Serving the Notre Dame- St. Mary's Community Friday, October 15, 1971 HLC resolution vvins vvill go to Hesburgh

by Fred Schaefer The Student Life Council last night voted 16-8 to adopt two parts of its Hall Life Committee report, setting up sanctions for assault, larceny, and the sale or distribution of drugs, and suggesting that the halls be allowed to determine their own parietal hours. The proposal will now go to University President Father Theodore Hesburgh for action. If he takes no action, it will go before the Board of Trustees October 22. The existing rules on parietals will be in effect unt.il the SLC's proposal is approved. The minimum sanctions for assault and larceny will be disciplinary probation for at least one full semester, if the proposal passed. The proposed section on drugs reads: "The selling and or distribution of drugs-the penalty must be no less than suspension from the university for at least one full semester. We recommend that the Dean of Student or the University Board in meting out more than the minimal penalties, should consider a difference in the intrinsic ha.zard Last nights meeting of the SLC potential between marijuana and other narcotics." The committee had considered disciplinary guidelines for the use and possession of drugs, but agreed that rather than disciplinary action, attempts should be made to rehabilitate the individual before any other steps are considered. The committee also reported, "Where drinking and parietal hours are concerned, we believe that no minimum guidelines can be Resolutions. of theSLC recommended because of the very broad spectrum of possible violations of the present rules. Moreover, we believe that there are properly matters to be handled by the hall." They then reminded the halls to"construct rules that are in ac­ cordance with Indiana State Laws."The SLC adopted the committee­ Recommended Disciplinary Guidelines sponsored move to drop that rule number five, concerning parietals, in Under Existing Rules and Judicial Procedures the Student Manual, despite the objections of Dean of Students Rev. James Riehle. C.S.C. Riehle contended "The recommended changes The Notre Dame Community feels that the following offenses seriously are beyond the scope of the committee. They exceeded their respon­ harm it and its members: sibility, and are completely out of order. The changes suggested are 1) Assault too broad for us to consider in one and a half hours." Instead of Rule 2)Larceny Number Five, the SLC adopted a resolution contending that, each hall 3)Selling or· distributing drugs. should be allowed to set the policies it feels are most appropriate to develop and maintain the good order of that hall. These would be Assault and larceny merit no less than disciplinary probation for at subject to approval by a supervisory board (e.g. the Student Life least one full semester. Council, the Student Affairs Committee of the Board of Trustees) The selling and-or distribution of drugs merit no less than suspension which would give approval contingent on that individual hall showing from the University for at least one full semester. maturity, responsibility, and the ability to use this freedom wisely." We recommend that the Dean of Students or the University Board in

Page 2 THE OBSERVER Friday, October 15, 1971 SLC passes hall autononty bill HAPPY BIRTHDAY PAT!

(continued from page 1) (from the rah-rahs in the tower) It continued, "Upon reasonable by, either the hall board or the of the 3-page document saying, evidence of general non com­ dean of Student of the University ''The administration feels that pliance with the hall's stated Board. parietals are a gift to be given to ND THE ROMA SMC policies, the supervisory boards Professor Edward Cronin good students, I feel they are the Pizza - Restaurant- Lounge shall have the authority to im­ objected to the report, contending right of a student." pose restriction or restrict hall "The students of several years University Vice-President and 219 N. Michigan - South Bend privileges.'' ago weren't responsible enough Board of Trustee Phillip J. The one part of the Hall Life in regards to the Honor System. Faccenda said, "I question if the Reasonable Prices Committee's report that was not They really blew the Honor Code. committee has thought through immediately accepted was sent I don't feel that the students are the position. Our present orry outs or Deliveries to your room back to the rules committee. It any more mature now." He also (judicial l system is ridiculous, concerned changes in the existing expr€ssed the fear that with the but this is beyond ridiculous. It judicial procedure. individual hall determining leaves me speechless." He Call 234-3258 (Keep it - use it) That section suggested that a parietals, "There will be 20 rules questioned if hall boards would case would go to the hall judicial for 20 separate halls, and Notre turn violators over to the St. ·-:"'".~ board, in consultation with the Dame will no longer be a com­ Joseph County Sheriff. :\lusic by John ="ichols Open till 4 am Fridays Assistant Dean of Students and munity." SBP John Barkett commented, the rector, instead of going to the Floyd Kezele defended the "I'm satisfied with the way it Dean of Students, as it presently report, saying "We want to bring went. I hope the proposal will be Notre Dame - Saint 1\fa.ry's Theatre would according to the section, it back in to the halls, and make it accepted. The logistical details it presents John Webster's the board would then determine if more of a hall matter." implies can be worked out. Some the case warranted a trial, and SMC representative Missy people's fears will be disproven if who the trial should be handled Underman also spoke in defense the halls are given a chance." THE DUQIESS OF MALFI

WSND FM presents hour O'Laughlin Auditorium October 15 16 21 22 23 8:30 pm sharp. Ticket Reservations, ' ' $2.00.' ' of international culture Students, faculty, ND-SMC staff $1.50. Ticket Lyn Leone There are 351 foreign students office open 4-6 p.m. or call 284-4176. James 0. Sullivan from Lon­ who represent 51 countries from don, England, has announced all 6 continents wh(,) have come to that, beginning this Sunday, Notre Dame, not only to benefit WSND will devote one hour each from American education, but SMC/Last Gasp Cinema Sunday to International Culture. also to give something of their This program will be broad­ customs and traditions to the cast - from 4:30 to 5:30 in the Americans. Presents: afternoon. Sullivan feels that the foreign The purpose of this show, ac­ students are rarely given a -- ..... -- ...... cording to producer Sullivan, is chance to express themselves RIVER PARK twofold: first, to provide an socially, politically, or culturally, ...... Oct. 15 Two Daughters entertainment voice on the Notre and hopes that this weekly radio Dame campus for the students, program will provide a means for A highly praised film by India's international as well as them to do so. finest director, Satayajit Ray. American, and, second, to give "After all", contends Sullivan, the international students an "we must preserve the in­ opportunity to share what they ternational flavor which \las so Oct. 22 Dutchman have to offer to the Americans in long been the hallmark of the the of culture. university system." Le Roi Jones shows America going to MAIN CHURCH hell on a racist subway. SUNDAY MASSES Oct. 29 Yanco Ja ... fonda A Mexican film. A perfectly beautiful 8:30a.m. Fr. Ned Reidy myth of the human spirit. 9:30a.m. Fr. AndrewCiferni, 0. Praem. 10:45 a.m. Fr. ACari Dehne, S.J. · donald 15:15 p.m. Fr. William Toohey, C.S.C. 1uth•rland Nov. 5 The Trial Orson Welles has brilliantly filmed Vespers - Sunday thru Thursday at 7:00p.m. Franz Kafka horrific Labrynth. Showings: 3:30, 7, 9 p.m. Fridays Admission 75c

HOURS: MON • lUES - TliUR - FRI 9 AM.5:30 PM Cultural Arts Connnission WED - SAT 9 AM 12 NOON COMPLETE SPBCTACLE ROGERS SERVICE Popular Fihn Series ALL EYE 011. 'S PRfSCRIPTIONS HONORa: J Optical Call ROG~I .UWnL • QWNER 289-7809 214 so_ Presents MICHIGAN The Fox People & Song CAMPUS FOLK ARTISTS Oct. 14 & 15 Alumni .Hall Lounge This Friday 9:00- 2:00 3rd BIG WEEK 7:30 and 9:30PM Price $1 Refreshments 25c Admission Everyone Welcome Engineering Auditorium

The Observer is published daily during the. college semester except vacations by the students of the University of Notre Dame and St. Patron Cards will be sold in the Dining •.Halls Mary's College. Subscriptions may be purchased for $8 per semester from The Observer, Box Q, Notre Dame, Indiana 46556. Second class postage paid, Notre Dame. Ind. 46556. Thursday and Friday Friday, October 15, 1971 THE OBSERVER Page 3 ----~------~------Army to drop 65,000 officers and men

((') IHil Nl'W York Times Froehlke said that most of those proximately 400 senior grade Sf'rvice. Thf' beginning of fiscal 1972. This N('WS s .. rvic(' to be r£>1eased would be persons officers, mostly majors and --A similar release program was 150,000 more than the op£>rat ing in categories in which lieutenants. covering first-term enlistees with average strength in fiscal 1971 Washington, Oct. 14--The army tlw army is or will be over­ Thf' army announced the GO days or less service remaining. and 56,000 fewer than requested antwunced Thursday that it str£>ngth or who would have been following release procedures: --Involuntary dismissal of by President Nixon for 1972, would release approximately l£>aving the military shortly --Continuation of the early Pnlisted personnel eligible for according to Pentagon officials. 65,000 officers and enlisted men bf.'caus£> of expiration of their r£>1£'as£' program initiated last rPtire1nent who have passed the But cutting 65,000 personnel from active duty by June 30 to lf.'rms of service. n•o11th in which servicemen in the will not automatically bring the comply with a congressional n'andatory attrition point for the P£>ntagon officials said the U.S., Puerto Rico and the Virgin nPxt higher grade. army in line with congressional ordl•r to cut its manpower to r£>duction plans call fur the Islands (including Vietnam mandat«:>. 92,000 for fiscal year 1972. --Release of officers who score r£'leas£> of approximately 36,000 r£>turn£>es) with five months or in th£> lower 10 pPrcentile on ef­ In approving the army's fiscal A Pentagon announcement oy draftef.'s, 24,000 volunteers, 4,000 less s£>rvice remaining are 1972 manpowerbudget, Congress Spcr<'lary of the Army Robert R. fici£>ncy lf'sts. r£>s£'rve officers and ap- Pligibl£> for discharge from the --More difficult reinlistment stipulated that the department's l'Xaminations for non- average 12-month strength not Barkett contends: commissioned officers. exceed 92,000. --Separation of first-term The department's strength Pnlistees and retirement-age July 1 was 1.12 million and its Hesburgh letter untimely officers who have been personnel in August totaled r£>assigned to jobs at military 1,074,431. posts close to their homes This means that manpower Bill Sohn addPd, ."J kept reading, expecting because of pressing family needs. levels in subsequent months intended to accomplish.,. would have to dip well below something new, but it didn't llowever, he suggested that it ThP army's manpower 11 92,000. Student leaders seemed to be come. Also he felt that while woulrl h;lVe been better if the sfrpngth was 1.12 million July 1, g('ll£'rally in doubt as to the the letter might be necessay in letter had been sent to the Alumni nwaning and pupose of Fr. two WPeks, it wasn't yesterday. and Trustees. Tlwodore Hesburgh's letter to the Orlando Rodriguez, Student Ed Motto, H.P.C. Chairman, Ombudsman investigates stud£'nt body. Bodv Vice-President, said he said that he didn't see any Student Body President Hohn considered the letter a good one necessity for the letter. He felt Barkett said that he was not bul: it contained nothing new. He that the letter was open and did Indian Lake coupons sure what fo'ather Hesburgh was also felt, "I don't quite un­ have a good point in that attempting in his letter. He d«:>rstand what the letter was patietals shouldn't be the only The Ombudsman staff has turned up the possibility that topic. However, he also felt that, initiated an investigation into ~he enterprising students fabricated "it only summed up where we Indian Lake Company of the Indian Lake Company, selling CLASSIFIED AIJS are, not where we are going. 11 He Madison, Wisconsin, which sold the coupons and promising a added that the letter should have discount coupon booklets to Notre refund if unused, without ever FOR SALE WANTED been written a month later, after Dame students last fall. intending to make themselves the Trustees had met. The investigation, being available to unsatisfied WANT TO SLIDE IT UP YOUR Need 2 ad iacent general admission conducted by Tony Catino, has customers. HTH'S LEG SATURDAY? BUY A tickets to USC. Call TOM 287-2731. Contacts with stores who GARTER BEFORE GAME FRONT OF BOOKSTORE OR CALL 7891. Any student willing to sell 2 tix to So. placed the coupons in the Cal Game. Call 609.931·0394. Any club, hall or campus discount booklet and with GIANT PILLOWS Collect and person.to.person to Madison's Consumer Relations Great to sit or lie on Frank Hoban. Board have failed to identify ~ ully Washable. Call Jim 8857. Member of SUBWAY Alumni needs 2 organization interested in either the company or the coupon 8 track Player, 35 tapes. All for $125. Owol side by side tickets for NO-USC salesmen. Cilll Pat 1789. and NO NAVY. Call Mr. Kranz Students who didn't use any of collect and person-to-person in entering the design contest for the coupons are eligible for a For Sale: 1 I ic ket to North Carol ina. Sunnyside, Washington, 509-837-6646. Cilll Tom, 287 2731. refund but will not be able to WANTED: collect unless the sponsors are STUDENT RECORD SALES is open 4 So. Cal. Tickets rights to a booth at the M.G. pinned down. now. 6 Navy Tickets s,we on new albums, large stock of 4 LSU Tickets Anyone with constructive in­ latst cuts. rail Tom, 1178. '72 Carnival should contact formation can contact the Om­ 313 Morrissey Hall Open Continually budsman's office in the Student Pt1. 3575. PERSONALS Government Offices at 7638. f lectric typewriter Brand New! All that is 90ld does not glitter ··6791. $125 1331. WE'ekend Parties Tailgate Parties Love you almost as much as MY Pre!]ame Food Sales Avililable: Tickets for remaining MOTHER'S turtle meat. Thanks for Dorn Kile - 1689 immediately home qames. Call 8951 after 5:30. makin9 me smile. KEEP THINGS COOL f-or Sille: Ski boots, Koflach Racing Villarie, 10 1 : M. Call 3313. Why did God make you so beautiful? Quillity 8 track tilpes. Big selection. Blue Ribbon PARTY TIME All only $3.50. if you did not attend the Call 6715. Smile Phanton . Thanks to you, before the world. ICE NUGGETS Prices slashed on all posters to -l1ate Monger r·rduce stocks. Posters that were now on sale at the $1.50now $1.00 1.25. For information To Derszio. meeting held Sun. Oct. 10. rome to 815 Flanner, 611 Grace or 315 It's been one year. Senior Bar Sout11 Reqina or call 1694, 1167, or Happy Anniversary and Birthday! 4258. Love Jimmi

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1966 Valient. 6 cyld., stick, con· Morrissey Loan Fund starting with the So. Cal. grune vertible, $560 or best offer. 233-9787. Basement of La Fortune 11: 15·12: 15. For Sale: 6·band, 17 transitor, new SHARP radio. $60. Call Brian 234- Marshmallow-covered­ 3798. marshmallow, Marshmallow.covered.armor will he held on the Monday before the game. LOST Armor covered armor Armor covered.marshmallow Lost between Bookstore and Armor covered-armor Washington. Pair of raunchy leather Isis Fieldhouse 7-10 P.M. 11loves. Zero. 1927. . ------Will work on Volkswagens 11 years To be eligible Lost: 72 class ring. White Gold and experience reasonable. Call 272-3980 blue stone. Name inscribed in back. or 272.2765 after 4:00P.M. Rewilrd. Call John 232·2725.

Lost: Blue, fleece lined Notre Dame Share a two bedroom apartment one windbreaker between library and mile from campus. Apply in person you must register your chili towers Sat. morning. Reward. 5:30pm at 638 N. St. Louis. Please call Ralph 1557-455 Cav. Free Viviane Woodard make.up WANTED lessons, samples, catalogs, gift wrapping. For appointment call: P!'rson wanted to a very Mary 234·3839. : , \ on the previous Thursday. profitabel business. Earning abilities · : ~ --~---. ---~ ·~' .!i J'·. ~. 1 ilrC unlimited and WE'll above Classified Ads pa.id for in cash when ! I .wcragc. Mclil qualifications to Mr. ordered. 2. Office hours 12:15-5:00. rtf Warren, P.O. Box 503, Malden Mall., Ads in bY 2:00 on day before o-2-14_8_o_r_c_a_II_6_1_7_2-61-19_6_4.Need student tickets for _____ USC and L_p_u-bl-ic_:__t--io_~_·---~~------~------~---..!. ______fueulivt> F.ditor never defend anyone r-r anythmg if they .·\d 'hlllmber 3, 1966 Business 283-'1471 The Triumph

l i ':

Hallelujia. Or as the ad hoc committee might say, halleluhia. The SLC in a session remarkable for its courage, its judgement, and its decisiveness, spoke up for the right of students to deter­ mine their own private lives, and for the right of the SLCr to determine the rules of the University. Because the SLC acted with courage last night, everybody won--- the students who want to live unmolested by remote potentates, the responsible members of you can't kill Beerslayer's spirit this administration, who want the school to be free from useless Trustee interference, and levelheaded sober discussion. In short, it was a triumph for the University as a whole. For this Beerslayer's Last Hurrah University will never function if a board of alien businessmen find it necessary to ride herd on the SLC. We hope the Trustees will keep this in mind October 22. With much\ sorrow I report the following: BORN: North.we.stern Weekend 1970 season It wasn't easy for the SLC to be as strong as it was. It would DIED: Time or'death unknown -- approximate time: in between have been a far more simple thing for the Committee to abdicate Michigan State and Oct. 14 to the Board of Trustees. All they would have had to do was to CAUSE OF DEATH: Martyrdom resulting from the misun­ derstandings and misconceptions of his purpose by fellow s!ude~ts produce some abysmal stupidity like the ad hoc report, bow, and NAME: To some-- "flaming fairy," "a----," or "flaming gaper" sit down. But the Board showed that it valued honesty and good faith more than it valued ease and security. But to the people who knew and loved him: "THE GENTLE AND LOVING BEERSLA YER" Special credit goes to two men who used their experience on the To whom it may concern: Hall Life Committee to reorganize their thought on this whole Upon reappraisal of my position in life, I have come to some of the issue-- Rev. Thomas Chambers and Professor Peter Thornton. following conclusions. The present standard that many members of the student body have assigned to my person is, in my opinion, far Although both men signed their names to the ad hoc committee from the actual purpose that I assign to myself. Beerslayer was absurdity, both men voted for the resolution the SLC finally ac­ created at a time when spirit at Notre Dame was at a low ebb. He was cepted. Professor Thornton was particularly eloquent in arguing born to encourage more than cheering at a football game or pep rally­ he was to represent the meaning behind those cheers. My feeling at the for its passage. time was that many students sang the Fight Song and cheered only It wasn't easy, either, for student opinion to render itself as because the person next to tht:m was domg the same. Beerslayer organized, as dignified, and as disciplined as it did this time sought to out meaning to those cheers. He was not created for an ego trip; he was created with a goal and a purpose. No matter what your around. There are student politicos, past and present, who would feelings about that purpose are, it !s more than can be said for some have used this incident as a launching- place for empty rhetoric people or some activities around here. and meaningless gestures. Let it be noted that this year's student Whiie some may have considered me an a------motivated strictly by government used it as a launching- place for constructive action. exhibitionist egotistical tendencies, I have always believed myself to .'lea clown. Surprisingly as that may be, clowns are human and do have, contrary to popular belief, emotions. . So, what have we learned from this session? Though some of the descriptions of my character may possibly be That the SLC is never going to be blustered out of its usefullness. true- it's essential to recognize the differences between an "a---" and a clown. An a------is one who is a self-centered exhibitionist whose That rational discussion and openness is invariably more ef- purpose is to raise himself to a level of noticeability at the expense of fective than lung calisthentics and verbal napalm. the people around him. A clown is a people-centered person whose only That the University is serious about making this place a good purpose is to make people laugh, smile; in short, feel joy towards themselves and especially the people around them at the expense of place in which to live. himself. We can only hope that the Trustees have learned something In an attempt to hold true to this definition, I often find my own from this, too. We can only hope- and wait- and play it as it lays. emotional makeup overcome by the ultimate desire to express humor. Unforturately, this seems to be not only m~ streng~h but e~l.so my weakness. Humor did, indeed, control my actions durmg halftime of the Michigan State game. I realize now that instead of bringing humor game anymore, but us. The look RODY. We are not objects, but to many, in fact, I defeated my own purpose by disr~pting the band. At in their eyes isn't that of friPn­ people like you, too.!?! I am not a this time I'd like to apologize for this unfortunate InCident. But more Editor: dliness either, more like that of a women.'s libber either, just a importantly, I wish to apologize for the detriment to the one thing that dog that hasn't eaten for a month. normal Saint Mary's chic- (yes , brought me here to ND, and that I have existed for, namely: the Notre This letter is a desperate at­ A shout from above comes, "Send one of those). So please , just tempt to convince you of the leave me ALONE- and watch the Dame Spirit. I now realize that when one begins to destroy the one 'em up! So I yelled back, "Send thing he loves -- it's time to quit. danger involved in passing girls who up?" BeforP I knew it I was game and keep your hands to up the stadium stands. I am yourself. On my deathbed I make only two small appeals: on my way up. First: that those who knew and loved me will at times look back speaking from experience. I've Everyone started yelling never had a fear before of going on the happiermomentsand think about the laughter and smiles I "Over the wall, over the wall!" in Gratefully yours, brought to them. to a football game until just this sheer madness. I have no fear of Prudence Purebody year. Second: to those who I may have insulted by my questionable going over the wall-rather in activities, I ask only one thing: forgiveness My plight is shared by at least getting there. I do NOT consider 15 other Saint Mary's girls who At this time, I'd like to will my relics to those people that have mysplf a human football to be created and destroyed me: I will my have "been around". We sit in a passed around. As I found out, row near the field, or should I 1. Red, white and blue rally sneakers to my roommate to whom many "men" didn't think of me they always belonged. say, "the passing zone". We are as a football either. So listen, ND sandwiched in by two rows of ND 2. Red leotards toG-Man-- may he put them on and break his own "men", if you want it, that is NO "God .... damn legs." "men". WAY to get it. I realize that the Towards the end of the fourth 3. Mask to those people who hide behind themselves and can't ratio is not exactly perfect. But respect those who are willing to be themselves. quarter, we find that these please don't take your "men" are not watching the frnt:•r~t;nn~ nnt nn moP nr hv 4. Finally my cape-- I will this most cherished remains to all those Headlines: T C Treanor, Jack Frischkorn who can always love a clown. Managing Editor: Don Ruane Special thanks to Beerslayeress who stayed by my side in my hour of News Editor: John Abowd Layout: Glen Corso, Jack Frischkorn . . Controllors-of-the-Knight: Helen Smudski, fran fmnegan need. SMC Editor: Ann Conway Good-bye Notre Dame! Features Editor: rick smith I'm off to join the circus, Sports-of-Sorts Editor: Jim Donaldson Night Editor: Marty Miller BEERSLAYER --l

Friday, October 15, 1971 THE OBSERVER. .,ages i 1 I poco & 'I iv'- versatile -Show Times- 1:45 3:45 5:45 7:45 and 9:45 innovation & confusion During the past decade, pop music has ex­ which obviously stems from <•ndless practice perienced temporary aches, then outgrown and good feelings within the combo. numerous fads and passing fantasies. America's "The band seems to be the natural heir to the ears have been bombarded by a multitude of fusions originality, diversity, and togetherness which ccrhe of various idioms with rock: folk-rock, psychedelic­ marked the beginnings of the Byrds and the Buffalo rock, blues-rock, soul-rock, jazz-rock, classical­ Springfield, Southern California's two best folk­ oteHliitdesses rock, and country-rock. rooted rock groups so far." Poco was one of the innovators of the country­ STEREOVISION rock movement. But their versatility and creativity prohibit them from being branded country-rock and Livingston Taylor is like sunshine trying to in· fading with the trend. They are a highly competent trude into a permanently rainy day. He doesn't quintet, too diversified to adhere to the limitations really belong, but he persuades his environment to adopted by the multitude of artists who jump on the accept him with his persistent warmth and ef­ bandwagon and ride with it outside the boundaries fervescence. He possesses a naive child-like quality of what's fashionable. with which he builds mythical castles in the air and Poco music has expanded to incorporate intricate then devours them with logic. Latin rhythms, plaintive blues renditions, ex­ 'Liv' Taylor is balatantly honest and honestly perimental techniques, prismatic and contrapuntal confused. He is super tension, Scorpio, extremely harmonies, and sophisticated phrasings and lyrics. talented and, at 19, the second youngest in a family New York music critic, AI Rudis, on Poco: of three brothers and one sister. All the family are "Poco's music, no matter what they may think, into music and brother James Taylor has already isn't country. Poco is too original to fit into the established the family name within the popular country bag. It has the country flavor, of course, music field. Father Taylor is Dean of the Medical but seasonings don't make a meal." School of the University of North Carolina. . .A Another critic confirms this opinion: "Poco simple observation, typical of Liv, reflects his seemed to have been a trend setter in adopting family in the lyrics of an early composition entitled country rock, but they and it were only passing 'Carolina Day' following here: through a phase. "What Poco is doing now, just as what C.S.N.Y. etc. is doing, what John Sebastian and Laura Nyro and a dozen others are doing now, Alex and Brent are loving their child isn't really rock. It isn't folk or showtunes ·t•ither. James is becoming a star "Poco and lots of others are headed off in a new Kate's laughing all the time direction that we can call good music, for lack of a And my brother Hugh's out wrecking the car better workd." My mother smiles thinking isn't it fine Poco music is created by Richie Furay on twelve­ That her children love again string guitar, Paul Cotten on electric guitar, Rusty Louis my best friend Young on pedal steel guitar, George Grantham on Falls on by THE UNPUBLISHABLE NOVEL.~ II We're all together again I. II I: drums and Tim Schmit on bass. They all as vocalists and composers. will IS NOWAMERICA'S MOS~', 1 . '( As an artist 'Liv' succeed because he has all Pete .Johnson, L.A. Times reviewer, says: the finer qualities that build understanding. He's CONTROVERSIAL FILM! RATED I· "All are capable musicians, and the singing hungry for knowledge, he works to communicate EASTMANCOLOR I X combinations are terrific. he has a'!lbition, humor, energy and exceptionai WITH . I . The high, flexible voices melt together in delightful t?lent. His songs reflect all these qualities with a CHRISTINA HART • MICHAEL GARRETT ~ ._.:...;. l: EXECUTIVE PRODUCER WRITTEN AND DIRECTED BY harmonies and separate for stron~-s~lfl~\- _ Simple awareness. LOUIS K. S' • ALF SILLIMAN JR.- ~~R ~ "Poco is also one of the tightest ·k·h .. • • iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiliiiili~g~r~o~u~ps·I~h~a~v~e~s~ejenj;ljcoioi'd;nat;nn i we're on time if you are HOMECOMING The concert-goer at t'Ootre Dame is infamously t e late. To those of you who do not fit under this 1 stereotype, a big "Thank You" is extended from those who run the concerts. But to those of you who

KICKOFF PARTY i!l do comprise this stereotype, please read on. fl When a starting time of 8:30 is announced for a Friday Oct 15 9pm -1 am South Bend Armory concert, all preparations are geared towards being ready at that moment. Rarely is a group not ready 0 to go on at the proper time and rarely is there an $5° petw couple tickets at door I y e\ equipment failure that necessitates delaying the show. The holdups are almost always caused by the music by rows of empty seats which designate the latecomers. No act wants to perform while a large FRIENDS,BROTHERS,AND STRANGERS . segment of the audience is still enroute to the r s concert, or while people are trying to locate their seats in the dark. Some performers (Livingston REFRESHMENTS PROVIDED I ~~ ·*g Taylor, for example) put a special clause in their special busses will leave the ND circle at 8:30, 9:00 and 9:30. Five minutes later from St. Mary's. 1 ni -g ~"' ~ contract the "protects" them from playing until the I "'.jl ru::i:"' audience is seated. Most acts ask the Concert ------"' 0 .,~ ~C~;t:: o.-:x:: ..a Chairman on the night of the show to postpone the >1/)- ..a starting time until the majority are seatted. Often ;;:~10~~R this results in long delays. E::i:r-- -~ .. Angela '0 .. ,....ti ~ It is easy to see where the solulution lies. Don't ND

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Friday, October 15, 1971 6 THE OBSERVER Nixon sends out warning increase in North Vietnamese by B£>rnard Gwertzman 1rilitary and economic assistance "aggressive action." in the current fiscal year and to (('I I!lil New York Times News The State Department, reac­ St••·vice allow no more than 200 ting to the committee's actions, A1Pericans to serve in Cambodia. released to newsmen the full text Washington, Oct. It -- The In addition, the committee voted of a letter by Undersecretary of to limit to 50 the number of Third­ Nixon administration, seeking to State John N. Irwin 2nd to head off a congressional limit on Country Nationals who could be committee chairman J. William paid from American funds. American assistance to Cam­ Fulbright. The letter said that bodia warned Thursday that the The Cambodian limitations those limits could "seriously were attached as amendments to ceiling approved by the S~nate threaten the capacity of the !<'oreign Relations Committee the Foreign Aid Bill, which still government of the Khmer ll'USt go before the full Senate. Wednesday could weaken Republic to defend itself." Cambodian resolve and lead to an The administration had The letter was sent to the originally asked some $341 committee Wednesday before it n'illion in aid appropriations for on campus voted to put an absolute limit of Cambodia-- about $200 million of $250 million on all United States it in military assistance. friday 3:30,7:00,9:00 film - two daughters, carroll Rubin: hard dope no good hall, madeleva friday 7:00, meeting - (continued from page 1) Rubin said that America is one international students, Rubin then turned to drugs big downer and that one must clubhouse. saying, "The most serious threat remember that the country is to the "revolution" is heroin. The based on Genocide. He reminded friday 7:30, 9:30, film- the Pigs are pumping as much heroin fox, engineering us that Cardinal Spellman as possible into our communities. designed the war in Vietnam. auditiorium. The people who peddle heroin are He finished saying that if we friday 8:30 drama - the policemen. Richard Nixon is the want to defeat Nixon we have to duchess of malfi, biggest dope pusher in the get back into the streets. "The o'laughlin auditorium. World." important thing is political ac­ friday 9:00, party - He also intimated that the tion." production of heroin was homecoming kickoff inexorably involved in our Asian party, south bend ar­ foreigh policy. "Communism or mory. heroin, that is the issue. We're saturday 1:30, football - over there to protect heroin. I'd notre dame vs. north choose Communism any day." carolina. In some concluding remarks saturday 7:30, 9:30, film­ the fox, engineering auditorium. saturday 8:30, drama -the duchess of malfi, o'laughlin auditorium. saturday 8:30, clJncert - poco and livingston taylor, ace. today

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Friday, October 15, 1971 THE OBSERVER Page 7 Briles blanks O's; Bucs lead 3-2 by Joe Durso baseball history. If the Pirates Wednesday, they made only four, He also was supposed to start the In the fifth, Clines led with a ((') l!lil New York Times take it then, they will become the with and Dave third playoff game against San over Blair's head in center News !'lervice first team ever to lose the first Giusti overpowering them in Francisco Giants last Tuesday, field and, on the next pitch, Pittsburgh, Oct. 14; Nelson two games of a series and then l'ight innings of relief; and but strained a leg muscle while Clemente ripped a single through Briles pitched the Pittsburgh score a sweep in the next four. Thursday afternoon, they netted warming up and was scratched, the mound for a 4-0 lead. Pirates to their third straight They moved into this com­ two singles. For three games, the so when he went to work Thur­ O's totaled eight singles and one sday afternoon, he was ranked It was the ninth for the 37- victory over the Baltimore manding position with the one year-old Puerto Rican, who Orioles Thursday with a stun­ ingredient they supposedly . the fifth or sixth starter on a team In fact, for three games in with five or startters, none batted .341 in his 17th season with ning two-hitter that put the lacked as they won two con­ the Pirates this summer, and it Pirates one game away from secutive East Pittsburgh, the Orioles were eminent. powerless and they were the only But two hours and 16 minutes was the 12th consecutive World winning the 68th . pennants: pitching. And they did Series game in which he had hit, The score was 4-0, and in any it Thursday at the expense of three games they have lost in later, the right-hander was pre­ almost a month. They were eminent in a town that has been going back to 1960. The Series language it was a personal Dave MeN ally, one of the four 20- record for hits is 13 by Bobby triumph for Briles. A 28-year old game winners on a Baltimore checked by Mickey Lolich of the thirsting for a world Series title Detroit Tigers on Sept. 8, then since the Pirates defeated the Richardson of the and Lou Brock linguist from Santa Clara staff that supposedly had pit­ othe Cardinals, and for hits in University. He faced only 29 ching to spare. won 16 straight before en­ in 1960. countering the Pirates' pitching He retired five batters at the consecutive. games it's 17 by • hatters--two more than the But in the three games in Three Hank Bauer of the Yankees. minimum--and allowed only two Rivers Stadium, it was Pitt­ staff, whose demise apparently start, then gave up a single to singles and two walks, and no sburgh pitching that tumbled the had been exaggerated. Brooks Robinson. He retired Clemente's single also knocked Oriole got past first base. Orioles, the three-time American "I'm sitting here," said Earl seven more, then walked Elrod McNally out of the game in favor The action now switches to League champions who were 2-to- Weaver, the of the Hendricks, who immediately was of Dave Leonard. Baltimore, where the sixth game 1 favorites to repeat in the series. Orioles," and I'm watching wiped out in a double play. He Things were going so poorly will be played Saturday with On Tuesday, the Orioles made Pittsburgh play the kind of ball got the next five, then Boog for the Orioles that they even lost Pittsburgh one step from only three hits off ; we played all year." Powell singled and was knocked the only argument of the game. "I'm not surprised," said off in a double play. He retired Hernandez took a pitch to the , the manager of five more, walked Don Buford in hand from Tom Dukes in the the Pirates, trying to keep a the ninth and then got Paul Blair sixth and Weaver argued straight face. "After all, it's the on a grounder to end the game. that the ball had struck the bat. GRAND OPENING same pitching that we had while The Pirates, meanwhile, went But even that contest went winning the National League to work early on McNally, who against the Birds on an af­ ,~.. pennant." had four full days of rest since ternooon when everything also "It's been a long two years for beating then in the opener went against them, too. By the .. me," said Briles, who was traded Saturday. -- ~ end of the ninth, the Orioles had • ,,- to Pittsburgh by St. Loiuis after Robertson,who hit 26 home SKI YAMAHA~· gone 17 innings without 1 Ever ~ he had won only six games for the runs before Aug. 25 and then scoring. They rushed to a 3-0 lead Sign up now Cardinals in 1970. "This one none until the playoff, bombed in the first inning Wednesday for our 'wonder' meant the most to me, and the the first pitch of the second inning night but after that fell silent. 1 key to it was my ability to throw 400 feet to center field and it was Grand Opt'ning Drawing what ' Worse, their pitchers stopped I k•• \ most of my pitches over the plate 1-0, Pittsburgh. pitching and their fielders often on 1 s ung 1 consistently.'' Manny Sanguillen followed stopped fielding. Oct. 30 Briles, who won only eight with a single to center, then stole They were left with the strange 1 1 second base while Jose Pagan is all games for Pittsburgh this season consolation that the series was and who pitched only four was striking out. He waited there returning to Baltimore, and so Valuable Ski Equipment completed games, had plenty of while Jack Hernandez was Will Bt' Gh·t'n Away as : about? : far the home team has won every Yamaha will pay ycur liut day'' rental I help today before 51,377 cheering striking out, and scored on a Prizt's I game. But even their own I of skis and palet to ~I.' you start~td I fans. single to center by Briles, who hit llt>rr·s ;