Irish, Longhorns Tie for 1St ..See Sports on Page 3 for Details

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Irish, Longhorns Tie for 1St ..See Sports on Page 3 for Details Irish, Longhorns Tie For 1st ..see sports on page 3 for details.. Vol. V., No. 44 THEServing the Notre Dame and Saint Mary’s College CommunityOBSERTuesday, Nov. 10 SLC sets Appeals Board Soph cars also discussed By Don Ruane cal Engineering Professor Arthur car on campus. The costs include security patrols, preventive light­ In a meeting last night the J. Quigley; Students: Juniors Student Life Council unani­ Peter Bold, and Tim Kuntz and ing and maintanance of the park­ mously approved the recommen­ Sophomore Steven Jeselnick. ing lots. dation of the Appeals Board The alternates will serve when Discussion of the issue was Nominating Committee that an appointed board member opened by Dean of Students Law School Dean William B. cannot serve on any given case. Rev. James L. Riehle who Lawless, Sociology professor The board members and alter­ presented arguments against the John Koval and Junior Greg nates were nominated by a three proposal. “I honestly just don’t Potts be appointed to the man committee composed of believe we have space for an The SLC additional three or four hundred Appeals Board provided for in Professor Paul F. Conway, stu­ anyone having a car on campus of the C2 lot (an off-campus lot the judicial code enacted on May dent Mark Zimmerman and cars,” said Riehle. He said this but the parking facilities cannot located north of the aero-space twenty-seventh. University Vice-President and year’s freshmen class is the accomodate that many auto­ building) be surfaced with gravel The board will hear any General Counsel Philip J. largest yet and that per centage wise, there will be more cars by mobiles. and be designated D3 for on- appeals to decisions handed Faccenda. Sophomore Class Executive campus parking. The off-campus down by the University Board. In the only other business the time the present sophomores Coordinator Gary Caruso It has the power to uphold Uni­ brought to the floor at the meet­ are seniors than at present. students would park in the lot responded to Fr. Riehle’s presen­ versity Board decisions or send ing, the issue of Sophomore cars Personally, Riehle said he sees cases back to the board if it on campus was assigned to a “nothing incompatible” about tation. He proposed that the rear (Continued on Page 2) feels the evidence presented does com m ittee until all related not justify the verdict. problems could be considered Lawless, Kovel and Potts and the committee can present represent the administration, one proposal regarding the Clarke prophesies of 2001 faculty and students respective­ feasibility of the issue to the entire SLC. It is hoped that the pen up a tremendous amount ot ly. Alternates for each area were By Art Ferranti of technological advances begin­ also appointed at the meeting. proposal will be made before the ning with piped water, indoor land which Clarke hoped would Arthur C. Clarke, inventor of They are Administrators: Fresh­ end of the semester. plumbing, gas heating and be left for wilderness which man the first communications satel­ man year dean William Burke, cooking, the telephone, and the needs both physically and The committee will consult lite in 1945 and co-author of the Asst. Dean of Business Admini­ electric light. Once family units with University Provost Rev. novel and movie 2001, A Space mentally. stration Vincent Raymond and were very self-contained but It will cost billions to make James T. Burtchaell regarding O dyssey, spoke last night on life Asst. Dean of Arts and Letters even now that is changing im­ the machinery necessary for his academic considerations and in the year 2001 to a capacity mensely. The only home pre­ Robert Waddick; Faculty: with Vice President of Business audience in Washington Hall. food conversion, Clarke said, but Mechanical Engineering Profes­ Affairs Rev. Jerome J. Wilson to Following introductions by paration now left is the meals, that once this is made the cost sor Albert E. Miller and Electri­ consider the costs of keeping a Prof. Emil Hoffman and Dean said Clarke, and that will soon will be relatively small. Waldmen, Clarke first set the be in the past due to dehydrated We will go back to the village Meagher speaks of women audience at ease with a few foods (approxim ately 90% of all as a way of life in the future, anecdotes concerning the motto food is water). One hundred Clarke claimed. We will learn By Ann Therese Darin He also attacked the present pounds of food per family per how to s.ore electricity and have concepts of marriage and of the Mystery Writers of Robert Meagher, Notre Dame America (“Crime does not pay - month would be all that is completely mobile homes. There maturity. “We need to seriously necessary to sustain life. All one will be no shortage of space. theology professor, added a new give children meaningful rituals enough”) and that of the dimension to the women’s liber­ Science Fiction Writers of would have to do is add water According to Clarke, we are so that when they come of age, and cook for 10 minutes. ation movement last night by Amciica (“The future is not now on the verge of the greatest we don’t give them the car keys Natural reproduction of communication revolution in claiming that although women and a can of beer or a military what it used to b e”). This should not be denied their “modern Jules Verne” said this animals may possibly be outlaw­ history. Two advances of mod­ uniform and we won’t marry ed due to the slowness of this ern science have put us at that rights, they should evaluate the them in a carnival atmosphere was the first time in history man worth of those rights to see if has begun to look seriously process compared to the need of point, said Clarke. They are the that quickly collapses,” he con­ the people. Clarke said,“For coming of solid stage electronics they are worth fighting for. tinued. toward his future. He said that it Sympathizing with woman every man to eat a pound of initiated by the invention of the In their place, he, repulsed in meat, ten men must starve.” The transistor and the communica­ and “her apparently sterile life Ihe same way as Miss Jane and home amounting to a cycli­ answer is to turn to new food tions satellites. At the end of the Fonda by the great stress being sources such as the hippopota­ century, Clarke proposed, there cal accomplishment of nothing,” placed on materialism, would mus and the sea. will be enough com m unication Meagher championed the cause reinstitute the basic function of Clarke pursued the latter satellites in orbit “for the whole of women’s equality by reading human life instead of concen­ point in detail pointing out that human race to pair off and talk some remarks which he intends trating on political activities as man is still a primitive hunter to itself.” to publish in an article for the Miss Fonda has advocated. He and that his new domain will be Instead of telephones in our St. Anthony’s Messenger. would reconstruct the human “We can’t deny people the the sea. We will go to the sea for homes we would have a device situation with a greater emphasis new farming techniques and man right to feed at the trough,” he with a television screen audio on personal human experien­ may possibly herd whales. This explained. Although he supports devices, and a small computer. ces - opposed to the purely brought up the moral question woman in her freedom drive, he This, said Clarke, would mean mechanical value of production. man having the right to slaughter termed the values that she is the end of newspapers because Specifically, he suggested the mammals with nearly the same striving for as worthless. all one would have to do is look expansion of the nuclear family intelligence as man such as the He cited education as one on this TV screen and zoom in unit to a more communal way of Arthur C. Clarke whale and dolphin. Clarke jibed example of lost significance. It what he wishes to read. One living. He also encouraged a that we had better not start has degenerated, he revealed, was an impossibility to actually could also read any piece of more complete experience of killing dolphins since they are “into a massive four-year version predict the future but he did literature ever written by dialing and reverence for the significant one of the few animals left of a summer camp in which the outline possible future technolo­ into a universal library and let­ events of human life such as, which seem to get along with im a g in a tio n is progressively gies. ting the selection appear on the birth, death, coming of age, and man. deadened for what society calls a He pointe out that in the past screen providing of course, that coming to know by placing them Inevitably, though, the main job.” new inventions were doubted we do not mis-dial the needed back into the home. and that their far reaching effect bulk of the food production of 30 digit number. To illustrate the dilemma of on the role of man was not the future will come from inor­ The most important use of today’s values, he quoted a ganic materials, said Clarke. Al­ There are still 500 football forseen. He predicted two defi­ this system in the opinion of Shoshone Indian chief, “You ask ready in England beef is being tickets needed for all the child­ nite events of the future, Clarke is direct bradcasting from me to cut the grass and make synthesized to the point that the ren invited to see the Georgia though: (1) contacts with extra- space.
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