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The peS ctator

2-7-1968 Spectator 1968-02-07 Editors of The pS ectator

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Recommended Citation Editors of The peS ctator, "Spectator 1968-02-07" (1968). The Spectator. 1081. http://scholarworks.seattleu.edu/spectator/1081

This Newspaper is brought to you for free and open access by ScholarWorks @ SeattleU. It has been accepted for inclusion in The peS ctator by an authorized administrator of ScholarWorks @ SeattleU. Education Major HonoredbyAWS The president of Gamma Sig- ma Phi, Bernie Clayton, was spectator January the chosen woman of month. Bernie, a senior educa- tion major, is from . She SEATTLE UNIVERSITY.7, <<^°'° 27 XXXVI Seattle, Washington, Wednesday, February 1968 No. has been on the honor roll for the past four years and is a memberof various campus hon- Inter-Dorm Action: oraries. She was selected for the hon- or by the AWS, on the basis of her exemplary dignity, intelli- Judiciary Board Formed gence and cooperation. The her a taking the first steps to rectify AWS officers described as By KERRY WEBSTER and responsible uni- the situation." dedicated Inter-Dorm Council President versity coed. Mahoney that he was Bernie is a member of the fol- Leon announced the MAHONEYadded lowing honoraries: Gamma Pi of an inter-dorm ju- "appalledand disappointed that formation not point Epsilon,Kappa Delta Pi, Silver diciary board and the adoption The Spectator did out that only a very small percent- Scroll, is an S.U. Merit Scholar of a set of anti-disturbance reg- Who in Ameri- a age of Campion residents took and is in Who's ulations carrying stiff fines at can Colleges and Universities. Hall luncheon Fri- part in the incident." Bellarmine Fr. Rebhahn, noting wryly Barbara Champoux, junior of- day. fice management major, and BERNIE CLAYTON code, Ma- that "The Spectator takes great The new board and in dorms," Jeann ic Mallette, sophomore said, two steps taken interest the asserted winter quarters last honey are that "90 per centof our students English major, received honor- fall and by the student government of able for January. year. against re- are serious minded." mention Spurs the dorms to insure The new regulations,and are- Barb, from Toppenish, is cur- Jeannie is president of currance of incidents such as cently-posted "Don't Throw rently serving as the ASSU sec- and an officer in Burgundy the February 15 bottle-barrage the first retary. She Homecoming Bleus. The Seattle coed was a family by Campion Law" in Campion are was of an area signs of cognizance princess and a Homecoming co- freshman senator and attended official of Body Confer- residents. the incident since its occurenca chairman this year. She was the Jesuit Student ago. treasurer of Bellarmine Hall ence. THE JUDICIAL board will three weeks consist of four members from Campion: Leon Mahoney, John Majority Wins: Meihaus, John Livermore; and Greg Woodman; two from Bell- LEONMAHONEY armine: Gayle Tallo and Lyn- nette Mathsen; two from Mary- and disciplinary action may be Express 'Hour' Opinions crest: Nancy Reed and Mitzie taken. Women Bastasch,andone fromMarian: 5. Dining Rooms: Any student By PAT CURRAN Mary JaneSchumacher. involved in disorderly conduct during A recent Bellarmine Hall The new regulationsare: or creating a disturbance concerning women's meal hours will be fined a mini- poll 1. Any student or students $25. dorm hours indicates an seen or apprehendedon the roof mum of 6. All moneyscollected willbe overwhelming coed prefer- or ledge of a residence hall, or of the deposited with the business of- ence to lengthen the hours. provoking a disturbance for hall peace, or a raid type action, will fice and used residence Of the four items on the poll, maintenanceand operation. hours be fined a minumumof $25 and one regarding extended may be subject to further dis- for junior girls and another fa- action. If no student MAHONEY hailed the code as voring unlimited hours for co- ciplinary "a step in the right direction." or students are apprehended, eds over 21 received the largest "That the students themselves support. then a fine of $50 will be levied together on this is a hall initiat- can get THE BELLARMINEresidents against the or halls goodsign," he said. ing or provoking the disturb- Rebhahn, S.J., voted 292-6 that junior hours be Fr. Robert extended from 1:30 to 2 ance. Dean of Students, present at the a.m. on 2. Men students are not allow- Miss Agnes Friday and Saturday nights, luncheon with p.m. midnight ed to visit in the women's living Reilly, Dean of Women, said, and from 11 to except at the approved evils, on weekdays. areas "This willnot solve all the for women times. but it is a step ending Unlimited hours toward 21 gained 287-13 accept- 3. Women students are not al- the sort of activity which is an over lowed to visit in the men's liv- embarrassment to allof us." ance. Parental permission was except approved his made a necessary stipulation in ing areas at Mahoney,in the course of of the proposals, times. outline of plan, the granting of unlimited hours. so we did not pass the propo- any or all four the new threw floor sign-outs changes will be permanent. regulations 2 a few brickbats the way of the The practice of sals," said Allison Fry, vice the 4. Violation of and lengthening of sophomore "These changes, if they did or 3 carries a minimum fine of "campus news medium." presidentof AWS. Further, it noted," he said, hours garnered not as impres- "An alternate plan for sign- occur, would be inaugurated in $25 for the visitor. the "I want two quarter. room visited will "that an independant group of sive majoritiesas the above outs was necessary before ap- spring They would not rentors of the question of whether be on a temporary basis since be fined a minimum of $25 each students, not The Spectator, is items. The proval could be given. Several sophomore hours should be ex- have been suggested this quar- the University policy handbooks tended from 1:30 to 2 a.m. on are also being revamped at the ter, including the use of a tri- 1' Friday nights had a 273-27 ma- angular check-board," Allison present time, Allison explain- jority. said. ed. Jim Dwyer Named The item regarding abolition or revamping of floor sign-outs "THEREFORE the AWS and LAST SPRING quarter, a trial resulted in the closest vote of the Bellarmine officers will be liberalizationof the dorm hours the poll— though it was favored able to present a united front in was begun. Junior hours were Political Union Head by a 3-1 margin. for these proposals." from 11 p.m. to mid- petitioning extended By GEORGE L.McLEAN THE FOUR proposals of the The Bellarmineofficers, whose night on weekdays and from on weekends. Sponsorship of a flexible pro- poll were originally brought to president is Gayle Tallo, will 1:30 to 2 a.m. pro- The time change was gram of bi-weekly alternating the attention of the Associated submit the final dorm-hour short- "nays" the Women Students officers last posals to the AWS within the lived. In the fall quarter of the "yeas" and is intent year, the of Jim Dwyer, newly installed quarter by the Bellarmine dorm next two weeks. When the AWS present academic leaders. The AWS officers re- cabinet approves them they will stricter hours were re-enforced. president of the Political Union house mothers Club. fused to sanction the changes, be sent to the student personnel One of the primarily because of the "no committee which is headed by found the switch-back and the "The Political Union Club has Rebhahn, S.J., dean current push for liberalization the responsibility for sponsor- floor sign-out" proposal. Fr. Robert "The complete lack of sign- of students. mystifying. "It's all confusing," soring, co-sponsoring, or approv- she ing any public political speaker outs was not a feasible idea and Should the committeesanction said. on campus," stated Dwyer. Dwyer, a junior and formerly Explains advertising manager for The Academic Vice President Spectator, is a member of the Young Democrats and the Mar- Private College's Role on T.V. Program keting He an active Club. is Fr. Edmund Morton, S.J., the the modern world. He said they totality, so that all truths are memberof the Democratic Par- seen part one truth." it, S.U. administrator who warned provide for a "healthy plural- as of ty and is, as Dwyer stated JIM DWYER higher FR. MORTON emphasized by Dr. Ronald Rousseve last No- ism" in education. "active nature." vember that his sex theories "I think the natural tension that the religious atmosphere of The new Political Union Club ■left vacant by the resignation of were jeopardizing his position, between private and public in- a Jesuit institution does not nec- president is now filling the post Dan O'Donnell. told a television audience Sun- stitutions is a very good thing," essarily insulate its students day that "no one is excluded he said. "We keep each other on from modern tensions. from the student body or facul- our toes." "Idon't want to giveanybody Spring Filing Begins Monday ty" for his beliefs. Asked by moderator Marty the impression that our reli- Filing ASSU and AWS elec- ognized if they of at "I believe it is true of most Camp to explain the contribu- gious schools are off the beaten for consist have tions will take place on Febru- least 100 members, have an ap- of our institutions that we do tion of the private, religiously- path," he said. "We our and 4 proved charter, and have ob- invite open, frank discussion of oriented college, Fr. Morton re- problems. These troubled times, ary 12 between 8 a.m. Vietnam, these p.m., and on February 13 be- tained in a previous ASSU elec- key issues," he said on KOMO- plied, "In this day of great spe- the war in all affecting our tween 8 a.m. andnoon. Students tion of the total vote. TV's "What's New in the School- cialization, when people know things are students 15% as well as wishing to file should note that These stipulations in the filing house." more and more about less and others." less, it's very difficult to com- On the future of S.U., Fr. they must be affiliated with a procedure are the results of Ini- political party or obtain a peti- FR. MORTON, S.U.s academ- municate, and knowledge be- Morton noted that the adminis- be tiative No. 2, voted on and ac- ic vice, president, was appear- comes extremely fragmented. tration was "thinking about"lay tion with 100 signatures to control, made submitted upon filing. cepted in last year's ASSU elec- ing on the program to explain "A Christian commitment," but had not as yet tions. thp rnlp of a nrivate colleee in he explained,"gives a sense of a decision in that area. THE SPECTATOR Wednesday, February 7, 1968 2 Taylor-Vaughters: Soldier Claims US. Reaction Cool to Report debt on the matter is paid up," HelpNeededin Asia he said. HINDERY also noted a state- ment by Vaughters to the effect that money originally pledged for the returfing of Catholic Memorial Field was being used improperly on the P.E. Com- plex. "Vaughters impliesthat we're stuck with paying for a $2,000,- 000 P.E. complex when we thought we were just renovating a field," Hindery said. "The fact is that we are still paying the same amount to fulfill the pledge as before, except that we're helping to build a P.E. complex instead of a lawn on the site." Inman agreed that implica- tions of impropriety in dealings with the University were un- founded. Leo Hindery, left, and Larry Inman "All of our dealings with the University have been fair and A student senate committee opposition on the basis of the just," he said. "There is no at- will take into consideration the conclusions drawn by authors tempt on the part of the Univer- first of two reports onthe ASSU Chuck Taylor and Brent Vaugh- sity to 'cheat' the students or to by Taylor-Vaughters, consult- ters. keep us in the dark about our ants, before the senate meeting Larry Inman, ASSU first vice obligations." Sunday evening.The committee, president,who had at least tacit- HE ADDED that he felt re- chaired by Senator Theresa Mc- ly approvedthe project, seemed negotiation of agreements with Bride, is expected to introduce nettled by some of the state- the University to be an unneces- the reportsto the student senate ments within the reports. sary move. at the 7:30 meeting. Hindery took exception to a The suggestion that the ASSU The report, which evaluated Vaughters allegation that no establish a separate incorpor- the ASSU as a whole and the fi- document is available outlining ated entity for holding "capital nancial arrangements of the the student ownership of the improvements" funds was also lot, the ASSU with the University, has Campion parking nor termed unnecessary by both due ASSU payments so far met with a polite, but balance on Hindery and Inman. A FEATHERED FRIEND: GreenBeret Sgt.Allan David- reception by for it. "Let's face it," said Hindery, unenthusiastic point during a speech on Vietnam Friday. ASSU officers. "The University realized the "the only thing that keeps stu- son makes a document had been lost," he dent governmentreally running LEO HINDERY, ASSU treas- said, "and sent us a new docu- well is the men who run it. No By MOLLY McDONELL and such as villagechiefs and school urer, who protested the project ment which declares our control amount of restructuring of the MARY ANN FRUSHOUR teachers. The Green Berets, op- at its inception, maintained his of the lot, and indicates that our ASSU can change that." erating in teams of 12 men, in The Vietnam war found a sup- remote areas, try to strengthen porter in Sgt. Allen Davidson, a resistance to these terrorist ac- Special Forces (Green Beret) tivities. fighter who emphasized, "I feel Davidson finds the American Watts Writers to Perform a need be Viet- we have to in national- first Negro newspapers The Watts Writers have been people are deceived and con- Six writers from the in nam," last Friday in a talk the warby "Mc- ly acclaimed Watts Writers America, Frederick Douglass. promised $300 for their perform- fused about the sponsored by the New Conser- Namara-Johnson-Rusk combine Workshop arrived in Seattle to- The six representatives are ance here, but it is not yet clear vatives. day to begin a speaking and James Thomas Jackson, K. Cur- where the money whichhas substituted propagan- will come Before an overflow crowd in da for victory." The U.S. policy dramatic reading tour which tis Lyle, Blossom Powe, Mar- from. A bill before the student the Library auditorium, he will include Seattle University. guerite Terrell and Quincy senate last Sunday would have ax- is a "double standard" as the Library auditorium, he ex- U.S. fights in Asia The writers will appear at Troupe. They will present ex- alloted the money to Special the Communists Events, Green Berets was to teach, re- and allows allies to sell wheat S.U. at 8 p.m.Tuesday in Pigott cerpts from their poetry, essays but neither Pat Lay- villagers to man, president, cruit and train pro- to Russia. auditorium. and short stories. ASSU 2nd vice tect their own homes. "We are The Watts Writers Workshop The writers' early work has or Chuck Herdener, special The bombing of Vietnam has coordinator, not commando teams; we are been of little importance be- was begun by Los Angeles been published in a book with events showed up not killing squads." novelist and screenwriter Bud anintroduction by Schulberg en- to explain it. cause few places of strategic Schulberg in an abandoned gro- titled "From the Ashes: Voices Since the senators knew little The Viet Cong, saidDavidson, importancehave been hit.Many cery following the Watts of Watts." the purpose of the bill or is growing but it is not a popu- times areas are bombed after store about supplies have riot. Now centering their activi- THEIR OTHER public per- the Watts Writers, they were largrowth, as its success ispro- been moved to Watts, p.m. to portional to the support it re- hidden caches, which, said Da- ties inDouglass House in formances will beat 8 Mon- forced vote it down. Jim vidson, the group has 35 members. day in Garfield High School au- Dwyer, head of the Political ceives from the North. The Na- dot North and South ditorium; at 7 p.m. Wednesday Union, has expressed interest in tional Liberation Front, while Vietnam. It is like "bombing THE WRITERS have named in Yesler Library at the U.W., sharing the cost with Special supposedlya popularrevolution, the barn after the horse has the house in honor of the Negro and 3:30 p.m. February 18 Events, but details of the ar- is in reality propaganda spon- been letout." at with plea slave who taught himself to in the Husky Union Building at rangementhavenot been worked sored by the Communists of Davidson ended a to write and published one of the the U.W. out. North Vietnam and China. Its the American people to "under- weapon is terror, striking at stand and support what we are prime targets in small villages, doing in South Vietnam."

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UWm w\%2 w ■%?ww " ■llv ■»■v Ulw %mtm%M V» 111IwlVi/Hvl Battles of Words and of Generations Found at Rep solute's "rivals" include Bob It is perhaps too contemporary the be-in, the happening, and Acres, the clownish duellist (Ar- to be a lasting play, and too the underground film in a grip- chie Smith plays the role as if topical (almost "preachy") to ping dream sequence which— will he werestill Andrew Aguecheek be a great play. But the new- blow— or at least stretch the in "Twelfth Night" two seasons ness of its technique makes it minds (andeyeballs) of all who ago), Sir Lucius O'Trigger, a a thrilling theatrical experience. witness it. It is not really to bulbous red-haired Irishman The playis receivingits world be seen, but rather to be ex- (well-playedby Patrick Hines). premiere in this first production perienced. John Gilbert turns in his us- by the Rep. The basic situation THE TENSION whichthe play ual superb job of acting as Mr. is a confrontation between Christopher, - - establishes between members of Faulkland, the dizzy romantic 19 year old poet two generations breaks free in lover who creates his love and turned hippie and Benedict, a the second act with a very real- his mistress (Julia Melville, 43 -year -old poet and teacher istic pot-smoking scene between played by Kay Doubleday) in turned homosexual. The older Christopher and his girl, Candy his own image and dissolves man, sensitively portrayed by (excellently handled by Jana himself in constant doubt and Jonathan Farwell, is disillusion- Hellmuth). Before the audi- self-torture. ed in the young man's rebelli- ousness, ence's eyes, the two smoke "THE RIVALS" is excellent- and condemns him for themselves into an other-world- ly directed by Allen Fletcher. forsaking his poetry and his ly euphoria and collapse in gig- His skillful employment of pan- duty as a human being to make gles. Then Benedict walks in, tomime and tableau (counter- use of his talent. Yet he has and the tension builds again, to pointedbyDavid Segal's master- forsaken his own talent for two the play's climax. years, moving ful lighting) adds a tremendous and his homosexuality The lights are done by Lux- dimension to the theatrical ex- (he loves the younger boy) has Sit, and show in ruined are a them- PREPARE TO DIE: Sir Lucius O' Trigger, (Patrick perience. his life. selves. So is the music, which In speaking of recent Hines) takes careful aim at his not too courageous accom- CHRISTOPHER is brilliantly is mostly the work of Country plishments of the Rep, some- playedby John Odegard,one Joe and the Fish. (Archie Smith). of adversary, Bob Acres thingmust be said about "Chris- the youngest members of the The last word goes to James topher." It is new play by By ROBERT CUMBOW is sharp and fast. a Rep company, and one of whom Bertholf, the play's director, Clarence Morley, and the fourth we shall see a great deal more. whose perseverance and his ex- "The Rivals" by Richard If there are victims to the sa- this season be produced Brinsley Sheridan is classical tirical strain of the play (which to at It is in its second scene that pertly-coordinateduse of scene- the Rep's new "Off-Center The- the play scales heights of inno- ry and specialeffect have made English comedy at its funniest. is much less evident today than ater" (located in the Lyric The- It comedy manners, it must have been 1775) they vation never before attempted what must have seemed an un- is a of and in atre Building,2115 sth Avenue). as such it embraces no great are Mrs. Malaprop herself, and in a formal stage production. It performable play into an inten- or questions. introspective "CHRISTOPHER" is the combines elements of the light- sely exciting evening of full themes ethical But the romantic lov- psychedelic play. it has given its many audiences er, Mr. Faulkland. These two world's first show, the pop music festival, theatre. a merry time, and has made a characters, played by Margaret lasting contribution to English Hamilton and John Gilbert, di- literature and language in its vide between them the play's introduction of Mrs. Malaprop, high points of comedy. the self-centered old aunt who unwittingly undoes herself with MARGARET HAMILTON, fa- her flagrant misuse of English mous for her portrayal of the words. Wicked Witch of the West in The plot of the play, inevita- Hollywood's "Wizard of Oz" bly, revolves around complica- during the late thirties, appear- HEARD tions in love. problem ed at the Rep last year in ,—g— The basic Spirit." year, she WKl^^m^^^K I of the play is that the heroine, "Blithe. This Lydia Languish (Mrs. Mala- steals the show as Mrs. Mala- prop Rivals," prop's niece) is the beloved of in "The and will four gentlemen, one of them also be playing a smaller role imaginary. Sadly, the only one in the next Rep production, whose love she returns is the "The Father," by Strindberg. imaginary one. Theodore Sorel (Hotspur in "Henry IV") appears as Cap- "THE RIVALS" a talking- tain Jack Abso'ute, the major RECRUITING^Or1^ is play. The comedy derives from suitor for Lucy's hand. Lucy is word and situation, rarely from played, in a comewhat unpolish- CLICHE action. But it is never a boring ed and at times hammish man- play.The barbof Sheridan's wit ner, by Jacqueline Coslow. 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SU Chiefs Take 14th Straight From Portland U., 81-66 ByMIKE FRUSHOUR Cour put the Chiefs ahead to of a milestone of the season for Chiefs, as they passed their Last night in the Coli- stay, 31-28, with a three-point the play with four minutes left in opponents in total points scored, seum the Chieftains defeat- the half. Seattle kept bombard- 1,615 to 1,604. ed the Portland Pilots for ing during these four minutes to Tom Little was high for the SPORTS their fourteenth win in a take a 43-32 lead to the locker Chiefs with 22, and Lou West row. Well, not actually, for it room at halftime. maintained his 15-point average Gorman Selected for was only their fourth win in a The second half was not as with a 15-point performance. row. But they have a fourteen- wild as the first, with the Chiefs Jim LaCour, who fouled out game winning streak over Port- maintaining their solid lead. with 7:22 remaining in the sec- National Tournament land, and this is what they kept After about seven minutes, S.U. ond half, scored 13. Paul Gloden The multi-talented Tom Gor- When the invitationarrived at intact last night. connectedon a few fast baskets of the Pilots was high for the man will travel to Salisbury, the Gorman household it was The way things out, 15 game with 24 points. with mixed emotions. started to lengthen their lead to Maryland, next week to play in received however, it didn't look like the points, which they kept until the During halftime, S.U. proved "School ordinarily comes first, Chiefs had a chance. Portland end of the game. supremacy over the the third annual National In- but this is too great an honor their cross- Championships, the hit on several 20-footers and town school, as the ASSU offi- door Tennis to decline," the Chieftain told jumped to a 13-2 lead. But Se- began biggest winter tournament held The Spectator. COACH BUCKWALTER cers beat the U.W. student body Hemisphere. attle chipped away, using Tom officers, 5-2. Leading the way in the Western Gorman will depart Saturday putting in reserves with about Charito Paserell, number one Little and Lou West as chisel- left, our boys were John Petrie morning for Baltimore via TWA ers, and narrowed it to 21-19 three minutes and was able for U.S. player, successfully de- and will be gone for one week. with 8:23 left in the period. to clear his bench entirely. and Pat Bradley,with Pat Lay- fended his title against an inter- The game also marked a sort man contributing a free throw. nationalfieldlast year. THE PILOTS called time out Meeting stop momentum, Baseball to the Chiefs' a meetingfor but didn't work, Jim La- There will be it as allprospective baseball play- Wildcats Skinned by Chieftains; ers at 3 p.m. on Tuesday, February 13 in the gym. Ed- Party Too Much die O'Brien, S.U. baseball coach, reports that no athle- For A Phi O's Little Pours Through 25 Points tic gearneed be brought asit The A Phi O's lost their un- leaders last Friday that height will be an informational defeated record and their hold isn't the answer to everything. meeting. on first place in a Saturday in- Leapin' Lou West, Chieftain tramural game agains the Par- center-forward, controlled the ty. The Party cashed in a flurry tip from 6-ft.-8 center Randy of free throws toward the end Sparks and the Chiefs turned it Paps Win of the game to seal their victory into a quick two points. They and gain first place in the then proceeded to maintain the American League. lead with a balanced attack and Three More The Party led in the early go- they had a 39-31 margin at the The Seattle U. Papooses ing on the strength of a strong half. picked up three more wins Fri- man-to-man defense as Ed Rob- day, Saturday and last night to inson was the onlyA Phi Oman THE OPENING minutes of stretch their win-loss record to to do any damage. Meanwhile the second period saw the 13-1. Steve McCarthy and Ned Doles- Chiefs continue their fine shoot- Friday the SimonFraser frosh ji were scoring heavily for the ing at one end and effective re- were blitzed 80-45 even though Partiers. bounding and defense at the the five starting Papooses In the second half Mike Ben- other. So with 15 minutes re- played only half of the game. zel scored five straight field maining and S.U. holding a 12- Mike Gilleran pumped in 20 goals to put the APhi O's ahead point spread, the Weber State points for the Papooses in the for the first time, but the Party coach, Dick Motta, pulled all half that he played. regained the lead and iced the his starters. On Saturday night the Pacific on free The Wildcats' second string pummeled game in the last minute played defense, Lutheran frosh were throw to win 37-31. tenacious but 85-61 as Tom Giles poured Robinson had 12 points and couldn'thandle the ball,and the through 28 points, Willie Blue, Benzel 11 the A Phi margin climbed to 14 points. 16, 15 Bob Horn for O's clock Gilleran and while McCarthy led the winners With 9:19 showing on the 14. This game was a make-up with 14. Weber inserted a fresh five game which had been scheduled In other Saturday games the against the somewhat. weary for lastmonth. ROTC overran the Sixth Floor, Chieftain starters. Last night Bob Horn had his 44-28, and the Justice League A TIGHT half-court press and best night of the season as he nailed the Banchees, 41-34. Jan TIP-IN: Steve Looney (20) and Jim Gardner (right) some clutch shooting by Wildcat shoved through 21 points to lead Karnoski led ROTC with 26 goal Justus Thigpen cut the lead to the Papooses over PLU again. piled try to tip-in a missed field attempt while Dan markers while Stef Hogue (50) four points with 3 minutes re- This time the Paps took it 95-72. up 17 points for the Justice Sparks of Weber State and Jim LaCour watch. maining. Looking a bit haggard The four other starters also League. Spectator photo by Dennis Williams and worn S.U. called a time-out scored in double figures. Tom By BRIAN PARROTT and tried to regroup its forces. Giles had 18, Mike Gilleran 15 The Weber State Wildcats, That they did, and with key and Willie Blue and Glen Davis S.U. SKI CLUB with a 12-2 record and a 6-ft.-8, steals by West, Gardner and added 13 points apiece. 6-ft.-7 and 6-ft.-5 forward line, Little, they held on for their The Papooses had a 46-28 lead BREAK TRIP seemed too tough a foe for our third straight win. Little was at half and steadily built it up QUARTER TO 7-12 Chieftains. But the Chiefs the game's high scorer with 25 to 30 points several times. Re- have apparently jelled, and and was instrumental in holding serves played much of the sec- TOD MOUNTAIN. B.C. showed the Big Sky Conference Thigpen to only17. ond half. March 16-23 UCLA Gains on First-Place Houston in AP Poll — might Hous- foes from AP TOP TEN Reservations now open limit 85 UCLA just pass conference now on. 1. Houston |25| 200 322 ton and re-establish itself as the New Mexico State is the only 2 UCLA |8) 161 314 $104, — team, team the poll this week, 3 North Carolina 14-1 263 Cost: all inclusive nation's number-one this new on 4! ST. BONAVENTURE 16-0 JOJ round trip from Seattle via railroad; week's AP poll indicates. The replacing Utah which has lost 5. Tennessee 14*2 180 Bruins trail the Cougars by a five straight games after being 6. NEW MEXICO 17-1 151 7. Columbia 13-3 91 3 meals a day; scant eight "poll points" even ratedas high as fifth. 8. Kentucky 13-4 77 6 of skimg— all lift tickets; though Houston received far 9. Vanderbilt 14-4 47 days The teams that S.U. has played 10. New Mexico State 17-2 44 area. more votes for first place. or play this are OTHERS receiving votes, listed alphabeti- lodging at lift will season list- cally: Army, Baylor, Chicago, Loyola, David- Houston finishes out the sea- ed in bold-face. The Chieftains son, Drake, Duke, Florida, Kansas, Louisville, against relatively weak op- have two games Texas- Marquette, Marshall, Ohio State, Princeton, Deposit of $ I0 requiredby February 12 (ski club meeting ) son left with Santa Clara, South Carolina, TEXAS El PASO, ponents while UCLA plays only El Paso. UTAH, Washington State, Wyoming. Full refund if you cancel before February 12 (ski meeting) Full amount due March 4 club CHAMPIONSHIP tffa l Reservations: Rick McDonald,Campion1208 PRO HOCKEY Wf)\ Janine Peretti,Bellarmine 413 SPECIAL UNIVERSITY OFFER! <\/f\v*» 6^, M*-4 Kathy Ursich. Marycrest 516 All reserved seats to games of the #^$V. JHJI Father Axer,Alumni House tf N.B- Tripopen to club members only SEATTLE TOTEMS kM$$A * * ' Membership available ($3) at time of deposit Defending Champs I * KV^9IHfIJ^PB are now available to I\j£j£SsSm Coming Activities: STUDENTS AT Vi PRICE Sffpl upon Night Skiing, Friday, February 9 ($2). Leave Bellarmine presentation of ASSU card fl H\ ■ 5:30 p.m. NOTE: not gooduntil 15 minutes W (Wenatchee), | Offer <| V Overnight to Mission Ridge February 17-18 , game time oneach gamenight. <, \^^^^^^7 ($10) before X—^«^"*J Board, floor, LA, opposite TONIGHT, FEB. 7: Totems vs. Portland Sign.up sheet on Bulletin first yJ^Z^yP.m. Rm. 123 FRIDAY, FEB. 9: Totems vs. San Diego Seattle center coliseum 8 THE SPECTATOR Wednesday, February 7, 1968 Lend Poets an Ear Fragments Seeks Authors The CreativeWriting Club will Students wishing to submit under the door if no one is SMOKE SIGNALS sponsorpoetryreadingat 8 p.m., fiction,poetry, or other creative available to take it. Today Gamma- Sigma Phi,-board, 6:45 February 13, in the Chieftain writing to Fragments, the lit- Fragments will be published Meetings pm chieftain lo*"-ge lounge. Dr. Richard Davison of erary quarterly, should have on or about March 4 as a spe- Gamma Sigma Phi, 7 p.m., their in to Ken- cial supplement to The Specta- Chieftain lounge. theEnglishdepartmentwillread material Mr. ath Club, 1 p.m., Ba. 411. Lean, Xavier 320, by KTopic, "Prime Numbers." from the poetry of Robert Frost neth Mac tor. New writers are welcome to Snodgrass. Feb. 20. Copy may be slipped submit material. HawaiianClub, 7 p.m., 3rd floor T and W. D. Pigott. Information on ski trip. tomorrow A Phi o, 7:30 p.m., McHugh Meetings Hall. I.K.'s, 7 p.m., House, wearblaz- New Conservatives, 7:30 p.m., ers. Library 112. Official Notices The last day to withdraw from must file an application for de- classes with a grade of "W" is gfee with the registrar's office Thursday, February 15. Ap- by February 16th. Applications proved withdrawal cards and the for degrees will be issued only $1 fee must be filed at the regis- upon presentation of receipt from trar's office by 4:30 p.m. on the treasurer's office indicating Thursday. Cards or fees are not that the graduation fee (bach- accepted after this date. A grade elor's $20, master's $45) has been of "EW," which is computed as paid. an "E," will be assigned students Mary Alice Lee who fail to withdraw officially. Registrar

Seniors and graduate students The Washington State Pre-Col- who plan to graduate in June iege Test will be administeredon Saturday, Feb. 17, at 8:30 a.m. * ' in Pigott 504. All students are '- R * '■-' W^Z^^S **«^^^^^S§si§ wr ■'■■::^m a 1 **»*"> |A CCIEICn required to take the test who V»**s_#*%_ 1 _>IP_B_f have not already done so or who have not completed more than AUTOS FOR SALE *2 cred>t hours in another colle- giate institution before coming to * : pl£!-8l S U V V^"-^»VV Wif ¥■ £ft £k 4& a*wwwwfiiisliiil £ 1959 Hillman. $175. Excellent run- Dr William Guppy, rung condition.GL 5-1877. Director Counseling and Testing MISCELLANEOUS typing: 3 p.9.» $1.00. ma 3-1461. 'Spur-O-Gram' THESES, term papers on IBM electric -p. , m " typewriter. Mrs. Rich. WE 7-2423. lime lO begin SA E ,s T EK! Wr _. N T Spur-O-Grams „ .^ ~ _"" Y' - are back. Once ■«__ £""«"'_ _ again S.U. Spurs will be on N.Y.5°v 10020. Mr. Spoclc need, you!J g£ -^ INFORMAL BEGINNING Hebrew day of next week, as campus Classes, anyone? See Fr. King, messenger girls. Members of X327 before Friday afternoon. the sophomore women's organi- FOR RENT: Le Oi. Kitchen, zation wil1 personally deliver Living room, Library, Study priv- messages anywhere on campus ileges. Student owned. 1422 22 E. for 25 cents during the Spur-O- _lley St. EA 9-2893 or EA 5-2483. Gram project. ''""'Three Blocks south of Volunteer por a r}ime extra, the girls will sing the message. Spur-O- ' RL WANTED: Girl desiring either Gr,aiTS -^g « Otherwise free room and board to babysit Wl11be available Friday through f»OMSor live out. Five evenings a week, next Wednesday m Bellarmine 25 hours can arrange schedule, and Campionlobbies, and in the Call EA 5-7799. Chieftain. Are these men double agents? No...but J&\ they know f !t a lot about J If you don't agree that security. A- business destroys individuality,

They're Provident Mutual's JM Wk< maybe it's because you're an BigMen on Campus. A In 15 minutes eitherof them . individual. can showyou why it's importantto plan— now for There's certain campus talk that claims vide things Bell telephonecompanies need, future security and how W'fJ-^^V individuality is dead in the business world. Becausecommunications arechangingfast, to goabout it. /li Amkm That big business is a big brother destroy- these needs are great and diverse, inginitiative. Beinginvolved with a system helps The right kind of life insurance that But freedom of thought and action,when keeppeople in touch,lets doctors send car- is a very importantpart of backed with reason and conviction's cour- diogramsacross country for quick analysis, your financial future. These age, will keep and nurture individuality helps transmit news instantly, is demand- fellow students willshowyou a planspecifically whatever the scene:inthearts,thesciences, ing. Demanding of individuals. designed for collegemen and women. and inbusiness. If your ambitionis strongandyour abili- to the contrary, the commensurate, you'll truly For complete informationon the advantagesof Scoffers red corpus- ties never be cles ofindividuality pay off. No happy with the status quo. You'll seek getting a head start— and our special program— mistake. Encouraging individuality rather than waysto changeit and— wonderful feeling!— stop by or telephonetoday. suppressing it is policy in a business like some of themwill work. Western Electric— where pro- Could be at Western Electric. BOB PIGOTT we make and EA 2-6769 JOHN ROGERS Western Electric EA 4-7792 ® MANUFACTURING1SIIPPIv UNIT Of THE BELI SVSTfM PROVIDENT MlilliAl_____ LIFE INSURANCKCOMPANY OF PHILADELPHIA