Vol. LV, 'No. 17 , WASHINGTON, D.C. Friday, February 18, 1972 ' Sigholtz Resigns Under Fire, Reinzo Acting Sports Director by Bob Hayes The Board, according to Fr. not preclude the possibility of your News Editor Henle, did not recognize certain being an active candidate for the Col. Robert H. Sigholtz resigned elements of the problem. Dr. Roger position of athletic director." yesterday as athletic director of Teller, chairman of the Athletic 'Fr. Henle hopes that Rienzo's Georgetown University. George­ Board, refused comment on the appointment will mark a "new town President, the Rev. R.J. decision. Henle, S.J., immediately appointed starting point" for Georgetown's Fr. Henle stated that this was athletics. Citing Rienzo's work with head track coach Frank Rienzo the most agonizing personnel deci­ acting athletic director. the track team, Fr. Henle believes sion he has made at Georgetown: that Rienzo is capable of "project­ Sigholtz's reSignation is effective "It was a difficult decision. We March 15, when Rienzo will take ing what we really want with our were dealing with a good man. athletics. " charge. While acting athletic direc­ Perhaps _we expected more from tor, Rienzo will continue as head Rienzo's first goal, 'according to him than, he could possibly pro­ Fr. Henle, will be "building up a track coach. duce." By requesting Sigholtz's resigna­ Fr. Henle criticized the newspa­ (Continued on Page 15) Col. R?bert H. Sigholtz, Georgetown athletic director, resigned yesterday tion, Fr. Henle rejected the advice per attacks on Sigholtz, insisting Ad followmg a month of controversy and conflict in McDonough of the Athletic Board which recom· that he is "not yielding to the ministration I Gymnasium. mended that Sigholtz be retained. pressures of the press." '.'1. tentatively came to this Renorts Gains Elections Next Friday deCISIon at least two weeks ago," r Fr. Henle said.' F M ' In a letter to Acting Athletic. ro m arty s Director Rienzo, Fr. Henle stated, . Campaigns Officially Open "I believe you have the ability and . Eldo~ Hale, assls~a?t t<;> the attitude to provide the necessary vl~e-presldent for admmlstratlv~ af­ by Ken Koenig those supporters of Emilio's posi- sent the student in a conflict with leadership for our Athletic Depart- f~lrs and a ~emb~r of the Umv.er­ Assistant News Editor tion will take a close look at what the administration. ment at these trying times." Slty, Food CommIttee,. has. demed The field of candidates for I'm saying." "My attitude is that a lot would The letter continues, "Although reports that the. Umversll!' has undergraduate student body presi- Kennedy, also a student senator, have to depend on the issue," your title will be acting director, absorb~d sUbstantl~1 losses In the dent widened to six by last' night's feels that Jaksetic's w~thdrawal Kennedy answered. "I honestly you will have the complete author- operatIOn of Marty s on the Poto­ filing deadline. Dan Kerrigan (SFS from the race will not affect his can't see an issue important enough ity over the total athletic program mac. :73) and John B. -Kennedy (ColI. campaig~. "I would ~a~ that Dan for a strike or a big confrontation. at the University." Hale, referring to a story pub li- 73), two candidates who have been and I WIll be very SImIlar in our Confrontation got us the task force, Fr. Henle also pointed out in his shed in the latest issue of The campaigning for several weeks are platforms, however." which should have been a really letter to Rienzo that the "accept- Voice, termed the story "totally generally considered to be' the Both Kerrigan and' Kennedy (Continued on Page 9) ance 0 f t h is trying assignment does wrong." strongest contenders, however. stated that they will observe the "The $19,000 lost by Marty's Besides Kerrigan and Kennedy, over the last six months has cost the official list includes Antonio For official list of all candidates, the University nothing," Hale Freyre (SBA '74) and Dan Brophy see Page 9 COIllDlittee Com.pletes stated. "The loss was totally ab­ . (SBA '74), Peter McNUlty (SBA -----______sorbed by Macke; Macke pays all ','73) and Al Ramos (SFS '74), B.J. $250 spending limit imposed by the the expenses. ) Rama (SBA '73) and V.D. Murray election committee. "I think $250 New SFS CurriculuDl "The University gets 6.5 percent .1 !Coll. '73) and John Soroka (SFS is a good boundary," Kennedy of the gross sales in Marty's and has " 73) and Bob Blancato (Coli. '73). offered. "The race will be won on by Tim Brown Political Systems second semester. made $5,530 over the last six \ A previously-announced candi- the corridors and you don't need to A newly revised curriculum for American Political Systems will months. The University, not Macke, i date, Emilio Jaksetic (ColI. '73), spend more to reach people there." the School of Foreign Service will involve various approaches to gov­ stands to lose nothing." 'j Kerrigan declared that despite be finalized next week when the ernment studies including an an­ John Bengiovi, food services rumors of his financial status, he curriculum committee meets to alysis of governmental structure, an manager, also denied the report. "I and running mate Steve Smith approve the proposed course of American Constitution course and a thought we made it clear at the last meeting that we, not the Univer­ (Coll.'73) will not spend anything stUdies. . . . study of pressure groups in govern­ near the limit set by the election . The academIc. commIttee WIll ment. With these options, American sity, are absorbing the loss." commission. distribute copies of the revised Political Systems promises to be Mike B1atty (ColI. '74), a food Kennedy, along with running curriculum next week with an more than the "high school civics" committee member, insists that the mate Pat Grant (Coll.'73), indJcated opinion poll to gauge student course many feared it would be. story was innacurate in reporting that they are interested in a debate reaction to the. proposed revision~. Two semesters of Principles of his remarks to the committee. "I told the committee that in among the candidates. Kerrigan, Bruce !'lagld" SFS ~cademlc Economics will be required. Four when questioned about such a representatIve, has emphasIzed that semesters of math is being offered my opinion further advertisement possiblity, said that he would be the stude.nt poll should ~e a means as a sixth course for interested and slashing of beer prices would willing to debate, but only if all the fLOUG-HM~~"'S L.b~(,H. Happily, this is all changing as the rapidly increasing SUITE 1690 influence of "consumerism" and Nader's Raiders are being WASHINGTON, D.C. 20015 felt. After nearly one hundred years, America i~ finally Telephone 656-5770 beginning to realize that all that carr~es a big price ta~ is . not a bargain. THB BOYA Page Thref S.M.C. Recruits Low_ !Activism 'Out' at GeorgetowL by Larry Peters International Student Movement "Basically there is nothing hap- for the U.N. and Senator Walter pening on campus and I wanted an Mondale of Minnesota. Roger Coch· alternative for this," remarked Ann etti, Georgetown's undergraduate Godilyne (SFS '75) who decided to student body president, has also buck the current Georgetown trend endorsed the conference. toward political non-involvement Further endorsements are and work for the 8tudent MobiIiza· needed from every professor and tion Committee to End the War in campus group, Segal continued. He Southeast Asia. hopes to be able to enlist the aid of An 8.M.C: fact sheet states Miss many from Georgetown, although Godilyne's alternative: "We fight the students in the past have "not for the immediate and uncondi- been very active." In fact there tional withdrawal of all United were only about 10 volunteers from 8tates troops and bombers from Georgetown at the 8.M.C. demon· Southeast Asia, for abolition of the stration last Nov. 6, in Washington. draft and against all forms of campus complicity with the war. Georgetown's Apathy We support self-determination for' According to Pat Sprouls tionary Vietnam and Third World America (CoIl. 75), . there "was hardly any designed to make and constitutional rights for G.L's representatlO~ [on Nov. 6] from" American style." Frs. Davis (left) and Bradley junketed through Europe last month to and high school students." Georgetown. In fact~ some stu· According to Jeremy Rifkin, (; study the "Georgetown Abroad" program. (Photos by Moses Albert) The basic "strategy" of the dents seeme~, to re~ent It. He added coordinator of the commission, thE' S.M.C. is to create massive demon- that he was surprIsed th~t ~ost of purpose of "today's revolution will strations which will bring "millions the peopl~ who s~ared ~n I~, were be one in search of new humar. of Americans into the streets freshmen, but. he IS ho~mg" for a values and new institutional struc- Dean Davis Plans for against the war." better response m the s~rn~g. tures. It will bring together largt: The latest activity of the 8.M.C. Although a great maJonty of the ., · 't' t d t . th sectors of the Amencan populatlOr. revolves around the National Stu- Umversl y s s u en s are agams t e did . .., , V' t (b t 75 t aroun common goa s an asplra- 'Georgetown Abroad' dent Anti-War Con).erence to be war m Ie nam a ou percen '1' " held in New York City Feb. 25·27. estimates the Rev. Richard McSor- 10nTs, C .., g I . "th~ . he ommlSSlon s oa IS <- by Daniel Hogan who had returned from study in According to David Segal, head of ley, S.J., assistant pr<:>fessor C?f reinforcing of the revolutionary A visit to European colleges and Europe in past years. During the the George Washington University theology). only . . .a few are h mvolved b In b e I'Ie f s b ecause)'t prov)'d es co n universities involved in the George­ visits, F rs. Bradley and Davis t alk e d branch of the 8.M.C_, the purpose of anti-war activIties. Anot. er mem er t"tmUI y WI'th th e h en-t a geo, f th<> town Abroad program confirmed to stud ents about G eorgetown and the conference will be "to inter- 0 f the S. M ..,C C hns Thompson t Th' -d t'f' t' - , . thO (C II '75) b ". I d" b pas. IS 1 en I Ica Ion IS necessary favorable reports received from recent campus even t s m IS coun- change ideas" on the course of o. , ecame mvo ve e- h f f' " t' g t to create an atmosp ere 0 con) students participating' in the pro­ t ry. activities the student movement cause h,e wa~ t .e d cer am se men ,~ dence among the people in theil gram, two University administrators The European itinerary included should take in the planned April 22 of public opmlOn to be expressed., ability to shape the future, te. said this week. Georgetown at Fribourg, Switzer- demonstration in Washington. The movement, however, has explore and enter unfamiliar area, The visit, which took place over land; les Facultes Catholiques de In addition, the meeting will never developed at Georgetown of experience" states a prepared Christmas vacation, involved the Lille in Lille, France; the Institute feature tt~ach-ins to educate people "because some people here tend to Ie' Rev. Harold Bradley, S.J., director for American Universities at Aix-en- on the anti-war movement and on be , occupationally .orient:d.. an~ re ~~rkin believes that the bi-cen, of international studies at George­ Provence, France; Loyola Uni- the military and political situation don t look for .outside actIVIties, tennial celebration of the U.S. is a town, and College Dean the Rev. versity in Rome, Italy; the Uni- in Indo-China. Thomps~n ..belleves_ Others are "big-business saturated propaganda Royden B. Davis, S'.J. Both agreed versity of London, and the London 8egal believes that the most wary of JOInIng movements such as campaign" which has been created that the trip was "very successful," School of Economics. In addition, important objective at present is to the S.~.C. "for fear of the F.B.I.," to recapture confidence in industry giving them a chance to visit with the two administrators gathered obtain as many endorsements as acco~dmg to. Thompson. , . and government. The P.R.B.C_, on most of the approximately 65 information about programs at the possible for the conference. This DIane Hillman (SFS 75) attn- the other hand wants to reveal thE­ Georgetown students attending University of Liverpool in England will not only add validity to the ~utes Georgetown's ~onparticip~- truths concer:.ing the struggles foreign schools this year and to see and Trinity College of Dublin, meeting for the country, but for tIon to t?e fact ~hat It seems as If every individual encounters because first hand the academic facilities Ireland. the endorsers' constituents as well. people. on thIS campus ~er~ of big business. The People's Revo- used by the students. Expanded Georgetown Abroad Among those who have sanc- apathetIC about the whole thmg. lutionary Bi.Centennial Commis- The visit confirmed most of the Fr. Davis and Bradley noted that tioned the N.S.A.C. are the Na- ~he noted that there was n~ gr0.up sion also hopes to rekindle the favorable reports from students (Continued on Page 13) tional Youth for McGovern, the hk: the S.M.C." at the Umverslty revolutionary "spirit of 1776" in mamly b~cause some stude~ts are order to challenge existing laws and co~servatJve and" th~ 8.M.C. IS too bring about fundamental changes in radical for them., . such things as taxes, ecology and So~e st~dents hav~ s~own m- national health. terest I~ antI-war orgamzatlOns,. but College campuses will be a for van?~s reasons they decl,ded source of volunteers who are versed not to Jom. Paul Ochs (ColI.. 72) in theater, music and radical Ameri­ sta~d that he. has str~ng ~actlons can history. These recruits will face agamst the VI:tnam SItuatIon and the responsibility of informing D.C. that he had believed the S.M.C. ~as tourists of the "real truths" of a group that was "really domg A . something." After investigating the merlca .. committee, however, Ochs realized SCience for the People that it is not just a peace group "Science For The People" is a due to the fact that it wanted rather small organization mainly spontaneous world wide action. composed of scientists and engi­ "Such an organization could not be neers which is attempting to estab­ effective for doing anything," he !ish a foothold at Georgetown. concluded. This group was formed about. three years ago when some scien­ People's Revolutionary tists felt that no individuals were Bi·Centennial Commission agitating effectively. David West­ Other peace-seeking campaigns man, a member of S.F.T.P., stated besides the 8.M.C. are anxious to that its main resolve is to "explain recruit Georgetown volunteers. One the what and why of science." of these is the People's Revolu- (Continued on Page 16)

'"11?RMPA~S UNLlM)rel) 656' '5770 fOoucAnaNAl. RegfARC~ )NC TJ.,A.

Despite the avalanche of radical literature on college campuses, Georgetown students remain aloof from political activism. (Photo by Larry Peters) Page Four THE HOrA. -Friday, Fe~ruary,18, 1972 Editorials Francis X. Rienzo Once again newly-appointed Acting Ath­ committee small, but plans on including letic Director Frank Rienzo is faced with the studen t, faculty, administration and alumni task of rebuilding a shattered organization. representation on it. A "sense of urgency" That the athletic program was allowed to will be communicated to the search com-' crumble to its present state is a crime; that mittee by Fr. Henle. the University Administration is finally Highly impressed with Coach Rienzo's responding to this crisis is laudable. performances as track mentor, Fr. Henle The handwriting has been on the wall for stated that it would be "swell with me" if the Dr. Sigholtz for' some time now. It was search committee were to reccommend the inevitable that he would quickly follow Coach retention of Rienzo as athletic director. Fr. Magee down the lonely road of resignation. Henle quipped though, "I'd hate to lose a The achievements of Sigh6ltz are significant, good track coach." but ·the deterioration in morale of the entire Is there an alternative to this if the Athletic Department is a serious indictment committee would approve Rienzo? Further, is against him. it not understandable that Rienzo would be Fr. Henle has chosen well in appointing reluctant to sacrifice a brilliant career in track Frank Rienzo to McDonough's top post. As to move into athletic administration? What is 'REBUIL~'NG ASAII\t--?~- Fr. Henle himself said, "Coach Rienzo is obvious is that Georgetown needs someone of .-______universally respected. He seems an extraordin­ ,Rienzo's abilities if it is ever to escape the R arily good choice in the opinion of all the self-perpetuating mediocrity currently ostrum people. " plaguing McDonough. Yet this respect is not unwarranted. Fr. Henle is aware that it is not without Expressions such as "high moral character," precedent for an athletic director to also This past Sunday the undergraduate student senate, "influential in developing young men" and a coach a team. It would be impossible, though, acting upon the recommendations of the President's "strong, responsive leader," abound when the for any single individual to hold down both Commission on the Fiscal Year 1973 Bud'gets, appro­ name Rienzo is mentioned. An attitude of positions for any length of time at George­ priated funds to the various student activities. The respect, perhaps mingled with a little fear, town. An adequate staff of assistants, members of this committee spent well over 30 hours in strangely results in a sense of intimacy however, might persuade Rienzo to continue session listening to organizations justify their budgets, yet between Rienzo and his track teams. , both tasks. The Voice in their last issue intimated that the decisions We are confident. then, that Coach Rienzo We urge the search committee to promptly were hastily made and ill-considered. is more than qualified to bring Georgetown review all applications for athletic director, The Student Activities were given $186,935.00 for athletics up from this point of crisis. But what while keeping close watch on Coach Rienzo's fiscal year 1973. (Not $207,000.00 as reported in The of the future? work as acting athletic director. Voice.) This was an increase of only $9,485.00 over this Fr. Henle IS forming a "small but We doubt that the committee will have to present fiscal year. Further, within the confines of the represen tative committee," to search for a go further than its own backyard to find the money allocated by the University, we were expected to new athletic director. He will keep the most qualified candidate. discriminate between the value and needs of 52 viable, interesting and worthy organizations requesting $268,874.00 in toto. This was $81,939.00 more than we Why Not Vote? had available to appropriate. One of the greatest ironies that a campus mayor may not have all of the distasteful Looking at the larger and more controversial budgets journalist perceives in his frequent role of faults ~entioned above, but it does make a we find few surprises. The HOY A, whose request was fully medium between students and student difference. It spends and appropriates your itemized and presented in great detail, was granted their government, is the phenomenon of a sizeable money (next year to the tune of over request (which was smaller than their granted budget for majority of students being totally convinced $186,000.) More importantly, its elected this year). The Voice requested $16,250.00 and predicted of the uselessness of student government. officials, or their appointees, are posed to the that $5,000.00 in revenues would be brought in. The It spends too much money. It accom­ University administration as "representa­ commission felt that a $7,000.00 income figure would be plishes nothing. It's too bureaucratic and tives." If it is widely felt--or known--that more accurate (compared to $10,000.00 anticipated interested in its own self-preservation. And so student government does not in fact represent income for .)No other cuts were made on The on ad infinitum. Some of the more emotional student opinion, any power or influence that Voice's budget. and/or profound observations on student students do have is easily undermined. Ye Domesday Booke received the same amount as fiscal government, while they would prove Hence, not to vote is a mistake, because, year 1972. Three Sister's magazine received substantially instructive, are unprintable. Much of which, like it or not, student government exists and the same budget as fiscal year 1972. WGTB-FM saw their to a certain extent, might be true in a it does make a difference on campus. While $36,065.00 request (vs. $21,058.00 for this year) cut paradoxical way, even though some of the the individual student may feel it to be his substantially because of two reasons: 1) they requested complaints appear at first glance to be own form of protest, all that a f.ailure to vote over $10,000.00 for stereo equipment that was granted for contradictory. really accomplishes is to perpetuate student this year and 2) $7,500.00 for travel and entertainment One might make the observation that this government as we have known it under the was considered a luxury in an austerity year. Therefore, is no different from the situation "in the real wing of the universally despised politicos. they were granted $18,665.00. world." Unfortunately, however, the problem In the end, the failure to vote next Friday The performing aris organizations were either granted is more acute on our campus, because the will merely passively allow a marginally-elect­ an increase or at least maintained at their fiscal year 1972 disenchanted student operates under the ed student government to preside over a budget levels. The same is true for the various language misconception that student government vacuum, totally out of touch with its clubs. Of the other organizations seeking funding only four. makes no difference. He is, therefore, more constitutency and much like the Pope were controversial. Banneker/Lack is suffering from a inclined to ignore the entire election process considering the merits of the Friday fast while leadership problem, with no one to run the program next' than the average adult voter. the rest of the world contemplates the death year. Becaus_e of this no budget was granted. The Hot And this is wrong. Student government of God. Line's,request for $2,560.00 was substantially altered due to a note from Fr. Judge explaining that the $1,000.00 in salaries that was requested was unneeded. On the basis, of this and other "fat" areas, the 'budget was reduced to $1,135.00. The Black Student Alliance requested $11,465.00 for Established January 14, 1920 fiscal year 1973. On the basis of three major considerations this budget was reduced to $3,800.00 (vs. THE BOARD OF EDITORS $3,300.00 for this year). They are: 1) an expensive caberet Bernadette Savard, Editor-in-Chief Pat EarlY, Managing Editor sponsored by the B.S.A. with profit going to the Community Scholars Program was not considered worth Bob Hayes, News Editor Fred Kohun, Photography Editor Mark Speca, Layout Editor Ken Koenig, Ass't News Editor (:r.;J'~k Lloyd, Business Manager Don Maldari, Copy'Editor the large investment, 2) the costs for a recruitment booklet Mark Sawtelle, Features Editor 'J'lm blown, AJ's't Business ,Manager Andy Lang, Rewrite Editor for minority students were grossly overestimated and 3) Dave Kopech, Sports Editor Joann" Pisc(·tt", Executive Secretary Ned Hogan, Headlines Editor substantial funds for lecturers would be made available for CJntributing Editors: Larry Peters, Circulation Manager Pl,ul lle.rnabeo Rick Horvath B.S.A. use from the Lecture Fund. Bob Bl'USO Pat Rogozinski The last organization that was greatly cut from its Jean l;o'lnefrock Tom Sheeran Don Walsh request was the student government. The executive's Don Hamer, Associate Editor Edward W. Bodnar, S.J., Moderator budget was cut almost in half. The senate's budget was completely rejected. This is also true of the budget for The HOY A is publisized each week of the academic year (witl! the exception of holidays alld examination periods). Students of Georgetown, Inc. Subscription rate: $7.50 per year. Address all correspondence to The HOY A Georgetown University, Wasllingtoll, D.C. Further information on any organization'S budget for 20007. Telephone (202) 625-4578. The HOY A is composed at Polygraphic Composition Corp., Washington, D.C., and printed at Record Publishing Co., Silver Spring, Md. - fiscal year 1973 is available in, the Student Activities The writing, articles, layout, pictures and format are the responsibility of the Board of Editors and do not necessarily Office. represent the views of the Administration, Faculty and Students of the University unless specifically stated_ Tile University subscribes to the principle of responsible freedom of expression for our student editors, ' Neil Shankman Student Activities Comptroller Friday, February 18, 1972 THB HOrA. Page Five

Letters to the Editor • • •

movement the Multipedalist students, but will also effectively gang should, however, blind no one Movement; and the time is ripe for Erase Chalk? curtail the possibility of mass to the continuing progress which is It's Too Late Baby the revolution to begin. , transit for the District's poor. being made under the able leader­ Thomas Murtagh has chosen To our felonious freshman, I can ship of His Imperial Majesty _ Georgetown University as the site To the Editor: only say my wallet bleeds for you; Shahanshah. An Open Letter to the B~ard. of at which to begin the revolution. A I am writing in response to a the next time maybe my body will Today Iran is stronger than at Trustees o~ Georgetown Umverslty stronghold of those who believe in letter P~blish~d in today's HOYA too. any other time in its modern Gentlemen. . . an hierarchcal order of things, concerning an Illegally parked fresh- Ed Hazelett history and is one of the world's ~s alumm of Georgetown Um- notably between man and dog, man, who suggests that commuters (CoIl. '73) most stable countries. Socially and verslty L~w Center we are ex- administrator and student, George- shoul? fi?d out what the D.C. economically Iran is the world's tremely dIsturbed and. emb~rrassed town is the ideal place to begin the TransIt eXI~ts f~r. It seems that this most progressive country in 1971. ,by the recent events involVIng the elimination of these distinctions. freshman IS blIssfully unaware of Red-blooded Americans Referring to the United Nations' ~niversity's athletic progra~. D~ll- For this reason, Mr. Murtagh has the r;alities of traveling, by the and the U.N.E.S.C.O. statistics mg Col. Robert Sigholtz s bnef decided to run for the office of Transit. As a commuter who has about this matter, one can see that tenure as Athletic Director many president of the student body of ridden the Transit for almost a year in the past year there was a growth unfortunate .events ~ave occurred. Georgetown University. Knowing and a half, I d,:m't t~ink I'~ bei~g To the Editor: of 14 percent in the national They culmInated In Mr. Jack he will receive fierce resistance presumptuous In enlIghtemng said A note of thanks to all George- income with the prices remaining Magee's forced resignation under from the administration Mr Mur- freshman. town University students who parti- stable. humiliating circum~tances. Such tagh is calling to the stu'dent body First, there is the pi~dIing cipated in the Georgetown Univer­ The social changes that came embarrassment to hIm and to the to act in a combined subhuman matter of economy. The fare In the sity Hospital quarterly Red Cross with His Imperial Majesty the University has led us to believe that effort under his strong l~adership to District is 40 cents one, way. Not Blood Drive on Feb., 8. They Shahanshah's "White Revolution" serious a?d immedia~e. t~~)Ught complete this task. He has asked bad, but considering the fa~t that deserve much credit in giving of changed the face of Iran. It 'is must !>e gIven to .the POSSibIlIty of Mr. Max Rueckel to be his running most commuters are ~omIng in themselves so generously, taking necessary to show a few of its replacmg Col.. Sigholt~. Further- mate. To date, Mr. Rueckel has not from Maryland, whIch c~sts time out on a busy class day to achievements. The abolishment of more, the entlle athletic program returned his answer (although he another 15 or 25 cents dependmg contribute to this most worthwhile the feudal system gave land to should be reevaluated. has brought us several newspapers on distance, weekly bus fare aver- cause. millions of peasants. The literacy You, the Board. of ~ust~es, an old shoe or two, the new SFS ages between $5.50 and $6.50, .Special thanks is ~iven to Al~ha Corps was created so that young should. make. a pubhc clanficatIOn Constitution, unsigned, and a dead roughly $20-25 a month. This is not PhI. Omega, an active fratermty educated men, instead of being ?f.the Issues .Involved. ~f~r. Magee crow), but a favorable one is a meager sum to a student whose whlc~ spearheaded the .student drafted, could serve the country IS mdeed an Innocent vIctim the expected soon. parents don't have three cars, or recruitment on campus. your ~f ~lth according to their own abilities. he should a Mr. Murtagh has declared the even two for that matter. help we have nearly trIpled our cont~oversy re~elV~ Profit sharing in industry was pub!lc apology from the other candidates to be mere bi- Secondly, there is a slight November blood donor total. Umverslt~. initiated. The Reform of Electoral U~td these steps are t~ken, we .wIll pedalist running dogs of the present element of convenience involved. 'I!uly, there can be no greater Law gave women equal status to ~lthhold our fi~ancI.al contrlb~- system. His qualifications are emin- This semester I have been fortunate service to our fellow man. men in the Iranian society, so that bons to the Umverslty. and wIll ently more readable than those of enough to get a ride about half of H. Joseph Curl today women ministers are serving ~nco~rage other alumm to do any other candidate, to whit: the time. With this ride it takes me Hospital Administrator in the Cabinet. Many other reforms lIkeWise. . . 1. He represents the continuity from 25 to 35 minutes to get to were brought about by His Imperial . In the meantIme, we wIll con- of history. He will probably be at school. By Mr. Chalk's almighty Majesty the Shahanshah that were tmue to be em.b~rrassed by th: Georgetown longer than any other Transit, the same trip takes any­ vital to Iran's progress. unf~vorable publiCIty for our Um- candidate. where from an hour to an hour and Happy Birthday Iran owes its progress to the able verslty. 2. He has a secret Five-Year Plan a half. This is something to be leadership of His Imperial Majesty John A. Wolhaupter, E,sq. to withdraw from the University considered when one wants to be at the Shahanshah. He saved the Law 701 (although his dean has informed a. 9:15 class somewhere near on To the Editor: country after World War II when Mark S. Rudy, E,Sq. him it may take ten). tIme. . . . the nation was in a social and Law 69' 3. His analysis of the multi- Thud, there IS also the pICayune The celebration of the 2500th anniversary of the Iranian Empire economic crisis and has brough t pedalist movement has never been matter of personal safety. The Iran to a pro.minent place among questioned (cf. Das Animal). streets in D.C. are not exactly as was marked in some parts of the "Born Free' world by extremist activities carried the nations of the world. 4. Because of his recognized safe as Fort Knox ~nd one fre­ Name withheld upon request authority, he is the only animal quently spe~ds 20 mInutes to half out by the so-called Iranian Student To the Editor: qualified to lead the dictatorship of an hour waiting for a transfer on Confederation. This group, which Animals are born free, yet the candidate. these streets. I, personally, have purports to represent the Iranian everywhere they are in chains. 5. He is not only the most ~een mugged once in broad day­ students, in reality is a small group You're Welcome There was a time when all animals qualified for this task of establish- lIght and I only have the deepest of professional agitators. They do considered each other as equals, ing a totalitarian student govern- sympathy for those co-eds who not represent a majority of either maintaining a balance and harmony ment antithetical to that of the commute after late classes. the students or the people of Iran. To the Assistant News Editor: among themselves for the better­ University administration; he is the . As to what the D.C. Transit Who supplies their budget? These My ransom was paid at the last ment of all of nature. But the only candidate to cotne out with eXists for, someone should ask Mr. pretended "nationalists'? and "pa­ Senate meeting. Thank you for animal kingdom as we know it courage, to state things as they are ChaI~, since he is actively seeking a triots" are actually on the payroll your concern. today has suffered from the rise of and as they must be. fare Increase that will not only put of countries hostile to their home­ Neil Shankman specieism, or as it is better known, 6. He is a cannibal. the Transit out of the means of land. The treasonous actions of this Student Activities Comptroller bi-pedalism, and it is man that has No one has ever before suc- created this barrier. Though govern­ ceeded at such a monumental task. 'A lI· h F "I' ments may deny it and police states No one has ever tried. It js not lU t e aml Y repress it, the forces of dialectical enough to strike down racism; it is biology show that this inequitable not enough to strike down sexism; division shall one day be resolved. we must strike down the core Thomas Murtagh is tl.).e foremost problem - humanism'. New South: Secure Rat Maze authority on dialectical biology in Michael R. J. Ro th the world. Thomas Murtagh is also by Ken Koenig budget were to be cut, alumni pressure would be the very soul of multi-pedalism. In (SFS '74) brought to bear upon the University, which could Vice-Chairman, The Ivan Pavlov Memorial Cafeteria opened last his famous work, The Destiny of week at the site of the old New South Cafeteria. The have resulted in the dismissal of a student the Species, he has outlined the Youth Against Bipedalism Georgeto,wn University tastefully done modern decor features a colorful rat development official. inevitability of the victory of this maze through which the hungry students must thread In the wake of Jack (Moses) Magee's resignation as their way-all of which is part of an experiment to head basketball coach, the University has reportedly study the reactions of humans when facing dangerous begun the search for his successor by appointing a situations. A system of bells will be installed shortly, coach·search committee. The committee, headed by News it is reported, so that students will learn to associate Pebbles Medley, includes Art White, Bob Adrian, Michael B. Alexander, Dennis Barbour, Mike Blatty, Stuart Chessman, the ringing of bells with the extreme discomfort that Elgin Baylor, Austin Carr, Bob Cousy, Fr. McSorley, Eduardo Cue, Dan Hogan, Ed Hughes, Claudia James, Steve Kurdziel, shortly follows. Estimated cost of the experiment if Peter Krogh and Col. Sanders. Janine Masciocchi, Jim Nass, Tom Olp, Larry Peters, Laura Perez, Tony $53,000. Porto, Carla Prince, Denis Sheridan, Art Wheeler Several applications are said to have been received Features * * * already; the most notable are listed below: Anthony Borzotta, Clifford J. Brooks, William Can:tpbell, Mike Hughes, Speaking of New South, it is rumored that a • Security Director Bernard Gorda is reportedly Charley Impaglia, H. K. Jordan, Paul Leather, Hector E. Luisi, interested in running the team. Gorda is rumored to Michael P. Malloy, Edward J. Maloney, John Maruskin, Anne security system has gone into effect there, although I have seen but little evidence of such a system. The have indicated to the committee that he would hire O'Loughlin, Mike O'Neil, Denis Sheridan, Raoul Duke N.B.A. veterans and explore the feasibility of arming Sports guard at the east wing of the building is placed where he can't possibly be effective and the guard at the the team. Some accounts quote Gorda as saying, "If Greg Coburn, Mary Flannery, Libby Heskin, John McGowan. Phil the team were armed, we wouldn't lose too many Margiasso, Peter Morris, Mary Quinn, Tom Ruddock, Ken Zemsky west end goes off duty late at night, leaving that door unguarded and unlocked. In addition, most of the games." Photography other doors are unguarded and unlocked and there is • University Registrar John Quinn also is rumored Moses Albert, Mike Bono, Thea C. Bruhn, Eric Craig. Keith King, Glenn Moses, no telephone system for the guards' use. Speaking as to have contacted the committee about running the Art Oberhofer. Jon Platt a New South resident, I feel about as secure as a team. Quinn reportedly indicated that he would run the team as he runs registration, thus assuring an Copy private in the Cambodian army. undefeated season, since none of the opponents Chris Basden, Tom Buchart, Krista Land, Bob Leonard, Robert Sullivan woulq be willing to go through the hassle of trying to Layout & Headlines * * * schedule Georgetown. Walt Albans>, Rich Berzon, Bill Blood, John Gordon, The StUdent Activities Fund appropriations for • Food Service Manager John Bengiovi also is said Diane Rogozinski the glee club this year are most interesting. Some to have expressed a desire to coach the team. - Advertising members of the appropriations committee are said to Bengiovi is reported to have introduc,ed a new Ed Bucciarelli, Deb Park feel that the glee club grant is out of proportion to its strategy ploy: he would feed the opposing team free student membership, interest and on-campus func­ of charge in New South, thus assuring an undefeated Secretaries tions. Both the band and the mixed chorus have more record on the home court, since the other team in all Martha Bauer, Barol Young, Jeannie ShalhOUb members. and perform on campus more often than probability would have to forfeit by game time. Columnist the glee club and both the band and the mixed chorus Ivan Katz received less money. * * * Cartoonists There was some sentiment among the commission Ash Wednesday occured this week. Easter is only about six weeks away. Easter vacation is only about Rick Horvath, BetsY Krugiiak members that the budget ought to be cut, but such a move was stifled when it was reported that if the five weeks away. Anticipation ... Page Six TH'E-.DYA Friday, February 18, 1972 YD's Meet National. Comm. Democrats· Urge Youth Action

Greater participation by young Miss Sampson noted the possibi- people in the Democartic party lity of a fourth party movement conventions and primaries' was developing 'at Miami. She feels that stressed during a meeting between the, delegate, selection reform and members of the Democratic Na- the consequent participation .of tional Committ~e and .'representa- young people will, prevent the split· , t~ves of th~ Young, pemocrats .of from happening, however. ; Qeorgetown Tuesday morning. , "The youth will not be able to ,. ,Due 'to: reforms - in delegate. say it has been exclu~ed," -which selections,. college-aged individuals was the situatiori in past convert­ will have'. a .deeper inv.olvement in tions, according' to Miss Sampson. -the' electic;m process .. by voting for Robert . Moss, director' of cam~, ,and becoming delegates' ih the' paign ,and political organization for 'national Democratic convention'to the Democrats, does not foresee the be . held in Miami.' Miss Marty Miami, . convention turning into Sampson, ,assistant to the president another' Chicago fiasco. Besides a­ of the National Young Democrats, speciai' security guard' force, the cited the system used in Iowa as police have promised to deal MAYOR JOHN LINDSAY , the most'equable process since.it is courteously with all visitors. views. There -will also be a clearing . based on proportional representa- Furthermore, people will be house and a newspaper for college­ tion ·giving a more accurate picture diffused throughout the convention aged individuals. of voter support. area because of a wide variety of Malcolm Diggs, convention In addition, these changes will scheduled events. -Should trouble housing director, said that although force candidates to organize their develop, the convention site, he cannot estimate the number of campaigns . at the precinct level located on an island, can be sealed youths attending, he does not instead of at the usual state level. off in order to prevent the entry of anticipate a housing shortage. He This not only makes for more additional people. noted that low cost lodging has effective and well-structured cam- Those attending the convention been 3lxanged with certain hotels paigns, but it also creates more will· find among other available and motels and that universities in individual interest and action in activities political workshops, rock the area are being contacted about elections, Miss Sampson stated. dances and possible candidate inter- dormitory accommodations. ! Ring Day' Feb. 22, 23, 24 Sen. Edmund S. Muskie (D.Me.) is generally considered to be the ,10 a.m.-7 p.m. leading candidate for the Democratic Presidential nomination to be made at the Miami Convention. JYew South Lobby Nixon Ignores Advice Of Youth Conference by Andy Lang a "struggle for survival." Rewrite Editor President Nixon's response to ((J) IR IIJ) IE IR .Y ((J) 1U IR Ed. note: This is the second the recommendations was predict· installment of a two·part report on ably cold. In one of his few public the White House Conference on references to the conference, how· NEW Youth, held April 18-22 in Estes ever, he told the National 4-H Park, Colo. Last week the author Congress last December that "the - examined the makeup of the youth extent of agreement between con· (((J)llIECGIE JRllNCG delegates to the Conference and ference hopes and government outlined the recommendations they action will further weaken the submitted to the President. This myth of an unbridgeable generation week recent developments and gap." President Nixon's response to the Observers claim that the confer· recommendations are examined. ence proves the exact opposite. In a When President Nixon appointed rare press comment on the delibera· a core staff in late 1969 to organize tions in Estes Park, Flora Lewis of the White House Conference on Long Island's Newsday called the Youth, he told the group to "listen conference "a more resounding, well to the voices of young more emphatic, more unquestion· Americans ..." able cry of fury and frustration Critics of the conference believe than any of the riots and demon· the President expected his "listen· strations of these last few years." ers" to hear a hidden silent A report that calls for the majority of young people who legalization of the sale and con­ would echo their parents. Instead, sumption of marijuana, the immedi­ they heard almost unanimous critic· ate withdrawal of American forces' CREATED BY lOHN ROBERTS ism of the values and insititutions from Vietnam, a guaranteed annual they thought the President repre- income of $6,500 per family of sented. Tn? "silent majority" of four, federally supported black American youth turned out to be as studies in every school and an end dissatisfied as the stereotyped to ,sexual discrimination' will campus radical. probably not be received enthu- WORLD'S FINEST Having failed to· find any signi- siastically by the present adminis­ ficant support for his policies tratio!l. Let your success show a little with a fine among the' almost 1,000 youth Some conference proposals and delegates who assembled in a President Nixon's poli('y goals do class ring by John Roberts. Your choice of Rocky Mountain ski resort for four coinl-ltle, however. Two significant stones~ weights and styles. Three dimen- days in' April, the President ordered examples are the President's current' 'sio1!al,Greek letter encrusting. an extensive "review" of the attempt. to normalize relations with conference proposals by 11 cabinet China' and hls commitment' to an departments and' 14 independent all-volunteer army. government agencies. The review Most Presidential response to the may uncover little that he will find recommendations, however, is FOUR WEEK SHIPMENT acceptable. expected-to be on an insignificant The conference recommenda- and uncontroversial level. In a tions, which range from legalization recent decision, for example, the of homosexuality to drastic cuts in National Endowment, for the Arts defense spending, outliQe a radical appointed several youth members program for reshaping America. to its art advisory panels, citing its GEORGETOWN UNIVERSITY Accusing basic American institu· action as a response to a conference tions of "repression," the preamble recommendation. to the final conference report Many observers fear, however, BOOK STORE claims that youth's "struggle for that the President's response will reform" has been transformed into reflect similar ,tokenism. Friday, February 18, 1972 Page Seven- Library Joins Nationar Trend, Launches 4-Day Work Week by Ed Hughes The library is not the first "The second reason," Pettit Lauinger Library is experi- department at Georgetown to ex- added, "was more time with my menting with a four-day work week periment with the four-day week. family." for its staff with a selective "pilot The summer school administration The cited advantages of the program." 'tried the program for about a four-day, 40-hour work week in­ Head Librarian Joseph Jeffs month last summer. Reactions to elude more leisure time and less announced the new 10 hour, the experiment were mixed. commuting. Experts add that pro- four-day work week which he Assistant Dean Kenneth R. Fred- duction is initially increased al- called "strictly voluntary." gren of the School for Summer and though it may taper off. The The experiment will affect seven Continuing Education was not increased leisure time is suppo~d out of thirteen employees in the satisfied with the program. He to increase consumption and aid cataloging department. The seven found that he would often need an the economy. may choose an extra day off and employee during the week and An important disadvantage in- show up, an hour earlier for work would then discover that it was the while staying an extra hour at the employee's day off. end of the day. "The big problem was that the Although only -seven employees whole office didn't take the same have chosen the four-day week, day off," Fredgren said. "I think almost all are in favor of the that is crucial." , innovation. The earlier hours, how- Summer School Dean Joseph Seven Lauinger Library employees are working under an experimental' ever, prohibit s~D?-e. int~rested Pettit was more enthusiastic abo~t four-day forty.hour work week. (Photo by Keith King) workers from partlclpatmg m the the experimental schedule, how· " program. ever. "As far as 1 was concerned, it .... ------:------, "I have children in nursery was a success for two primary EDUCATIONAL RESEARCH ASSOCIATES : 'school and 1 have to be home in the reasons," he said. "The first was that Present this ad for low Introductory offer. Limited Time only. I morning," one employee said. "I do 1 got more substantive work done EDUCATIONAL RESEARCH ASSOCIATES I think it's a idea, though." because of arrival. Offers 10% discount on all research papers. Call for further 1 'iiii;;;iiiiii~~~P.iiiliiiiiiiiiiiJ information. 527-5736. I I I Save this Coupon I ~------__ l LSAT REVIEW. CLASSES Now forming in preparation for LSAT to be volved in the program is the strain given on April 8; also July and October. caused by working a 10-hour day_ Intensive review sessions to be held at the Experts note that the problem can Sheraton-Carlton Hotel in Washington, D.C. become acute for those jobs re­ quiring extensive interpersonal con­ and taught by practicing attorneys. This is the tact. well-k-nown course given in NYC 'and Boston. The future of the four-day week Call (202) 017-8834 or write: at Georgetown is unclear. The duration of the experiment in the lAW BOARD REVIEW CENTER OF N.V.r INC. Lauinger Library cataloging de­ partment has not been determined 100 Shore View Drive and there is no guarantee that the Yonkers, New York 10710 program will be expanded if it proves a success.

THE SPRING DINNER-DANCE

lIthe only dinner-dance left at Georgeto\Nn" March 11,1972 Walter Reed Army Officers' Club (16th St., NWj sponsored by Georgetovvn University ROTC for the entire campus

Dress: Semi-formal (suit or tux; cocktail dress or gown)- 7-8 open bar 9 cash bar opens 8-9:30 dinner 9:30-12:30 dancing to Gene Donati (one of the finest dance bands in the DC area.)

TICKETS ON SALE FEB. 18,19, 20, 21, 22, & 23 See us at the stump or in Walsh lobby, depending on the weather. Cost $18. Buy now and reserve your table. Tickets are limited. Page Eig~t · THE· HOYA Friday, February 18,1972 Abortion Seminar Advocates Traditional 'Pro-Life' Stance by Claudia James Having concluded that many deals with the right to use contra- At a seminar on abortion spon- women feel driven to abortion ceptives and not with murdering a sored recently by the Holy Trinity because of poverty, illness, iUegiti- fetus. Parish Council, Dr. William Colli- macy or economic burdens, Dr. Concerning the abortion ad ton, a gynecologist and chairman of Colliton feels that society must be which appeared in The Georgetown the Maryland Life Committee. and compassionate and try to help Law Weekly, Prof. Stanmeyer Prof. William Stanmeyer of George· those who feel driven to take this stated that "not only students' town University Law School spoke desperate step. He advocated the rights are involved here, but the out against abortion, calling it a social acceptance of unwed mothers rights of the University and all defiance of the long held Judeo- and the establishment of more. those who stand behind it. Any Christian ethic concerning the in- centers to help them, similar. to university is free to define its own trinsic value of life. those which already have been set identity," said Prof. Stanmeyer. Prof. Stanmeyer and Dr. Colli- up in Chicago, Atlanta and Cin- "Georgetown is an institution ton believe that society must take a cinnati. Furthermore, he urged which has evolved its identity over pro-iife posture and must work to monetary assistance to families the course of nearly two centuries," alleviate the conditions which cause with handicapped children and he added. According to Prof. women to seek abortions.' Ac<;ord- research into the prevention of Stanmeyer, for students who have ing to Dr. Colliton, "a nation with birth defects. voluntarily chosen to attend our mater~al and technological "How can a nation which seeks Georgetown to force it to depart Prof. William Stanmeyer of the Georgetown Law Center called for an resources can do better than abor- to end capital punishment, fights to from its identity is to steal end to legalized abortions, charging "A society such as this Will.' abort tion." save its environment, works to something from its very essence. itself." Dr. Colliton, a 1948 graduate of prevent cruelty to animals, passes r------"""I Georgetown Medical School, emph- gun control legislation and con- asized through a slide presentation demns an immoral war in Vietnam, that the fetus is "very much one of 'dial M for murder' in the case of us." He pointed to the fact that the abortion?" asked Dr. Colliton. Being the adventures of a young man heartbeat of the fetus is distinguish- Agreeing with Dr. Colliton, Prof. able a few weeks after conception Stanmeyer also regards the fetus as and that after only two months a human being and deplored abor-, whose principal interests are rape. there has been Significant leg, tion as the action of a society in skeletal and nervous system devel- which the central value is no longer 'ultra-violence and Beethoven. - opment. life, but comfort. "A society such According to Dr. Colli ton, the as this will abort itself," Prof. viability of the fetus (presently 20 Stanmeyer said. weeks) is irrelevant. "With the Pointing to the law as a reflec­ great strides being made in techno- tion of medical realities, Prof. logy, age of survival is immutable~" Stanmeyer stated that the unborn said Dr. Colliton. child does have some legal' rights. Terming abortion a "violent, According to the law, if a pregnant nasty business," Dr. Colliton stated woman is given the death penalty, that abortion is very often a the sentence is not carried out until traumatic experience for the after the birth of the child. Also, if woman involved and that it some· the child is injured in an accident times can cause a great deal of while in the mother's womb, a suit physical pain. As an example of the can later be brought about on his impact abortion can have on a behalf. society, Dr. Colliton noted that In regard to the law as a source since abortion was legalized in of justification for abortion ad­ England in 1967, each year a bill vocates, Prof. Stanmeyer said that has been introduced in Parliament there is only one case that is looked to legalize euthanasia. to as a defense of abortion- Dr. Collition said, "No society Grinwold v. Conn. According to can function if it allows some of its Prof. Stanmeyer, this case is com­ members to decide who shall live." pletely inapplicable, because it TERM PAPERS! "We have them - an subjects" , ( Termpaper Arsenal, ( Send $1.00 for your descriptive 519 Glenrock Ave., Suite 203, catalog of 1,200 quality term West L.A. Calif. 90024. papers: (213) 477·8474

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HUGE FRAME SELECTION T?e filing deadline has been extended to 6 p.m. Friday night for the following All THE lATEST STYLES senate seats; as of the Thursday night deadline, the seats were unopposed or had no candidates: EYES EXAMINED CONTACT LENSES PRESCRIPTIONS FILLED ColI. '73 SBA '73 GUNS '73 SLL'73 SLL'74 EMERGENCY SERVICE GUNS '74 SFS '74 SBA '75 SLL '75 GUNS '75 AND SPECIAL STUDENT DISCOUNTS· BLOOD PLASMA DONORS NEEDED ATLAII/TII: ALL BLOOD TYPES Need Help? IIP'TII:AI. EARN $25 - $80 Pn Month Can for Information ANtIBODIES, INC. 1747 PENNSYLVANIA AVE., NW 1712 Eye St., N.W .• Suite 210 'Call (Convenient to GU) 298-6960 Hot ,Line DAllY 9-6; SAT. 9-3 466-2050 Ident~fication required 625-4194

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Name ______~ ______YOU CAN EAT AND DRINK I SUN-THUR' 5 - 7 P. M. I Address I IL ______City State Zip JI o My Travel Agent is , . ~B~ICKSKELLER Page Ten THE HOrA Friday, February 18, 1972 National Symphony ************************ Abravanel Not In• Command 'NOTICES Tiger at the Gates at Stage One has only two more performances. A~d there will be another reading of Last week the National Sym- movement by three repeated notes. of the various motifs, sounded dull Under phony Podium was turned over to The first movement has three and the. great heroic personality Milkwood and Don Juan in Hell in Dahlgren: Chapel, 8:30 guest conductor Maurice Abravanel, Cadenzas of which the third is seemed more that of a semi-con­ tonight and tomorrow. long time music director of the perhaps the m~s.t brilli~nt,. an tented Burgomaster. The strings * * * * * Utah Symphony Orchestra. extended composItion rangmg mto were heavy and late in the attacks Montage II" an informal evening of award-winning ,Maestro Abravanel opened the diverse keys and written with demanded by Strauss. student films, followed by discussion and refreshments, concert with Johann Christian magnificent keyboard style. Towards the end of this move. Bach's Symphony No.3 in D flat Th . th f th will be presented tonight and tomorrow by the Open Major Opus 9, one of the earlier . e recurnng. eme orms. e ment there is a descending scale of J s~nngs accompamment to the ftr~t changing octaves. Mr. Abravanel Stage, at 3133 Dumbarton Street (not far from campus). works of ohann Sebastian's young- plano melody of the Largo and 10 paid-no attention to their coloring Shows are at 8:30, tickets are $1 and the phone is est son. The Third Symphony is a the .last. movement the three note thereby giving no variety to the 244-6333. lively piece characterized by the motif IS spread out across the surging forms of the music. The * * * * * * distinct Italian and operatic influ- six-bar opening: three bars starting famous Adversar" 's . theme was ences found in J. C. Bach's earlier E d h J .Auditions for the First Annual G.U. Law Center Revue works. This Symphony follows the on. an t.e other three on G, played with little coordination and will be held on Feb. from to p.m., for any amateur ~hlle the mam theme of ea~h pa,rt even less feeling and' when - the 27, 3 8 earI y 0 verture f ormat 0 f treeh IS made u~ of three alternatmg E s. hero's companion was introduced talent. Proceeds of the Revue go to the G.U.L.C. Day-Care movements. Originally composed as Mr. LIl~ proved to b~ an by the first violinist Miran Kojian, 'facilities. Call Larry Reecer at 527 -4995 or Barry Paster at the Overture to his Opera Zanaida, excellent plan. 1St, demonstratmg a it was obvious that the complex 543-5488. 600 New Jersey Ave., N.W. it starts with one solemn theme perf ec.t t ec h mque an d control over passage of long series of cadenzas that is developed throughout the the plano. He played the first was simply too overwhelming for structure of the Allegro Assai, to a movement with rare ease and grace him t ·th . k' d f * * * * * lively close, similar in format to the in his style His phrasing of the first 0 c~pe W.I m ~n~ 10 T~ The Catholic University Black Organization of Students baroque Concerto Grosso in the movement' Cadenzas was superb ~ven secse~.I-gracIOu~ daymg. r e is presenting a series of movie~, plays and concerts. Call alternation between small groups of obtaining the richest of sound~ t~ass b Ion so~n t I mo~e ~~ny 529-6000, ext. 581. instruments and the full orchestra. from his instrument: Mr. Lill used bl~~teJa:~i ~~:Ic;:n ~~n e~he~~ . The secQnd movement, And~nte, his pedal sparingly and concen· towards the end of the battle scene. * * * * * IS .less formal, mor~ expressively trated on obtaining every SUbtle They were dull and even played, at ~ezzo~Sopran6 Alberta Driver will appear in a free lYrical, perhaps showmg the ardent nuance possible from the over· times, blatantly out of tune and did reCItal Sunday, 4 p.m. at the Augustana Lutheran Church, of the Mannheim School, as it whelming closing theme of the not respond properly to cueing. Mr. New Hampshire Ave and V Street. really is, in air with variations form; Allegro con Brio. He gave the last Abravanel's beat was vague and J. C. Bach's melodic use of the two movements very powerful and hard to follow in a piece which * * * * * "Some people think that love is an emotion. Love is oboes here does nO.t overshado~ masterful interpretations paying demands the utmost of clarity and the br~ss and blends. mt<:, a melodiC particular attention to the shading precision in marking on the part of good sense." - Ken Kesey attractive style, ,leadmg lI?-to a very of the Largo, where his rendering the C,onductor. short Presto movement m Rondo was given with as much finesse as Hector E. Luisi ************************ form with strong choral underpinn· possible. ings, beautifully constructed. Maestro Abravanel accompanied Films Maestro Abravanel's reading of in the same businesslike manner. I the Bach was very professional and His tempo was adequate and he businesslike. He knew what. he obtained the rich, classical feeling wanted and the orchestra gave It to of the score from the orchestra Persecution Under the Leaves ) him, good string playing, from particularly in the opening Tutti of which considerable detail of nuance the Concerto. ( THE GARDEN OF THE FINZI· can almost feel the cool of the added so much. I have always was extracted from the orchestra in The Concert closed with Richard CONTINIS. A film by Vittorio de drops through the trees and smell found it easy to pick out the Jews the first movement with an adequa- Strauss's Ein Heldenieben, a Sica. At the Outer Circle. the fresh scent that the rain always in the movies about Nazi persecu· tely balanced tone. symphonic poem composed in six I saw a really nice movie the brings. Much later, the mood has tion and while I never sympathized The Andante was conducted at a movements depicting a hero's life. other day, the kind that makes you changed entirely and a scene shot with Hitler at least I saw the Jews very deliberate and quite effective It is a highly romali'tic piece, feel good on the way out. It wasn't from both sides of a window shows as a group ~part. There was always tempo, perhaps a shade too slow, bringing into the music a harmony one of those too, too mushy ones how far apart two people can grow. a hint of an accent of a mannerism but enabling the solo passages to and orchestral technique devised to that embarrasses your intellect The acting was perfect. This is that identified them. But this movie sound delicate, with the correct express the deepest and most when you enjoy it. Nor did I feel not to say that we a~e dealing with is in Italian and the people are so mellow timbre. The Presto was led romantic emotions. Yet, compared that I had performed most of my superstars, but that It was easy to Italian that if it were not for the at a normal tempo giving the overall to his earlier tone poems it is Lenten penance by fishing out all believe that each actor. was the visual clues, you'd never know that performance an excellent, quasi- composed on an abstract subject, the symbolism. If was a subtle person that he was playmg .. They you were dealing with potential baroque texture and design. even though he makes allusions to blend of those things that make a were blond and warm, so tYPICal of scapegoats. So when the Nazis The concert· continued with his personal life. The sections are movie good and I really think you'll northern I.taly, and yet so atypic~l begin their roundups, I could only Ludwig Van Beethoven's Concerto continuous and consist of a first like de Sica's latest. of the It~lans that we always see m shake my head in wonder. When for Piano and Orchestra No. 1 in C subject, a transition movement The story is set in Fascist Italy the mOVIes. Unfortunately, the you see one man so like all the Major. John Lill, a young gifted leading to a second subject, that i~ and the main characters are young cre~iits did not identify who play~d others, even the least injustice English pianist, winner of the developed into a recapitulation Jews in the city of Ferrara. They WhICh part, but the two mam becomes unbearable. Other films Moscow Tchaikowsky International with an added subject. are mostly university seniors, old perf.ormers, Domini~ue Sanda and have gone so far to stress the wrong competition, was a soloist for the Maestro Abravanel's rendition friends who watch for the signs of FabIO Testa, are relatively unknown in condemning someone because he evening. The first piano Concerto, was, unfortunately, at best war together. All but the Finzi- to American audiences. I almost is different but this one shows the although often labeled "Mo- mediocre. The Nat\onal Symphony Continis. Alberto 'and his beautiful wish they .could never learn to horror of c~sting stones at one who zartian," is definitely Beethoven's needs to work much harder to sister Michol hide in the sumptuous speak EnglIsh so that I could is the same. with its vigorous rhythm, big tone perform a piece like this, particular­ garden of their estate, entertaining remember them the way they were. I can't do an thO t d 11 th friends and playing tennis, letting A word for those of you who ain of th h Y mg ~ u e and wide ranging tone color. The ly when it is' playing with an the walls that once kept out the may be wary of seeing a movie with p , e un appy endI?g, but I Concerto has an underlying theme augmented ensemble. The opening . I ,. also can t forget the SIghts of stated at the beginning of each section a self-contained exposition strangers 0 f their childhood keep su b tit es. Don t be afraid-after five unsh'n d' d' . f th .. ' away the threats to their youth. or ten minutes you don't even s 1 e an ram rlppmg rom e They are a privileged couple, notice them and in the case of The same green leaves. Developments wealthier than any of their Garden of the Finzi-Continis, they Anne O'Loughlin companions and little aware of the hardships that their fellow Jews are Yoga I n Georgetown U undergoing. When they are forbid- Hatha Yoga classes beginning Wednesday, February 23, 7-9 The Truth Will O t den to study at the university, their p.m. at Western High School, 35th & R Sts. N.W. (use I would strongly recommend of discussion and action among the father makes a contribution to the downstairs R. St. entrance). $20/8 week course; $3/each that you visit t.h~ Environmental three men and three women who Party and their Gentile servants class. Sponsored by D.C. Department of Recreation. Theater Workshop one of these are. Things occasionally get a bit re~ain regardless of the. sanctions 347-3385 for information. nights. The time would be well uncomfortable since these actors agamst them. Alberto still has the :======! spent. don't distanc~ themselves with- finest doctors to care for his frail The deal here is "spontaneous makeup or costume and are moving health and Michol wears all the Alternative to Abortion theater," that is, the actors impro- freely about the minimally theat-_ latest styles. vise according to the feelings in the ricalized room, just inches away at More. aff~ct~d .by the new , Birthright 526-3333 air, using a vague plot as a times. It's hard not to feel involved persecutlons IS GIOrgIO, who cannot jumping.off point. It sounds pretty at some level or other. At any rate buy hi~ way into everything and ~======:::;;;==~ pretentious and all, but if you give it's worth the trip. who has no way around all th?se things half a chance you'll do all The place is located upstairs at who . c~ose theIr doors to hIm, right, because what you are at the 1519 Wiseol1sin Ave., though the explammg .sadly ~hat the. rules. are 8torgttottJn moment can affect the nature of sign says "Evelyn La Tour."Presenta- not of their makmg. He IS further the presentation, something. that' tiOlls take :lP hour or so. Call Emily distr~ssed. by .the c?Ilapse of his can't really be said for the ordmary Rosenberg ~t 338-4744 or watch relationship WIth MIChoi. In love stage production. With luck, you'll the newspapers for showtimes. with her since grade school, he lR"'it be able to sense what dramatic art M. S. cannot believe that her love for him is all about to begin with and I is only as deep as her love for Guitars think that's important. Plots, props, Alberto. costumes and stars too often Technically, the film was beauti- Lessons overwhelm what matters, instead of fuI. We are introduced to the story helping the drama along by by shady green pathways, drenched Accessories sharpening itr, insights, and elaborat- with summer sunlight and clean ing on its vision. terra·cotta Italian streets. Long Repairs The current production is called scenes of students bicycling in their Facets and is based on the story of shiny white tennis outfits and Rentals a member of a small communal playing,a leisurely game on the clay' family becoming pregnant and the ,courts set the tone of a life that the reactions which this event pro- Finzi·Continis were trying so hard , duces.: The pregnant woman is to hold on to. A sudden downpour 1738, WISCONSIN AVE 965-4215 never present, but is the main topic sends the players scattering and you '--______--: ______------_---1 Friday, February 18, 1972 THE HOYA. Page Eleven Theater Exercising of the Tongues

THE PHILANTHROPIST. A: play coaxed into participating, Philip tempers the jaunty with the tender, by Christopher Hampton. Directed quite inadvertently insults the buf· a hard line to hold against Ted by Thomas Gruenewald. At the fooning novelist. As the party ends, Graeber's apt conception of. the Washington Theater Club, now a nymphomaniacal student seduces bald novelist. Nancy Reardon, through March 12. Philip, into permitting herself. to wacky, resolute and blustering as The muses are not dead . and stay overnight; he can't refuse for the nymphomaniac, sparkles. All in although playwright' Christopher fear of hurting her. The ·dark of all, these actors are about a most Hampton's award winning play, impotence at an end, Philip changes memorable business, telescoping The Philanthropist, occasionally subtly _and smoothly the next day from group to personal encounter sounds a tad academic, he admir· under shades of green stage lighting with floods of stage business all ably recalls a time when drama did and the ironically juxtaposed back­ presented with grace and even not fear the lemon balm of long ground music of Mozart and cunning. range wit. Brahms. More excellence of design is Oxford University's academic A play which offers an audience evident in the lighting and the set community (spot-lighting much to think about, unlike the than normally to be expected at Hampton's own past) offers the work of many young playwrights W.T.C. background for a small-action, whose proposals far exceed their Hampton's play, though tech­ sitting-room comedy examining the output, The Philanthropist hedges nically smart, is hampered some­ dusty, coffee spoons at noon life of toward technical refinement. The what in conception. Opening with a a philologist who "loves all man- direction of Thomas Gruenewald young writer (not seen again until kind and even all words, in any bristles smartly on the back of curtain call) reading his latest order, individual rather than con- l:iampton's careful character deve­ script, Hampton apparently ,seeks secutive." The philanthropist of the lopment. Quite definite and re­ his jollies through a self-indulgent title is also the philologist, Philip. markably complete, a full vision of exposure of dramatic unreality. Unnervingly unassertive, Philip particulars appears on stage. Modern writers who are poor knows words so well that he Edward Zang's portrayal of Phil craftsmen have an excuse for not understands what one says rather the phil(-ologist, -anthropist) is m ai n taining straightforwardness than what one means. This irritates virtuoso. Humble and yet perky, about theatrical reality, but why "One of those kids who always used to sit in the comer . ~ . " his fiancee, Celia, excessively. But the audience both admires and good technicians of drama play during the course of a dinner party, pities Philip. If all there were to cute tricks on audiences I'll never Drugs Philip is ridiculed by a silver-tongu- The Philanthropist was Zang's know. Ignoring this quickly over­ ed and brutish novelist bent on portrayal of Philip, one would find come and totally regrettable open­ commandeering Celia away for the more to appreciate here than in a ing, The Philanthropist is nearly a evening. Consistently the outcast gaggle of lesser performances. perfect evening. What a Neat Guy from the conversation, when finally Holland Tayler as Celia carefully Paul Bernabeo NEOLITHIC MADNESS, an album wont to play without pause or by Wobble Bobble and The Cross of hesitation for two and three hours Band Gold, on Black Hand Records. at a stretch, taking time out for , ' It's now more than cliched to their unvarying meal of raw steak note that there is a gross ov~r­ and chocolate milk. The group And We Went to Church Thrice!!! abundance of new musical groups consists of Wobble Bobble (his .' working under the general (and original stage name, Blind Boy J I Sallying forth as the musical misleading) category of Rock (why Grunt, was stolen years ago by a ambassador of Georgetown Uni- not Cabbage?) and it's little less now-prominent artist Bobble ami­ versity, the Concert Band travelled hackneyed to point out a group ably refers to as "that pseudo­ spectre, that wormy joy-boy, that tofestivities New Orleanslate last week.for Mardis Gras abovethat is "reallythe latest head cropand shouldersof new pretentious Yid from the Frozen XIIDI GI S West"; no one feels up to asking his In conjunction with the Rev. . . .I releases." You know what I'm Thomas King, S.J., the band's . . leading up to. This group is really real name, though an ex-girlfriend moderator, the group presented something. of 47 minutes suspected he is a several Masses in the city, climaxed Bob and his bunch are easily the lamed wufnik, one of the 36 holy by Sunday evening Mass in the best new group of the year and men who stay God's vengeance), historic St. Louis Cathedral. 1972 look to soon clutch at the hems of Fred C. Dobbs III, Wladziu Valen· Reaction to the band's presence milestoners on the order of the tino, J. L. P. Simmon-Jones and a in church was enthusiastic, leading Kinks, the 1968-vintage Velvet flitting apparition referred to only St. Louis' rector the Rev. Nicholas Underground, the Highway 61 band as Flog. J. Tanaskovic to remark "this is and, dare-I-say-it, Eddie Cochran, Flog's bass lines resemble alter­ only the second time that I've the man who put the third "z" on nately a crying dragon and a bumpy heard people applaud in the Cathe- "snazzz." There is no particular train ride. Dobbs, the percussionist, dral in the entire time that I've strongpoint to their work, being as often syncopates himself backwards been rector." section serenaded the city during better things. how .they do everything with the into mock incoherence, then flicks The most enjoyable aspect of one of the parades. Those standing Tentative plans for next year serene grace of genius many centu- out a line of bass-to-snare runs that the trip was Mardis Gras itself and below the hotel's Canal Street will include a trip to Florida v.:ith a ries their elder. In other words, leave one with a pressure in the when the band wasn't otherwise balcony enjoyed the makeshift stopover in newly opened Disney they hit that note, time and again. chest. Valentino plays piano and occupied, its members could be concert irnmensly, but the rendi- World. The origins of the band are, organ, sometimes simultaneously, seen prowling about the French tion of "When the Saints Go Dickman viewed the New Or-· thank God shrouded in night and and seems to have spent a lot of Quarter centering on Bourbon Ma.rching In" was cut short by th~ le~ns trip as "a gia,~t sucess" ~nd fog. Tales' abound, but the most time in canyons and old Slavic Street. ~lVal ?f two ,~f Ne~ Orleans said that he saw a greatly lr~- "reliable" has them surfacing from moviehouses. Simmon-Jones plays a John Dickman, band president, men m blue. ObvlOu~ly not proved band at Georgetown, proVI- the antebasement of a Bulgarian pedal steel guitar hardly recogniz­ saw Mardis Gras as a "completly music lovers, the police forced the ding that the members are willing laundry on New York's Lower East able for its encrustations and layers unique experience. No where else in errant brass .to fle~ ~p the fire to work." Pat Early Side where they were reputedly of arcane electronic gimcracks (tan­ the country could you find an' escape and hIde theIr mstruments. ' dem ring modulators, variable-speed entire city drunk and happy for an This reporter used the left fire tape loops, octave generators and entire week.'; escape. other of that ilk). Needless to say, Although not officially sche- Most of the band members it sounds like almost anything from duled to. participate in the parades, vowed to return. next year, but the an attack squadron of banshees to several of the members of the brass band is continuing to bigger and dribbling church bells. Wobble plants himself in front. a battered acoustic guitar at hi. __ ~, a gnarled Glee Club hand around its neck, holding it like a captive turkey, occasionally hoisting it up for a few choruses. The songs, mostly originals, are The Best We Could?- as varied as the instrumentation would suggest, but are all of a In an evening of works by occasion with Seiber's quick and piece, united behind the burning Charles Ives, Benjamin Britten, witty "The Handsome Butcher," a vision of Bobble's incomprehensible Matyas Seiber, Bela Bartok and piece both well chosen and well sorrow and joy. Whether it be Francois Poulenc, the three soprano performed. Under the direction of "Plink My Plunk, Girl Ya Smell soli performed by Jean Marie Helmut Roehrig the group con­ Like a Skunk" (Flog's big showcase Moynagh last Saturday evening in tinued with more Britten, some number, in which he does some­ were· the high point. slightly palatable Bartok and an thing approximating a squid's belly There was only one other. added attraction of songs on dance), "Texas Hornpipe" (featur­ The program began with the Japanese themes which might have ing Valentino's impressions of the Georgetown Glee Club under the offered the serenity Britten's "Sere­ Galveston Flood), "The Night You direction of Paul Hume, proving nity" lacked, but for their excess of Dreamt Me" (written by Simmon­ that a chorus could sing loudly. To milky sentiment. Jones), or even the band's rollicking this end, Ives' "Let There Be Light" Following intermission the two version of "Death Don't Have No served well. Proving then that it groups joined for Poulenc's Mercy," all the plethoric strands could sing low (or lowly) the Club "Gloria." Passages of deep ex­ and flashes slide into crystal focus performed Ives' "Serenity." This pression were achieved, but these behind Wobble's-voice. No one has was followed with a sloppy and were fleeting. The excellence and yet been able to remember what imprecise rendition of Britten's exactitude of Fred Scott's accom­ words are used and that's only "The Ballad of Little Musgrave and paniment on the piano was hardly partly because he often makes them Lady Barnard." matched by a slaggard crew of up on the instant. But you know The Edgecliff College Choral voices. what I mean. I hope. Group followed and lighted up the Berhard Lens .R.D./M.S. Page Twelve THE'.(JYA Committees Urge Guidance for Georgetown's 547··· Veterans·

by Don Maldari, and Lancaster hope to explore the Switchboard, bills itself as "a free Copy Editor possiblities of new approaches in job referral and hot-line service for' The problems of 547 veterans of this area_ veterans." This non-profit organiza­ the armed forces on the George­ Mallot expressed the desire to tion is sponsored by Elmer L. town campus are not visible to the investigate the <;urriculum re­ Winter, president of Manpower, average student. Three groups, quirements of veterans as well. Inc., a temporary-employment however, are strugglipg to help the Veterans have the opportunity to agency, and founded by James Georgetown veteran. take various college courses while in Tuman, director of development The first of these groups is being the service, many of which have for Mount Sinai Medical Center, organized by Dr_ Patricia Rueckel, credits transferable to Georgetown. Milwaukee, Wisc. J. Jay Volkert is vice-president for student life, who A case in point is Steven Hathaway the organization's representative on has instrud&d ASSistant Housing (SBA'73) who, in his "three years, campus_ Director Stepher.. Mallot to chair an nine months and twenty-eight A brochure" describing the origin administrative committee investi­ days" in the Navy, amassed 65 and goals of the service claims that gating the problems faced by the college credits. Georgetown "by March' 1, Veterans Referral veteran-turned-student here at accepted only 51 of these while Switchboards will be operating in '1eorgetown. George Washington University was 15 cities, and will be initiated in The committee, which has sche­ willing to accept 62_ five additional cities per month duled its first meeting for the end In addition, Mallot would also following that date." The service of February, will be comprised of like to explore the possibility of claims to handle "an average of 300 the Rev. Matthew Sullivan, S.J., utilizing the College Equivalency completed calls per week on one associate dean of the College of Evaluation Examinations. The tests telephone line. Arts and Sciences, James DeMarco, evaluate the knowledge the veteran "Approximately 60 percent of assistant dean of the School of has acquired outside the classroom the calls have been Vietnam era Languages and Linguistics; Matthew which could possibly earn him veterans, 30 percent from veterans Gardner, assistant dean of the college credits. of previous. conflicts, and 10 School of Foreign Service; William The attitude of the "regular" percent from widow, dependents, Patterson, director of student fi­ Georgetown- student toward the or relatives of veterans," the broch­ nances; Barbara Spade of the veteran will also be explored, said ure adds. Placement Office; Patricia Shea of Mallot. "The veteran-student is by The areas in which the service Psychological Services; Maurice no means a new phenomenon at concerns itself are employment, job Lancaster, assistant director of Georgetown," he observed, "as training, unemployment benefits, undergraduate admissions, and stu­ evidenced by the large number of financial, legal, or psychological dents James McKeever (Coll.'74) veterans who studied here in the problems, drug related problems, and Daniel Healy (SBA'72). A forties_ One of the more prominent disability claims and procedures or Dr. Patricia Rueckel, vice-president for student life, has ordered the response has not as yet been of these is" Dr. Giles of the reviews of discharges, loans and formation of a committee to study problems veterans face adjusting to received from the School of Busi­ Government Department." insurance." college life. (Photo by Glenn Moses) ness Administration. Dan Healy, one of the two Mallot sees the committee as veteran-student members of the dealing mainly with the "problems committee, "would like the com­ Vets Speak Out and obstacles of a veteran as a mittee to make some decisions student." Included among the which would stick." In addition to topics to be discussed will be an the objectives voiced by Mallot, he investigation of the problems faced sees the committee investigating the GI's Face Unique Problems by the veteran in housing. Cur­ pOsSiblity of monthly tuition pay­ rently the University allows un­ ments for veterans. Since the G.l. married veterans to enter the Bill appropriates $175 monthly for Can a veteran find happiness at students are a "little over-idealistic, forces stimulates one to maturity: housing lottery and be treated as the single veteran-student and $205 Georgetown University? Does a depending on who I speak with." "It opened my eyes to people, any other student. If he prefers, for those who are married, a system student who has been in the armed Twenty-six year old Daniel Peters society and the world." however, he may live off campus. of monthly tuition payments would forces have unique problems and (ColL'72) disagrees. A three-year Peters, however, found the Employment and its relationship be most appropriate for the veter­ views? veteran of the Army, he finds the Army to have "no intellectual to student life is also a major area ans' needs, Healy observed. The answer to these questions is Georgetown student to be "as stimulation whatsoever. of concern, Mallot states. Many James McKeever, the other vet­ an emphatic "yes!" Veteran­ much a Joe Hoya as ever. " "Your brain power gets a little veterans are married and must eran-student appointed to the com­ students do indeed have special Daniel Healy, (SBA'72), a 23 rusty until you get back to the real" therefore support a family. High­ mittee, sees the "triangular prob­ attitudes as a group, although those year old veteran of the Army, finds world," he said. "I can't live that yield jobs, that is, those which pay a lem of the married veteran" as a attitudes are by no means char­ that the typical Hoya "fills the great deal for short hours, are major area of concern. He stated acterized by uniformity. spectrum of personalities," while preferable for the veteran to the that the married veteran's problem When questioned concerning 26 year-old Paul Esswein (Coll.'73) regular "$2.25 an hour job," he may be viewed to include "the their OpInIOnS of those fellow a veteran of a four-year hitch in observed. The veteran must play a domestic responsibilities of a students not so fortunate to have the Navy, finds half of the student dual role: As a student, he must married man, the financial prob­ already served their country, an body intellectuaL "The other half attend to academic endeavors, lems he faces and the academic entire spectrum of answers ap­ are 'freaks,' Jo"r lack of a better while as a breadwinner he must reasons for attending college." peared. Stephen Hathaway word," he remarked. support himself and his family. For these reasons McKeever has (SBA'73), 26, who spent "three The general consensus among Mallot hopes that admissions organized a group called Veterans years, nine months and twenty­ veterans concerning student anti­ procedures will also be considered for Veteram-a strictly apolitical eight days" in the Navy, finds most war demonstrations is positive. by the committee. "Although vet­ organization which has as its goals of his peers to be "the most "During the first May Day demon­ erans' applications are reviewed "a drawing of the off-campus intellectual" and individualistic stu­ strations, when I was in Vietnam," twice," said Maurice Lancaster, student and initiation of a sense of dents I've ever come across." He Brian Brinig (SBA'74) said, "I felt assistant director of admissions for community among veterans." finds competition for grades a little that anything those kids did to get minorities, "they are not given The third veteran-oriented group too keen for comfort and is of the me home would be fine. If special consideration." Both Mallot on campus, the Veterans Referral opinion that some Georgetown demonstrations are the only viable way to confront the administration, then I accept them. "I do question the sincerity of many of the demonstrators, how- way-like Archie Bunker - I enjoy ever," he added. "It's unfortunate books too much." that there isn't a way to effect Commenting on his two years in change within the system." the Marines, Brinig stated, "they Walter Smith (Coll.'73), a were the worst years of my life, but 38 year-old veteran of the Korean the most profitable in terms of War, said of his fellow students, experience." "They want change, but voice their It is impossible to generalize opinions at a distance instead of exactly why the veterans inter­ really getting to a place where they viewed chose to substitute blue and can effect that change." gray for khaki and navy blue. The veterans' opinions of the Three and a half year Marine armed forces also provided a varied veteran Ralph Edwards (SBA'75) picture. Chuck Daily (Coll.'72), 26, observed that "at my age I need a expressed his views in straightfor- paper which declares I am qualified. Watd terms. "I regret having joined "Georgetown," Edwards added, the Navy. It is filled with alie- "can give me that paper." Speaking - nation, apathy and lack of trust. along the same lines, Smith com­ The only profit I received was that men ted, "Society sees a need for I learned a lot of what I didn't like, the diploma-so I'll get a diploma!" such as stupidity, ignorance and Esswein observed curtly that he unkindness." was presented with a choice of Healy expressed a somewhat "school or unemployment. Since I different sentiment, finding the can make more money after school, army "worthwhile." Healy claims I decided to come to Georgetown," he "matured greatly during my two "he said. "Now, I'm beginning to and a half years in the Army and I enjoy school: "I'm satisfying my, ,fulfilled my duty to serve my curiosity as tp whether I can cope <' r The transition from military to academic life has not been "trouble·free for all of Georgetown's 547 country." Hathaway echoed with intellectUal pursuits." Healy's conviction that the armed (Continued on'Page 15) veteran·students. (Photo by Glenn Moses) \ Friday, February'lS, 1972 ' ·.THE BOYA. Page Thirteen . ACompfehensive·Viewof Adjudication Ed. note-Peggy Jo Parros. assis"tant to Vice President for Student According to the Green Bo~k of 1971~72 , Life Dr. Patricia, Rueckel, has prepared a graphic representation of the varioUs boards included in the student adjudications system' for I. Decisions on residential matters come from: The HOYA. The charts which appeared in the Feb. 4, 1972 issue were inaccurate in several areas and Miss Parros submitted a revised Residence Hall version in an attempt to facilitate our understanding of this important system. Hearing Board Person Residential The charts provided illustrate the adjudication system as defined appeals in the Green and Purple Books of 1971-72 which the Administration accused Appeals Board accepts as the basis for the adjudicatory system. The student senate, chooses however, still maintains that the G-Book of 1970-71 is in effect as it Resident Director pertains to disciplinary matters. Waives hearing in writing While The HOYA affirms its belief in the value of peer judgement input to the adjudication system, the procedures are still overly complex. It is hoped that the task force on the quality of stude'(lt I I. Administrative action in residence halls: life's subcommittee on adjudication will submit resolutions to streamline the system without endangering the principles on which it Resident Director was founded--the student's right to receive a prompt and fair (up to residential probation) Residence Hall Residential hearing in front of peers, if he so desires, on any matter requiring ..--__o;;.;r ______.... ./ appeals appeals adjudication. Hearing Board Appeals Board Dean of Men or Women - University Appeals Board (up to resid~ntial suspension) . Composed of: President of the University Academic Dean According to the Purple Book of 1971-72 Student Government President 2 - University Hearing Board I. Cases which go to Campus Hearing Board or Deans: Composed of: 5 Students 4 Faculty Members Campus, 3 - Residential Appeals Board Hearing Board University Composed of: 2 Students Hearing Board 1 Dean 1 Corridor Jesuit Dean of Men or Women 1 Resident Assistant Waives CHB in writing 4 - Campus Hearing Board , Composed of: I I. Administrative action: 3 Students Summary Administrative Disciplinary University 5 - Residence Hall Hearing Board I------appeals Composed of: Action by Deans Hearing Board Appointed Representatives from the Dorms 6 - Evidentiary Advisory Council III. University Hearing Board under original jurisdiction: Composed of: 1 Student '\ Dean (Academic) Any member of gives evidence to 1 law Professor Georgetown University 7 - "Summary Suspension Board" Composed of: President 9f Faculty Senate IV.. Presidential summary suspension: University Student'S Dean (Academic) Appeals Board 1 Faculty or Admin. member Appeals to "Summary Suspension Board" (chosen by the 2 others)

-}?;~~~~ .~:·.· ..;::·:·W Continental Journey Produces , . : \':," ,.: ,- , '~,: ' Foreign Education Revisions i (Continued from Page 3) be under the supervision of profes- and English-speaking Africa, the ... sors who have received their doc- only continent without a George- there will soon be new oppor- t oral d egrees f rom American town study program. Their trip tunities for foreign study. Les h I f h Facultes CathoIiques de LilIe, for sc 00 s. A our- our course entitled produced leads on these and other "Social Science Methodology in the locations and has led to the example, will now accept George- town science students. Only hu- Developing World" will be required establishment of contacts all' over manities and social science students at Bombay with electives from the the world. were previously admitted. fields of economics, political Assimilation by Students science, social psychology and his- The science program at LilIe will t ory. The problem of assimilation into be directed by a French physical The Catholic University of Goias European culture is being solved by chemist who obtained his doctorate has a work-study program open to Georgetown students abroad with from an American university. Ad- students with some background in varying degrees of success. Fr. visors for the LilIe program will also Portuguese. Qualifying students will Bradley noted that the student's be qualified, American-trained de- be making up part of their tuition success or failure often depends on gree holders. by teaching English in Brazilian the location the student has chosen An important development in schools. After this year, the Bra- for his year abroad. Among the the foreign programs is the dis- zilian government has pledged to various European schools open to covery of opportunities for study at award five scholarships to George- the Georgetown student, there exist Xavier College of Bombay, India town students qualifying for study different degrees of difficulty in and at the Catholic University of at Goiania. shedding the tourist image that so Goias in Goiania, Brazil. Both of the travelers point out often plagues A' ericans in a Georgetown education will now span the globe as a result of intensive The Bombay program, running the rapidly expanding scope of the foreign country and which contri­ efforts by Frs. Davis and Bradley to expand the Georgetown Abroad from July to December and open to Georgetown Abroad program and butes to an aloofness between host program. 15 Georgetown· students, will also are looking for locations in French and guest. Helping the student r--.;;;;..-.------~-----...:..------=------v choose the location that may suit his individual needs and personality THE HOLY GARMENT CO. BETSY KRUGLIAK and preparing him to overcome the difficulties that he may expect in a L~+e's \ ... vernme?t, ~Ill assign a deficiency. It is possible to tailor ______- ______representatIv~ to fIll hiS place on the processed foods for good the board. nutrition. News Analysis All Georgetown undergraduates • Members of affluent societies are members of the corporation. A have a different requirement for full-time student "shall have the biological energy. To avoid obesity "provide greater legal leewaY,tt right to vote in elections, re­ they must eat less. Cutting down on according to the bill which was ferendum and the annual member­ calories makes it more difficult pas~ed unanimously by the senate's ship meeting as governed by the to get all the trace nutrients that judiciary committee. bylaws of the corporation," as are required and may call for such As stated in the Articles of stated in the Articles. micro·nutrient supplements as In('()~poi'dion, the organization will The Articles, however, also stip- vitamin pills. "spc..llsor, estabiish, organj:7.e, pro- ulate that any student who does • Excess of total food intake mote, and '0t assist educational, not want to be a member of the and specific foods is the greatest social, ehuntable, and religious corporation can state his intention cause of affluent malnutrition. As activities, pnt,erprises and programs in writing to the Chairman of the their income rises, people eat more for the benefit of its members and Board and will then be excluded calories and more foods of animal the residents of the Washington from the membership roll. " origin. Thus animal protein and Community." Members of the corporation will saturated fat increase in the diet. What this means in simple terms be subject to limited liability only. Affluence is also characterized is that S.G. Inc. will "provide any The members, therefore, are "in no O· 1· '__ .J .r:. by larger intakes of sugar and other conceivable service to the Uni- way responsible for the liabilities ur apo.l21es duoq :lriends carbohydrates into the diet. In the versity and Washington community incurred by a corporation to which ~ 0 U.S., 100 pounds of sugar a year in a cheaper, more efficient and they belong," said O'Brien. -xor the frac are of dftod order are eaten per person - about higher qualitative manner," accord· Thus, if a corporation goes . 0-- one-half of the total carbohydrate ing to S.G. Inc. Chairman of the bankrupt, its creditors cannot ap- ,the Lurnini50f paper intake. This raises the incidence of Board, Pat O'Brien (CoIl. '73). proach the stockholders for tooth decay: The question is, what The Board of Directors of SG renumeration. In short," he added, - .-.oS-ad f ., J-=-_ effect does the sugar, high saturated Inc. is composed of two student "the students have nothing to lose L-__.....;1;;.JI.....;5~U!..;...;:....;::;~~o..;;;;.::;~e;=..;==.:.aare::.::;.:=-=:=n=-_--=D.4N==I=E=-L..:Ba=RI=~=...J Page Fifteen Democratic Staffers Address

Potential Student V Qlunteers'• '1;, . " . " ,1:.. , .:' by Steve Worth September of 1963 and denounce that'~Americahasaresponsihilityto Speaking before' approximately the Vietnam yvar." the fr~ world." .. " "\i,:;' , 60 students in the ,I'alms Lounge of " Alan. Karauss of ttte' Muskie' ": Economic ~d, social pr9~Jelns " the Walsh building, staff workers of camp said that ~ost people support will 'be the major issues of th~~1,9'l2 four Democratic presidential candi- the Maine se~at9r because of his campaign, the 'staff membeiSf~~, dates compared their views Monday position on Vietnam withdrawal, with \ busing and l.lnemploym~~fthe night. " ' . and the restructuring of, national' mol!t, ~ontroversiaI ',topics. ' , :"'~.,:' , The presentation was sponsored priorities. Muskie's appe~; he said, ' .. by the ,Georgetown Young Demo- lies in the belief that he,will restore crats. Edmund Muskie was repre· "truth and, honesty in' govern· sented 'by staff,,'member., Alan 'ment." , KarauSs, Hubert' 'Humphrey by P~ul Baicich' from the, Jackson Mike Grimes, George McGovern by staff traced the history of American Representatives , "candidates Humphrey, John Bradburn and Henry Jackson ,liberalism to its present "topsy Muskie, McGovern an~~ Jackson' tldckessed a gathering' of iitterested by Paul, Baicich~ Jay Myerson turvy" state and the confusion: students in Palms Lounge., (Photo byF~Kohunl-' ' (Coll.'73) moderated the dis- within the Democratic party. Jack- t' , , ' ' cussion. son, he said, is the only 'candidate ' Grimes described Humphrey as a who can avoid a Democratic defeat AdlDinistration Pon'ders "consistent liberal" and "the most in the November election., outstanding candidate in the kinds All the candidates, except of legislation he has instigated." He McGovern were described by their cited Humphrey's role in the 1964 supporters as "opposed' 'to having AutulIlnStudy Period Civil Rights Act and the establish- the U.S. withdraw like a snail into A shortened final examination professors prefer the shortened one ment of the Job Corps. its shell" after Vietnam. McGovern, period preceded by 'a preparation hour period or intend to give no According to John Bradburn, Bradburn said, was a "realist," week is being considered by the final exam at all, "then we might McGovern is "the most righteous citing his early support forrecogni- University Administration, Ac- be able to shorten the exam period candidate as far as integrity goes." tion of China. ,'," ademic Vice-President' the Rev. down to a week," Fr. Fitzgerald McGovern was, he said, "the only Humphrey's position in foreign Thomas R. Fitzgerald, S.J. said said. senator to stand up as. early as policy, according to Grimes, was SEN. GEORGE McGOVERN Wednes~ay. "It'll be a verY intensive week of The possible change was exams," he added, "but it will have announced when' Fr. Fitzgerald been preceded by a week of Peace at McDono'ugh released the proposed 1972-73 preparation." academic calendar. Although it is Fr. Fitzgerald exphasized that not included in the new schedule, a any proposed change will not shortened, examination period is "involve a reduction in the number Henle: 'A Better Relationship' being considered for next year. of clasS days." Fr. Fitzgerald assumes that all The new schedule was designed (Continued from Page 1) The acting athletic director consi· "very capable and able to do a 'fine examinations cannot be crowded to be "virtually identical" to the new staff, while incorporating the ders his major responsibility "to job as athletic director," he 'reaf­ into a one week schedule. As a calendars of the five Washington existing people, in the development help formulate a positive philoso­ firmed his decision not to reapply result, the Admin.istration will seek Consortium universities, according of a more complete program." Fr. phy of athletics." This has resulted for the position of basketball coach to determine whIch professors do to the academic vice president. As a Henle sees "a better, working in "some confusion" and "my at Georgetown. not intend tQ give examinations result, students from Georgetown relationship all around." major responsiblity is to redefine The major schism in the athletic next year. Other professors, Fr. taking Consortium courses will find Rienzo, 37, came to Georgetown that philosophy and hope everyone department has developed around Fitzgerald noted, may prefer a one it "easier to cross campuses," he three years ago as head track coach. applies it," Rienzo said. the personal feud between Sigholtz hour final instead of the present' added. He arrived here with impressive "I do not consider this a and Magee. Magee also resigned last two hour time period. Two new features included in credentials after dominating New personal crusade," Rienzo stated. week under •fire. Despite the, open If a significant number of the proposed schedule include a York City schoolboy track as head "The Athletic Board and their hostilties between the two men, advisory committees should evalu­ Magee stated that "I do 'not three-day weekend in October and coach at Archbishop Molloy High ate my own personal philosophy a spring semester break slated for School for over a decade. consider this any kind of a victory. Veterans the middle of March. " The year' previous to his arrival, and see that it goes aiong with the It's tragic, it really is. ' the track team had all but dis­ other people." "I've had time to reflect oil the (Continued from Page 12) The spring break is scheduled as banded in a dispute with coach Rienzo expects his first concrete whole situation and I find that it is The problem of academic adjust- an Easter vacation this year. Next Steve Benedeck. Rienzo has since problem will be to "find a replace­ a tragic situation that two men 'Who ment is being handled well by most year, however, Easter occurs at the built the team up to a 50 man ment for Coach Magee who will wanted to, do 'something 'for Georgetown veterans. "I found it end of the semester, necessitating squad. Rienzo does not "envision rapidly bring us back to our proper Georgetown's athletics are now out easy to get back to work," observed the change. a broad restructuring of athletics," position in basketball." To redirect of work," Magee added. Brinig. "I now have more motiva- The three-day weekend in Oct­ but hopes that "some of the the athletic program; Rienzo be· Rienzo is "saddened" by the tion and a better appreciation of ober was set because "it was clear it conflict which occured over the lieves "the basketball program will events Which led to the resignation education." was too long a stretch until misunderstanding of the philosophy have to get back on its feet." of Sigholtz. "I know that in Bob Edwards feels that the reading Thanksgiving," ,Fr. Fitzgerald said. of athletics" can now be cleared up. Although Magee called Rienzo Sigholtz's dealings with me as a load is a bit heavy after three and a track coach he has been fair and half years away from the books, helpful. , "I am thankful for all that he ~~~t.'?elieVeS that "Marines don't Electives Marli SFS Reform has done for the furtherance or "It is best to break up the four track and field program at George­ years of college," emphasized town," Rienzo said. "His encoura­ A F'· Ie· I I S gement and help have been factors ~:;~~; ;~;to: :~::'gt~!~~~: ;~~! S Ina urrlCU urn s et in all this." those entering the service that they Challenged by his task, Rienzo will find "an intellectual back- (Continued from Page 1) tives. Of the 60 credit hours in the receive the final proposal Feb. 29. said,"We must now look at the water" which he believes will make ities course for a maximum of 50 last two years, 24 will be free. The Observers predict that E.X.C.O. will history of athletics at Georgetown further academic progress more students will also be offered. The other 36 will be divided according give the changes quick approvaL and learn those things that are good difficult. humanities course consists of lec- to the student's major. Foreign Service School Dean and build on them. The married veteran student tures in music, art and literature. There are four majors for a Peter F. Krogh is credited as the "We must also discard those faces the unique challenge of being Foreign service students will student in the School of Foreign driving force behind the new things that are detrimental to the student, spouse and father. finish all tpeir required courses at Service in the revised curriculum. curriculum, according to most ob· fundamental educational good of "College is geared toward the single the end of their'sophomore year. These are International History, servers. the University," Rienzo concluded. man," observed Smith, "but I don't Additional studies in the major Humanities in International Affairs, feel we (married students) should areas of concertration are being International Politics and Inter- receive special treatment." offered. national Economics. Some of' the veterans' inter- ,The language requirement and Depending upon the student's viewed offered some pertinent courses .in either theology or major, structured electives.in the advice to' prospective 'draftees. philqsopliy'have been set. A Money general areas of history, economics Daily emphasized that he "went and Income course will be offered and government will be offered. over the hill a number of times" fIrst ,semester followed by Inter· Eighteen of these \.'Vill be basic and urges all military men to do so: ' ~ti,onal Econ~mics. while the other 18 will be sup- "I would tell gUys to go over the ,In the government section, In- portive. hill once. Then you've broken, the troductiori to Comparative Govern- For International History military's power, over you: it frees ments and International. Relations majors, intensive areas of study will you and gives you a sense of, will both be required. It is expected include European, Regional or independence." ' that Dr~ Quigley will teach one of American Civilization. In the Inter- Peters believes he' 'WOUld "go to the: sections of the International national Politics section, Inter. Canada" if he' "~had to do it ag~nt Relatio~s course.'. ' nat~onal Relations, Law and

EASTER IN EUROPE? For information, see Professor Ri;ey·Hughes, English Department. Office in Lauinger Library. j I Veterans for Veterans

Harbin Music Lounge

Open House

February 27th 3-5 p.m. ~ake HAVE YOU GIVEN MUCH THOUGHT TO WHAT YOU'LL BE DOING ' It TOMORROW?

Finding a job that gives you satisfaction isn't easy today. Not in a world as con­ fusing and com­ plex as OUTS. But the PauI­ ist finds a frc­ quent joy in his own way of life and values that are lasting. As a Paulist he may counsel a run­ away youth. listen to the problems of senior citizen. OT­ ganize a Home Mass or conduct a forum on nar­ cotics. Because Paulists have al­ ways been pioneers in communi­ cations, h~ may communicate through the printed word or through mass media such as radio. film!. or television. Whatever tool he chooses. the Paulist gets his "message" through. Can you think of any other life that will provide more inner satisfaction for you? For more information about the Paulist priesthood write to: Rev. Donald C. Campbell, C.S.P., Vocation Director, Room PQUlisrfothets.

PABST BREWING COMPANY· Milwaukee, Wis., Peoria Heights, III., Newark, N.J., Los Angeles, Cal .• Pabst, Ga. 31069

415 West 59th Street New York, N.Y. 10019 Friday, February 18,1972 THE,HOYA Page Seventeen Norman Mailer: The Blue-Gray Man

by Mike Blatty denying altogether that he is a Ed. note: The following article novelist." describes Norman Medler's day at And as he clicked off the lamp Georgetown University last Friday. and climbed into bed, Mark was The story begins with the reporter's beginning to be afraid. "Be earthy," assignment to cover the Mailer visit. I his boss had said; "joke around Actually, he hadn't been thrilled with h~m." But whe~ he emer~ed when his "boss" gave him a call and from hiS dorm late Friday mornll~g asked him to follow Mailer on his and walked ever-faster toward hiS tour 'of the University. "It's right rendezvous in Walsh, he knew that up your alley," he had told Mark he would not. over the phone, which seemed true enough for more reasons than one. WALSH But there was a problem that hadn't occurred to Mark's boss: "I've read some of his stuff, you The news of his arrival came know, and I hate the guy. It's not rippling through the crowd like a the writing itself. It's just that he's chain of tumbling dominoes. Out­ a raving egomaniac. I can't stand side room 394 an overflow mass him." of anxious students clogged the Mark recalled the accounts he drab blue corridor, sealing off the had read of Mailer's legendary remaining room and threatening to manner. Once, while addressing a strangle the entire floor. "He's in throng of demonstrators prior to a the lobby," someone yelled and the Tom Corrigan, Norman Mailer, Voice reporter Emily Durso and HOYAreporter Mike Blatty stroll up 0 Street. march on the Pentagon, he had chatter of the crowd grew steadily (Photo by F. Kohun) guzzled quarts of liquor, shouted a louder. ,variety of obscenities, threatened to Crouched in the corner of the sat down in the chair behind the swered them very thoroughly and kindly. At every pause in the beat up the. official ~.C ..a~d buzzing hall, Mark was so busy teacher's desk. He rubbed his hands THE TOMBS answered cnes of PublICity rethinking his approach that he was together. conversation, Mark put his right hound!" with a vibrant "F--- you!" completely oblivious to the exodus Mark listened and watched as hand on top of his mug, looked at ,But the assignment sounded in progress. A SUdden frenzied rush Mailer addressed the class and stole Mark turned away from the Mailer who in turn looked at him interesting and Mark agreed to do packed the bursting classroom and split-second glances at some of the tangle of curly gray hair, the steely and began to open his mouth to it. left him nearly alone in a strangely faces around the room. Then Mark gray-blue eyes of the man across speak. quiet con-idor, There was a loud wrote in his tablet, "He is nervous!" the table. His heart was pounding But there was something so COPLEY click and swinging sound in the and underlined it three times. He like a locomotive gone Wild. unr~al about facing this ex~ra- direction of the stairs, then three noticea that Mailer fidgeted with his Mark could feel in the darkness ordmary man from the other Side vague figures stepped into the hall glass of water as he spoke and that of the afternoon p~b, the hot, salty of a lunch tab!e that !nvariabl!' Late that night, hunched within and began to walk in his direction. the man's sharp, rapid delivery was beads of sweat bursting through his Mark !owered hiS han~ Just a bit the ~urning glow of a drooping Mark put his hand in the left beginning to grate on his nerves. forehead then trickling down his and raised the mug to hIS mouth, It high-intensity lamp, Mark came to pocket of his jacket and pulled out Mark thought he saw something cheeks onto the floor. After the must have happened two or three realize how wrong he had been. a very small writing tablet. He in every one of those little habits, dizzy flash of color, there was a times befo,re Mark could stand it no What emerged from a quick glanced back up at the figures. but whatever he thought most crystal pool of icy red liquid longer. He. knew he would have to review of the collection of essays pierced by a bobbing and gently spe,~: ~,e SImply ?ad to know. on Mailer was an understanding of spinning straw. Su, Mark saId very nervously. a passionate, sensitive, witty, ta­ Mark lowered his head until his "I've been wanting to ask you lented, confused, abused and "Dr. Flint said something about lunch and Mailer said, teeth found the plastic and the cold, som~thing fo~ quite a while but I'm misunderstood man. With the publi­ 'We don't have to eat in the cafeteria, do we?' " red wine was flowing smoothly afraId that ] ve been too nervous. cation of his first novel at the age through his being. A moment later, I'v~ read two of y~ur nov~ls and I of 25, he had been brutally thrust - ______he cocked his head to the incre· enjoyed them qUIte a bIt and I into the public eye, declared to Th . dulous photographer on his left. wonder if you have any plans for have joined the ranks of great ey we,re gett10g closer. He significant he made a special note "I'm scared to death" he another, Don't you feel that your American authors, then expected to l~wered hIS head and ~it the tip of of on the back of the tablet. Two whispered-and cracked a we~k and involv~~ent in so many activities play the role to a hilt. ~IS pen. ,He had recogmzed the man days later, while writing an account empty smile. He turned again to the has diSSipated mUch of your en­ As Mailer himself had put it, "It m the middle. of the visit, Mark looked at the man across the table, the man ergy?" cut me off from the past. I felt like A man with a brown beard back of the tablet and copied the speaking softly to the ladies by his following quotations: 'd someone who had been dropped peeked out of the classroom, then " . D . Sl e. , onto Mars." hurried outside and met the man in • An ~mer!can rea~ IS the A steaming bowl qf mushroom Mailer's second novel, The Deer the middle. They shook hands a first Amencan . novel. sm.ce The soup hovered above his head and Park, was to be the masterpiece of few feet from Mark. He flipped the Scarlet Letter ,:,,~!ch th10ks m terms Mark lifted his arms to bring it to his generation, ,the equivalent, in his cover of the tablet, put the tip of of goo~,and evIl.. the table. He felt a sudden jolt of time to The Sun Also Rises. It was the pen to the clean white page and ~ Readers !n New York were pain as the cauldron burned his jUdg;d mediocre at best. Barbary scribbled quickly. "short, rather ~un~us beca~se I left them hang- fingers-then slowly, steadily, it Shore was the same. pudgy, blue denim pants and shirt, mg. (!1me~lcan Dream, first ap- floated past his face and latched Now, 24 years later, the man black boots, curly gray hair, blue­ peared 10 serial form) . itself cruelly to the hands of the caned by Sinclair Lewis, "the grey eyes." , B~~ then ~e als,? COPIed: " pearded man. The exchange was greatest writer to come out of his The four men passed through . • Expenence m. novel wrltmg repeated once, then again, before it generation" was waging a battle the door that the bearded man had gives. one a certam amount of reached the table. con,fl,dence, bu~ the first two .weeks A bright silver spoon flashed in with women's liberationists and peeked out from, so Mark walked {wrltmg Amencan Dream} It was . visiting colleges to push his latest to the opposite door and slipped · t ld 't 't't " the darkness, then descended mto b a. d 1 JUS cou n WrJ e I . th h kif . r b th film. inside to stand in the back of the • "Novels take me three to four e c un y poo 0 sWlr I~g ro . Mark closed the books, con- classroom. The crowd was perfectly times as long to write as non- T~e bearded man rose, saId some- vinced he would be meeting a man silent: nobody moved in his chair. · " thmg and left. fiIC tIon. "N "M k h ht h haunted by literary failure. "He is Dr. Flint said "Well here he is, • "1 don't think about past ow, ar t oug, as t e facing it in one of two ways," Mark Norman Mailer'" and the man who books. I'm too concerned with new spo~>n rose and fell, He mched the NORMAN MAILER thought. "Either he is exaggerating had been in the middle walked 'de " chaIr forward and carefully lowered There! It was out-over-done the merit of his previous works or slowly to the front of the class and I as'''It tak ny y t b his left elbow onto the edge of the • es so ma ears 0 e with! Mark felt terribly drained but :: ' '.... ; . . table. He looked down, then up a wnter because you have faIled as . t th 't' bI H also greatly relieved. Mailer had . t d d h' d In 0 e wal mg ue·gray eyes. e a writer 0 un erstan w at IS goo t d h' I' d t dd th listened carefully (perhaps patient­ and bad." par e IS IpS, rea y 0 a ress e ly) and nodded thanks when he D r. Fl10' t s t 00 d up an d th an k e d awesome author. mentioned the novels. Why had it ,Mailer. The man in the 'chair been so difficult? thanked him back, then the class THE ANSWER Mark listened intently as Mailer stood up and walked out the two explained his theory of creative doors. Mark found the student with energy. He believed, he said, that the camera who was supposed to Suddenly a figure was standing energy is collected, not lost through accompany Mailer also and the two next to Mark. They had been in the contact with, a variety of experi­ of them walked to the front of the pub for quite a long time and Mark ences and individuals. The essence class where their man was talking could see well enough to know who of his answer, and it had been fairly quietly with a handful of leftovers, it was. Corrigan said, "You must be long, was that energy gained from When they, too, had'left, Tom very tired; why don't you use my stimulating activities could be Corrigan of the Lecture Fund asked room to rest for a while before the "stored" in a sense and brought to the reporters to introduce them- talk." bear on a particular activity in the selves. The girls went first, then the Mark was impressed with future. photographer, then Mark. Nobody Mailer's kindness. The conversation He paused for a second as shook hands, which was fine with had been dead for quite some though waiting for confirmation. Mark who was beginning to feel time but he said, "Well, I'm very Mark continued to look at Mailer's very frightened. relaxed here. I'd like to stay a while eyes; he knew that he could not Dr. Flint said something about longer." And Corrigan repeated, nod. Mark wanted to ask again if lunch and Mailer said, "We don't "But you must be very tired" and Mailer planned to write a novel, but have to eat in the cafeteria, do Mailer said, "I'm going to stay a bit the reporter found that he was we?" longer" and that was that. Corrigan speechless. Mailer waited for a good Dr. Flint said, "No, there's a smiled and disappeared in the while longer, antiCipating another nice place across the street called darkness. question. Then he turned to his the 1789." But when they all Then the waiter came to the beer and the girls: "In the Prisoner crossed the street, the door was table and gave everyone a beer. The of Sex, .. " one of the girls said. Mailer: 'passionate, sensitive, witty, talented, confused, abused and locked, . so they went downstairs girls began to ask Mailer about Several minutes later, they rose . ~sunderstood.' (Photo by F. Kohun) , , "_' , . , _i~~~~. _ , ' , ' _ .. ______, . , ___ ,,:,~~e~~s_ .l~~~r~~i?~, ,~d, ,~~ . an- and left the table, Page Eighteen THE HOYA' Friday, February 18, 1972 8abyHoyas Lack Talent; Three Recruits on Team, by Tom Ruddock Fitzgerald have also been im- the chance to play with the varsity Riding in the wake of the varsity proving, adding their talents to the team. This ruling will also put some basketball team is a somewhat scoring and playmaking of the responsibility on the coach. A

forgotten group of athletes who offense. I freshman won't get as much experi- compose the freshman basketball Yet the team has suffered two ence on the varsity bench as he team. Coached by former Hoya major setbacks in the fOnDS of would playing with the freshmen co-captain Don Weber, they have Mark Gallagher and Kevin Laughna. team. The coach will have to decide compiled a 4-7 record, beating such The team's best player by far how he wants to use and develop teams as Catholic University and Gallagher broke a bone in his right his freshmen players." Arlington Hall. ?~nd a number of weeks ago. His Weber also pointed out that this Teamwise, the freshmen appear Injury has taken longer than ex- new rule will be good for recruiting to have considerable success in their pected to heal and consq~ently, the players. The one stipulation of the execution of the fast break. They rre~hmen have ~een Without the rule, however, is that a player will have been running a lot in practice InSIde attack which Gallagher can have to state his status in the and this helps to explain the success give ..Kevin Laughna, anoth~r out- beginning of the year and keep it. A of the fast break. The main standIng player, !eft Georgetown, freshman on the varsity roster will weakness of the freshmen is their because of academiC troubles. Thus, not be allowed to compete in defensive play and as a result, the the team has been plagued by the freshmen games. team has been working very hard absence of two key players. on rebounding skills. Meanwhile, in recent action the Just recently the N .C.A.A. As far as individual talent is passed a rule that will allow Hoya frosh swept past Arlington concerned, the team has had its freshmen to compete on the varsity Hall 101-49 on Saturday- night. share of improvements as well as Outstanding performances came level in football' and basketball. The from Ed Fitzgerald with 16 points, dissappointments. Bill Donan, the rule will go into effect next fall. team's 6'7" center, has been on a Tom Russo with 18 points and Bill constant upswing. Though only Coach Weber feels the rule is a good Donan with 16 points and 15 somewhat lacking offensively, he one. rebounds. Last Monday night saw has been an asset to the team's "I'm in favor of this new rule. the freshmen fall to a 32 point loss The 4-7 Freshman basketball team shown here in a "heavy" practice weak defense. Tom Russo and Ed Now talented freshmen will have to Navy. session at McDonough Gym. (Photo by Fred Kohun) r------,HOYA,SPOR'rS MENU Friday, Feb. 18 Hoyettes B,eat NO, TRACK: Quadrangular Meet {Md., Penn. and Del.) at Stretch Skein to 4 Delaware U.; '1 p.m. Saturday, Feb. 19 The Georgetown Hoyettes up­ outrebounded the visitors, grabbing SWIMMING: VS. Towson State ped their season record to 4-0 with 47 to Notre Dame's 13. at American U. last Thursday's 32-30 victory over Ms. Meagher was high scorer in Montgomery College and Tuesday the Montgomery College game' as Sunday. Feb. 20 night's 44-25 conquest of Baltimore well, adding 10 points to the BASKETBALL: VS. Hofstra at Notre Dame. Winning cause. Kate Connelly McDonough Gym. a p.m. played well, hitting for eight points. Led by co-captains Libby Heskin Tuesday, Feb. 22 and Kate Connelly in the Notre Down 15-12 at halftime, the Dame game, the girls finally played Hoyettes fought back to tie the game at 25-all in the third quarter SWIMMING: atShepheard Coli. to the potential Coach Betty before finally edging Montgomery WOMEN'S ,BASKETBALL: vs. Underwood had predicted. 32-30. , " Mt. Yemen" at .McDonough Brigid Meagher, who tossed in The Hoyettes will put their Gym) 7:80 p.m. 18 points, was the high scorer in undefeated record on the line ~Ur.~ Feb. 24 the Notre Dame game for the Tuesday night when they play Mt. .' Hoyettes. Although the margin waS Vernon at home. On Thursday they .BAS~TIJ~~:, ,at ,Manhattan lopsided, the Hoyettes managed to Immaculata on the road and Satur­ , ; (Madison Square Gard~n) hit only 19 percent of their shots day they will trek to New York Women~s ':~ketball:' at Im* from the floor. The Hoyettes City to meet Fordham. "h;laeuI~ta " "

© 1972 Jos. Schlitz Brewing Co., Mitwaukee and other great cities.

AQUARIUS, JAN. 20-FEB. 18.

.. , Former Georgetown harrier Bill Barrow, whose mile relay team defeated previously unbeaten Adelphi at Louisville, is now a member of Sports lnternationaI. (Photo by F. Kohun) GU Runners Shine A t William & Mary (Continued from Page 20) run their individual events within tational division and finished an hour of the relay but they won, second to Joe David of Sports anyway. Neale had to run his third International, with a jump of 6'8". half·mile in competition later in the In the college events Rich Mull evening. The splits were: Sickles, won his section of the two mile 2:04.0; Matteini, 2:01.6; Freel, with a time of 9:23.8. Mull is 1:58.6, and Neale, 2:03.8. returning after a knee injury and In the mile relay, Bruce Mason, ~ ear infection during the cross- co·captain of the indoor team, ran country season. Teammate Steve ail exciting lead leg but the team ~ Riley ran 9: 28.7 in another section failed to, maintain its lead and to capture fourth in that section. finished second in 3:35.0. The If you're ·'an Aquarian, In the mile, freshmen Wes split~ Wfo(;': Mason, 53.2', Rousseau, you've probably already found Burwell and Jim Blessing ran 54.4; Dan Hogan, 54.6, and Mattin­ near-identical times of 4: 37.2 and gly 52.8. Schlitz Malt Liquor. 4:37.3, respectively. Coach RlE:nzo expressed his AqUariUS' you're anything but traditional. Other individuals who competed overall feeli!1g of the meet saying, but failed to place were Jim Freel YO,l!'re often a wild dreamer, and always "There were some very impr,essive an Independent thinker. That's why you in the half, Lou Fabrizio and Steve performances. A couple of runners get along so well with Schlitz Malt Liquor, Matteini in the 600, Joe Mattingly showed me that they're really on Taurus the Bull. ' , , and Charlie Rousseau in the 60 and the verge of running really well." ~ Schlitz Malt Liquor is the unique drink that stands Rich Birhle in the 50 yard high hurdles. Tom Neale was the only This_ weekend the entire team apart with a bold taste all its own. And that's other individual who placed, travels to Delaware' for a quad- what you respect. ragular meet with Pennsylvania, You know you can be lost for days in your idealistic copping fourth in the half mile. dreams of the future. And when you join the Neale, Freel and Matteini re­ Maryland and Delaware, but Justin earth-bound, you continue to seek originality and turned to team with Mark Sickles as Gubbins, the outstanding mar- surprise. Like Schlitz Malt Liquor, Taurus the Bull. the second unit of the two mile athoner, will not compete in the relay won the event in 8:08.0. All Washington's Birthday Marathon Nobody makes malt liquor like Schlitz. Nobody. three of the runners had already due to a pinched nerve in his foot. !-.______~ Friday, February 18,1972 THE HOYA Page Nineteen , UiJder the Bleachers Sigholtzv. Magee ... by Dave Kopech i§ necessary, but what kind of council? The Sports Editor greatest criticism of the Athletic council is One of the most interesting aspects of the that it allows too much time for deliberation Sigholtz-Magee controversy is the speed or and by the time it finally decides, the decision lack of speed of the Athletic Council in has already been made by someone else. dealing with the current (ancient?) problems I would sugge'st that the council be at McDonough Gym. required to submit minutes of all its meetings The council is made 'up of nine regular to the University community. The students, members, with three representatives from the faculty and administration would then be able to see what was accomplished in a five and student body ~ three from the faculty one alumnus, one representative of the administra­ one-half hour meeting. At the same time, the tion and the Athletic Director, who is an knowledge that their actions would be ex-officio member. A representative of the reviewed might just make. the Council Woman's Athletic Association and a represen­ members face their responsibility and make ta6ve from the office of the vice-president for decisions while there are still decisions to be student life are also included. tnade. Members are required to meet at least Cheerleaders or Cheerfollowers? monthly and are responsible for advising Fr. Cheerleaders are an amazing lot. Usually Henle on matters pertaining to Georgetown they are loud and outgoing and generally athletics. spirited. Georgetown's cheerleaders fit this The inefficiency of this group is obvious. It description; they are loud and outgoing and tends to postpone all controversies and in spirited, but unfortunately they choose to be doing so, adds directly to them. all of these things at times other than A good example of the council's ineffi­ basketball- and football games. I am not .' ' ciency is the Magee case. Coach Magee had criticizing the hard work of these individuals ,»,y.~""""~':""'" H inquired as to his status for next year as early rather, the fact that they are basically as the spring of 1971, but it was not until ineffective. They do not incite the crowd to As a large crowd looks on during the Rutgers game, Jack Magee turns December that the council met to review cheer or make noise, but seem to let the away, disgusted by one of the many questionable calls made by the Magee's contract. The council, however, crowd lead them. referees. (Photo by Art Oberhofer) decided not to make a decision during the Cheerleading has never been considered a basketball season and postponed any decision glorious pastime for men, but it seems that until later in the year. guys are the only ones who can really get a Poor Foul Shooting Meanwhile, The Washington Post released crowd moving. This may be due to the fact its front page Laug~na article and Col. that the majority of those attending the Sigholtz released his now famous "Basketball basketball games are guys. While the cheer­ Evident in Losses Fact Sheet." The situation seemed to be leaders are standing around, the guys take the the line. They hit 81 percent of getting a little out of hand. One might think initiative do all the work. Why not make their their free throws all night (com­ that the Athletic Council might want to clear job official and create a men's cheerleading pared to 65 percent for. George­ up the situation. squad? town) and·did not miss when they Instead, it decided to meet again and Another problem of the Georgetown needed them most. The final was 90-83 and the Hoyas were 2-16. discuss whether or not Magee should be fired cheerleaders is the great looking outfits which Loss number 17 came at the or rehired. One should not imply that such a follow them around. The colors blue and gray hands of Rutgers, 72-58. Again move was not called for; it certainly are very patriotic (see Civil War 1861-1865), playing a good first half, the Hoyas was-except that a decision one way or the but they are very blah especially when, as is could manage only 26 points in the other should have been forthco!lling. It was typically Georgetown, gray is the accented last half. There was no second hal f comeback in this game. The only not; instead the council deliberated for nearly color. Grey should not be accented and comeback the Hoyas did make was six hours w"ithout reaching a decision. Magee neither should the ankles of the female in the first half, as Fletcher once decided- he had waited long enough and version of the Hoya cheerleaders. again provided the hot hand to resigned, thus eliminating any need for the As for those lovely young ladies who cheer erase a nine point deficit and put council to deliberate any further. but can't yell, they are to be commended for Georgetown up by three at 23-20. John Somogyi, the highly touted One cannot really criticize the council for their efforts. It seems, however, that much of Scarlet Knight guard, led Rutgers not reaching a decision. In light of its past their effort thus far has been wasted. with 23 points. But more impor­ history, it was only doing what comes Alternatives to the situation might include the tantly, Somogyi provided slick ball naturally-nothing! possibility of finding more cheerleaders, handling on fast breaks which, in When one considers the amount of time preferably the type who are not self-conscious VINCE FLETCHER the final analysis, did the Hoyas in, Rutgers had more than it's share of and energy it wastes "deliberating," one about cheerleading, or of having the existing t d b k h t ft · d' ... d conver e a an s 0 a er uncontested layups, due in large wonders if there should even be an Athletic c h eer1 ea d ers fIn more Imagmative an grabbing an important rebound. part to Georgetown turnovers and Council. inspiring cheers and voices which can be The Hoyas were forced to foul also to the Hoyas' poor second half 'It seems that some type of advisory board heard. and Assumption did not miss from showing off their offensive boards. Intramurals rill Void of Team, Individual Sports' by Mary Quinn popular intramural sport, is nearing intramural program, the men's "The intramural program is the end of its season, during which intramural council, in cooperation arranged to create a balance be­ 60 undergraduate and 20, graduate/ with the woman's athletic associa­ tween major team sports and faculty teams competed. The sea­ tion, is planning an All-Sports Day. individual sports," commented son ends officially on March 1 and Though it is still in the "draft" Greg Schulze, director of intra­ playoffs will begin immediately stage, the day is tentatively set for murals. "We've tried to work it so after. There will be six tournaments mid-April. It will consist of an that there is something for every­ and six intramural champions, all of afternoon of activities such as co·ed one, whether or not they have whom will receive individual tro­ softball, volleyball, frishee, tug-of­ specialized athletic ability." , phies. war and sack races. There will be The intramurals program is open . The intramural department is appropriate refreshments provided to anyone who is connected with also interested ,in attracting a and the champions will receive . the University, both undergraduate greater number of girls to partici­ individual plaques . and graduate students as well as pate in it's events; consequently, Though no difinite arrangements members of the faculty and staff. everything is either co-ed or has a have been made, it is hoped that While anyone may compete in the woman's division. perhaps other student activities graduate-faculty-staff division, only , could be scheduled for the same undergraduate students may enter The intramural clubs program weekend as the All-Sports Day, to the undergraduate events. was forme.d to make.up for the ~ack comprise a Spring Weekend. There are 14 sports ranging from o~ form~lzed phYSIcal ed~catlOn. The intrmural program has a badminton to golf in the program. I~ s meetmgs are. la~gely mstru~. wide assortment of sports and Ping-pong, volleyball, softball, ~onal and there IS lIttle competl- activities to offer the stUdents. squash, tennis and track and field bon. The club program offers "The teams" said Schulze "are are included. Entries are still open fencing, squash, boxing, judo, formed pri~arily for enjoyment 'lbe Georgetown Fencing Club performed during the halftime of the for everything except ping-pong, ~ii~g, we!ght training and condi- though at the same time they try t~· Rutgers game. The club is one of five which make up the Intramural badminton and squash. tlonmg to mterested students. fill the void of scheduled instruc- Clubs Program. (Photo by Keith King) Basketball, by far the most As a grand finale to the spring tion classes." 'GEORGETOWN UNIVERSITY. WASHINGTON D.C. Friday; FeblUarY 18, 1972

Another Record in Sight Hoyas Establish Loss Mark Hoop Losses Nos. Jr. Sparks' ... 16, 17, _and 1B;. .. ? St~Joe's to by Phil Margiasso then collapse and lose. Whether this 81-70 Win The hard-luck Hoyas again had failure to perform in the latter It finally happened. It was fairly their share of bad breaks last week stages of a gapIe is due to fatigue or obvious that the Hoyas would and in the process lost three games psychological reasons cannot be break the school record for losses in to Assumption, Rutgers and Navy. determined with any great degree a season, but it was not until Monday night, the Hoyas again of certainty. Wednesday night that the inevitable ,­ were victims of their own ineptness. took place. It would seem, however, that At Annapolis, they seemed unable fate is working against the Hoyas. Against nationally ranked St. to get things together,.but even this The ending of the Penn State game Joseph's, the Hoyas played per­ did not really cause their 18th bordered on the incredible and the haps their finest game but as has defeat. way Assumption won was annoy- been the case all season long, Poor Shooting ing. It seems the Hoyas should have victory was just out of reaeh. 't 13 for 33 come away victors in at least one of Head Coach Jack Magee was I ns t ead , J was a · . th e 1as t f our h orne games, yet t h ey pleased with the efforts of his perf ormance f or the c harIty strIpe did not players. "We played extremely well, that sealed their doom by a score of . our best game this year." He 70-66. It was the worst foul Assumption Prevails especiallv praised the efforts of shooting _ performance for the Sophomores Tim Lambour and Hoyas. Prior to the Navy game they The game with Assumption was Ron Lyons. Lambour scored seven· had shot at a 68.1 percent free deadlocked 42-42 at intermission teen points and had nine assists throw percentage.. Had they shot The Hound~ then ~ent ahead by a~ while Philadelphia bred Lyons ~ 68.1 percent a~aInst Navy, they 11 point lead late in the second half added fourteen points and twelve would have won In a walk. at 78-67. The Hoyas staged a quick rebounds. comeback, initiated by Vince Flet­ Disheartening-Weekend cher's consecutive medium range The Hoyas led by four points at \ halftime but were unable to contain The other two games the Hoyas jump shots. When Mike Laughna, All-American cadidate Mike Ban­ played were equally dishearten. who played only briefly in the first tom and the other Hawks in the ing ... In both ,games the halftime h~f because of foul troubl.e, shook second half. The Hoyas did mange score was even. The script of almost hiS man loose underneath for an to pull within one point with a every Hoya basketball game seems easy layup, the margin was down to little over nine minutes left but to be a fairly predictable one. The a sole point. The Hoyas had a Bantom sank five straight buckets first half consists of inspired ball chance to take the lead, but ~ i') ... to put the game out of reach. control and good execution. In the watched it increase instead as a The game was the Hoyas' eight second half the Hoyas fall behind at turnover was followed by Tim Sophomore standout Don Willis scores a layup on ~ br~akaway early in the Hoyas' loss to Assumption. (Photo by Art Oberhofer) consecutive loss and the twelfth the very outset, rally to tie and (Continued on Page 19) defeat suffered on the road. The GEORGETOWN old school record for losses in a FG FT R PF T L.ughna .. -.- .. 9-15 1·3 18 2 19 season took place in 1954 when the Meets NCAA Standards Edwards ...... 4-10 1· 3 9 1 9 Hoyas won eleven and lost eight­ LYons ...... - R 6· 6 12 3 1• Lambour .. . ~ .... 6·11 5· 6 I 3 17 een. The Hoyas have a chance to Fletcher ...... ~·20 2· 3 1 4 10 Kentz ...... 0- 2 o· 0 2 0 0 break another record on Thursday Dooley .. .. 0- 2 1- 2 I 4 1 Robinson ...... O· 1 O· 0 0 1 0 when they meet Manhattan in Mitchell o· 0 0- 0 0 1 0 2-Mile Relay Qualifies Squ~re If Totals. : .:: ::: . : • 27·69 16-23 48 19 70 Madison Garden. they ST. JOSEPH'S by Ned Hogan the first time this year and Coach the University of Chicago Track FG FT R PF T lose that game they will break the Me Fsrland ...... 9-16 2· 3 5 1 10 school mark for consecutive losses a The two mile relay travelled to Rienzo commented, "There's a Club, a team of post-graduate Sabol ...... 1· 3 4· A 0 0 Bantam ...... 10·26 4- 8 19 .1 2A" record they already share with the the Mason·Dixon Games in Louis· slight emotional barrier especially atheletes who last year set the McCollum '" 3·10 5· 6 7 ~ II O'Brien ...... 6· 8 4· 6 4 J 16 team from 1954. ville last week and despite the fact for freshmen. We hadn't run in the American record, since broken, for Prybella ...... I· 2 0- 0 2 n 0 Kelly ...... 1· 3 o· 0 2 0 2 The Hoyas can conceivably that they didn't win the event the first section before and they need a the indoor event in the Mason­ Furey ...... O· 1 O· 0 l 4 0 relay furthered its chances' to little experience." Dixon Games. Zipp ...... 0 0 O· 0 0 1 0 break the string on Sunday when Peltzer ...... O· 1 O· 0 0 0 0 qualify for next month's N .C.A.A. The team finished third behind The race itself was closely Totals ...... 31-70 19·27 43 16 81 they play a mediocre Hofstra team. Championships in Detroit. Manhattan College, considered the contested and the Hoyas finished They ran in the first section for favorite for the N.C.A.A. title, and two seconds behind the Jaspers. The talented Jaspers, who have run S, ••.,.,.. ';m., Team• t '·I;n·If "j, s, _ the fastest time of the year, ran John Lovett, Cliff Bruce, Joe • fn. Savage and John Rothrock. The t.I~ S RecQI'.d• I to 4-6 Hoyas splits were; Kevin Reilly, _ . 1:53.5; Duane Joyce, 1:53.2; Steve The G.U. swim team, though I He also _helped pace John Hickey to Caton, 1:53.4, and Conrad Zink, splitting the past week's meets'I-1, a 6:06.9 in the 500 free, setting up 1:51.5 for 7:31.6. moved itself' closer to a possible a 1-2 sweep of that event. Co- The .N.C.A.A. qualifications call .500 season record with a 64-40 captain Jim Rummage also scored a for the seven fastest teams and victory over Randolph Macon season best of 2:33.7 in taking the. Georgetown is safely placed within Saturday. The loss was chalked up 200 yard Jjreaststroke. that group. A selection committee, i~ the traditional C~tholic Univer- The story was different against however, has the final word and SIty - Georgetown rIvalry held last. Randolph Macon, in many ways. members make their decisions Thursday, an encounter doomed The coach of the visiting team taking into consideration the types from the start since Catholic U. insisted upon a three meter diving of tracks and other variables. began giving swimming scholarships event, a breach of regulations in While the two mile relay was in sev~ral years back. The Hoya's that Randolph Macon does not Louisville, the remainder of the record now stands at 4-7 with five possess a three meter board at their team was in Williamsburg, Va. for more meets scheduled to complete home pool. Usually, another one the Indian Invitational. Hampered the season. . meter event would be held instead. by the 12 lap flat tartan track, the Catholic U. placed its swimmers After much deliberation, the Hoyas times were not spectacular. Many in such a way as to win the meet, . accepted his request, only to find of the better runners were granted a yet pace the Hoya swimmers to that Randolph Macon had not week's lay-off following good per- some of their finer times. brought a diver with them! formances or were sidelined to The 400 medley relay of Scott But the attempt to prevent the prevent reinjuries. Wakemen, Jim Rummage, Dave Hoyas from gaining five points in Of those who did run, there Donovan and Joe Tennent took a that diving event failed as Senior were many good- performances in first· in one .of their finer perfor- Jeff Bernard, diving from three ~' , 4J' .,.. ~ the college division events. Bruce mances this season. meter board for the first time in 14 Groneveldt, the ~utstanding Hoya Craig Moore took a third in the years, uns.teadHy climbed the ladder -.:-- " - Steve Caton is' one of the '~embers of Georgetown'~-two mile relay team high-jumper, competed in the invi- 1,000 with a 12:49 to clip a few and dove to the applause of which qualified for the NCAA's. (Photo by Glenn Moses) (Continued on Page 18). more seconds off his school record. everyone present.