours. It's got the strongest Truth, not poetry, i8 the concern of Personna, and we stl~u~ant you can take without a pre· tell you truly that you'll not find a better slwving com­ SCription. And it's not habit forming. bination than Per80nna and Burma-Shave, regular or NoDoz.§). If you don't stay up with the menthol. competition, you won't keep up with the competition. Page Eighteen TIlE HOrA. Thursday, May 2, 1968

International Student House TRADITION AT GEORGETOWN Attempting To Widen Scope The International Stu den t ity of Edward R. Klein, Dean of stay. Following that date, the last OLDMACS House will finally be able to ful­ Men, Mr. Frank Buck (Housing), spaces left will be available to fill its primary purpose-a resi­ Mr. Charles Deacon (Admissions), students who take English' as a dence hall with half its members Mr. William Carroll (English as foreign language and who live on corner of 34th & M from diverse nations, and a funnel a foreign language). campus. through which foreign and Ameri­ One important change is that The 35 spots available to can students can integrate in a upperclassmen, whether foreign or American students will be al­ Free Parking In Back Of Groovy's more cosmopolitan atmosphere. American, may choose rooms in located both to upper and under­ The vital decisions concerning the House. There is a quota, how­ classmen. A certain percentage of the ISH were made some months ever, and upperclassmen must ap­ the House's American population ago with the support and author- ply to either Sam Phelan at the will be made up of upperclass stu­ Monday thru Friday House or Tom Kuna (there will dents while the remainder will also be facilities for resident ap­ consist of freshmen, who have al­ Two G.U. Debaters plication at room selection on May ready been notified of the House Open 11.'00 a.m. 10). and its function by the Office of Win Second Place The 35 foreign places will be Admissions. The Office has indi­ available according to several cated that over 120 applications Drinks with food orders and after In Novice National stipulations. Upperclass foreign for housing in the ISH have been students may apply, but all Walsh sent out to interested incoming College students Kenneth Case­ Area foreign freshmen will be as­ freshmen. beer and Patrick Mulvanny fin­ signed rooms in the House. The In addition to the changes in re­ Draft .10 ished second in the Novice Nation­ remaining places will be held open gard to admission to residency in al Debate Tournament concluding until September 10, thus allowing the house, changes have also been the 1967-68 debate season for late foreign students a place to made in its basic government. Georgetown's freshmen team. Fifty-two schools from 27 states Bottled .20 debated the topic, 'Resolved, that the Federal Government should guarantee a mirlimum annual cash in some to all citizens.' Mixed Drinks .25 After preliminary rounds against Hope College, the University of Southern California, Kent State University, DePaul University, Sours ...... 35 Redlands University, Bradley Uni­ versity, the University of Loyola at Santa Barbara, Mulvanny rated third individual speaker, and Case­ Slings, etc. .1.25 beer rated fourth individual speak­ er, making them the highest rated team. In the elimination Regular prices without food rounds they defeated the Uni­ versity of Southern California, University of Wyoming, and the Prices good to 6:30 p.m. , before los­ ing in the final round on a split 965-5065 decision to Stanford University. Over the three years that this tournament has been held, George­ Gaston-White debaters H;enneth Casebeer and Patrick Mulvaney town has emerged fifth, first and finished second in the Novice National Debate Tournament, proving now second. perhaps that they really aren't such novices after all. L ______:==::!

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d Thursday, May 2, 1968 THE BOrA Page Nineteen' After One Year At Georgetown­ ~ and now ... JADE i EAST~ 'Satisfied' But With Reservations (Continued from Page 9) jump above three million or some­ demically superior to this one. I think I'd probably give money to ject of a few remarks. All were thing, but I'd love to go to some place like Berkley or USC for a this place when I graduate be­ dissatisfied with student govern­ semester just to see what its like." cause I feel that their greatest ment. One student who had been "I'm glad I came here, but I'm problem is their need for money." CORAL particularly active in high school not satisfied. I applied to a school A NEW AFTER SHAVE & COLOGNE described the freshman's problem, that was here ten years ago and "The problem is finding the right PARIETALS isn't here now. I think I see in­ (Continued from Page 3) activities for you. Like when I dications that it might improve, came here I thought the Collegi­ and if it does, I'll stay. I feel kind he did indicate that Dr. Tripp's ate Club was what I should be in of an obligation to contribute as observation of the Board show­ and what I should do, and now, an alumnus, but if it doesn't ing a general reluctance in fact its the last thing I'd join. I think improve real fast and give clear was unfounded. Fr. Harbrecht in­ it's a farce. I'm most disillusioned indication that it is going to con­ dicated that "Dr. Tripp was not with the Collegiate Club for not tinue to improve, I'll get out, and as informed as he might have doing the job they should be do­ I'll get out after my sophomore been. He came in and discussed ing." Another said, "I think that year." the matter with the Board, and GUCAP is a fairly good organiza­ "I'm really glad I came, but in then left. He was not there for tion," and added, "If you get a the same way I'm not satisfied. I our general discussion which was feeling that you're involved with probably won't stay here for the carried on afterwards." something, maybe you'll get more four years. I would never give The provision for the experi­ out of it." money to this school because I mental weekencis, which will run Asked if they were satisfied, if get the impression that if I wrote until the end of the semester, are they liked it here, if they would a check out, I'd be throwing it essentially the same as those used stay here for four years, and if away because the people who run on the previous weekends and they would give money as alumni, this place wouldn't know what to which will be instituted on a per­ their responses varied. "I'm not do with my money." manent basis should the Board satisfied, but I think I'll stay. "It's challenging academic-wise look favorably on the intervisita­ I'm hoping that things will get but I'm not satisfied. As far as tion program in June. better rather than worse, and I giving money, I'd feel a lot better don't think many persons are ab­ if I was paying less now, its a little CHOICE '68 solutely satisfied with it. I think less than Harvard and it probably (Continued from Page 3) that I will give money but I doesn't have as much as Harvard. wouldn't feel obligated to give There's a lot of advantages of tion, 616 students chose the Dem­ AFTER SHAVE from $2.50 ocrats, 386 picked the Republican COLOGNE from $3.00 money. If I have it, I'll give it, being in Washington." SWANK Inc.-Sole Distributor but if I don't have it, I'm not go­ "I'm fairly satisfied that' I party, 604 chose neither (inde­ ing to hurt myself giving it." came here. I'd like to spend my pendent), while 14 voted for "I'm basically satisfied with this junior year abroad and as f~r as . 'other party." place, and I'll probably stay here going to a graduate school I'd Three referendum questions of for four years if tuition doesn't like to go to a school that is aca- national interest were also on the ballot. The first two questions dealt with U.S. policy in Vietnam and the bombing of North Viet­ nam while the third question was on the "\.l.Tban crisis" in America. The first question's alternatives and results to "What course of military action should the U.S. pursue in Vietnam," were: im­ mediate withdrawal of U.S. forces, 236; phased reduction of U.S. mili­ tary activity, 1,024; maintain the current level of U.S. military ac­ tivity, 142; increase the level of U.S. military activity, 122; an "all out" military effort, 192. The second question asked what course of action the U.S. should pursue in regards to the bomb­ ing of North Vietnam. The re­ sults were: permanent cessation of bombing, 610; temporary sus­ pension of the bombing, 622; maintaining the current level of bombing, 199; intensification of the bombing, 251; and the use of nuclear weapons, 74. The third question dealt with the "urban crisis" and which pro­ gram should receive highest priority in government spending. The results for this question were: education, 696; housing, 106; income subsidy, 60; job train­ • ing and employment opportunities, 764; and riot control with stricter law enforcement, 128. The poor turnout of only 1,756 was due to rainy weather and 1 confusion about polling hours and places. Lack of pUblicity about the election also hurt the turnout, Fly. although the various candidates' workers had spread their respec­ Flyaway. tive posters, buttons and bUmper Cut out. stickers throughout the campus. Time-Life Inc. will computerize Break loose. the national returns and release Have a real vacation on your vacation. the results next week. Join United's 12-21 Club and escape to almost anywhere, almost any time, at half-fare. When you fly 12-21 style you can't reserve a seat, but you can get away from it all at half-fare when space is available. Because United has more seats to more places than anyone else, there's a better chance you'll be in one of those seats. It's easy to join. Stop in at any United office, be under 22 and bring proof, slip us $3.00, and you're in. Make sense? Make tracks!

Call your United Campus Rep.-Mike ~e Conners, at 783-4700. He's a fellow fHenclly, skies student and can help you with all your travel needs. For flight information or if reservations, call United at 783-4700. -,~~ United. "Just as nice at halfthe price." SENATOR KENNEDY Page Twenty THE HOYA Thursda.y, Ma.y 2, 1968

GUCAP Melllbers Elect Officers, Advertising sales, STAMP IYI ~~~~~, II'S THE RAGE full or part time REGULAR ,~!!!~~ MODEL Outline PrograIlls F or Next Year ~ ANY Men wanted with home 3 LINE TEXT52 With the leadership of a new time. A schedule will also be their interest areas. Following Th. finest INDESTRUCTIBLE METAL Board of Directors, the George­ posted in the GUCAP office. these sessions, there will be POCKET RUBBER STAMP. liz" II 2". phone or car for sales in the Send check or money order. Be town University Community Ac­ "Orientation '68" although ex­ meetings at which interested stu­ sure to include your Zip Code. No tion Program is examining its tending for one day only next dents can speak with those who Georgetown Area. po.tage or handling charges. Add sales tax. present structure "to more effec­ year, will be expanded to include are involved in specifiC projects. Prompt shipment. $atilt.dion GUllnlntMlil tively co-ordinate the community workshops in the various areas of These additions are designed to THE MOPP CO. service performed by Georgetown interest such as tutoring or civil better acquaint the volunteers Call Vic Chase at 362-9073 P. O. Boll 18623 Unol Sq .... Stdion students," according to the new rights. The sessions will present with the real duties of a com­ ATLANTA. GA.. 30326 chairman, Brian McCaffrey (ColI. methods to assist GUCAPers in munity action worker. '70). Additional members elected to the Board, by vote of the project leaders, include: Dodo Reddington (SFS '70), Bill Bridge (SFS '70), and Tom Schuch (ColI. '71). A fifth member, Ellen Maland (SFS '70), was also appointed. To facilitate GUCAP administration vacatioP'1 for the '68-'69 academic year, chairmen at the same time were GoiPfI o~o carry chosen to work in the following s re areas: Lou Campbell (GUNS '70 Be .. 00 -recruitment), J 0 h n Cur ran (ColI. '70-orientation), Horace Sheerer (SFS '70)-transporta­ .... ~. ©OOOOOO'S H£QU£S tion) and Bonnie Shulock (SFS '71-publicity) . GUCAP has also been nominat­ ltU\\I£lEftS CllYWBBll B ed in a competition sponsored by the Lane-Bryant Company to select A.CCBPTBD BVB r $100 . the 'University with the best com­ harge-75¢ pe \ organiz.atlon. munity action program. A $1000 lowest \ssua~ce ':or\d's \argest trav~ s and aU award will be presented to the winning organization. Dr. Stefan Sacked b~ t de banks, travel a9&enSOcIN H. Horn, professor of Translation .;,,:': At authorl~e lHOS. COOK and Interpretation in the School Cook's offices. of Languages and Linguistics, is sponsoring the e n try. K 0 p p Michelotti, a School of Foreign Service junior, wrote a short es­ say describing GUCAP's history and goals, which is part of a larger presentation documenting the group's activities. Evaluation sessions for all pres­ ent projects will be held with OurSp ce Department their respective project leaders on the afternoons of May 5 and May 12, from 3 to 6 p.m. Comments Big. This year even bigger. Some Chevrolet Tri­ ways, too. With such exclusives in Chevrolet's field and suggestions from project mem­ Levels are longer. Some wider. Some with more as an ignition warning system. You'll get a buzz out bers are welcomed; those able to cargo room. Size up Impala. Nothing in its field of it if you ever leave your key in the switch. There come should contact their project comes as big. For instance, in many others you are rocker panels that clean themselves with every leaders for the specific date and wouldn't dare try laying a 4 x 8-foot mirror flat in the shower you go through. Inner fenders that protect main cargo level. (Especially if you're superstitious.) the outer ones from rust. And hidden windshield In Impala, no problem. The hidden storage compart­ wipers on many models. Even with all these advan­ ment on the lower level also takes more of your gear tages, Impala and Chevelle Concours are the lowest than any of them. The roof rack you order should priced luxury wagons in their fields. And if that's take care of,the rest. For your comfort, there's extra what you like to hear, hear this. Unprecedented hip and shoulder room. savings are yours now at your Chevrolet dealer's We make our Tri-Levels lots more attractive in other '68 Savings Explo. See the details below.

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• ~ Five Exotic Places .::.. To Go This Summer The Middle East in the 19th and 20th Centuries I Medieval Europe France and the Enlightenment Spain'and America The Islands of the Pacific; IMPALA STATION WAGON Cultures and Peoples Plus 286 other courses just as compelling. Undergraduate. Graduate. PrOfessional. Go a little farther academically Powerglide and whitewalls. big savings on power disc this summer. To the University has ever held. To you it of Pennsylvania Summer Sessions. means extra buying power­ brakes and power steering on 2.AnyChevrolet or Chevelle First Session: May 20-June 28 an explosion of savings on any Chevrolet or Chevelle with 2S0-hp Turbo-Fire V8, Second Session: July 1-August 9 Chevrolets and Chevelles. with V8 engine. Powerglide and whitewalls. Register Now Take a look at these bonus For a Summer Sessions catalog, 5. Buy any Chevrolet or mail the coupon below. savings plans. Then see your 3. Any regular Chevrolet Chevelle V8 2-door or 4- Chevrolet dealer. with 2S0-hp Turbo-Fire V8, door hardtop model- save Address' ______Bonus Savings Plans. Turbo Hydra-Matic and on vinyl top, electric clock, City, ______whitewalls, It's like no other savings 1. Any Chevrolet or Chevelle wheel covers and appear­ Slate Zip ____ event your Chevrole.t dealer with 200-hp Turbo-Fire V8, 4. Now, for the first time ever, ance guard items. , uNIVERSITr of ~~ I PENNSYLVANIA~. {Q Happening now at your Chevrolet dealer's, i Sumrr:': <;essions ~_ a tremendous explosion of extra buying power. Only the leader could make it happen. l_ Philadelphia, Pennsylvania 19104 Thursday, May 2, 1968 THE IIOYA. Page Twenty One Admissions Office NO SI&N OUT FRONT BUT ••• Conducts Survey INBIDE_ by Mike Gilberti '67 are presently enrolled in gradu­ In order for an admissions office ate schools, 29 percent are em­ ~'UN to be able to provide prospective ployed either in business or as ~FEI.LOWSII'P students with information on a teachers, 17 percent are in mili­ .,rF'HE fOOD university's ability to place its tary service, and four percent .~8 8RAHDS graduates in full-time graduate occupy various other positions. The figures also indicate several It1PORTED ... OOJ1Rfl(. BEER programs and careers, and facts about various aspects of campus other interesting facts. life, it must conduct surveys of its For instance, many people feel FR. SWEENEY students and graduates in order to that the Nursing school is not ac­ will concern the present campus obtain the statistics needed to pro­ complishing its goal because its environment and the attitude of vide this data. graduates do not go into full-time the student toward the school in In the past several months, the nursing. On the contrary, about general. The present sentiment is Georgetown University Admis­ 92 percent of last year's graduat­ that this survey will provide an sions Office has been conducting ing class are presently full-time accurate picture for the incoming such studies. During the fall of nurses and four percent are in the student of Georgetown life from 1967, questionnaires were sent to military services as nurses. An­ the most important source avail­ 686 m<.>mbers of the Class of other surprising fact is that the able--the stuc1ents themselves. 1967. However, the response, 529 greatest number of graduates en­ out of 686, was hardly adequate tering the Peace Corps came from to provide accurate statistical in­ the Foreign Service School, 11 1968 'Military Ball' formation. In the early spring of students joining. this year, questionnaires were once At this time it is hoped that Open to Entire GU; again sent out. This time the re­ this survey will be taken every sponse was an ample 618 out of year, and that in several years Marks 50th Year 686. Thus having obtained enough enough statistics wiII be available information, an accurate analysis to determine various trends of The annual Military Ball, spon­ was made and incorporated into great importance to Georgetown sored by both the Army and the a report. applicants. Air Force ROTC units at George­ . Another survey wiII be taken town. will be held next Friday Statistics from the report show evening, May 10, from 9 p.m. to this week of the Class of '69. It that 50 percent of the Class of 1 a.m. in New South cafeteria. Music will be provided by the First Army Field Band, featuring both military and popular rock tunes. This year's Ball celebrates the fiftieth aniversary of the ROTC program here at Georgetown. Decorations for the event will be in line with this theme. Air Force and Army officials, as well as members of the faculty and ad­ ministration, have been invited to attend the event which is the last of the ROTC social yeur. As in past years, the highlight of the evening will come at 10 p.m. with the crowning of Ball's queen. Princesses are C e c i I e Carameros, a senior in the School of Foreign Service; Consuelo Del­ gado, a senior in the School of Languages and Linguistics; Lynda Sue Eason, a freshman at Dun­ barton College; and Yvette Villa­ mana, a sophomore in the School of Languages and Linguistics. The Ball this year will be once again formal. Included in the $4 ticket price is access to the "open bar." Invitations for both cadets and non-cadets may be obtained at either the Air Force office in Copley or the Army offices in Old All You Need Is Love North.

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Mr. Galvin: what can business offer a liberal arts graduate 1

Dear Mr. Galvin: Dear Mr. Sayre: When you began this dialogue in the Fall, you expressed the Liberal arts majors of all kinds are needed in business desire to clear the air about business. You said you wished to management and generally have a more varied career choice in interest college students in business by answering questions they business than have business administration graduates. I would might have. Further, you have stated that business has a great like here to consider just one discipline that you might not interest in the non-business student, or the liberal arts student. normally associate with a career in business. I refer to anthropology. These goals all are fine, but my fellow-students want to know just A U.S. company seriously interested in trading with people of what exactly are the opportunities for the non-business student, other lands must acquire in-depth knowledge of those people. or the liberal arts student? For example: Is there a place in Some nationalities are physically different from Americans­ business for a philosophy major, or a history major, or a smaller in physique, for example. Some have skin and hair government major? Certainly a liberal arts student would seem to coloring and texture different from those of most Americans. be at a disadvantage in the business world when competing with Dietary habits vary from country to country. Some flavors or a graduate of a business school or college. odors acceptable in one country may not be in another. This is true also of some expressions and words. American corporations There is another question fellow-students of mine ask. Does seeking sales overseas are looking for anthropology majors business place more emphasis upon recruiting in the so-called whose knowledge of peoples of other lands can help them. "prestige" schools, the schools, and private school.s, There is also a growing need at home for people knowledgeable than it does in state institutions like the University of Arizona? in this discipline. The late, but growing interest now taken by U.S. companies in the American Negro market is compelling Possibly, Mr. Galvin, you can give us some idea of the background businessmen to study this significant section of our population. of business executives; from where do the young men now in Cosmetic companies have long limited their major marketing training come; and finally, what is the background of men like activities to the white market, but some are now forming yourself, chairmen of the boards? special departments to produce and market their wares to our Negro citizens. Such activities must be backed with a Sincerely, thorough knowledge of Negro physiology, psychology, desires, and needs. The application of anthropology in business does not only relate 4~w.~ to our Negro families. We have people of many different Fred W. Sayre origins-, Scandinavians, Orientals, Semitics, are but a few. Each has special requirements in cosmetics, clothing, University of Arizona foods, and sometimes housing. It is difficult to think of any liberal arts field that is not applicable to business. Language majors are in demand at home and a broad; English and journalism majors are of course needed in advertising, marketing, public relations, and pu blications departments; sociology and psychology majors are sought for employee and community relations; government majors are increasingly in demand now that close cooperation between business and government is becoming more and more real. The list could go on and on. Many business leaders do not have business or engineering degrees. A few are: Frederick J. Donner of General Motors; Robert C. Tyson of U.S. Steel; Fred J. Barch of General Electric. I am another. BRIDGING THE GENERATION GAP. Concerned about campus viewpoints on business, and equally concerned that I do not believe business recruiters place more emphasis on businessmen often have misimpressions of today's college ivy league schools than on state colleges. Business seeks more students, Robert W. Galvin, Motorola Chairman, is of the top students-the cream of the crop-from all recognized participating in a continuing dialogue with students at four colleges. Obviously students in the top third at Arizona would leading universities. The students, whose letters to Mr. Galvin be preferred to those in the bottom third at, say, Princeton. We are being published in campus papers together with his need good men, Fred; young men with imagination, flair, new replies, are: Barbara Caulfield, ; ideas-but always graduates of high academic standing. I hope Ralph Kimball, Stanford University; Paul George Sittenfeld, you'll be one who will give business serious consideration. ; and Fred Sayre, University of Arizona. Additional topics are being aired over college radio stations. Sincerely, Mr. Galvin also has visited campuses to participate in discussions aimed at furthering mutual respect and understanding. The photograph shows Mr. Galvin exchanging ~41.~Robert W. Galvin views with members of the Yale Management Association. Chairman, Motorola Inc. , Thursday, May 2, 1968 THE DOrA. Page Twenty Three Can you Actions Replace Authority As Jesuits Search For Role (Continued from Page 15) his Jesuit spirit of education-fair Bunn notes, "Means can always meet the test? change, always improve. But there end, that he might praise and play. "If a student says he's iI~ will never be any change in our reverence the Lord his God, and I don't ask for a doctor's certifi­ Here's everything you need to serving Him, at length be saved. cate. I believe him. On the other objective. To that objective we But the other things which are hand, this can encourage a minor­ have dedicated our lives." But Fr. help you get a top score in the placed on the earth were created ity to act vociferously. I don't Bunn observes that there are a few unchanging means, too. Among tests you have to pass. for man's sake, that they might have any scruples about being assist him in pursuing the end of hard on the undesirables." these is "the closest possible rela­ • Up-to-date test material his creation.... " Fr. Fadner's insistence on in toinship between teachers and Getting down to specifics, Fr. loco parentis harmonizes, sur­ students." An already changed sit­ • Best organized study guides Fadner's "Jesuit spirit of educa­ prisingly for some, with a char­ uation at Georgetown is a mush­ roomed studentry accompanied by • Do's and don'ts of test-taking tion" is achieved by what he wit­ acteristic of Jesuit education cited tingly calls "dirty words." Among by the Rev. Joseph A. Panuska, an appropriately-sized lay faculty. • Step-by-step programming these are discipline and in loco S.J., assoc. professor of biology, That "closest possible relationship" pctrentis, the mere mention of who emphasizes a close student­ between Jesuits and their students • Accurate practice tests which is anathema to any student teacher relationship. Fr_ Panuska is, to say the least, endangered. • Correct answers and solutions of the Berkeley generation. says, "I think that Jesuit schools Only 20 years ago, the College But concerning disclipline, Fr. are schools which, by comparison boasted a faculty of some 52 mem­ • Self-evaluation profiles Fadner explains, "There is an to many other schools, offer a bers, 23 of whom were blackrobes. adage among old-fashioned Jes­ fairly close student-teacher rela­ Co-curricular activities were each uits-'Knowledge makes a bloody tionship." assigned a Jesuit moderator, in­ COWLES SCORE-HtGH EXAM BOOKS entrance.' In fact, the old term OileD lUindedness cluding the golf and tennis teams. for for any academic subject was The dean of men was quite natu­ How to Pass Fr. Fadner's lack of scruples GRADUATE RECORD EXAMINATION APTITUDE TEST 'discipline,' in which is implied rally a Jesuit, and his deputies on that knowledge certainly does not about "being hard on the unde­ with special Test-Yourself Examination bonus. 444 pages sirables" might conceivably clash the corridors were also Jesuits. In make an easy entrance. Now I short, one could not help but come How to Pass believe that things should be as head-on with another of Fr. Pan­ uska's Jesuit educational ideals-­ into contact with the blackrobes LAW SCHOOL ADMISSION TEST palatable as possible, but a cer­ and. for better or worse, be influ­ MEDICAL COLLEGE ADMISSION TEST tain amount of disclipline is neces­ open mindedness. But Fr. Pan­ uska's notion of open-mindedness enced by them. DENTAL APTITUDE TEST sary." Turning to in loco parentis, Of course, Georgetown is no he says, "Every Jesuit and every concerns itself more with liberal MILLER ANALOGIES TEST longer a Jesuit university in the teacher acts in loco parentis. One education rather than liberal pun­ FEDERAL SERVICE ENTRANCE EXAMINATIONS ishment. The biologist says, "I traditional mode. The Society of of the inalienable rights of a par­ Jesus no longer supplies the can­ GRADUATE BUSINESS SCHOOL ADMISSION TEST ent is to educate his offspring, and think that the product of a Jesuit school should be a liberalized in­ opy under which every member of NATIONAL TEACHER EXAMINATIONS a parent delegates this right to the University community eats and professionals. " dividual, somebody who uses his Each $3_95 Paper • Over 300 pages scholarly work, if he's engaged in breathes - the winds of change Paternalism have blown that canopy away. The 24 GRE Advanced Tests also available Hand in hand with in loco par­ scholarly work, as an open-mind­ _._plus ed affair. I mean that the doors Jesuits have become simply an entis, in Fr. Fadner's scheme, is influence within the University­ COMPUTER PROGRAMMER APTITUDE TESTS $4.95 Paper paternalism, a word which he are open, that his mind is domi­ SHORT·CUT SHORTHAND nated nearly as much by unsolved one of many influences. And this quite rightly observes is often influence is Georgetown's sole Learn Shorthand in 40 Easy lessons by S. M. Wesley, Ph.D. "said with a snear." He explains, problems as by solved problems." $3_95 Paper "Paternalism is good because it He continues, "This should be re­ claim to Jesuitry. The blackrobes, is fatherliness. Now a word that flected in his social consciousness, t h r 0 ugh their influence, give Available at your campus bookstore is bad is paternalistic, character­ too. He should look on his fellow Georgeto\".rn direction in the real­ izing tyranny and the laying down man as being an individual with ization of ~a transcedental objec­ of laws without justification." He whom he's engaged in a common tive. Needless to say, the direction re l~?~!~g~ 4~8~~~!~~?n~, ~~~~~~~!rlk~!'22 enterprise. His spiritual life should may be imparted in many ways further observes, "God is pater­ nal. God works through his crea­ be open-minded. The spiritual life because each Jesuit, being an indi­ tures, who are nevertheless free also is not a closed door. If he vidual, has his own way of going agents." Fr. Fadner's point is well ends up with this attitude in his about things. But one thing is cer­ l taken-there is no arguing with professional life and his spiritual tain-the Jesuits' influence, once God. life, he will be able to adapt to exercised through the simple con­ A natural setting There is one other character­ changing situations." frontation of one human being istic that Fr. Fadner applies to About changing situations, Fr. with another, though one might have a penchant for dressing in for SUIDIDer study. black. As the Rev. James Ryder, S.J., University president fro m 1840 to 1845 and from 1848 to 1851, perhaps unwittingly prophe­ Rostrum cied, "Far more good is to be done in America by reason and good example than by authority and force." (Continued from Page 4) Direction to Presence come prOjections occur, we are faced with the problem Even as their presence gives the of revising programs and rapidly finding alternative University direction, the black­ sources of income. Unlike General Motors, when sales robes must give direction to their fall off, our labor force cannot be reduced drastically. presence. They must create every Study with us this summer. Our 300 acres of green shaded campus Our major payroll costs become fixed for the ensuing opportunity in which to achieve provide a perfect summer study atmosphere. During off hours enjoy that "closest possible relationship" on-campus tennis, riding or bowling. year some nine months before registration for the Fall We're just minutes from parks, beaches, golf courses, several fine with students. For one thing, if a theatres and museums and just an hour from Manhattan and the term. In an operation involving some 500 cost centers Jesuit lives on a student corridor, Hamptons. with diversified interests and capabilities, significant he certainly should not come to be Modern residence halls are available on the campus for undergradu- redirection of effort presents a good problem for a called a "phantom," as one or ate men and women. magician. two are. And perhaps more Jesuits UNDERGRADUATE COURSE OFFERINGS should live with the students, But, where is the greatest G.U. Wealth-it is not in abolishing the cloister in Ryan, Liberal Arts and Sciences, Pre-Professional, Pre-Engineering, Business and Education tangible bricks and mortar-nor investments-nor cur­ MuUedy, and Gervase. One black­ robe advocating this comments, GRADUATE COURSE OFFERINGS in the Graduate Schools rent assets, but rather in the intangibles of a dedicated nucleus of Jesuit fathers supported by an equally dedi­ "It would be different if the Jesuit of Long Island University: Biological Sciences, Business community were an exciting, vital Administration, Chemistry, Education and Certification, cated faculty, both striving to create profits in form of Management Engineering, English, Foreign Languages, place-but it just isn't." Guidance and Counseling, History, Library Science, Marine another intangible-the well-educated student, who is Possibly the most important Science, Mathematics, Music Education, Physics, Political also the "stockholder." At best, this is not a simple method through which a Jesuit Science, Sociology, Speech. fixed process, but a constantly changing and complex works his influence is his own per­ sonality. A blackrobe does not be­ Apply now for TWO 5-WEEK SUMMER SESSIONS process, profits from which are measured by the come more approachable merely achievements, the loyalty and the responsiveness of the June 24-July 26 and July 29-August 30 • Day a~d Evening by doffing his Roman collar and Admission open to visiting students from accredited colleges. graduate "stockholder." Maximization of profits is dif­ replacing even his black suit with a more worldly shade. Mr. Edward or additional information, summer bulletin and application, ficult under ideal conditions. When expenditure of in­ tangibles and also tangibles is required to appease and R. McIntyre, S.J., instructor in phone (516) 626-1200 or mail coupon philosophy, notes, "People don't repair damages and feelings/senses because dissident think any more or less of you be­ "stockholders" choose to defy organization rather than cause of a Roman collar. The fac­ C.W.POST COLLEGE pursue mature deliberation to conclusion, profits de­ tor is how committeed as a man OF LONG ISLAND UNIVERSITY cline and dividends are reduced. When expenditure of you are." • It was only through personal re­ "NEW DIMENSIONS MERRIWEATHER CAMPUS assets has to be applied to low profit or loss products lationships that even an old apos­ -~~~~~~------I (parietals, parking programs, vandalism as opposed to tate like E. Boyd Barrett was I Dean of Summer School, C.W. Post College, Merriweather Campus, I educational programs, the problems of society, the brought back to his senses. After I P.O. Greenvale, L.I., N.Y. 11548 • CP I I Please send me Summer Sessions inf?rmat!on bulletin. I world of tomorrow) the "stockholders" have to invest almost 20 years of penning sundry I 0 Women's Residence Hall 0 Men s ReSIdence H,:,II I more funds or accept a lower return. Obviously the diatribes against the Society, he I 0 Undergraduate 0 Graduate 0 Day 0 Evening returned to the Church when he greatest long range capital growth for the student­ I Name. - ••• ------••• - • - •••• -- •••• - • - •••••••••• - •• - •• - • - • - • • • I realized that a group of men who investor stockholder involves complete budgeting of had been so good to him CQuld I Address •• ----- •••• ----- • --- • - . - - • - • - •• --- •• -- • - •• - •• - • - • - • • • I production and full application of resources to the high not possibly be everything he had I City ••• _ ••• --_ ••• _···_-_··-··- State •••••••••••• Zip ••• _._ ••••• I profit growth products and elimination of the loss items said they were and w ere not. I If visiting student, from which college? .•.••••••••• - .••.• - • • . • • . . I from the product line. Among his first writings upon his ~------"coming home," as he put it, was the line, "The Jesuits were kind." Page Twenty Four THE HorA Thursday, May 2, 1968

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------_____d 'Thursday, May 2,1968 THE HOrA Page Twenty Five Golf Team Record the Cull Drops Below .500 by Dan Reynolds tough losses, the team dropped a For the first half of their sea­ 6-1 decision to a very good son, the Georgetown varsity golf Princeton representation and then team has not been successful de­ lost to Villanova, 5-2. Finally, on spite pre-season expectations for April 26, Georgetown broke into a better than .500 percentage in the winning column by defeating the won-lost column. , 5-2. by Larry Finefrock The team's record after five Only two of the team's mem­ matches is 1-4, but two of the bers at present are above the .500 losses have been the result of mark in their individual matches. With last week's sweep by Georgetown's freshman, junior extra-hole sudden death defeats Todd Poland has won four of his by Navy and Penn State. Against five personal duels and co-captain varsity and varsity heavyweight crews over their Marietta Navy, with the other personal Jim Ball has been victorious three counterparts, the Hoya rowers have entered the picture as match having resulted in a 3-3 times in five matches. tie, co-captain Pete Keller lost The team still would like to Rich Hlucha.n a serious threat to this year's Dad Vail championship. De­ his individual match on the 19th conclude the season with a 5-5 BOB FRANCIS spite the fact that the defending champions from the Ohio or first extra hole. This resulted record but this would require four in a defeat for Georgetown by the victories in their last five matches River dined in the New South cafeteria prior to hitting the score of 4-3. against such tough opposition as Hoya Athlete water, they still were acknowledged as the team to beat Against Penn State, the golfers Maryland and Pennsylvania. The lost by one point, 4-3, when sopho­ team has not been playing as well among small college rowing experts. more Jim Smith was defeated as they would have liked to up to Of The Week The crew is an unknown quantity to most Georgetown stu­ on the 23rd or fifth overtime hole. this point in the season but hope, Following these two extremely nevertheless, to finish strongly. Its been a dismal season for dents largely because they compete extensively in Phliadel­ Georgetown's baseball team, but phia where most of their competition dwells. They receive Bob Francis decided to beat American University last week to an allotment of $2,000 from the University but the remain­ help them save some of their ings funds needed must be gathered through revenue from Citations Presentecl athletic face in the Washington area. Sports Week and individual initiative. While retaining the The 5'7" left fielder merely col­ official title of "club", they have come to be the most ac­ To Female Athletes lected two triples, a single and a complished in this athletic category at Georgetown. Being walk; scored three runs and had by Phil Yellman The basketball team, which three RBI's. Then in the seventh fully aware that any success to be had must be the effect of Last Friday evening the distaff went 8-3, named four outstanding inning he helped dampen an strategic and financial manipulations, the crew has had to side of the Hoya sports family players-Kathy Gilligan, Kathy American University uprising by gathered in the Alumni Lounge Allen, Kathy Gallagher and Seton making a leaping catch of a ball supply its own money in many situations. for the Women's Athletic Asso­ Wall. The Most Valuable Player driven to the 330-foot mark at the One of the greatest breaks to happen to this team is Tony ciation's Awards Banquet. Six Trophy went to Seton Wall, and fence in left field. Had the hit ~ sports were represented, and out­ Lee Beane was cited for outstand­ landed safely, it is doubtful Johnson, the young Olympian turned Hoya coach. Johnson :, standing players were named from ing play over a four-year period. whethei- Georgetown's 7-5 win represented the United States in Tokyo in 1964 and his four of the teams. Barbara Castle and Betsey Rugg would be in the record books. were awarded for their play on chances for a trip to Mexico City this year are excellent. His the field hockey team, which had Francis, a junior from Scituate, knowledge of conditioning and rowing technique were in­ TRACK only one tie during an unbeaten Massachusetts, has just returned troduced on the Hilltop for the first time in 1966 and he has six-game schedule. after being sidelined by a torn (Continued from Page 26) managed to continue the winning tradition established during The sailing team, presently first hamstring muscles, but injuries The following week at New York in the Mid-Atlantic Conference, are nothing new to him. He has the era of Don Cradle. There must be a lot of unselfishness City saw the Hoyas pick up sec­ named Ann Markusen as outstand­ also had a shoulder separation, and desire for personal satisfaction on the part of Johnson onds in both the distance medley ing and bestowed the Service and torn ligaments in his knee and because his financial payment is minimal. relay (Fred Lane, Borck, Proto­ Sportsmanship award on Gail Wis­ several muscle pulls during his pappas and Stageberg) and the carz and Betsey Rugg. collegiate career playing football The pride of Georgetown rowers this year has been the two-mile relay team of Lane, Sam Chris Boersman took the honors and baseball. heavyweight varsity. They are the ones who will be seeking Gray, Protopappas and Stageberg as top member of the gymnastic Last week's game was an oppor­ to bring Georgetown Its first Dad Vail crown since 1964. So placed fourth. team, which does not engage in tune time for Francis to display This Friday and Saturday will meet competition. Members of his abilities. There was a scout far this season, they have propelled the 325-pound shells again find the Hoyas running into two teams, the volleyball team from the New York Yankees on much faster than any of their small college competition which Villanova at the Quantico Relays with a 3-1 record and the tennis hand and they have already com­ has included lVIarietta, George Washington, St. Joseph's, La­ in Quantico, Virginia. Coach Steve team with a 1-0 mark, were pres­ municated with him through the Salle, Temple and Villanova. Hopefully, they will not dupli­ Benedek is contemplating a stra­ ent at the banquet but neither mClil. As soon as it is legal to be cate the feat of the 1963 team which swept past all of its tegic combination of his top run­ squad named outstanding players, in contact with them, Francis will ners in various relay teams to test as the competitive season is still be very receptive to any offers the competition that year, including the preliminaries of the the powerful Eagle team. in progress in both sports. Bronx Bombers may have. Dad Vail, only to finish three seconds behind Marietta when it really mattered. As a spectator sport, 400 witnesses discovered last Satur­ day, despite the extreme inclement weather, that a crew Georgetown Varsity Crew race holds more excitement than they had thought. This Saturday's D. C. Area championship will be the Potomac finale for the Hoyas as they take on area teams in a tune­ Takes Kerr Cup Regatta up for the Dad Vail. The boys are hungry and that should On April 20, the Georgetown ute. Adding precious inches to the frosh fourth place in a blanket make the difference. heavyweight varsity won in Phila­ their lead on every sroke over the fiinish for second behind winner delphia for the second straight first 1500 meters of the 2000 meter Drexel. CUFF NOTES: An important meeting for all members of week when they rowed away from course, the young Hoyas moved In the afternoon's second race the field in the second annual out to a full shell's length lead the Hoya heavyweights fell one the Hoya football team has been scheduled for this afternoon Kerr Cup Regatta. over the opposition. But several length behind a surprising Trinity at 5:15 p.m. in the gym .... Student Athletic Commission Earlier in the afternoon Frank tragic crabs in the last 500 meters crew at the start. As the t\VO lead elections and induction of new members will be held tonight Benson's big frosh crew jumped smashed their hope of victory crews pulled far away from the at 8:00 p.m. in 208 White-Gravenor. Interested parties are off to an early lead while rowing when the boat nearly came to a other four entries, Trinity main­ invited with the hope of expanding this committee's partici­ a t a high-paced 36 strokes a min- stop. A quick recovery brought tained its four second lead till the finish for second behind winner pation in athletics at Georgetown .... The Atlantic Coast mained confident, however, that Conference has acknowledged the success they have enjoyed the results of their next meeting, using freshmen in their minor sports. Meanwhile the ECAC at the Dad Vail, would be quite continues in their ridiculous stand which is killing schools different. It was the junior var­ sity's first race of the year, he like Georgetown. . . . The intramural track meet will be held explained, and his crew was not a week from today (May 9) on the upper field at 4:00 p.m. as sharp as they might have been. Trophies will be presented to the winners of the 100-yard In the afternoon's feature race, dash, the 220, 440, 880, mile run, 440 relay, 880 relay, mile the Hoya varsity left the starting relay, shot put, high jump and long jump. line at a high 38 strokes per min­ ute. In short order they pulled into a one length lead, which they SOCCER Soccer Sunday, staged to cli­ extended to open water as they max spring training, gained turned through Strawberry Man­ (Continued from Page 26) Georgetown a reputation among sion Bridge, 750 meters from the British to hang a 4-3 loss on the area soccer lovers. Players and start. The Hoyas settled to a locals. fans alike were pleased with the long and powerful 31, and with The final contest was the Na­ facilities; the crowd hollered loud cox J. K. King calling for more tional Soccer League Stars of and liberal advice, praise, and power, Georgetown continued to D.C. tie the United Soccer League scorn in the best soccer tradition increase their lead. of Pennsylvania, 2-2. The Nation­ and went away happy. Unchallenged as they ap­ als took a 1-0 and then a 2-1 lead Coach Mendoza hopes to bring proached the last 500 meters, the as ex-pro goalie Carlos Borgialli similar soccer happenings to Hoyas increased their stroke racked up save after save. How­ Georgetown next year; this year's slightly and crossed the finish line ever, he fell one save short of spring schedule gained the varsity four lengths ahead of defending victory when muscular Don invaluable experience against the The Georgetown Lacrosse Club assured itself of its first season above champion La Salle, Trinity, Drex­ Kopicinski rocketed a beautiful area's best amateur teams, experi­ .500 with last week's 9-3 win over Mount St. Mary's. The club con­ el, Massachusetts and distant angle shot to net the Penn squad ence that hopefully will payoff in cludes its season Saturday against Villanova. Holy Cross. a tie with five minutes to go. victory this fall. Page Twenty Six GEORGETOWN UNIVERSITY, WASHINGTON, D.C. Thursday, May 2, 1968 Crew Squad Overwhelms Marietta Rowers Capture Regatta Victory by D. K. Bark ed 10 seconds ahead of the Hoyas. Georgetown's heavyweight var­ It was the Pioneers' only victory sity crew extended its winning of the day. streak to three straight, defeating The freshman race started just champion Marietta by a length on as the rain was beginning to let the rainswept Potomac last Satur­ up, Marietta pulled to a slight day. The win, added to junior lead off the live but as the Hoyas varsity and freshman victories, settled to 34 strokes per minute made a clean sweep of Marietta they came up even. for the first time in the history of At Key Bridge both crews Georgetown rowing. ma tched stroke for stroke while The occasion, marking the tenth GW and Virginia frosh crews anniversary of the founding of trailed many lengths b e h i n d. the crew, was notable by the fact Georgetown finally edged into the that it was the varsity's first vic­ lead and held off a final sprint by tory over Marietta in four years. their opponents to win by a deck­ ,'''' " .. It was also the first time ever length. that the Georgetown frosh have In junior varsity competition, beaten Marietta. both crews got off to an even First blood was drawn by the The triumphant Georgetown varsity heavyweight crew wildly acknowledges their full length victory start. GU quickly grabbed the lead over defending Dad Vail champs Marietta. George Washington University, which also nudged the Hoyas, second Frosh team who, and after 500 meters was a good rowing in a four man shell, sped rowers from Ohio, is shown just inches away from the finish line. length ahead of the Pioneers. In Steve Sanders across the finish six lengths ahead the last 50 strokes Marietta nar­ of the struggling Ohioans. In the rowed the lead to 20 feet but as following race, composed of sec­ the Hoyas raised the stroke they ond team varsity fours, Marietta pulled out ahead winning by half pulled to an early lead and finish- a length. '68 Georg'etown Baseball Team At 3:30 the varsity race went off with Marietta again jumping to an early lead over both GU and Can B,oast Of No Yastrzemskis GW. As they neared the turn be­ fore Key Bridge, the Hoyas be­ by Mark Davis stars by any stretch of the imagin­ But the Hoyas promise to finish gan to move up and taking a Sandwiched somewhere in the tion. Mediocre might be a brutal the season with the same excite­ power ten, pulled a full length in baseball spectrum between the word to tag on the Hoyas, but it ment with which they entered it. front, as the three crews passed magnanimity of the St. Louis is less cruel than bad and more Baseball connoisseurs might be • under the bridge. For the next Cardinals and the absurdity of truthful than good. driven to tears by the Hoyas' play, thousand meters the Hoyas main­ the Chicago White Sox lies a host Forgetting any linguistic calis­ but advocates of wide-open, un­ tained their lead, holding off a of teams regrettably character­ thentics, the facts speak for them­ predictable baseball could find en­ final desperate sprint by Marietta ized by little but their anonymity. selves: the Hoyas have won one­ joyment on the Hoyas sun­ and finished with a winning tim~ The harsher realities of life in­ third of their first nine games, drenched diamond. of 5:58.5 to Marietta's 6:03.2. clude the dictum that the quality with decisions against only How­ Next Saturday the Hoyas face of college baseball is condemned ard, Duquesne, and American. George Washington, Rollins Col­ to mediocrity, barring the Thirty errorS committed and 62 Hoya Soccermen lege of Florida and the perenially emergence of a campus Carl runs allowed offer little comfort powerful in Yastrzemski. for the Hoya partisan playing the Host Three Tests Dave O'Neill the D.C. Area Regatta at the Sad to report, Georgetown's numbers game. THE VICTORY BATH Thompson Boat Center. baseball roster boasts no super- Yet chances for improvement always remain for the more hope­ With Poor Results ful. Junior Bobby Francis, return­ by Phil Moller ing to action for the first time in Kehoe Field was the battle­ four games, pounded out three ground last Sunday as the Hoya GU Makes Creditable Showing hits to pace Georgetown to a 7-5 soccer team hosted a triple head­ victory over American in the er running from noon to five. team's latest victory. Georgetown led off against the At Difficult Drake Relays Meet That contest also featured the Washington Internationals, a first second win of the campaign for division club of D.C.'s National Georgetown mixed it up with were occupied with the William thusiasm over his varsity chances Mike Keesey, whose ERA for 24 Soccer League. The surprising schools many times its size last and Mary Relays and the Queens­ next year. innings is now a respectable 3.00. Hoyas, at full strength on a drY week in the Drake Relays held in lona Relays. At Williamsburg, first The sprint medley relay team Greg Gibaldo, owner of the field, made up in hustle what they Des Moines, Iowa, making a places and meet records were es­ also captured a first place on the Hoyas' other triumph, rounds out lacked in finesse, holding the creditable showing in the process. tablished in the two-mile relay, performances of Borck (440), Ron the starting duo. talented International to a single The two-mile relay team couldn't three-mile run, steeplechase and Ferrara (220), Skip Larsen (220) Any discussion of Hoya pitch­ goal in the first half. overcome a blistering 1 :48.2 the freshman mile. The steeple­ and Zieminski (half-mile). The ing becomes academic until one Maybe it was the happy, cheer­ anchor leg by Jim Ryun of the chase saw Fred Protopappas win distance medley relay team was realizes fielding has been em­ ing crowd of nearly a thousand, or Univer'lity of Kansas as they fin­ in an excellent time of 9:11. In disqualified when Zieminski was barrassingly less than sensational. maybe the sunny spring weather, ished second. The team of Bob the latter event, Garth McKay called for blocking another lane. Difficulties focus on the infield, but it looked surprisingly like :... Adrian, Bob Schwetje, Steve was timed at 4:16 to promote en- (Continued on Page 25) where a deluge of poor defensive talent as the inspired G.U. foot- '. Hickey and Bob Zieminski im­ play has repeatedly handicapped men managed to hold the Inter­ proved steadily from a last place the Hoya mound corps. nationals entirely scoreless in the position after the first lap, but The outfield presents a more second half, while Emil Sicre drove their 7 :23.9 time was not enough. encouraging if less pertinent pic­ in a lightning kick 30 min. into The strong distance medley re­ ture. Keesey, Francis, and Mike the period to give the Hoyas a tie lay team was handicapped because Callahan have handled fly balls with one of the area's best ama­ of a phySically tired Bob Ziemin­ with consistency. Callahan is also teur teams. • Enthusiasm and amazing team­ ski in the three-quarter mile run the pacesetter in hitting with a and could only muster a fourth .391 mark. work were the name of the game place. Hickey's half-mile (1:51.2), Still, the frustrations pile up: as freshmen Rick Prieto, Pete Jim Borck's 440 (47.0) and Steve eight errors against Richmond, 14 Hess, Tom Craig, and Dave Stageberg's sizzling mile (4:02.8) men left on base to George Wash­ Decerbo teamed with "old pros" enabled the Hoyas to finish as ington hurlers, and 14 strikeouts Sicre and Alfredo Montero to in­ high as they did. incurred in the American con­ still muscle and punch in tbe The brightest spot in the relays test. Georgetown attack. came as Stageberg became the The middle figure reveals what The D.C. Over 35 Stars, facing second fastest American in the might be the Hoyas' central prob­ the Philadelphia Senior StarS, three-mile run as he clocked a lem: lack of clutch hitting. While jumped off to a 3-0 lead in tbe 13 :24.5 for the 12-lap race. Still, Tim Valentine, Callahan, Keesey, first half of the second encounter, this was only good for second and Francis enjoy healthy batting spearheaded by Walter Durkan place as Van Nelson of St. Cloud averages, RBI tot a 1 s rem a i n and Georgetown's own player­ State captured his third straight anemic. coach, Rick Mendoza. The tiring title with a time of 13 :17, by far Keesey's five RBIs lead the D.C. Stars couldn't hold on ~. the best in the country. The two squad in run producing. Long through the second half, as tbe . ;',: Olympic possibilities were nearly ball efforts include his two home Philly 35ers stormed back behind even until Nelson ripped off a 61- runs and Francis' two triples. Be­ Ben McLaughlin and Walter Bab~ sccond final quarter-mile to clinch sides receiver George Fritz' four (both veterans of the 1950 1- The Georgetown Rugby Club crushed St. Joseph's last Saturday U.S. All-Star victory over tbe the race. 18-0 in the "A" game and 5-0 in the "B" game. consecutive assists, there remain (Continued on Page 25) During the vacation, the Hoyas Dave O'Neill no more statistics to laud. j I