CORE Metadata, citation and similar papers at core.ac.uk
Provided by Xavier University
Xavier University Exhibit
All Xavier Student Newspapers Xavier Student Newspapers
1962-10-12
Xavier University Newswire
Xavier University (Cincinnati, Ohio)
Follow this and additional works at: https://www.exhibit.xavier.edu/student_newspaper
Recommended Citation Xavier University (Cincinnati, Ohio), "Xavier University Newswire" (1962). All Xavier Student Newspapers. 2134. https://www.exhibit.xavier.edu/student_newspaper/2134
This Book is brought to you for free and open access by the Xavier Student Newspapers at Exhibit. It has been accepted for inclusion in All Xavier Student Newspapers by an authorized administrator of Exhibit. For more information, please contact [email protected]. VOLUME XLVll 20~ CINCINNATI, OHIO, OCTOBER 12, 1962 No. 4 Council Protests Xavier Sugar Bowl Participation Segregated Seati11g Cause Of Student Co1111cil i-\ctio11 ''All th1·ce amendments have ra ngemen ts be in legra l eel; and. been passed."' said Student Coun if denied this request. to con cil President Joe Meissner as sider requesting a release frnm Council okayed a resolution pro the lenns of the contract. testing Xavier's participation in :n Thnt the Student Council the Sugar Bowl Classic. In an urge the University, at an.'f emergency ses.-;ion. held last ca:-.e. to make a public st.ilk• Tuesday at t::io Council voted ment declaring its 1>ositive po .. to reconsider its e;irlier rejection sition on integration, or the report of the Council's Debate from the floor included Sugar Bowl im·e~tigation com a reading or 'he International mittee. Club's resolution which called 1'he earlit•r rejection was nmde U11' "inherent se~regation" in the in the last ten minutes ot" a tournamcn t "n1orally wrong-.'" 7 :30 session that morning. In Then debate sprnng up around. those ten minutes Council had the word ··protest" in the firsl; debated and voted down a pack clause or the resolution. age ap11roval ••C the eommittee'.i Some thought the word should first proposal. bL· slruck out since it seemed. Late1· that morning Meissner to contradict the Uni1·ersily Otl called an emergency session for matter~ or theology. OthL•r:i 1 ::W lo hash out the measure thought it should be strength fully and l<> vnte for eaeh clause ened. individually. Al. the emergenc.1' Fiually, Tom Rohs proposed ~ session an ei~·ht-to-one vole rewording of the first clause to called for reconsideration o[ the clarify that Council disapproveti Members of the-1962 Homeeominc Committee admire a likeb queen eandidate (name withheld). earlier decision. not or the University, but or seg Excludinc the ean1pus beauty, pictured leU &o richt ~re: Clip Walinr, publicib chairman; 'l'im lfarmon, regation. Council then passed llH! Al Milian, chainnan of the in eo-chairman; Jaek Heaan, lloa& ehalnnan; Danny Loni:, tickets; Chip Hardy, ceneral chairman: Steve vestigation committee. then read amendment to the clause to read·: Braun, queen ehalrma11, "l) That the Student Council ,i ~- ' the revised resolution, which read: protest tn the University the !'ar ticipution in the Sugar Bowl 1) That the Student Council Clnssic ill so rar iH the tourm•·· protest lo the University our n1e11t fosters ite.-rei:atlon prac,. Xavier Homecoming Queen Is particip Xavier Uni 'v er sit y 's 1962 ·Penin's orchesh"a, wide I y - over the wol'ld for the Air· Force. Homecoming festivities,· to be known for its engagements at the Stale Department, and the held before and a_fter the Mus- - country clubs. conventions, and President's People - lo - People Father O'Connor Elected ke~eers-Dayton Flyers game on · other social events, has played Program, ente1'taining over silc Saturday, October 20. will fea · at the Gibson, Sinton, and Neth- million people in fifty states and ture three main attractions: a . erland Hilton hotel:; in Cincin over forty foreign countries. To Council Of Education 'fl~lat parade, the coronation of nati. It was featured in the After their contract with the The Very Rev. Pau) L. O'Con lation affecting educational mat-• the Ho.:necoming Queen, and a · - Twentieth Centu1·y Fox movie Air Force expired. they appeared nor, S .. J., president of Xavier ters and has acted as a l ia isun gala dance, Winced Victory. on the Ruth Lyons 50-50 Club University, has been elected lo agenc.1· bet ween the ed uca I ional Lealtlng the pre-gamt> r I o a t The Four Saints program on WLW-TV. the Board of Directors of the institutions of the nation· and thtt aisplay' will be a parade of about Pe1·haps the most co!orful part American Council of Education, Federal government. twenty-five 1 9 6 2 Oldsmobile • • • of the evening, though, will be one or the nation"s leading edu Father O'Connor also serves in convertibles, which are being Chairmen of the Homecomin~ cation associations . . provided by the Four Saints. committees are: Chip Hardy and a leadership capacity in se\•eral clonated for the event b.v General · Hi::: election took place al the Once known as the Kord Kings, 'l'im Harmon, co-chairmen: Jack other educational associations, Motors. The floal.-: themselves forty-firth annual· rnel'l.ing of the the Four Saints have been enter Hogan and Dick Dubbs, Floats; He is cunently president of the will be furnished by the rnan.v - Council October :l-5 in the Pick taining for ten years with vocal Steve Braun, Queens; Denny Ohil)_ College Association, is :J. campus clubs at XU. and their Congress Hotel in Chicago. He and instrumental music, p I us Long. Tickets; and Clip Waling, member of the execut ve commit theme will be Broadway mu will serve a three-year term on theil" own brand of humor. Publicity. tet? of the college and univer~ity aiicals. the 18-member board. division of the National Catholic John Howell, who organized Chainnen or the clubs who 1'he American Council on Edu Educational Association, and is the group, is the lead siPger; he wish to participate arc re4uired ca&ln11 numbers In its member on the executive co111millee ot plays a total of sixteen instrn to submit the name of the pa1· ship numerous national educa the Jesuit Educational Associa-• ments and writes and arranges Physics Concla\'e ticular musical that the~· wish to tional alt!loclalions, unlve1·sities, tion. all the instruments and vocals. portray, at North Hall no later collei:es, 'm•hnologlcal schm1ls, Bob Erikson, the second tenor, Hailed As Success Now in his ~ighth ytear a:1 than Monday, October 15. No •elected private s e c o n d a r y plays live instruments and ar- The Conference on the Foun Xavier president, he fonm!rly· two clubs can have the same mu schools. s 'a t I' d!'partments ot 1·anges all of the comedy r·ou served as dean of the colil>ge ot sica I as their theme. dation of Qt!anlum Mechanic;: education, city scl111ol systems t.ines. Jcny DuChenc, the first arts and science,; al Xavic·r. H" held October 1-5 at Xavier Uni and pri\•ate school systems, se Xavier's Homecoming Queen tenor, is a recipient of many joined the Xavier faculty in l!Mfi versity was an oul~tanding suc lected educational de11artments will be elected by ballot today, honors in musical competitions. after having served aboard th" cess, according lo its chairman, of business and Industrial com but, unlike other yeai·s, she will Doug Evans, the bass, plays five U.S.S. Missouri as ship chaplain. Dr. Boris Podolsky, X a v i er panies, voluntary ...THERE there la much de8ire to learn. WW there of necessilu will be muc/1 arguing, muclr writing, man!J opinions: for opinion in good men is but knowledge in t/1e making. John Milto~ institution has the privileged position the Team Doesn't Win university has in the arena of human affairs as the implacable guardian and lover of Games For Itself truth. 1f Xa,·ier Unh•ersity, by sending its bas Jt is obvious that athletic teams cannot ketball team to a segregated tournament, be looked on as independent entities with recognizes the opponents as teams of uni 110 vital relation to the university. No one ''ersities, then there is nothing left for stu could say that the job of our basketball dents who ham the interest of their uni team is to win games for itself. Games are yersity most at heart to do hut to express Jllayed for the nniversit.y. and the univer grave disappointment with the action of the i;ity expresses itself in some small way in university's administration. the actirity of its athletic teams. 1f the ohjcetion is m:11le by 1kf01Hle1·s of Jiarticipation in the 811gar Bowl Tourna- 11wnt that our bai-;kptball team sometimes Xavier Students 11lays non-Catholic: teams and that this sort Dr. Harkins' wit is a b.vword ····.·.•.•·'.·.•.••.•.·.·:····· ··:····:-··.··.· .. ••.·.··.·.··-:·.··.•··.··.··;.· !Jlmong those who have Jeamed Latin or Greek at his hands~ Even the most soulless of st u~ dents would find it hard to for get his classic rendition or Dare Brubeck Oflfipus Rex, wherein the trngic I'm ;n • Ooncing Mood J>rince. guilty of "sociallly un acceptable behavior" (he killed Ray Conniff his father and m a r r i e d his •.. Th• W•1 rou Looll Tomghl mother), achieves momentary glory when he forces a pestifer ~ :; ous sphinx to "do a brody" over Miles Dari• :: a handy cliff. Equally memorable I( I Wtrt • 8tll after the "Harkins treatment": Ajax. the "foaming avenger" of Hom,er's Iliad, who personally The Brothers Four stabbed to death all the hogs in M•rtannt the Greek camp outside Troy when seized with a mad urge to right an affront; the kidnapped Andre Previn Li~• (()lie lutist of Plautus' Menaechmi, called the "ukelele lady"; her opposite number in the sarne Duke Ellington play. a member of the oldest Perd•do •profession, a "shady lady of tl1e evening .•• division"; and King Priam of Troy, also in Homer's Iliad, whose fifty sons and fifty •daughters will foreve1· remain in many minds as the definitive eKample of "Catholic Action on Roy Hamilton long•/ Eyts 'the loose." If all this has civen the im• ttression tba& Dr. Harkins is Gerry fl•lligan Who! Is Th"1t T11 S•1 chiefly notable as a comedian, let the record be set straight. He ha..<; an amaainciJ' varied aca• The lli-Lo's ! dernic baekcround; he is a phil• ltt11thmg'• Coming Up Ro5'1 ologist of note aml a recognized authority in his field of special• : 'ization, the writings of St. ,John CloudbUtK Chrysostom: and J1e is an out· ··standing leader in the Co&tholio eommunU7. Buddy Sreco r1tt Llll1 I• I Tt.,,,P ••. And a Mountain of Work Be.o;ides his accomplishments on both sides of the classroom, Dr. Harkins has gained quite a stature in the fields of philology Great new record offer ($3.98 value) .•. just s1.oo and textual Cl'iticism, espccinlly in the area of patristic studies. His lii;t of publications includes when you buy Sheaffer's back-to-school special! contributions to professional jour nal.s, an article on St. John Chry• -u sostom i n th e Encyclopaedia Britannica, and a translation of Chrysostom's Baptismal lnstruc• &Ions, which appeared as Volume Now when you buy your Sheaft'er Cartridge Pen Cor SHEAFFER'S BACK-TO-SCHOOL SPECIAL! Skrip 31 the Newman Press' Ancient achoo!, you get 98' worth of cartridges FREE ... a ot 13.93 value for just $2.95. Look for Shealfer's back-to New cartrMlt• p .. widl 9811 worth of cartricltes FllH. Christian Writers Series. At the achool special now at stores everywhere. On the back of present time he has four en• the package, there's a bonus for you ••• a coupon good $3.93 VALUE FOR $2.95 cyclopaedia articles af41.. another for a $3.98 value Columbia limited-edition record. It's · book accepted and awaiting pub• "Swingin' Sound", twelve top artists playinc top hits for tbe first time on a 12• L.P. This cloi1bl.-Nl11• back-to · ucatiOll, achool oll'er IOQd only while they laat! So hurry, chocl. WHh aB el ...... _. ... :rour Sheaffer Cartridce Pen from &Ye mnart eolora ...... mail rour ''Srittia' aouad" NCClld ..,,.. Mldq. Dr. Baril._ .. Ml ...... , a...... CINCINNATI, OHIO, OCTOIEI 12, 1962 Potts' Powerful P11nts ·And Plaeekic~s KEN'S KORNER by Ken Czlllincer, NEWS Sports Editor Provide Ple11ty Of Thrills For Fans he has a 10.4 seconds eloekl~c In List. as well as many newspaper. UOWLING has been added to this year's int.r;imural program. by Steve Braun .. , try to make good cont:ict &he 100 yard dash. headlines • The rceently-includccl sport could become the most popular intn1- The books, too, are a forte of On &he gridiron Georg-e kl an m11ral event at XU. Fred Jrwin, Assistant Athletic Chairman, de wit.h it," states G e o r g e Potts when c1uestioned about kicking the Physical Education major. lnsplraUonal leader. Off It, he la St'l'\·es tremendous credit ror the outstanding job he has clone in His name appears on the Dean'• 9De of Xavier'• finest sentlemea.. urgnnizing I.he bowling program. fifly-yarcl field goals. This is the Each tenm participating in the other intramural sporting events theory and this is the player that is eligible to have TWO bowling teams. Each squad consists of has rewritten the kicking records four men. a·1 Xavier. More· than eight bowlers from one team are permitted to bowl Six years aro at St. Paul Hich 11t the reduced rates and i;t.udents are also allowed to bring dates. Sehool In Norwalk, Ohio, Coaell The reduced rates apply to both students and their-dates. Tony P a r I 11 dlseovered &hat • boylsh-lookln&' sophomore eould Every Thursday afternoon &bree or more bUHs wlll arrive In kkk a football a lone wair. A front of Hinkle Hall at 3:05 and return to &he cafeteria a& 5:30. three-time letterman with &be sa. Summit Lanes, 7798 Jleadinc Road, will be &he Bite of &he Intra Paul Flyers, George "'as a Jaell mural bowling leairue. Student. who wish to drive lo &he SummH of all trades. lie played offen Lanes are welcome to do l!O. sive and defensive end, defr.nslve The cost or the program should attract mnny i;tuclents. The bus tackle. fullback and halfback. ride is 10 cents for a round trip. It usunlly costs 50 cents per game His abilities didn't stop there: he 11nd 25 cents for shoes to bowl. However. Xavier students c:in bowl also kicked off, p u n t e d and three gmnes for $1.00 (l"hoes are included). Thus you will save booted extra points. As a senior, lit least 75 cents each week. he was captain and most valu At the end or the semester each semester, the winning team will able back. r«>eeive a trophy. Jndh•iclual prizes will be awarded too--$10.00 (hight'st a\•erage), $5.00 (bowler with the most strikes), $5.00 Basketball Asset (bnwler with most spans) and $5.00 will be presented to the stu 'rhe b a s k e t b a 11 team also dent who bowls the most frames. This last. award will be made found him a v a I u ab I e ;i:;sct. at the end or the school year. The others will be made at the George led the team to an un completion or each semester. defeafcll season and, ·at one time, The bowling progrnm begins on 1'hursclay, Oct. 18 at 3:30 p.m. a rating of second in the st.:ite. Captains of each tenm will be given a schedule of the weekly The Ohio basketball writers se l(ames. If anyone desires information concerning the bowling pro Jectecl him as an All-State guard. Xavier's George Potts displays the kicking fo·rm that has put his ~rnm, contact Freel Jrwin. Fred resides at Elet l 18. His phone Norwalk honored the St. Paul name 111 loeal, state and national record books. Potts will faee Jiin · Jlllmbers are PL 1-9456 or PL 1-9578. Student Council president as stu MeKee, another fine llleklns apeelaltst., aa Xavier Stacllam tomorrow So lei's make Th11rsclny "Bowling Day at Xavier." Maybe we dent ol the· year. n~cha. have a future Do-r1 Carter at our universit.y. Xavier was his choice of col leges !or a very· simple reason; • • • • • they offered him the best schol A well-scouted Ohio U. eleven is Xavier'l'i next gridiron op arship. Jn his freshman y ea r I ,------~I I,~------~ Mother always I ' JIOnent. The Bobcats are undefeated in three outings. Four Muskie George perfected his two and a 1 It's your I I I coaches watched Ohio U. edge Dayton, 27-25, last Saturday after hall step kicking method. As a I 11 toldmeto I noon. sophomore he recorded a 37 .9 1 tapered shape 1 1 looll ·for the blue label* 1 Head mentor Ed JUies and assistants Jim Mullen. Dick Selcer punting average. Marshall CoJ I and your I I I •nd Bob Von Holle watched the Bobclat victor)'. Biles returned to Jege remembers him well i.n '6J, I I I I Cincinnati from Athens, Ohio on· Saturday nlcht in order to seou& for it.. was his :field goal that 1 hopsacking look I I I the UC Bearcats. gave Xavier a 3-2 victory. Tomorrow night's game is Xavier's third home contest of t.he This year, a combination of : that get me •• • : : : l'iCason. The Musketeers conclude the home portion of their schedule hard work and th o s e eighteen 11ext week with a homecoming battle against the Dayton Flyers. and a hall inch calves have put I I I ~S1'Htf~"'- I Like the Miami and the Detroit encounters, Saturday's affair the Muskies on the scoreboard promises to be a thriller from start to finish. I certainly hope and George in the N.C.A.A. rec \,~------# 1mother large crowd is in attendance to witness the Musketeers ord books. Of ~like Burns, the '------,:u ,, attempt to stretch their winning streak to three. extra point and field goal holder, A ttcmlcmcc in 1962 hns been remarkable. A sizeable hi crease i11 Geori:e says, "He is the quickest "ft II,, 11ttcnclM1cc is precisely lhe slwt in the C1rm thut Xm,ier footbull I've ever had, and that is the I I f/.eeds. Be there tomorrow night. key." I I • • • • • Approached by Pros This has been a banner year Coach Biles Sf!Ys tlrnt confidence, "believing in themselves" for the · X:ivier kicker lor other ' ' !s what has changed the ballclub after the Miami loss. Biles also reasons. His first college punt Jlrnisecl the student body tor its support of the team. return resulted in an almost Xavier's coach had t.he student section moved up to the 40 yard touchdown. A holding penalty line this season so that the students would be directly behind nullified the fit t y - f i v e yard their team, encouraging the squad with their cheers. Studen& jaunt. He has been approached rmpport merited an A+ rating in the Detroit came. Let's maintain by almost e v er y professional &hat rankinc against Ohio University, team. Of course, his decision to • • • • play pro lootball will not be • made until the termination of Last S.1turclay J attended the Purdue-Notre Dame game at the season, in accordance with !South Bend. The Boilermakers outclassed Notre Dame, 24-6. For N.C.A.A. rules. li4 minutes the Irish played "one yard and no cloud of dust" football. The six-foot-one, one hundred Trniling 24-6 with a·bou1 six minutes to play, Notre Dame sud and ninety pounder has become •lenly opened up its attack. more prominent In the Musketeer (Continued on page 5) ofrense &his year. Those long, loping strides and quick hands have enabled him to pull in many a crucial pass. His speed Marshall Yearli~gs Next Foe Is decelvlnc to those who watch; .For Von Holle's Frosh .Squad Th o u g h the freshmen Mus tackle,. and runnlnc bark spots 111 Snapping The Keds "Court Kina" 1Ceds taper-tot keteers officially opened the sea- the next few games. Coach Bile• for tennis and Champion~ in new, = 11on yesterday against D a y to n, has already admitted that "We'll Pigskin .•. 111 casual wear a>reely hopsackin1 . 'they actually opened a week ago be weaker at those positions, be today with a scrimmage against ea use of graduation, unless we by Co-Captain Dick Kohls the varsity. flrid some boys "'ho ean flt In. Especially lmpres11ed with the When we seouted &hne boys to A weekend off in the middle performance of the frosh was eome to Xavier, we were lookinc of a football campaign can im Vanity Head Co a eh Ed Biles. for Intelligent men with a desire prove a team or put it back to Nobody's reallJ suggesting romance will be yours if you wear Biles &aid be thought they eould for playln&' the a-ame. we have Sept. l. It does allow for minor U.S. Keds. But it is true that Keds are the best-fitting, the most "'eaaily be the best ever, &hougll eome ap with fellows to fill Ole injuries to heal, improvements l&'s still a IH&le too early to tell." bill alon&' t h o s e qualifications on weak points, and a break in comfortable, good-looking and long-wearina fabric casuals you Highly lauded for their ex- and I'm sure &lley'll be fine ball the routine, Only one major - eeptional play w e r e end Jack players." problem remains - will our can buy. Because Keds are made with costlier fabrics. With an :Evans, tackles Bill Brummer and Assisting Coach Von Holle to fighting f!dge be dulled? exclusive shockproof ed arch cushion and cushioned innersole. Howie Williams, halfback Walt Our , next opponents are the Mainer, and f u I 1 b a e k·, Mike ward what he hopes will be his . niged ,Bobcats of Ohio Univer in· short, with an·those "extras" that make them your best buy .Junker. first undefeated season are three sity.. Undefeated in three games, Next Thursday the frosh host lormer Xavier varsity gr'idclers. the Athens team has posted shut in the long run. Head for your nearest Keds dealer. Get that :Marshall in a 3:15 p.m. contest. Quarterback coach is Tim Rose, outs in two of its contests. "Little l Not too Strons ... Not too Light ... Also Open A Student Charge Account \TiCEROYS available d/1!e' got the Taste 745 SWIFTON SHOPPING CENTER that's rightl CINCINNATI, OHIO .Ut~F C 1Gft2, DROWN 6 WILUAMSON lOBACCO 00111'. ,._. l'a~e Sis CINCINNATI, OHIO, OCTOIEI 12, 196Z especially girls' sch o o Is, are high school Latin and English al Newly-Chosen Coordinator looking for leadership. Fr. Wheeler St. Ignatius in Cleveland and al S&. Xavier, he beeame a mem Speaking since the meeting, he ber or Xavier's rHuUJ' in 195L Reports On NSA Congress mentioned the campaign to have In New Post In addition to be i n 1 assistant recistrar and TheolocJ' proressor. .Jim Pelikan, '64, was appoint stantialed by philosophical prin a minot·ity report as well as a Rev. Orrin T. Wheeler, S.J., bas be is also Ute new moderator el ed Xavier University's NSA Co ciples based on reason. Our or majority report issued on each been named as assistant registrar the Faculty Wives Club. ordinntor by Student Co u n c i I dered search for ultimates is in decision by the Congress as one this year. The former assistant project that Xavier should sup fo: (Continued from 1>age l) Tn a speech open to the public or would you October 2, Dr. Dirae suggested like to try for possible new appl'Oaches in the realm of quantum mechanics that might solve some of the long *50? standing problems in the field. One possibility, he said. was the revival of the ether t.heor.\', ENTER LUCKY. STRIKES' ZANY NEW long held by physici~l~ but dis cardecl during this century undC>r t.he influence of the rc•lativity thC'Ories of Einstein. Dr. Din.ic ~ .. : n:ested that' the ttwor,\' of <'1 1 er. which was thou~ht t.:i be "Crazy Quastiau"~~~~t'1 a sub.otance or medium perv ABE BAUMRING PHARMACY 3611 Montcomer1 U. Between Chico'• 9lld the :!lhirt Laundry THE SHl_RT LAUNDRY J611 Mon&l!fomer, ao.. EVANSTON One Block South of Dana Few Blocks North of the Dorm BACHELOR SERVICE FLUFF DiY BUNDLES • 4-HOUR SERVICE • ·• PURE WHITE, "! New England MODERN FILTER : . ('li:T::n;@!Q.... ·. ! ...... ) Bat ~.-•••• ·~ ~ ;.:.:-:.;:·····="···········.-.·.·.··.·.·.•.·. PLUS 1FILTER- BLEND UP • FR~NT Manufacturing • Company Win... ;.·: s-tt-on.·~ , tas-d-es:: .·' ·-,,~·· ... ~'.nood ;.;; :·. * 118 East Sixth Street like a cigarette should! Clneinnati, Ohio .Jiff a. I . ._ldo Toho ... "->~-· WI.,.._...._,•· & •. '.-- .· ...... '. ·~ .- ... ·.- .... -; ,, ..... '. -..... ~... ~ ". ~.- .. ,,__.. ~ ...... ~-·"" - Pare El~hl CINCINNATI, OHIO, OCTOBER 12, 1962 Xaviei- Political Forum Dr. Kro11enberge1· Two New Instructors New Psyclt P1·0£. Join Math Department Plans To Continue · Series The Dean of Faculties has an• nounced recently the appoint This semester Mr. Benito Two years later he obtained Once again Marion Hall will ment, is the new moderator or ment of Dr. Earl J. Kronenberger Ccrimcle and Mr. David· Flas his Master's degree in mathe be lhc scene for the meetings o[ the Forum. He said th a t he lo the Xavier psychology depal't• pohler have joined ·the Xavier. matics at X.U. He is currently the Polilicul Fonun. Lasl year, would like to have several speak ment. Unive1·sity Math Depal'Lment as wol'kin& on his thesis for his ers come in and discuss the prol.J full-time instructors. Mr. Ceri ·Doctorate in mathematics at tha the Political For urn generated Dr. Kroncnberger is a nath•e Iems Cincinnati races as a city. mele taught night school al Xav Unh·e1·sily of Cincinnati. interest on the campus with such of Dayton, Ohio and has studied He feels that out-or-town stu ier l<>sl year, and Mr. Flas- · :speakers as Mr. William Flax, al the University o[ Dayton, Mr. Flaspohler also gradu dents will get an insight into the pohler was a gl'a(,iuate assistant area co-ordinator of the Birch where he received his bachelor's ated from St. X a v i e r Higla problems of their own towns. at X.U. However, this is the first Society; Mr. Torn Gebhart, ed degree. He earned a master's at School. He won his Bachelor of Day s l u ct en ts will have the year that they are Juli-time in-· itorial page editor of the EN· Bowling Green University and Science degree in math in 1961 QUIRER; Rev. Maurice Mc chance lo lean1 more about the 11truct01·s in· the day school. his doctorate al Ottawa Univer at X.U. Last year Mr. Flils• problems that affect them di Mt·. Cerimele p1·epped at St. Cracken, a pacifist. and other sity, where he was also counsel rectly. Xavier in Cincinnati. He th.en pohle1· received his Master's de• controversial speakC'rs. This year, ing psychologist in the Univer went on to receive his Bache,01· · gree in mathematics at Xavier. the Forum plan~ tr, continue in Organization such as the sit.v Guidance Clinic. the same vein. The Forum brings ot Science degr;ee al X a v i er . He is no..y studying in, X.U.'11 N.A.A.C.P., the C iv i l Liberties speakers to the University in 01· He has published in The Per University ·in 1957, night school. Commit lee in Ohio and the Coun der to acquaint the students with sonnel Jou1·nal and in t.:nclneer- · the controversies and problems cil of World A!f;iirs in Cincinnnti, Ing and Industrial Psycholoc,.. prevalent in the United States have been mentioned as possiblc Dr. Kronenbcrger is a member today. organizations from which repre Rev. W. Henry Kenne.v, S.J., sentatives co.uld be obtained lo of the A m e r i c a n Psychology .head of the philosophy depart- speak at the meetings oC the Association and other guidan~ Fornm. and science organizations. Dr. Harkins (Continued from page 3) have formed a number of posi-· -~~ tive ideas on the sub.iecl of edu Cl . cation along the way. Dr. Ha1· kins proves no disa1>pointment in this regard. (J He admits he is hard put to cltlfine education. "It must be described," he says, "as a war against knowledge - the wrong kind of knowledge. tht" kind of lrnowled~e that kills Dr naaims lhe man who knows." In this war our best. our only weapon is truth. To fo1·ge that weapon and to wield it with effect we need ari efficient lrain .ing process. Dr. Harkins, like many educators, is convinced that we can find this in the Lib en1I arts. "[ am not a foe of speciali?.a YITAllS® KEEPS YOUR HAIR NEAT All DAY WITHOUT iREASE! . ~.,, .... ".;. . tion," he says. "I am a foe of .Greatest discovery since the comb! Vitalis .with V-7e, the ii: VI~. · over-specialization. or· of any 1reasefess grooming discovery. Keeps your .hair neat all day . ~ .specialization begun too soon." ·~:::= . ' The work of the lihernl arts. without grease-and prevents dryness,· too. lry Vitalis_todar. curriculum. as Dr. Harkins sees it, is the acquisition and develop ment of the facu!ty of Christian l'ftllffHO ,,;•1t£01•1tll9 judg·ment. He emphasizes the FRIDAY, OCT. 12-1:11 r.1. ·:;;',·:j.f ::ii:':.1·:.:!i\.:\;:::·::;·;~.\'\;,::::;i11:::'~!\ii,:::~::':!:i:::i:\!'(i::;::::~::::,:;1;::] word Christian. "If your· whole strength lies in ethics. it you IUSIC HILL never rise a b o v e philosophy, then you see things with a kind PRICES: $4.40 - $3.30 - $2.20 of twilight vision. Philosophy can tell you only so much because 'TICKETS NOW ON SALE philosophy necessarily remains Dowotowa Ticket Oftlee, 301 Viae Swee& the wisdom of men. and the vdsdom of men cannot prnduce a faculty of Christian jurtgment." It is this faculty of Christian judgment which tinally puts into our hands the ultimate weapon that is truth. "Truth," says Dr. Harlr.in11.· "111 a many - splendored lhinr. Us :I s11lendor derive11 from l&s unity in God and it11 multlcipllclty in us. God ls h'uth, hut we apply '::J. •he word 'true' to a plurality of ,>;:j. thin rs.'' He explains, "Truth is an analogous notion applied lo many ),!~i things in the morn!, ontological ,:q and logic