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12-11-1968 Spectator 1968-12-11 Editors of The pS ectator

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Recommended Citation Editors of The peS ctator, "Spectator 1968-12-11" (1968). The Spectator. 1130. http://scholarworks.seattleu.edu/spectator/1130

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. Financial Strain Apparent At Free Hour By PATTY HOLLINGER hike will not affect present stu- transrorm some prupeny ncai The fact that austerityhas be- dents until fall quarter 1970. S.U. into parking stalls. come a determining factor at The financial strain became Fr.Fittererhad stated that the S.U. dominated the State of the apparent during the questioning reason for the decrease in en- Universityaddress and question- sessionin such areas as parking, rollment was due to the increase and-answer period at the free enrollment,visitingprofessor- in tuition. A student questioned hour Friday. The Very Rev. ships and the AWS rug. why the tuition was beingraised John A. Fitterer, S.J., president Leo Hindery, former ASSU if it was decreasing enrollment. of S.U., gave the address. treasurer, questioned the reason Fr. Fitterer noted that there Approximately 150 people in for the 60 parking stalls, located were 700 fewer undergraduates the half-filled gym listened as on Broadway between Marion this year, and the total enroll- Fr. Fitterer gave a general and Columbia, being rented to ment was 3600. He stated that statement whichrevolved mainly Swedish Hospital instead of S.U. S.U. could take 5000 tomorrow, around finances and the P.E. students. and 6000 next year with an in- Complex. FR. FITTERER replied that crease in faculty. Fr. Fitterer ALTHOUGH Fr. Fitterer did the propertyhadpreviously been expressed hope that the state not dwell on the seriousness of occupied by houses which pro- will now pass a substantial aid the financial situation, it perme- vided an income but which were program and said that the gov- ated the hour. He noted theprob- eye-sores. By renting the stalls ernor had alreadycommitted lem of private universities in to the hospital, the blight was himself to some form of aid. keeping salaries at a good level. removed and income still came BOB CHESTERFIELD, CAP He said that since there are no in, he said. president, questioned why there state assistance funds and little Hindery then questioned why have not been endowed chairs federal funds, income must the students were not allowed to to bring visiting professors on come mainly from tuition and provide some income from the campus. Fr. Edmund Morton, fees. ASSU contingency fund. Fr. Fit- S.J., academic vice president, An increase in tuition was also terer replied that there were repliedthat financial difficulties announced for nextyear.Fr. Fit- other financial considerations in- impeded this. He said that visit- terer said the $30 a quarter in- volved in dealing with the hos- inglecturers would be especially crease will affect enteringfresh- pital and that perhaps the con- desirable and that efforts are men in fall quarter 1969. The tingency funds could be used to Continued on page 2) STATE OF S.U.: The Very Rev. John A. Fitterer, S.J., Seattle University president, explains the university's financial situation during last —Friday's assembly. Spectator photos byBob Kegel SEATTLE Walk-Out, the "Rug" Stir Sunday Senate XXXVII Seattle, Washington, Wednesday, December 11, 1968 "*» J^JS A protest walk-out character- billproposedbySenatorsGraves, Red Carpet: ized the regular meeting Sunday McKnightandMcDermott which morning of the student Senate. would assure to the senate con- Senator Phil Gilday left a pre- trol over the approval of all ex- meeting conference apparently penditures of $250or moreby the Pays AWS Rug Associated Students, particular- Fliterer Half of in protest over the reaction of his fellow senators to his billre- ly Special Events or any class questing that $300.00 be allotted "A" or "B" clubs. to the Core Critique. The senate's approvalwill also In Senator Gilday's absence, be required on any contract or senior Senator Dave Mills as- pledge made by the Associated sumed authorishipof the legisla- Students in vo1 ving $2000 or tion according to senate proce- more, such as parking agree- dure. Mills expressed serious ments or building fund pledges. reservations since the existence Prior to passage, Senator of the entity named by che bill, Graves proposed an amendment the "core critique," is highly to his own bill exempting The questionable. Spectatorand the Aegis from the The format andorganizationcf stipulations, indicating concern the critique is in the process of for freedom of the press. He radical revision and the sena- pointedout that those twoorgan- tors were uncertain as to the ex- izations would have to continue act function of the revised cri- to obtain senate approval of tiqueor evenif any teachereval- their annual budgets. uation could be effectievly ad- Senator McDermott empha- ministered. sized that the measure should Senator Mills and Senate not be interpreted as prompted Chairman Thorn O'Rourke, who by any feelings of hostility har- attempted to answer questions bored by the senate for the ex- concerning the bill, indicated ecutive branch. that the $300 wouldbe utilized to Also on the agenda was a bill pay for an eight-page supple- to approvetheconstitutionof the ment to The Spectator in which newly organized S.U. Manage- the result of the critique would ment Association which passed be published. unanimously with no discussion. The senators rejected an initial The Association's membership CARPET: to right, AWS offi- in the AWS office. The carpet is hot pink motion "THE" left to table the bill in Sena- consists of faculty and students cers Jeannie Mallette and Allison Fry sort and magenta shag. tor Gilday's absence, apparently in management in the School of AWS papers on now fully-paid-for carpet —Spectator photo by Kerry Webster determined not simply to put off Business. but to the discussion defeat The Christmas spirit intruded two-week-long mini- to this use of University funds. had specifiedthat the University measure. Later, on a motion by into the meeting when the sena- The controversy over the Asso- In an address to students Fri- would match the Guild funds. Senator Costello, they moved tors considered a requestbv the day, Fr. Fitterer promised that Fr. Fitterer, in order to keep the bill back into committee. Black Student Union for $100 for ciated Women Student's "no university money will be both the University promise to The "RugAffair" was the sub- a Christmas party at the Martin red carpet came to an end the AWS andhis own promise to ject by Mary used to.carpet the AWS office." of a report Jo Luther King Junior Day Care yesterday, as The Very Rev. The statement was made appar- students that no tuition money Logan, ASSU Secretary,who re- . John A. Fitterer, S.J., president entlyon the mistakenimpression would go into the rug, paid the lated her conversation with the The funds were requested for of S.U., paid off the University's had promised to University pledge out of money S.J., that the Guild VeryRev. John A.Fitterer, refreshments and for presents $150 pledge toward the installa- pay for all of the carpet's cost. given to him as a personal gift president of S.U., over the dona- for the approximately 25 chil- tion with a privategift. The statementcaught both the by a private source. a$350 carpetfor the AWS severely tion of dren of disadvantaged Half of the funds for carpet AWS and the by surprise. The misunderstanding as to office by the S.U. Mary the Guild Guild. families for whom the party were to have been donated by AWS President Alison Fry met the original agreement came Jo helped to placate the sena- would be given. The measure the S.U. Guild, a women'sgroup, with Fr. Fitterer yesterday, ex- about two weeks ago, when Fr. tors, some of whom had rep- was approvedunanimously. and the other by the University. plainingthat the original agree- Perri became ill before having proached the university admin- The senators seemed less re- senators ment Joseph Perri, appraised Fr. Fitterer of the by Several student and with Fr. istration for this expenditure, sponsive, however, when ap- other officers objected,however, S.J., executive vice president, final outcome. explaining that no university- proached for an allotment of Fr. Fitterer's adroit fund-shuf- administered funds had been $550 for the publication of Frag- fling is expected to be satisfac- used for this purchase. ments, thecampus literarymag- tory to most of the principals The senate passed the revised azine, by the Fragments editor S.I.L. Projects "Failsafe" involved; the sighs of relief Jo Crawford. The amount re- fromUniversity and student cir- quested would be used for the Pigott cles alike have been almost Parking Expires publication costs of one winter Tomorrow In audible. starring Henry point, drop a nu- Fall quarter parking decals and one spring auarter issue. "Fail Safe," committed to Meanwhile, ASSU Secretary Jo emphasizedthe importance Fonda and Walter Matthau, will clear bomb. Mary Jo Logan revealed yester- expire on December 20, 1968. The minute-by-minute devel- To insure continued parking, of a literary magazine to a uni- be shown tomorrow afternoon at day that a privatedonor may be versity and she indicatedthe im- 2:15 p.m. in Pigott Auditorium. opments as all life hangs indan- interested in giving enough raw new validationtabs should be gerous — the desperate purchased before the expira- nracticality of last vear's solu- Admission charge to the SIL- balance carpet to cover every student problem financing, sponsored is 75c. efforts to halt the planes, the tion date. Students desiring tion to the of event office in the Chieftain. the publishing of Fragments a* a "FailSafe" is the grippingand awesome calm of the President winter parkingshould register courageously attempts to Office, supplement to The Spectator. powerful story of a time in as he at the Plant Manager salvage whateverhe can from a S.U.'s Raiders Bookstore 125, anytime The senators agreed to consider America when mechanical fail- — after meeting ure a Strategic Air Com- desperate dilemma make sus- Pages and December 20. the reauest at the first sends four five. of winter quarter. mand plane past the fail safe penseful entertainment. Page Two THE SPECTATOR Wednesday, December 11, 1968 Prof/ess Proposal: Student-Run Class Considered The Council last limitations were expressed. The signis effected with all the detail Academic a week approved a unique stu- Council held that a student- needed to administer such proposed course should be re- course, then that design be pre- dent-centered proposal presented Council Larson, pro- quired to undergo the same pro- sented to the Academic by Dr. J. Robert cedural test that any course for consideration." fessor of sociology. Dr. Larson The way been made author- proposed by any faculty mem- has now proposedthatthe Council to undergo in open for interested students, as a to be designed by, ber would have ize course order to be incorporatedinto the individuals or as members of taught by, graded by, partici- organizations to partici- by curriculum. campus pated in by, and evaluated This means in essence that patein the process of designing students alone. subsequent to design of the such a course. Those intersted The title, subject matter,num- course, in its final proposed and willingto work should get in ber of credits, hours, type of as- form, it will once again have to touch with Dr. Larson immedi- signments, style of teaching, ac- come under the scrutiny of the ately. Work on the course can tual teaching, and the examin- Academic Council and win its begin immediately. ing and grading procedure are approval. to be planned and executed en- Both approvalof the idea and tirely by students. the procedural specifications are The aim of such a course, noted in the motion offered by fit's Take according to Dr. Larson, is to DeanRobertson of the School of give students a real and mean- Business,a member of theCoun- Eighteen ingful voice inUniversitylife. cil, which stated, "that Dr. Lar- The Council was not unani- son be encouraged to pusue this mous in its approval; many res- idea, that if student interest is New Actives ervations and some qualifying generated, that if a course de- Intercollegiate Knights an- nounced their 18 new actives Monday. The accepted pledges are: Max Theobald,Brian Tallo, Jer- Parking ry Schaefer, Don McKenzie, Pat Student's Flume, Jim Sweeney, Jerome Tanaka, Dan Tom, Chris Davis, Tom Villiers, John Nichols, Jon EVERGLEAMS GLISTEN: Sparklinglights and the L.A. Eastman, Craig Dahl,Pete Car- Building mirror the Christmas spirit of S.U. Complaints Heard stens,Ed Perry, George Wilbur, Bob Steiner, and Mike Barcott. By KATHY MCCARTHY changes to the Senate and the the spring The new actives will be initi- PlantManagerduring next quarter. Frustrated students searching quarter. ated Fr. Fitterer Queried on for a spot to park their cars can "The Plant Manager will be now voice their complaints to open to any practical sugges- the Student Committee to the tions," affirmed George Bern- Cooks Contrive Plant Manager,Thorn O'Rourke, steiner, a committee member. State of the University ASSU vice president, said Mon- Otherson the task force include: Pilandri, McWalter, Christmas Tea (Continued from page1) titurers. day. Mike Bryce mnAa tho Fnei111 ■r Koinn h\\r Nieder- The annual Christmas Open low being made by tne Jesuit Fr.Fitterer used the assembly The committee was created, Kevin Yagle and Paul the Pacific coast to S.U had been continued, at the meyer. House, sponsored by the Home universities on announce that O'Rourke be- will to cooperate in securing lee- asked to join the Association of ginning of the year when the Economics Department, be Urban Universities which he squeeze of dorm and town stu- PARKING is not the onlycon- from 2:30-4 p.m. this Thursday or termed as a "great honor." dent parking became evident cern of the committee. Pleas in the Old Science Building. Fr. Fitterer said that the P.E. and was partially alleviated by suggestions concerning waste Guests will include members Women Set and investigation. disposal units on campus or of the faculty and friends of stu- Complexis on schedule will student Plant course, attract more funds to S.U. management forces suggested clocks and bells in dorms and dents intheHome Ec 110 A question to Fr. group be to act other buildings should also be "Principles of Food Prepara- Holly Hall was directed that a formed members, Bern- EdmundMorton, S.J., academic as a "voice for the students." directed to its tion." vice president, asking why stu- steiner concluded. The class has been preparing Banquet dents, if they are to be consid- MEMBERS will begin an ex- Through their efforts, bulletin and storing food for this event 1 T T _ < * __ T T _ 11 T"» A. direction m responsible,must bound parking be provided in all quarter, under the The HollyHall Banquet, ered be amination of the entire boards will soon to the policy allowing only six lotset-up during the winter quar- all classrooms for publicity and of Kathie King, hostess, and an annual Christmas din- class cuts. ter and willpresent any feasible class use. Mrs.GraceHudiberg,Instructor. ner sponsored by the Asso- Fr. Morton said that this poli- ciated Women Students, cy was "not a directive" and will be Saturday at 5:30 was the result of the desire of p.m. in the Bellarmine Hall the faculty. Are you able and willing to organize, moti- cafeteria. All women students,both vate andlead others? Areyou ready to develop dorm and town residents, Senator Sought invited. Application for senior sen- stamina, are position 2 qualities of self-discipline, physical re- A fashion show present- ate No. are now be- ing taken to the ASSU office. — ed by the AWS-sponsored The position opened after sponsibility and bearing qualities essential for S.U. Fashion Board will fol- senator Terry Greiner re- low the banquet. AWS signed due to personal rea- members will model clothes sons. success in a civilian or military career? Have provided by Jay Jacobs, a Seattle clothing store. you considered serving your countryand fulfill- Admission to the banquet for non-resident students ing your military obligation as a commissioned willbe $1.25. Resident coeds i \ will be admitted on their in the Army? Would $50 meal tickets. officer per month during your junior and senior years {y.■ I&} financial burden? A" $ ease your Wedding m Gowns X If the answer to any of these questions is "YES", you should in- j ® J vestigate the opportunity afforded under the new, two-year Army Formats ROTC program. A recent law enables a college student to meet the GmvM SOwp;fwmals '25up. ! ! requirements for a commission in just two years! " J'j " allfabrics ZJhere ZJime When the President of the United States appoints you a com- " allstyles Dor missioned officer, you will have achieved the enviable combination Morthwest's finest j Portrait j a position of leadership selections of a college degree in your chosen field and " chargeorlayaway in the service of your countrry. You willbe making the most of your j 4 I potentialities for both a civilian and military profession. If you join the program, you will be a step ahead for the rest of your life!

Seattle For further information, contact the Professor mm 4718'A University Way 1522 sth MA2-7696 Open Mon.'til 9 PM LA 3-2403 of Military Science at the Army ROTC Building i Wednesday, December 11, 1968 THE SPECTATOR . Editorial — more rug We Get Letters j students voiced their opinions at Some of our fellow the opposite of the "terrible fate situation is more than nonsensi- University" address Friday that the by the Highline college cal; it is, perhaps, immoral. the "State of the centralissue predicted of stormlet over the red carpet in the Associated Women editor. Convinced of the uselessness lo tne taitor: history and given the shabbiness insignificant for an entire uni- literanly Student's office was too Many of us who live and work A TRULY HORRIBLE fate of human nature (so get uptight awaiting in city to- commented upon by Brad Doyle versity to about. in Seattle's Central Area are con- people this journal), not, took the personal intervention day is the cruel prospect before some days ago in your Insignificant or it cerned and dismayed over such city's Ihave no hope that anything will University to get Highline our black youth on the of the president of the the matter recent incidents as the campuses, where it is preor- be accomplished by my pin-stick- Community College NEWS item, inevitably ing, but as the unusually forth- settled. flagrantly ghetto dained that they will which insulted encounter ignorance, arrogance right "Red River Kentuckian" residents, and the snail's pace prejudice manifested by explained one day to the British yesterday. sluggishness some high schools and just FR.FITTERER faced a sticky dilemma He in whites from the affluent ghettos cockney whom he had called money" in the area of introducing courses out how the ugliest man that was ever had just promised students that "no University Afro-American history and who neverbother to find workshop cre- on the other American lives and turned out of the of would be expended on the AWS carpet. Then he found granting recognition to Black Stu- is, ation: "The thing was on my thinks and feels. Ironic as it help that, through a misunderstanding, he had indeed prom- dent Unions. the black man's contemporary de- mind and I just couldn't ised AWS that half of the cost would be paid by the These issues are interrelated. mand for culture and self-identity telling you so." No whiteor black person who has is relevant because it is a now Sincerely yours, University. seriously studied the real history thing and may very well be the Gerard G. Steckler, S.J. He solved the problem with his typical flair for pull- of black people in America, a catalytic force that can give spir- "Sentinel" received a history marked by centuries of itual vigor to ournational psyche. (alias Gerard G. ing a compromise out of thin air. Having just brutalization, terror and near Steckler, S.J.) money to the Indeed, the local white power private personal gift, he transferred the genocide, and a history that is many apologies by oppression and structures owe AWS. still marked and concessions to the blacks super-exploitation,could ever feel steadily abuse, patron- The president thus neatly sidestepped the main stu- shock, wonder, cen- when they buy or express ize and tolerate. But much more dent objection that "our tuition money" wasgoing to sure, anger or indignation over gestures recog- sporadic limited acts of is needed than of a wall-to-wall carpet for AWS. the and nition or validgrievances; an im- protest and despair that do erupt. mediate programof area-widein- Nobody who knows yesterday's the history of today's ghetto could struction in real ALTHOUGH WE ARE usually quite cynical about history or America and an immediate ex- By DIANNE BYE University even conceive of handling this to prob- impromptu financial "deals" on the higher sarcasm, irony or posure of all students the As Christmas vacation looms subject with lems and burning needs of the near, in the city levels, we cannot, in all candor, fault Fr. Fitterer's judg- contempt. The mentality that mandatory entertainment only Central Area are if is assuming a surge. ment sneers at another's pain can of the cities—pov- festive in this situation. result in the politics of fascism. the real shame Most campus cultural activities acted, feel, with an overridingsense of honor, erty, racial segregation, police He we — to tackled have concluded for this quarter, to students or and oppression are be wishing to renege neither on his word the BLACK STUDENT UNIONS head-on by a new generationedu- but opportunities tosee and hear to scrupulous administrator might have minority history classes are long- cated to be braver and bolder worthwhile artists in Seattle are the AWS. A less overdue in our schools, precise- felt tempted to issue a statement "regretting" that a of preventing than the old one. plentiful. Just this week for in- ly for the purpose Sincerely yours, following for your "misundersanding" had developed, and told either the such atrocities as the Highline stance the Community College NEWS item Rex D. Jones pleasure: AWS or the students toget lost. Executive Director and the inevitable retaliatory vio- Opportunities MUSIC to maintain,of course, that the original the NEWS has the ef- Seattle We continue lence that Inc. HMS PINAFORE: Gilbert and commitment was extremely ill-advised. But, we feel that frontery to complain about. White by the D'Oyle Carte provoke black violence— Industrialization Center Sullivan Fr. Fitterer has acted wisely within the framework of racists Opera Co., London's Savoy Thea- and then demagogically denounce tre, Opera House TODAY AND commitments already made. their own product. Hypocrisy TONIGHT! 2 p.m. and 8:30 p.m. reigns supreme, and will continue roomy praise UPAY SHANKAR: Impresario to do so until the black victims and Interpreter of Indian Culture, SPECTATOR are effectively organized on their To the Editor: appearing troupe of Indian THE — A of floor-to-ceiling tapes- with Journalism, Sigma own behalf for their own self- set First Award, College 1965— Delta Chi dancers, Opera House, Dec. 13, 1967-68, tries to the office of AWS whose "All American" Award, Finl Semester —Associated Collegiate Press defense. 14, 8:30 p.m. "All American" Award, Second Semester 1965-66,— Associaled Collegiate Press As anti-poverty agency des- members have made the Seattle "Publlcolion of Distinction" Award, 1964-65, Catholic School Press Association an University Mall sparkle with the THEATRE Published Wednesdays and Fridays during the school year except on holidaysand during exam- ignated to try to meet some of by University. by Seattle University students with editorial and business the in brightest Christmas decorations REPERTORY THEATRE: inations Seattle Edited Seattle, the needs of citizens the at Tenth Ave., Seattle, Wash. 98122. Second-class postage paid at Wash. it has ever known! "Midsummer's Night's Dream," offices 825 alumni, Canada, Mexico, foreign, J6; Central Area and to participate Subscription: $4 a year; close relatives, $3; $4.50; other building of and Louis Gaffney, S.J. Dec. 11, 12, Playhouse, 8 p.m. To- jirmail in $7. in the a proud United States, School day, Matinee, 2 p.m. Editor, Kerry Webster Art Editor: Tom Yagle beautiful community, we con- Graduate Patty Hollinger Photo Editor: Don Conrard. stantly invite people of all races COME BLOW YOUR HORN: News Editor: VanderSchroeti, Theatre, in Feature Editor: SherylHenry Photographers: Rainier our job Cirque all black cast Bob Kegel, Tom Downey, Frannie to work with us in free comedy, Dec. Sports Editor: Brian Parrott training facilities, which are lo- this Neil Simon's Advertising Manager: Phil Gilday Higgins, Dennis Williams. nonsenseagain 11, 17, 18, 7:30 p.m. 3406 E. Union. Business Manager^ Rob Dufficy Advisor: Roger Yockey cated in the heart of the Central PLAY: Copy Editor: Mary Ellen Garvey Area. We consistently assure the 10 me taiior: SECOND SHEPHERD'S REPORTERS- Cathy Clapp, Linda DuMond, Marsha Green, Cris Gallucci, Katie Garvey, Mare Enemble Theatre, Dec. 12, 13, 14, Nichols, Pace, Theresa Seattle community as a whole The annual nonsense has started Houser, John Majors, Kathy McCarthy, George McLean, Neil Charlotte that living and working in the again. Last week the 15; Dec. 11-29, 8:30 p.m., 107 Oc- Seeley, Steve Triesch and Sue Weghost. days cidentalSt. Represented for national advertising by National Educational Ad- Central Area can be a stimulating team lost the last two of Inc., meaningful opportunity for class in the Central Rockies. This DA MINSTREL SHOW: New vertising Services, a division of Reader's Digest Sales and Services, and Theatre, Firehouse N.Y., learning and growing. It is just week, returning to the same area, Group CAMP New York 10017. they will lose a couple more. Theatre, Dec. 13, 14, 8:30 p.m. Sandwiched in for a kind of rest LOOK BACK IN ANGER: Off- was a game at home. This is a Center Theatre, 2115 5th Ave., All the dramatic power magnificent way to prepare for opens tomorrow ,Dec. 12 through thought, the month. Thurs-Sat., 8 p.m. of the best-selling novel J^^^3P jl finals. On second the is now on the screen! 1,. Jsg" I^9 Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer presents W f liWfl Spectator Art Editor a GeorgeEnglundproduction «/^g&. ML i|^& j|S ifflBßl Is Active S.U. Student The new face in art this year was a little kid," he laughed. "I in The Spectator is due largely wanted to be an automobile de- «*t 111 §■ mM^^m ■"'' "~^S Bt. f^^ to the art editor, Tom Yagle, signer. From there Ibranched who does it allhimself. Tomis a senior at S.U. major- "When I'm assigned a cartoon ing in art.Tom's interestsrange or a drawing for The Spectator from sports (he was a member Iam usually given the general Anthony OskarWerner DavidJanssen VittorioDeSica of the soccer team) to the stu- idea of whatis wanted. Iget my Quinn " " dent senate. He also enjoys ski- own ideas from there. The McKern SirJohnGielgud BarbaraJefford RosemarieDexter ing and being a member of A cartoons I do for sports are Leo Phi O. He will participate in the mainly my own ideas," he said. LeadershipConference next Jan- The feature drawings, too, are [g] aisos,ar,ne SirLaurenceOlivier put " and appeared in Tom's own ideas into art Suggested for screenplaybyJohn Patrick and JameSKennaway basedon thenovelby MornsLWest uary, his name -^ Who in Col- form. -produced byGeorgeEnglund PanavisionandMetrocolor MGM Who's American GfNEfiAL^jj^ leered byMichael Anderson leges." "The Spectator is a good pa- '■ RESERVED SEAT TICKETS NOW AT BOXOFFICE OR BY MAIL working per," he said, "and Idon't feel "I started for The it Spectator last year because I it deserves all the criticism ad manager has been getting," Tom said. PRICES AND PERFORMANCES: was a friend of the SCHEDULE OF Front al^s^"center and he asked me to do some art EVENINGS: Sunday through Thursday at 8:00 p.m $2.50 $2.75 work for ads. This year Kerry Friday, Saturday and Pre-Holiday at 8:30 p.m 3.00 3.25 Webster, the editor of The Spec- MATINEES: Wednesday at 2:00 p.m 2.00 2.25 tator, asked me to be the art Saturday, Sunday and Holidays at 2:00 p.m .. 2.50 2.75 manager, and Iaccepted," says Special Matinees December 23, 24, 26, 27, 30 and 31 at 2:00 p.m. 2:00 2.25 Tom. "When Ifirst came to S.U. I NORTHWEST PREMIERE WEDNESDAY, DEC. 18 was going to be a mechanical engineer,but Iswitched to art in my junior year.Ididn't take my opening night PARTY | DEC. 18 BENEFIT FOR THEATRE NAMF first art class here until Iwas GROUp "I NAMES a sophomore," Tom said. HOLY INFORMATION, CALL I address.. feel my career is somewhere in PARENTS' CLUB KAREN W|LK|E c|Ty _ | ( gTATE Z|p art, but Idon't know where. EA 90610 MA 3 4683 I'm interested in industrial de- I I No. Seats. @ $ Total $ EVE. □ MAT. D j sign and architecture, and I'll I DATE REQ _ __ ALT. DATE 1 2 I probably go on to graduate irilULeONrORATIOM gOX OFFICE school in one of those fields if ,,,. I FOX^H^BBifl | MAIL COUPON WITH CHECK OR MONEY ORDER me," rinil mi kIT I (PAYABLE TO PARAMOUNT THEATRE) WITH SELF I the army doesn't get he HAM ') I1 M I ADDRESSED. STAMPED ENVELOPE TO: PARAMOUNT I smiled. dKdMI INI T N T L 8 0 PtMTIONAL901PINEST-MA3^73 L""lE^°i^.I!l_!" ll^^^i!-J "Iliked drawing cars when I Wednesday, December 11, 1968 4 THE SPECTATOR

Mike O'Leary. an "aggressor" leader, motions his men for- ward.He carries anM-14 rifle,smoke grenades and amachete.

A villager's eye view, from one of the thatched huts, of the invading "Viet Cong" ...actually junior and senior cadets.

Probing cautiously through the thick scrub.Raiders 1 Raiders Take The Raiders, S.U.s Army perclass cadets were split into counterinsurgency twogroups for the weekend field R.O.T.C. problem. The upperclassmen, as training group, spent a cold Viet Cong, were to capture a vil- lage. The Raiders, as Allied O'Leary and William soggy weekend at Fort Raider Bob Thompson confers with"aggressors"Mike Village,learning troops, were to break m and free aggressor force. Lewis' Vietnam it. Douglas before beginning the exercise. Douglas led the of m conditions the art combat place closely resembling those of the The exercise took m the Vietnamesehamlet. bitterest weather possible, with The Raidersand volunteer up- near-freezing temperatures and AT OR Wednesday, December 11, 1968 Wednesday, December 11, 1968 THE SPECTATOR Page Five

Army Staff Sergeant JamesMiller,the Raider advisoi

Mike O'Leary. an "aggressor" leader, motions his men for- On the outskirts of the captured village. Raider commander ward.He carries anM-14 rifle,smoke grenades and amachete. Mike Duneganreceives reports of probing patrols.

Raider Bob Thompson exploresone of themany tunnels that crisscross under the village.

Probing cautiously through the thick scrub. Raiders Mark Rogala, left, andDarrell Wells, setout on apatrol C. Village Raiders i 1 V.a u Take ine The Kaiders, fe.u. s Army perciass caaets were split into uiiuugiiuui two groups night. The cadets used realistic R.O.T.C. counterinsurgency for the weekend field problem. The upperclassmen, as - practice grenades, land mine Photocoverageof theRaider training group,spent a cold Viet Cong, were to capturea vil- simulators, and fired blank M-14 field problemis by Spectator soggy weekend at Fort lage. The Raiders, as Allied and 50 cal. machine gun. am- photoEditorDON CONRARD, troops, to in and munition. a Navy veteran, who donned Lewis' Vietnam Village,learning were break free The 't- raider fieldexercise is an khaki to join theROTC cadets the art of combat in conditions annual event designed to enable the The place in field. It was his second closely resembling those of the exercise took in the the cadets to apply their class- year with the Raiders on their bitterest weather possible, room knowledge in a concrete Vietnamesehamlet. with annual field problem. patrol. The Raiders and volunteer UD- near-freezine temDeratures and situation. Smeared with camouflage paint. Raider KenDobson waited for his Page Six THE SPECTATOR Wednesday, December 11, 1968 Chiefs Hyphenate H-S, 95-79

By KATHI SEDLAK The Chiefs played their best defense of theyear inlast night's The show ran for 40 min- performance. The Cowboy shuf- utes last night.S.U.'s Chiefs fle just couldn't get around the ran H-S right out of the Chieftains'man-to-man and zone Coliseum. They build a 21- defenses. point lead at the half, and The Papooses rolled over the Pacific Lutheran Knights for after that only the clock their fourth straight victory, 108 could stop the Chiefs. to 74. With about five minutes Tom Little was highpoint man gone in the first half, and both for the Chieftains, hitting on 10 teams even, the Papooses got out of 22 shots for 20 points. Lou the call for a zone defense and West and Sam Pierce backed stopped the Knights cold. At the Little's performance with 16 half, the Paps led 53 to 37. points each. Buddy Haines Smooth-shooting Mike Collins scared 26 for the Cowboys. led the team with 25 points. Cen- West topped all rebounders, ter Mark VanAntwerp,still weak carrying off 11 of his own. J. W. from the flu,managed 20 points. Fairman stole the board show Gary Ladd added 15, and was for the Cowboyswith 8 rebounds. charged with goal-tending. The sharp-shooting Chiefs Lenzy Stuart is still wowing maintained their 90+ points per the spectatorswith his court per- game average and hit better formances, and newcomer Bradd than 50% of their field goals. Bever kept the points totaling in The tribe out-rebounded Hardin- the final minutes of the game. Simmons 56 to 39. (Continued on page 8) WHAT, Sam snakes for two. Pierce: "You say ref?" * * " Heres' the waythe roundball criticsmight havesummed up last night's gigantic,in which the Chieftains stunned a good Hardin-Simmons team, 95 to 79. The Chiefs didit all, and more than once. "They're— crowd-pleasers.They shoot sharper than the Sonics." Sam Leatherlung, SeattleBladder. "Lou West should be in the moon program.But when— he goes up, whoknows where this cat will come down?" Hy Peeker, Sky-View Citizen. "Seattle—U. has a magician's act. They sure got a lot fromLittle." SamSlighthand,Big ValleyDaily. "The Chieftainsare abasketball circus.Don'tmiss their act."— BarnumBailey,TacomaBig Top.

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