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May 22, 1959 QaCanipifi «^ News Briefs {By the Author of "Ratty Round the Flag, Boys! "and, "BarefoU Boy with Cheek:') ^ The foreign service officer exams will be given on December 5, 1959 in 65 centers throughout the U. S, and in Foreign Serv­ ice posts abroad. Applicants will be given HOW TO BE A a one-day written exam to find their ability in expression, general ability, and back­ THUMPING BIG SUCCESS ON CAMPUS ground. Those who qualify will be orally examined by a panel in their area. Those who pass, will get a physical exam and Wliile up in the attic last week hiding "But college is more than just sleeping, background investigation. If they survive from the tax man, I came across a letter, eating, and studjing. There are also many this, they are put on an appointed list in yellow with age, that dear old Dad had interesting acti\ities which you must not order of exam grades. Starting salary sent me when I was a freshman. I repro­ miss. You'll want to give at least three ranges from $5,225 to $5,885 per year. duce it below in the hope that it may Ught hours a day to the campus newspaper, Candidates must be between 21 and 32 your waj"^ as it did mine. and, of course, another three hours each years of age as of Oct. 19, 1959. College seniors or graduates may be 20. They must "Dear Son, (Dad always called me Son. to the dramatic and music clubs. And let's say a total of eight hours daily to the be American citizens for at least 9 years. This was short for Sonnenberg, which Application blanks and other information used to be nw first name. I traded it last stamp club, the debating club, and the may be obtained from the Board of Examin­ 5'ear with a man named Max. He threw foreign affairs club. Then, of course, nine ers for the Foreign Service, Department of in two outfielders and a left-handed or ten hours for fencing and bird-walk­ State, Washington 25, D. C. Applications, pitcher But I digress.) ing, and another ten or twelve for ceramics must be filed by October 19, 1959. and three-card monte. A paper on "The Silicon Solar Energy "Dear Son, (Dad wrote) Converter" took fourth place in a contest "I suppose j'ou are finding college very "Finally we come to the most impor­ sponsored by the Great Lakes District of big and bewildering, and maybe a little tant part of each day—W'hat I call 'The the American Institute of Electrical Engi­ Quiet Time.' This is a period in which neers. It was written by Robert Archey of frightening too. Well, it need not be that Pittsfield, Mass., an electrical engineering way if you will follow a few simple rules. you renew yourself—just relax and think senior at Notre Dame. great thoughts and smoke Marlboro Ciga­ "First of all, if 5'^ou have anj' problems, A comparative study of the judicial rettes. Wliy Marlboro? Because they are take them to j'our teachers. The}'^ want to systems of the United States, Canada, help 5'ou. That's what they are there for. the natural complement to the active life. Switzerland, Argentina, Australia, Brazil Perhaps thej' seem a little aloof, but that They have better 'makin's'; the filter and Mexico is incorporated in "The Fed­ eral States and Their Judiciary" a new is onlj' because thej' are so busJ^ You will filters; the flavor is rich and mellow and a treat to the tired, a boon to the spent, book by W. J. Wagner, associate professor find 3'our teachers warm as toast and of law in the Notre Dame Law School. a safe harbor to the storm-tossed. That's friendly as pups if j'ou will call on them Professor Wagner, who joined the Notre at an hour when thej' are not overly busy. why. Dame faculty in 1953, has just been award­ Four a.m., for instance. ed a Fulbright grant for lecturing and re­ "Well, Sonnenberg, I guess that's about search abroad during the 1959-60 school "Second, learn to budget j'our time. all. Your kindly old mother sends her year. He wiU lecture on American law What with classes, acti\ities, studjing, love. She has just finished putting up and comparative law at the University of and social life all competing Paris and the University of Rennes in for j'our time, it is easy to France. The author of the new work holds fall into sloppj"^ habits. Set advanced degrees from the University of up a rigid schedule and stick Paris and Warsaw and Northwestern Uni­ versity. to it. Remember, there are only 24 hours a day. Three A book on Communism, which two Notre of these hours must be spent Dame professors helped edit and to which they contributed, has come under attack in class. For every hour in by a Red party publication in the Soviet class you must, of course, Union. The authors were called "the most spend two hours studying. open and naked enemies of Communism." So there go six more hours. The book, "A Handbook of World Com- . Then, as we all know, for munism," was published in Germany last every hour stud3ang, you must spend two rather a lai^e batch of pickles—in fact, year by a Polish priest. Rev. Joseph M. Bochenski. The Notre Dame editors and hours sleeping. This accounts for twelve 350,000 jars. I told her that with you more hours. Then there are meals—three contributors are Dr. John Fizer and Dr. away at school, we would not need so Gerhart Niemeyer. hours each for breakfast and lunch, four many, but kindly old Mother is such a The book came under attack in the hours for dinner. Never forget, Sonnen­ creature of habit that, though I hit her March issue of "The Communist," a berg, you must chew each mouthful twelve quite hard several times, I could not dis­ monthly review of Red ideology published himdied times. You show me a backward suade her. for party members. It is the official "party student, and I'll show you a man who Keep 'em flying, line" for Communist party members. bolts his food. Although the book is available in Ger­ Dad." man, it will be published in English this ©use fall and issues in other languages will fol­ low. Berets more advice to freshmen—and uppercUmmen too. Scholars from the United States, C]»na^9j If non-fitter cigarette* are your pleaaure, double your pleas­ Eun^ie and South America have accepted ure with Philip Morris, made by the makers of Marlboro. (Continued on page 25) The Scholastic the Scholastic TO JOHN THURIN AND THE ENTIRE STAFF OF THE 1959 DOME, Vol. 100 May 22, 1959 No. 24 OUR SINCERE CONGRATULATIONS At last week's Publications Banquet in the Morris Inn, John Thurin, 1959 DmM editor DiiGe Qnad Semper Vieturat whom you see pictured at the left, unveiled volume 50 to the pleasantly surprised audi­ \^ve Qoaii Oai Moritimis ence. In typical Thurin fashion the event was of heroic scale. Against the back wall of the Mahogany Room was a four- or Founded 1867 five-foot reproduction of the Dome cover which, when opened, revealed a movie screen. For the next ten or fifteen minutes we were treated to a sneak preview of the year hook and were Entered as second class matter at Notre Dame, so impressed with the changes that we decided to devote the In^ana. Accepted for mailing at special rate of cover and several feature pages to our own preview. As the postage. Authorized June 23, 1918. bulletin board posters around campus claim, the Dont« DOES have a new look, an informal spirit that cai>tures many of the everyday facets of campus life. We were particularly impressed with the color pictures of the Dome taken from the road to BOB SEDLACK St. Mary's and the stadium picture during the Duke game last fall. Editor It is unfortimate that the Dome comes out so late in the year for it leaves very little time for John, and his Associate Editor, Bob Janoski, to LOU STETTLER enjoy the praise that is so deserved for their year-long effort. Again, may we offer our congratulations for a job well done. Associate Editor

RON BLUBAUGH News Editor GRADUATION: Recently a lottery was conducted to see which parents of the gradu­ ating seniors would be assigned seats in the Drill Hall in event that rain would WALT RUDGE Copy Editor force the exercises inside. Although the lottery was perhaps the most democratic way JIM YOCH. .. Features Editor to solve the problem, it might have been much better or fairer to reward the parents TEDDY THOMPSON. Sports Editor of those students who achieved academic distinction at the University, such as honon JON SIDDLE -Cover Editor or prizes. To reward those who had attained an excellence in academic matters hy giving their parents choice seats for the ceremonies would not be unlike the way in DAVE SOMMER Photography which the University rewards its former athletic leaders. The Monogram dub maor PETER HASBROOK. Business Manager bers have a fifty-yard line section reserved for them in each home game. CONRAD SUSKI Circulation ROY RUBELI. .Assistant News AL GENIESSE „. -Assistant Copy STUDENT FORUM: The last forum of the year proved to be quite a success. The CHAS RIECK. Assistant Copy speeches were interesting, and the discussion lively (although it did come off with a FRANK DUDA Assistant Features slow start). This one and the forum discussing the problem of Red China were perhaps the best. The Academic Commission is to be congratulated on its program of student JERRY KRIEGSHAUSER.„JVss't Features fora. CHUCK MHXER Assistant Features TOM ROSE .Assistant Sports BOB SCHAEFER Assistant Sports WSND's YEAR IN REVIEW: One of the most enjoyable features of the year on the BOB HORN. j\ssistant Business student radio station took place last Sunday night when the entire year, off and on FR. CHARLES CAREY, G.S.C...Moderator campus, was reviewed by the staff of WSND. A very good idea and a very well- handled program. Possibly the most interesting facet of this particular program was the presentation BUSINESS STAFF: Tom Carer. Bernie DobransU. of awards to a member of the administration and a member of the faculty for thor Jim Keough, Roger McMahon, Joe Finnigan. outstanding contributions to Notre Dame this year. Oftentimes, as is evidtmced hy the recent furor over television's Emmy awards, one is disappointed or appalled at the NEWS STAFF: Jim Byrne, George Catejr, Wade selection of particular winners. Happily, this was not the case with WSND. darte. Bill Flaherty. Bill Galvin. John Hoey. Bob We would especially like to cite the award given to Father Collins, Notre Dame Kelley. Jim McGranenr. Tom Marriniak. Tom Dean of Students. The very nature of his position is extremely difScult and even, >- Romans. Charles Tausche. Tom Wda. no doubt, undesirable since he must handle, in addition to numerous small details sack as lost and found, the disciplinary problems of the University. His kindness and con­ SPORTS STAFF: William Gary. Dick Ciccone. sideration, his patience and personal concern have impressed many of us since his Didc Corso, Jay Kilroy, Tim O'Reilly, William assumption of the office two years ago. We would like to add our appreciation and Reagan, George Voris, Tom Walsh. congratulations to that of WSND for an honor well deserved.

Member of Catholic SdunA Pttm AiwciatioB ami ONE DISGRUNTLED NOTE: When Father Collins commented on the number of ~ Aaodated Cdlegiate Ftress. Repraented for a»- students who, for reasons other than disciplinary, were forced to leave Notre Dame tiooal advertiiing by National Advcrtinis Service, he said that he had tried to convince some of them to remain hut that he wasn^ com­ lac. 420 Maifismi Avenue, New York Gty. pletely successful. WSND's interviewer remarked blithely, "WeU, you can't win tiicm all. Father." Later on, when Coach Langford remariced that he r^n^etted losinflf a por^ THE SCHOLASTIC it paUnhed weekly dnii* Ik* ticular fencing match, the atrocious "you can't win than all" was repeated—to our.. •ckool year, except dming vatatioB aad extreme annoyance. The flipjiancy (though we feel that it was unintentional) of this tioa perkMb, at die Univcnity of Notre phrase was completely out of c(mtext with the seriousness of the program. Iby we, rate, 95.00 • year. AddrcM aQ i» AB B£tar, Bos 185, Notre 7 suggest that the interviewer find a more appropriate comment. S. * SL May 22, 1959 BREEN'S JEWELRY . . . Nationally Ad­ OUR COVER: This week's SCHO­ vertised Watches, Diamonds, Silverware LASTIC cover is a preview of the RENT a One-Way Trailer to Men's and Women's Costume Jewelry 1959 DOME which will be dis­ take your things home Four Ways to Buy: Cash, Charge. Layaway. tributed on the 25th of this month. Handy Charge .... Fine Watch Repairing It pictures the cover of the yearbook WARNER'S RENT-A-TRAILER 325 South Michigan AT 7-3630 with the implements of those who 901 WESTERN AVE. SOUTH BEND worked on it laying on top of it. Fine arts major Gerald Welling gives the students a sneak look at the cover of what is one of the most excellent college yearbooks in the jlllllllllilS country. Welling is a member of the DOME staff and has other work featured in this year's book. UBBiftY aid A complete four page spread BOOK SHOP on this year's outstanding book be­ Available New Catholic Books' Missals, and at the gins on page 14. Carrying our cover Notre Dame theme throughout the section, this Prayer Books. Religious Articles. week's SCHOLASTIC is designed Bookstore 110 East LaSalle Ave., So. Bend ECONOMY SIZE not only to preview the DOME but A Non-Profit Organization Rag. 69$ value to look like it.

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The Scholastic Zieoftm

a demi-finale: by JOHN BELLAIRS the arthurian legend continues

Now that I am about to pass into the the sallyport, the following ritual would parts after the tenth hour, and the pages of history as one of the maligned ensue: pages were forbidden to bum candles in and maligning wits of this fair campus, Serf-Templar: Get the (wheeze) devil the evening. All candles and wicks were • I deem it time to try once more to wrest out from under that portcullis! Yez controlled by the Templjtrs (who claimed the somewhat battered laurel wreath can't come in here after the ninth hour to have invented light), and their chief from the head of the Arch-fiend, Bowen. between Swithinmas and Michaelmas, amusement was to patrol the castle with My response to Bowen's archaeological except on tournament days, when yez water-buckets, dousing the candles of cowp of last week is the announcement can't come in at all. those who disobeyed them. The guards of a discovery of my own. Sir F.: But, marry, this is mine own demanded of the pages small bits of While rummaging through some of place of study, and besides I have on my parchment, which were collected and the more moldy sections of the library, shield the Seal of Righteousness which burned in a great fire every Walpurgis- I discovered a decaying volume which gaineth me access. nacht. If the parchment was not forth­ was being used as a doorstop for a fire S.-T.: Oh Yeah? Well it ain't gonna coming, a hue and cry would ensue, and exit. The barely legible gilt lettering gaineth yez enti-ance here. Out! the page (if caught) would be sorely of this old folio edition proclaimed it a This ceremony was always completed flogged. first edition of Malory's he Morte by the guard's confiscation of all the These tireless guardians of the castle d'Arthur, but what interested me most knight's regalia amid violent curses, and never tired of insulting visiting digni­ was a hand-written addendum at the the expulsion of said knight from the taries. The Abbot of Cul-de-sac was back. This manuscript, dedicated to a premises. It came to pass that these pitched into the moat on the charge of fellow named Ralph Roister Doister, is stalwart protectors would challenge any­ being an impostor (The guards had de­ entitled Ye Legende of Kynge Baldric of one who even passed near the castle, and cided that all those who were not of Umbrage. I shall attempt to reproduce those who wanted admittance could gain their number were impostors, or at on this page this quaint legend, preserv­ it only by donning a hairshirt and ad­ least very naughty people), and on one ing if I can the inimitable mediaeval vancing on the knees bearing propitia­ occasion King Baldric himself was eject­ style. tory bouquets of forget-me-nots for the ed for not knowing the password of the Once in a valley yclept Promisse (that guards. On tournament days, when the day. is, blight-ridden) there dwelt a King most burly knights of the castle engaged It came to pass eventually (as all Baldric. This goodly knight built in the in mortal combat, visitors were forced things do) that no one was able to get valley a castle (ne'er seraph spread a to tether their palfreys at least 12 miles in or out of the castle, all the passage­ pinion o'er castle half so fair) called from the castle, and advance the rest of ways having been bricked up by the Umbrage, and called to it knights and the way on foot chanting the Carmina guards. The palace lay thus, as if en-—. damozels from all the countiy round, so Burana in four-quarters time. The chanted, until the doughty Sir Hngh that he might have jousts, quaff mead, guards not only obeyed all orders but Demi-Culverin and his men (who did and become legendaiy as all get-out. To made up their own, and their watchword not believe in the curse) decided to guard the castle from dragons, knights- or motto became: "The knights who own assault the castle. As he said: errant, and other riff-raff. King Baldric the castle are no better than anyone "I think it is time to take Um- organized a society of guardian knights else." It may be wondei'ed that these bi-age." called the Order of the Baggy Blue aged protectors were not sorely beaten So Castle Umbrage was taken, nor Doublet, or Serf-Templars. This so­ or at least challenged by the men-at- was it the last time that Umbrage was ciety was composed of men who were ai-ms whom they discomfited, for they taken, since it was discovered that the by i-ule no less than 86 years of age, and bore neither halberd nor broadaxe. But guards were unable to elicit from out­ no more than three feet tall, with a the fact was that the Serf-Templars siders the respect accorded them by the weight of at least 200 lbs. net. The were said to be enchanted and that their castle personnel. It was also dis­ members of the society were ranked ac­ very touch would bring down on the covered eventually that the castle had cording to their ability to growl guttur- \ictim of their wrath a muri'ain of nothing worth the taking but a few ally, make meaningless gestures, and gnats, ague, and acid stomach to boot. dented wassail bowls and a few paynims protect entrances, portcullises and the And indeed the countenance of these left over from the last Crusade, so the like. Clad in their garb of baggy blue men bore witness to the eflicacy of the invaders went away, leaving the guards (which was decorated with tinsel) these curse. to their games. It is said that the Serf- stalwarts guarded the castle against But in time the Templars became dis­ Templars watch over the castle to tliia enemies, but especially against those satisfied with mere- enti'ance-guarding, veiy day. Some say they are the Imsr who wanted to get in or out of the and took to rebuking the pages of the bands of the Yalksrries, some claim ihey premises for any reason whatsoever. For castle, who would bait the guards to are descended from the Troll-god, but instance, if Sir Falconet, a teacher at make them give chase. New i-ules were others (and wiser ones, too) say they the castle-school wished admittance at invented to keep the pages off the ram­ are just bothersome old men. May 22, 1959 RENEW YOUR ABSOLUTE LAST CHANCE TO SCHOLASTIC SUBSCRIPTION NOW

from LIMERICK LAUGHTER ENTER NOW! PROCRASTINATION WON'T PAY

Put a little sunshine in your life. Put some cash in your pocket. Enter the SCHOLASTIC "Limerick Laughter" Contest. It's easy. It's fun! Here's how the contest v/orks: The SCHOLASTIC will award $5 for the best limerick submitted with an empty L & M cigarette pack. Another $5 will be paid for the best limerick submitted with an empty Chesterfield pack, and a third $5 for the best limerick submitted with an empty Oasis pock. Ten (10) honorary mention G. WASHINGTON, faonous father, says: limerick winners will receive Happy Talk game, the new hilarious word "Makes your hair look real George!" game. Write your limerick on any subject you choose. Enter as often as you wish, Jostalinlebil- but be sure to accompany each limerick with on empty pack of L & M, of Wildroot Chesterfield, or Oasis cigarettes. and...WOW J ft This contest is open to all Notre Dome students and faculty members. Entries must be delivered to the Scholastic office or mailed to: LIMERICK LAUGHTER, % THE SCHOLASTIC, University Press Office, Notre Dome, Ind. College Outline Limericks for the May contest must be received by May 24. Names of the winners will be published in the May 29 edition of the SCHOLASTIC. Series The samples below show you how easy it is to write a winning limerick. * History of Europe Since 1815 / oft must suppress a strong yen. On Ruddy Pierre let u^ tarry. To think for myself now and then. He dated a coed named Mary. * History of the United States In all this "security," With ta^te a^ their basis. Why strain my maturity? They of course smoked Oasis. Since 1865 Ifs done for me by "competent men." Compatible pair — need you query? * first Year College Chemistry * Biology * Chemistry Problems and How to Solve Ihem * French, Spanish, and German Reviews * Physics—Questions, Problems, and Solutions See the Special Sale on Prints and New Books

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8 The Scholastic QamfuU Si AEC CHIEF JOHN A. McCONE TO SPEAK BEFORE 1,280 GRADUATES IN STADIUM

Cardinal Koenig to Deliver Baccalaureate Address; Bishop Pursley to Celebrate Solemn Pontifical Mass

His Eminence Franz Cardinal Koenig, Pittsburgh, Pa.; Sir Hugh Scott Taylor, Archbishop of Vienna, and ChaiiTnan president of the Woodrow Wilson Na­ John A. McCone of the U. S. Atomic tional Fellowship Foundation, Princeton, Energy Commission will be the principal N.J. speakers at Notre Dame's 114th annual Honorary doctors. Other honorary commencement exercises here Sunday, degree recipients are Rev. John A. O'­ June 7. The announcement was made to­ Brien, author of religious and philosoph­ day by The Rev. Theodore M. Hesburgh, ical books and a veteran Notre Dame fa­ C.S.C., University president. culty member; Harry C. Hagerty, finan­ FRANZ CARDINAL KOENIG The Austrian prelate will preach the cial vice-president, Metropolitan Life In­ Representing Church . . . Baccalaureate sennon during a Solemn surance Co., New York City; and John Pontifical Mass to be celebrated by Walker, director of the National Gallery Bishop Leo A. Pursley of Fort Wayne of Art, Washington, D.C. Maloney is attending Notre Dame on in the Notre Dame Stadium at 9 a.m. Following the Baccalaureate Mass in a Lubrizol Scholarship, and was award­ McCone will deliver the commencement the morning Father Hesburgh will bless ed the Notre Dame Navigation Award. address at af tenioon exercises in the sta­ an American flag which the senior class Cardinal Koenig became a Prince of dium. Father Hesburgh will confer (ight presented to the University on Washing­ the Church last December, having suc­ honorary degrees and approximately ton's birthday. Traditionally, the seniors' ceeded Cardinal Innitzer as Archbishop 1,280 graduate and undergi-aduate de­ flag is blessed and flown for the first of Vienna in May, 1956. A native of grees during the ceremonies, which will time on their graduation day and then Rabenstein in lower Austria, the 53- be televised by WNDU-TV. throughout the following year. year-old prelate is an outstandingr Biblical scholar and an exceptional luv Honorary degree recipients, in addition On the day before their g^i'^duation guist with a command of most European to the Archbishop and Commission mem­ from Notre Dame 236 members of the languages including Russian. ber include Lt. Gen. Bernard A. Schrie- senior class will receive commissions in ver, head of the Air Force Research and the Army, Air Force, Navy and Marine Eminent visitor. During Worid War H Development Command, Andrews Air Corps during Class Day exercises in the he served as chaplain to University of Force Base, Md.; Dr. Frederick D. Ros­ University Drill Hall, Saturday, -June 6, Vienna students. With the end of hostil­ sini, head of the department of chemis­ at 10 a.m. The program also will include ities he became lector in Biblical studies try, Cai'negie Institute of Technology, the awarding of prizes to outstanding at the University of Vienna and later students. Rev. Edmund P. Joyce, C.S.C., was appointed to the chair of moral Notre Dame's executive vice-president, theology at the Salzburg Theolc^eal will preside at the Class Day ceremonies. Faculty. He was elevated to the hier­ Student speakers will include John Hay- archy and made Coadjutor Bishop of ward, Lucio Noto, and John Maloney, his native diocese of Sankt Poelten on Hayward, the class president, is a June 3, 1952. He was ordained in Borne resident of Toledo, Ohio. He is member­ on October 27, 1933. ship chairman of the Blue Circle Honor McCone was sworn in as chairman of Society, co-chairman of the YCS, and a the U. S. Atomic Energy Commission on member of the NEOTC. July 14, 1958. During 1950-51 lie had The valedictorian of the class, Noto served as Under Secretary of the Air is a resident of Englewood Cliffs, N. J. Force in charge of new aircraft procnie- He is a member of the Physics club the ment and the construction of air imaes International Relations club, a YCS throughout the world. A native of San group leader, and was assistant chair­ Francisco, McCone is a 1922 engineoii^ man of the Festival of Arts. He has been graduate of the Uiiiversity of California. named winner of a Woodrow Wilson Before assuming his present-duties, lie Scholarship, which he will use to study was president of the Joshua HendyCoipi., physics at Cornell University. Los Angeles, which operates tankers in Orator from Penn. Maloney, the class world trade and cargo ships in the orator, is from Fairness Hills, Penn. Pacific. \ He is a member of the American Insti­ Last year's commencement speaker tute of Chemical Engineers, the Joint was Labor Secretary James MitdidL Engineering Council, the Nu Delta Archbishop Brady of St. Paul gave fhe - Epsilon honor society, and NROTC. He Baccalaureate address. The eeranomes also is serving as the vice-president of this year as in the past, will be hcM . the AIChE, vice-chairman of the JEC, in the Notre Dame Stadium. In case of CHAIRMAN JOHN McCONE secretary of the Nu Delta Epsilon, and rain, the ceremonies will be held in the . . . and State assistant editor of the Dome, DriU Hall. May 22, 1959 Yoch Chosen '59 Editor of 'Juggler' by Board; Army Field Band Gives New Format Planned for Literary Periodicaf Concert at 8 in Drill Hall The United States Army Field Band of the Herodotians, a member of the will present a concert tonight at 8:00 The editor and senior board members in the Drill Hall. The program is spon­ of the Juggler have announced their University Concert Band, and a Dean's Lister. , sored by the Tri-Military Council and selection of Jim Yoch as editor of the admission is free. campus literai-y publication for 1959- Also on next year's Juggler board will be Bernai-d McElroy, Cris Watters, and Composed of more than 100 of the 60 Yoch, a Dean's List student, is a finest musicians in the Army, the band junior English major from St. Louis. He Jim Rose. McElroy is a junior English major from East Orange, N. J., who has made three extensive overseas tours is an active member of the Wranglers, as part of President Eisenhower's president-elect of the Bookmen and is has recently been named the recipient of the Mitchell award for play writing. People-to-People Program to foster the present features editor of the SCHO­ intei'national good will. Concerts for LASTIC. Joe Ryan, the outgoing editor, He is a reviewer for the SCHOLASTIC, a feature writer for next year's Dome, Pope Pius XII, Prince Rainier and Prin­ is a senior English major from Bronx, cess Gi"ace of Monaco, and President N.Y. Next year Eyan will study English a member of the Dean's List, and an ex- assistant vice president of the NFCCS. Tito of Yugoslavia were highlights of literature as a Woodrow Wilson Fellow­ the 1957 goodwill journey. ship winner at the University of Chi­ Watters, a sophomore pre-med student In Spring of 1958 the Army band cago. fi-om Ti'enton, Ohio, is a member of the made its first tour of Hawaii and the Next year, Yoch plans to completely Bookmen and a member of the Dean's List. Far East. The vetei-an musicians played change the format of the Juggler as part a total of 45 concerts in 41 days. During of the celebration of its thirtieth anni­ Revolutionary assistant. Rose, of Cuba the 27-day tour of Japan, Korea, and versary. The present size, cover, paper, fame., is a junior English major from Okinawa, the band played before an and type are being discarded (finances Hamburg, N. Y. He is a member of the estimated audience of 150,000. allowing) in favor of a largei-, color- Wranglers, Bookmen, and the 1960 Jazz The band's repertoire ranges from illuminated magazine that will enlarge Festival Committee. classical arrangements to popular tunes its scope to include photographs of stu­ and novelty numbers. Vocal and in­ dent painting, sculptui-e, and archi­ strumental solos are also a part of all tecture exhibits. The winter issue will perfoi-mances. The Soldier's Chorus of be the longest and will contain stories 30 vocalists has accompanied the band and essays selected from the thirty-year since 1947 and is considered one of the ti^dition of the Scrip-Juggler. Yoch also best male voice groups on the concert plans to boost circulation. The Juggler stage. will launch an intense advertising cam­ Spanish bull rings, French provincial paign next semester based on the market halls, Riviera seaside parks and present magazine's high quality ma­ Scandinavian amphitheaters were terials and its new format. crowded with audiences totaling 350,000 Television performer. Assisting Yoch, during the 1957 summer tour of Europe. as associate editors, will be Tom Ban- Traversing the continent from Oslo to choff and Dave Christian. BanchoflF, of Seville and from Lisbon to Belgrade, the College Quiz Bowl fame, is a Woodrow "Kings of the Highways" played 43 Wilson Fellowship winner for 1960, the concerts in 12 countries. chairman of the AB Advisory Council, a The primary mission of the Anny member of the Bookmen, tennis squad, Field Band is to tour, as directed by the Third Order of St. Francis, president of Secretai-y of the Amiy, and present free next year's Wranglers, and is on the public concerts as representatives of the Dean's List. He is a junior math major United States and the Ai-my, both here from Trenton, New Jersey. and abroad. Christian, a junior history major from Lansing, Illinois, is the secretary

EDITOR YOCH A new look. Next year's Auxiliary Board will be headed by Paul Hundt and Jack Caha- lan. A junior English major from New York City, Himdt is on the AB Ad- visoiy Council and was a member of the Junior Parent-Son Week End Committee. Cahalan, a sophomore philosophy major is an academic commissioner, a mem­ ber of the Blue Circle and the AB Ad­ visory Council, and is on the Dean's List. The other newly appointed members of the Auxiliary Board are William Slat- tery, Michael Smith, and Lyn Ralph, sophomores, and Terry Burke, a fi'esh- man. Of next year's Juggler personnel, Yoch, Banchoif, Christian, Watters, and Hundt are on the present Juggler board. In addition to Ryan, the graduating members of this year's staff are Charles Bowen, Bob Vondrasek, James Carroll, ASSOCIATE BANCHOFF Andrew Connelly, Bob Ghelardi, Marsh ASSOCIATE CHRISTIAN Literary help. '(Continued on page 24) The historical approach. 10 The Scholastic Jones to Replace Berioncini as Band Leader; Shishman Supervises Titterton, LeRose, Nolan to Retorn Next Year '59 'Technical Review' Tom Shishman, a mechanical engi­ Titterton, a junior in the College of neering major from Tulsa, Okla., has Engineering. been named to the position of editor of Old Pro. One member of the trom­ the Technical Review. Named as asso­ bone section. Bill Coulson, will be re­ ciate editors were Jim Hayes and Jim turning next year. Coulson, a graduate Wulf. student in philosophy, had had 16 years Previously articles editor of the Re­ of musical experience, and has worked view, Shishman will succeed Soger with such musicians as Abe Most, Betty O'Neil. A Dean's List student, he is Button, Ray Sims and Shorty Sheilock. secretary of the engineering honor so­ Coulson is now playing regularly on ciety, Nu Delta Epsilon, a member of Frank Dreighton's show on WNDU-TV. the Joint Engineering Coiincil, and the For next year, Jones plans to put Glee Club. Tom, who has been a mem­ more emphasis on the large band than ber of the Review since his freshman was done this year, when the activities year, plans to keep his policy much the of the smaller five piece group lai-gely same as that of the present, which has overshadowed it. Greater attempt will had so much success in recent years. be made to seek out engagements for the large band at South Bend area dances Hayes, who is in his fifth year of and other social affairs. AB Engineering here at Notre Dame, is Plans for next year's small group are from Larchmont, N. Y. He is the vice- still indefinite, and will be largely con­ president of the engineering honor so­ tingent on Jones' finding suitable re­ ciety, Nu Delta Epsilon and a monber placement for guitarist Bertoncini. of the Met club. Any aspiring musician wishing ta Wulf is a mechanical engineering WALLY JONES audition for the Lettermen cliould con­ major from Rock Island, lU. Formerly tact Wally Jones at 317 Howard. features editor of the Review, he is a New letterhead for the lettermen. member of the American Society of Taking charge of next year's Letter- Mechanical Engineers. men, popular campus band led this year Grand Knight Elected A third junior on the new staff will by Gene Bertoncini, will be Wally Jones, be Dick Sapp, who has been named as a pianist for the past two years with For Next School Year business manager. Sapp, an engineering Bertoncini's group. science major, is from Munhall, Pa. He Jones, a junior from Wilmette, 111., is Gi-and Knight of the Notre Dame is on the Dean's List and a member of a communication arts major. He has Knights of Columbus for next year is the Air Force ROTC unit here Jeny McGlynn, junior commerce major been playing the piano for 15 years and from St. Louis. He has served as ward­ The other new staff members for next has played for musical productions put en of the Council this year and was: year will be: John McLaughlin, a soph­ on by the University Theater. In ad­ named Knight of the Semester last fall,. omore from Chevy Chase, Md., oflSce dition, he is a member of Gene Berton­ McGlynn is also president of the St. manager; Garry Scheuring, a sophomore cini's quartet, which has a three-week Louis club and has been active in Dillon from Zona, Minn., copy editor; Tom engagement, beginning July 6, at the and Stanford hall governments. Medland, a junior from L(^anspoit, Cloister Inn in Chicago. Deputy Grand Knight will be Bill Ind., features editor; Joe Ogurchak, a Big Band Sound. Next year's Letter- Heaphy, a junior English major from sophomore from Akron, Ohio, articles men will probably cany 15 pieces, ac­ Bridgeport, Conn. He was publicity editor; and Hank Mittelhauser, a fresh­ cording to Jones, who has still quite a director for the Knights this year. man engineering student from Manhas- few unfilled positions. Although final Selected as chancellor was Joseph Hil- set, N. Y., advertising manager. personnel arrangements won't be com­ ger. Hailing from Columbus, Ind., pleted until fall, Jones expects to use Hilger is also active in the Accounting- three trumpets, three trombones, and club, the YCS, and the Propeller club. five saxophones in addition to the Recorder for the coming year will be rhythm and string sections. Marty Ronan, sophomore AB student Only two of the saxophone spots have from Chicago, who was re-elected to his been definitely filled. 'They will be held present post. Warden will be Jim Wat­ down by Len LeRose and Ralph Capas- ers, Dean's List commerce student from so, both graduate students of the music Philadelphia who is also a member of school. Two trumpet players have been WSND's Public Relations Staff. selected: Freshman Con Nolan and John Elected to the position of treasurer was James Long, AB sophomore from New York City, Long is also active in ... OR ELSE the teaching activities of the CCD. Ad­ vocate will be Clay Smith, who retains Another notice joins the ranks. his present position. A junior commerce This one emphasizes that all books major, Smith is secretary of the Com­ borrowed from the University Li­ merce Forum and president of the brary after May 12 will be due May Indianapolis club. Inside Guard will be Shephen Kiley, 31. In any case, all books will be former Senate spiritual commissioner due the day before final examina­ and commerce student from Kokomo, tions, that is, a week from this Sun­ Ind. Outside Guards will be Thomas day. Special borrowing privileges O'Donnell, an AB major from Chicago will go into effect only during the and member of the AFROTC rifle team, examination period. and Thomas Miller, commerce student HMTOI TQM SMSHMAN from Milwaukee, Wis. Technically speaking. May 22, 1959 U WSND Reviews Year on 'Profiles in Sound'; Math Dept. Announces Tie Winners of Contest Announce First Recipients of Station Awards The Mathematics Depai-tment an­ nounced Wednesday the winners of their "Profiles in Sound," a review of Notre nouncers who have made them popular annual mathematics competition for Dame, 1958-'59, took to the WSND air­ at Notre Dame, "Profiles in Sound" was sophomores and freshmen. In the soph­ waves last Sunday between 8 and 11 rounded out with news and sports pre­ omore competition, there was a first place p.m. The three-hour spectacular, pro­ dictions for the coming year given by tie between Robert Burckel of Science duced and directed by Mike Ahem, Geary and Ryan. and William O'Connell of AB. Joseph WSND program director, began with a Among the campus personalities in­ Bartlett of Engineering and David Hud­ montage of the year's activites. terviewed on the spectacular were Bill son of AB submitted papers worthy of Joe Geary, WSND news director, fol­ McCuUough, 1958-'59 chairman of the honorable mention. These four papers lowed with the year's 15 top news stories. Blue Circle Honor Society, John Thurin, wei"e chosen from among the 20 sub­ King Gillan presented a summary of 1958-'59 editor of the Dome, and Robei-t mitted by sophomores from all colleges. campus news highlights. Sedlack, 1958-'59 editor of the SCHO­ John Meyer of AB was chosen the WSND sports director, Tim Ryan, LASTIC. The 1959-'60 campus leaders winner of the freshman competition. added a summaiy of the year's top also participated in the program. Among There was a second place tie between spoi-ts stories, and Dick Ciccone re­ them were Tom Scanlon, new chairman Jei-ome Cosgrove and Clement McDon­ viewed campus sports. Ryan also inter- of the Blue Circle, Pat O'Daley, editor ald, Both of the second place winners Aaewed Coaches Joe Kuharich, John Jor­ of the DOME, and Ron Blubaugh, editor are Science majors. Third place awards dan, and Jake Kline, all of whom ex­ of the SCHOLASTIC. were given to Paul Donis, Rajanond Du- pressed confidence in their '59-'60 teams. Coming up this Sunday night is the rand, and Richard Jensen. Honorable mention was accorded to Robert Cihak, New awards. Highlight of the show annual farewell message by Father Hes- burgh to the student body. John Gamett, Ronald Herm, John Hey- was the announcement of the recipients wood, Paul Margosian, and William of the first annual WSND Faculty-Ad­ Moi"an. The winners were chosen by a ministration Awards. This year's win­ panel of mathematics professors. ners are Rev. A. Leonard Collins, C.S.C., BanchofF Selected President The test was administered last month. Dean of Students, and Professor Walter It was composed of theoretical problems M. Langford, head of the modern lan­ Of Campus Discussion Group chosen in such a way to give an equal guage department, and coach of the chance to all students regardless of their fencing team. The Wranglers, comjiosed of the in­ tellectual elite of the campus, (SCHO­ present mathematical courses. It was In presenting the awards. Station LASTIC—May 1) have selected their oifi- constructed to show the readers the stu­ Manager Neil Stalter cited Father Col­ cers for the 1959-60 school year. Tra­ dent's mathematical creative ability in lins' "sense of fairness and understand­ ditionally the Wranglers have only a solving problems. The winners will re­ ing in dispatching the duties of his of­ president and secretary. ceive various mathematical books. fice, as well as the gi-atitude of the stu­ dent body for his farsighted and selfless Tom Banchoff, a junioi", has been work on behalf of improvement of stu­ chosen as pi-esident. Banchoff is an AB- Faculty Members Awarded dent life." math major from New Jersey. A mem­ ber of the debate team, he was chairman Promotions at Annual Dinner Multiple citation. Stalter cited Pro­ of the National Invitational Debate The promotion of thirteen University fessor Langford for "his outstanding tournament held at Notre Dame this of Notre Dame faculty members was an­ contribution to the 1958-'59 Notre Dame year. Banchoff was also a member of nounced Monday evening at the annual scene, for his generosity and his dedi­ the Irish Quiz Bowl team of recent fame President's Dinner in the new North cation to the ideals of his profession as and a winner of a Woodrow Wilson Dining Hall on the campus. a Notre Dame gentleman, and for his Fellowship. Rev, Theodore M. Hesburgh, C.S.C, work to improve the academic and extra- The Wranglers' secretary for next Notre Dame president, was host to ap­ cui-ricular life of the Notre Dame stu­ year is Bill Slattery. Slattery hails proximately seven hundred members of dent." from Caldwell, N. J., and is a sophomore the University faculty, administration Father Collins was appointed Dean of in the Arts and Letters College. and their wives. Honored guests at the Students in the fall of 1957, succeeding The 20 members of the club hold event were Rev. Eugene P. Burke, Rev. Charles McCarragher, C.S.C. Prior weekly meetings and discuss a paper C.S.C, and Prof. Leo Kuntz, who are to this time. Father Collins served as presented on any one of a variety of retiring from the faculty this year, and superior of Moreau and Holy Cross Sem­ topics. This year the general theme for Professor Emeritus Knowles B. Smith inaries, as well as superior of Andre the papers and discussion was "The and Rev. Francis P. Cavanaugh who are House, and rector of Morrissey Hall. Modern Mind." observing their 50th and 25th anniver­ Professor Langford has been head of saries respectively at the University. Joe Daschbach, this year's president, Rev. Chester A. Soleta, C.S.C, vice- the modern language department since will do graduate work in English at 1946. He has taught at the University president for academic affairs, an­ Columbia University. A Navy scholar­ nounced the following promotions in the since 1931, and has held a full professor­ ship student, Daschbach will receive his ship since 1943. He has coached the departments indicated: degree from the University's general Professors Otto Bird, General Program fencing team since 1940, and coached program of liberal education this June. the tennis team from 1940 until 1953. of Liberal Education; Rev. Cletus Bach- He is one of three coaches in Notre 'ofer, C.S.C, biology; and Bernard D. Dame history to be credited with more CuUity, metallurgy. than 200 victories. "WATCH THE BIRDIE" Associate Professors — Robert E. Christin, English; Joumet D. Kahn, The WSND spectacular also featured Attention all photographers! Ap­ General Program of Liberal Education; interviews with Rev. Theodore M. Hes- plications for photographic positions Louis Pierce, chemistry; and Kwang- burgh, C.S.C., president of the Univer­ on next year's SCHOLASTIC staflF are Tzu Yang, mechanical engineering. sity, Rev. George C. Bernard, C.S.C, now being accepted. Anyone who Assistant Professors—^Rev. John P. vice-president for student affairs, and Dolan, .C.S.C, history; Rev. Henry A. Rev. Glen Boaiman, C.S.C, prefect of is interested please contact Ron Blubaugh in room 309 Pangbom as Geuss, C.S.C, classics; Robert J. Lordi, religion, and chaplain for the staff of English; Rev. Patrick H. Maloney, WSND. soon as possible. If no one is in, C.S.C, music; Gilbert L. Rathbun, com­ We predict. Also featuring the top please leave a note. munication arts; and Rev. Eman Mc- seven tones of 1958-'59, and the an- MuIIin, philosophy. 12 The Scholastic Five Receive 'Engineer of the Year' Awards; TAG 'EM AND STOtE 'EM The closing date for this year's: i; I Annual Recognition to Laud Outstanding Men summer storage is 5 p.m. Tuesday, Five recipients of the 1958-59 Engi­ Notre Dame on an International Tele­ June 2. Ail items to be stored for neer of the Year Awards, announced phone and Telegraph Co. scholarship, he the summer must be tagged, se­ each May by the Technical Review staff, was awarded the title of Distinguished curely tied and brought to the-Drill have recently been named. Militaiy Student in the Ai-my ROTC Holi before this date. The first is James Mullen, an aero­ program. He is planning on entering nautical engineer from Pittsburgh, Pa. the Army on gi-aduation. There is a general storage price Mullen, who is on the Dean's List, has of $3.25 for extra large' items, been a member of the Sailing club, the A four-year record. The winners of the Engineer of the Year awards $2.75 for first large item and a Pittsburgh club, the freshman swimming $2.50 chorgs for each additional team, and the IAS. Besides serving as must have fully demonstrated that they possessed the qualities of leadership, president of the latter, he served on the large item, and a $1.50 charge for scholarship, sei-vice, and character in small items. Ail stored items can be Joint Engineering Council and as chair­ accepting responsibilities, both as mem­ man of the committee that founded the insured up to $50 at a cost of 2% bers of the University and the College of evaluated value. engineering honor society, Nu Delta of Engineering. Epsilon, of which he has been sei-ving as president. He has been awarded scholar­ ships at both Cornell and M.I.T. for graduate studies. Navyman. John Maloney, a chemi­ cal engineer is from Fairness Hills, Pa. Maloney is a member of the Amer­ ican Institute of Chemical Engineers, the Joint Engineering Council and the Nu Delta Epsilon honor society. Maloney is serving as the vice-president of the AIChE, vice-chainnan of the JEC, secre­ tary of the Nu Delta Epsilon, and assist­ ant editor of the Dome. Attending Notre Dame on a Lubrizol Scholarship, he was awarded the Notre Dame Navigation Award and the AIChE Chapter Award. Maloney is a contract student in the NROTC program and will enter the Navy for two years immediately after graduation. HIP, HIP, HURRAY A mechanical engineer, George Mc- Andrews is from Clinton, Iowa. Mc- Andrews a Dean's List student, has been a member of the Senate academic com­ for the mission, the permanent hall residence committee, the student chapter of the American Society of Mechanical Engi­ GREYHOUND* way neers, the Joint Engineei-ing Council, and the staff of the Technical Review. He is also the membership committee to save money! chairman of the engineering honor so­ ciety, Nu Delta Epsilon, and a member Got the good word about of the publicity committee for the Engi­ Greyhound Scenicruiser neering publicity committee for the Service®? It's the latest, Engineering open house. the greatest way to go... Fire scholarship. Kenneth Eraemer, with air-conditioning, pic­ Compare these low. an architect from Plain, Wis., who will ture windows, air-suspen­ low fares! graduate cum laude, has won the Na­ sion ride and complete tional Fire-Undei-writers scholarship, restroom! You'll have a Cincinnati, Ohio $ 8.20* the Wisconsin Architects Foundation ball headin' tiome on a Detroit, Mich. 6.40 Scholarship, and first prize in the Cath­ Greyhound —it's often Harrisburg, Pa. 18.75 olic Property Administration competi­ faster than other public Miami, Fla. 36.35 tion. He is presently a finalist in the transportation, and always *one-way fare, idus tax national competition for the Paris Prize less expenshre! of the Nivola Trophy. Besides his archi­ tectural activities, he was on the Junior BAGGAGE PROBLEMS? You can take more with you on a Prom and Senior Ball committees and is Greyhound. Or, send your belongings by Greyhound Pack^e a member of the Nu Delta Epsilon and Express. They arrive in hours and cost you less! the student chapter of the American In­ stitute of Architects. He will receive rrs SUCH A COMFORT a commission in the Air Force in June. TO TAKE THE BUS...AND The fifth man is Paul Anderson, an GREYHOUND electrical engineer from Yonkers, N. Y. LEAVE THE DRIVING TO US! I Paul has served as vice-chairman and chairman of the AIEE-IRE, and co- chairman of publicity for the Engineer­ Greyhound TenninoL Mcda & Momoe. AT 7-t541 ing open house, and as a member of the Joint Engineering Council. Attending May 22, 1959 i^i -•-k Vol 50

John P Thurin EDITOR-IN CHIEF

Robert A Janoski ASSOCIATE EDITOR

John M Moloney JT EDITOR ASSISTANT EDITOR

McBreer Thomas J McHole MANAGER MANAGING EDITOR

PHOTO EDITOR COPY EDITOR DESIGN COORDINATOR ART EDITOR PUBLIC RELATIONS

SENIORS: Dan Lyons, editor Tn Flon igar Ken Loje IP Zou 99 Denny Montali Frank Oberkoetter IZATIONS Bill Dodd Murphy edi Bill Kruger eg Hel rung b Mess noe' SPORTS krt Konervrko editor Jack Brody r Ouzzc edito' Pete Hickey ob Logor John Osipowicz ' George Rozurr John Schuster

UNDERCLASSMEN PHOTOGRAPHERS Bot Good ed'to' Bob Cihak Rc" LoReoL Tim Keough ^'onk Alsheime^ Denny Kidder Dor Beaudom Ed Meriz Paw Morgosior Carl Peterson Prank McGee George Spahn P rank O Connel- Dean Singewald fronk Smith Kevin Solon Do' Omilianowsk Bill Sullivan Walt Wittenberg

ADMINISTRATION S PORTRAITS .c> Wol'rar

AC WORK John Mortme Jerry Welling, Ken Witte

ENT SHEETS Jor- Siddle

IQNSULTANT Georae DuBor iMCAi ADVISOR Mr John M Bi 19§9D0M: PPiNTER No.ti- State Press Hammond Indiana

DIRECTOR C^ NOTRE DAME PUBLICATIONS Notre Dame in 1959 — this was the year of the College 5DEKATOK Re» Cnc Quiz Bowl, the change of football coaches, the new grading system, the record snowrfall, the Jazz Festival, the Howai'd Hall J bicycle races and more. This was Notre Dame, all of it. To present this cavalcade of both the predictable and the -feV^ unpredictable the 1959 DOME, banning the format and style of previous volumes, has initiated a design and coverage plan­ ned with a reader appeal in mind. No longer found are the usual lineups in the "Halls" section. Discarded is the stamp collection of professors' pictures peculiar only to the DOME's "academic" section. Gone are the segregated academic, social and sporting highlights of the year. Absent are the inhuman, prop-dominated portraits of the administration. In place of this traditional coverage the reader will find a month by month coverage of all events at Notre Dame in 1958- 1959: an entirely new approach to the senior section; a new ^-•^-p.., Kr^. '^'^.

ji^a^'-"^ iMI

i LOOK AT THE lEW LOOK' By John Thurin

and different set of "Karsh" type photographs of the admin­ formal type of picture. Instead there is now an infonnality istration; a pictorial bulletin of each college, of each depart­ in all pictures, yet finished in a pi-pfessional manner. ment; and a new informal type of hall pictures. This is the And, finally, the reader will find a style of copy unusual new and accurate perspective of Notre Dame initiated and to the average yearbook. It's readable. It's alive and flashy. I^ictured for you amid a completely different format. It's interesting and rightly so because of its casual, down-to- This new concept, with emphasis on informality, incor­ earth tone. porates a "flare" design, photography which captures relaxed Incorporating these three features of the "new look'' are and natural groupings, and copy geared in a casual tone. six completely revamped sections. These sections are the "Fea­ Most closely identified with the "new look" is the layout. tures," "Seniors," "University," "Sports," "Organizations" and It is a "flare" tjqie of design similar to that of such profes­ "Underclassmen." Their content is Notre Dame in 19.59. Their sional magazines as Look and Life. A controlled or guided style style is strictly a "new look." of layout directs the reader's eye in and around the page in This is Notre Dame's yearbook, originally conceived in a logical story-telling fashion. April of 1958 and completed more than one year later. It rep­ Perhaps the most noticeable improvement in this 50th resents an attempt to construct a yearbook with some • new volume, however, is the quality of the photography both tech­ ideas. These ideas' have been simple ones and the book has nically and non-technically. Handled by nine students, this been mounted on them as simplv as possible. This, then, is the year's photography incoi-poi-ates very little of the traditional "New look," the 1959 DOME. May 22, 1959 15 joining the pages and casting away the "framed" look of past issues. A series of related polygons, expanding and con­ tracting, lines, and a corresponding print used consistently unify the book. One difficulty with the layout is the lack of white space which creates an impression of busy movement A Keview: for the eyes without relief. One of the more glaring faults is the opening of the academic section with a picture of the College Quiz Bowl THE 1959 'DOME' team. The performances of the team are hardly represent­ ative of the academic and such an association is erroneous. In the final analysis no comparison with the past can be What imagination and energy can do to revive a seemingly made. The new book has completely thrown its ancestors' iron-clad tradition of inferiority and outdatedness is seen techniques away and the result is a book, as the editors in the 1959 Dome. Gone are the posed and spotted pictures suggest, "mature, accurately informative, and attractively with their insipid stares, the dry explanations, the unending modern." file of seniors' and professors' pictures. In their place, vital Congratulations. J. Y. and clean photographs are escorted by an informal, person­ able text that is mature, interesting, and enlightening. Often the comments go beyond the yearbook. After a description of how Who's W]vo men are chosen, the text accompanying the brilliant photograph of the candidates reads, "This year however, from some quarters of the University, came criticism HISTORY OF THE 'DOME' of the method of selection." The headlines too have a person­ ality and "The Mardi Gras Carnival" from last year's book by ED RICE becomes "Wheels turn, dice roll, Brubeck swings," in the new book. Other examples: "December; a coach, a cardinal, con­ With the rise in cigarette sales at Notre Dame from year certs, chemistry"; a "Murder in Washington Hall." Examples of to year, no one would suspect that an anti-cigarette club once subheads: the graduate school becomes the "Summit of learn­ existed here. In the 1914 Dome, a picture of this group ap­ ing"; biology, "Facts of life"; commerce, "Dollars and sense." peared in the "Activities and Organizations" section of the The introduction is especially good and we want to take the annual. Things have changed since the first Dome was pub­ barker's advice and "step right into the 1959 edition for a lished in 1906, but the annual has consistently chronicled the new look, a new view of an old well-known, well-loved college years of Notre Dame men. university." All the students can find themselves in the In earlier years, the annual happenings on the campus new Dome. In the Activities section scenes from all phases were recalled with humor, while many articles not directly of student activity are gi-ouped according to the months, connected with student life were of a very serious nature. and the old, discriminating "Highlights" is reduced in area Such things as minor student activities and pranks, along and replaced by pictures of students (for instance) buying with social events were, and sometimes still are, recalled with books or skiing, as at mid-year. In the Sports section too, humor. Cartoons were essential to the early Dome reader, the "unlettered" sports are reviewed. as were wit and humor columns. In the main, this was due to the lack of photography and improved methods of printing. The Senior section is broken up by large photographs Advertisements were profuse in the back pages of early that depict scenes from the inevitables of student life with Domes, in the days when the Philadelphia was advertised as an appropriate text: a yelling cadet oflScer on the drill field, "The House of Purity," and Brother Clemmens was proud to Zyggy, the Huddle, a cursing student putting on a "laundry- say he used Halfner Coffins. Those were the days when the shrunk" shirt, and Frankie, the campus cop, gendanning the Holy Cross Brothers operated an undertaking establishment theater dooi*. at Notre Dame. The picture of Joer's in this section has an interesting stoi-y. "No, let's agree on one thing right now, George. We On the other side of the coin, however, the Dome could be just stop in for one friendly, sociable beer, and then catch quite serious when it chose to be. All formal events at the the bus back in time for chow. I've got two tests tomorrow, University, including graduation, important visitors to the and I got'ta hit those books. Just one fast one. Right, campus, and the like, were treated with the utmost pomposity. Geoi^e?" Poems and literary content were heavy in early editions. "Yeah, yeah." Poems and philosophical discussions are pilnted in other "Now let's get it straight, George. One more beer — two University publications now, but many of the things men­ at the most — and we cut out and go to the Avon. They're tioned in early Domes are still with us. The vei-y first Dome, showing an Italian flick there this week. With subtitles. So as a matter of fact, described the Notre Dame watchman, just a couple more an we leave. Eight, George?" with a still up-to-date bit of irony: "Yeah, yeah." There once was a watchman called Dorin, "Now don't get panicky, George. Suppose we do miss the Whose job was to guard over Sorin. last bus? We can always take a cab, you know. I mean it When a student came late. won't break you to take a cab just once. Right, George? His plight was to wait. . . . George?" While Dorin in Sorin was snorin'. The photographs throughout the book are top quality, both in subject and reproduction. Only the color shots, which The layout of the Dom^ has been mainly the same through­ are still an improvement, fail to live up to the over-all quality. out the years, too. In the tradition of all annuals everywhere, The scenes are no longer the dull ranks of the Senate's it has always ibegun with a dedication, moved through pictures seats or a group huddled about a table or standing at atten­ Df the campus, members of the administration, faculty, and tion; the lake, the drill hall, or the student press show students an into the graduating seniors. Later sections cover student and professors at work or at leisure in their natural and activities and sports. appropriate surroundings: Fr. Hager writing music or Dr. Baseball was formerly the main sport at Notre Dame Evans getting Be-ing (a diflScult picture, indeed.) Special and received more space in the Dome than football. The change mention, must be made of the superb pictures of the Adminis­ began with the Army-iNotre Dame battles which were cited tration. These pictures are eiramples from the elite sphere by football fans as the greatest of all sporting events. This where photography is art. turn began about 1915. Notre Dame also formerly had a But even these pictures could be hidden under the old hockey team \diich captured many trophies. Debating was method of lajwut. And so change took over here also to almost as popular as baseball, with each hall cheering on display tiie pictures in layouts that have almost always con­ their own teams in heated competition. sidered the rdation of the two op^i pages seen together. Slang has undergone changes down through the years — Each page is interxually balanced as welL Often pictures are for instancy many of the students used to go "skiving." This bled off the page or run from one page onto another, thus (Continued on page 19) 16 The Scholastic by Tony de Haro At the Movies

Taking a deep beath, she wound the feeble topcoat tighter around her slight AVON body and stepped out into the stream The Night Heaven Fell: (May 21-26). Brigitte Bardot puts on her act of hurried people while the cold winds between murders and as a direct result of looks between her and her thrice- slashed through her thin clothes. removed paramour, Stephen Boyd. The Legion of Decency, having no lower The inside of the building, she re­ rating, has stamped it with a low C. In Bardotscope and Eastman-Color. called, had been quite different. Warmth seeped through the lush carpeting from office to office and the comfortable chairs COLFAX bore weight tendei'ly, Oh, the nei-ve! She was perfectly fit It Happened to Jane: (May 22-28). Most people are wading through for the job, her feet marked in deter­ promotional material for this one, since it's being pushed harder than Marl- boros in a tattoo shop. The title is probably misleading because the picture mined cadence along the sidewalk. She is classed as a family comedy, though has brought suspicion upon was at her best in office work, her thin herself after Tunnel of Love. But it's rewarding to see in lips tried to foi-m the words. male clothes. , head shaved, engages in his usual antics. As the first drops of rain began fal­ ling, she slid into the entrance of a store. Her eyes flashed in fury, tearing at the GRANADA very heart and cause of this annoying -^ rain. Water di-ipped now and then from Warlock: (May 21-27). A Western with a twist that, as we go to press, the bi-im of her shabby hat and sizzled is still unbelievable. Hemy Fonda uses his tin star to no avail and finds on her inflamed face. How could they himself out of a job, showdowned by Richard Widmark. The fair sex was do this to her? never fairer as Dorothy Mmm-malone and Dolores Mmm-michaels appear on She turned toward the display window the scene. And the dishes desert Fonda, who rides off into the sunset. and looked at her reflection on the glass. Quickly, taking her compact out, she dabbed her face liberally with rouge. PALACE ' Then she turned around once to assure Thmder in the Sun: (May 20-26). After the place in the sun was set herself of the imagined propriety of her aside, an island and a raisin entered the picture, and now thunder makes outfit. the scene. This one was released after Academy Awards, probably for fear By no means a beautiful woman, she of what it would do to Susan Hayward's chances. JeflF Chandler and Jacques had worn her face into sad wrinkles Bergerac vie for Miss Hayward's affections, and Susan professes her prefer­ through years of woriy. Adorned with ence for greying hair. too many ill-placed flowers, her hat rendered her stern face comical. Corset RIVER PARK ribs were visible under the re-done dress with the uiunatching belt. After gri­ The Naked and the Dead: (May 21-24). Norman Mailer's poignant novel macing at it she tugged down on it to loses so much that the only thing left is an arresting performance by Aide smooth it out. The topcoat, thin and a Ray. Cliff Robertson and Raymond Massey play characters strong in the lifeless gray, turned into more of a rag book and wishy-washy on celluloid. A disappointment even for the actors. So much for that. eveiy time it rained. True; she did not seem much. But she Co-Hit: Enchanted Island. Herman Melville is at present spinning niadly was a good, honest woman; and nobody in his grave upon seeing this adaptation of "T3rpee." Jane Powell plajrs a could fit the job as she would. tinted-hair, green-eyed Polsmesian and Dana Andrews is the guy who jumped There is no opening at the present ship to live on the island. After a lively sojourn with some cannibals, Dana time! Who are they, anjrway? Why offends the great god Zeke and is chased onto a ship that pops out of no­ did they put up the sign, then? Perhaps where. Running after him, Jane almost gets her goose cooked as she climbs on the ship, because of a flaming arrow thrown at her by the natives. they like to be begged; but she would stoop to no one. With only a frown betraying her, she stepped down into the rain and shufHed STATE away. But soon the indignation within Stranger in My Arms: (May 21-27). Jeff Chandler and June Allyson her turned to muttering once more. She ponder, between hugs and kisses, whatever happened to her dead husband. stood in the rain without even noticing Sandra Dee and Charles Cobum also star, in addition to Mary Astor. The it. whole mess is about the mother, Miss Astor, who insists her son was a hero At first she didn't see the old lady. and the war buddy, Jeff Chandler, who knows what really happened. When suspicion turned to ceiiainty, she Co-hit: Never Steal Anything SmalL That well-known song-and-dance whirled around and stood looking deeply man, Jimmy Cagney, believes in stealing nothing smaller than the sbawr. into the lady's eyes. > niis seems difScult with Shirley (Oklahoma) Jones and Roger ("Koolde's "Here," said the lady kindly. An sidekick") Smith sharing the billing. It might be interesting to see how outstretched hand held a crumpled bill. the venerable old Cagney sneer-wit mixes with Shirley's voice. Her eyes played over the withered face with the look of a pleading soul, —Toity Wong a gn:ateful heart; but an outraged queen. "Lady, I'm no beggar!" May 22, 1959 n An Appreciation of Existentialism by Frederick J. Crosson

PREFACE as much as in phantasms and sensible things. What we are The SCHOLASTIC is hoiwred to print a resume of the crotvd- trying to seize here is that inneiinogt, intimate reality which gathering lectures that Professor Crosson gave last month on we may describe as that to which all things that appear in any the Existentialists Satre, Marcel, and Heidegger. Dr. Crosson way, appear. rejoins the Notre Dame faculty this year after a year of This subject or self, then, is not an object of consciousness: research and study in the field of existentialism at Louvain. it is that in relation to which there are objects (ob-jectum, In 1953 Dr. Crosson joined the General Program faculty and something thrown before. . .). We are clearly forced to use at present is teaching political philosophy in the program, circumlocutions at first, in trying to circumscribe this reality; while continuing his tvork in contemporary political philosophy for language is articulated to express the characteristics of a7id existentialism. objects, the things which ordinarily preoccupy us. How shall we conceptualize what we are talking about? One of the most remarkable events in contempoi*aiy phi­ Jean-Paul Sartre conceptualizes it in this way: losophy has been the appearance of the existentialist proble­ "It's a complete void, because the whole world is outside matic in the work of several different thinkers, independently of it." The self (the in-self, in Sartre's terminology) is pure and i-oughly at the same time: Marcel, Jaspers, and Heidegger. nothingness, a paper trough in being. But, riveted on being One is tempted to see here the kind of inner logic or necessity (intentionality), it is experienced as, on the one hand, the ab­ for such appearance in histoiy, that Maritain has spoken of sence of being, and on the other, as therefore absence of and in a different context (the appearance of the notion of plur­ desire for being. Man, in dread of admitting this nothingness alism). Like most philosophical positions it may be viewed as in his heart, tries to become something. He acts like a profes­ a corrective reaction against the excesses of its time: ration­ sor, like a waiter, like a statesman. He tries to escape from, alism and its cultural counterpart, the increasingly technologi­ and hide from himself, this complete lack of determination, of cal organization of himian life. With Kierkegaard, these later definiteness, which he is, ontologically, not something but thinkers register a strong protest against a merely objective nothing, he can never succeed. He is condemned to be abso­ or scientific view of man, and reaffirm the uniqueness of the lutely free — he makes himself what he is, he freely chooses human world. Insofar as it does represent such a reaction, to be kind or cruel, to be professor or thief, to follow a code its own temptation will be to overstress the non-categorical of values or not follow it. Essence, Sartre says, does not pre­ nature of reality, that is to impugn the significance of objec­ cede existence, but follows it. Suppose I assume the roles of tive knowledge. husband, employer, member-of-a-fraternity, etc; very well, I WTiether or not these thinkers succumb to this temptation, may act as if these "define" me, give me as it were an onto- the insights which they express will be valuable in themselves, logical status. But my commitment to each role is a past act if they are true. And the only way to discover these, before — and I am free at each moment to repudiate them. I cannot being able to judge the movement as a whole, is to approach not be thus free — this is the meaning of the characteristic their writings sympathetically. It is impossible to disagree ex-sistence of man. with someone unless, first of all, what he is saying is under­ It is clear then that no perduring structure can be built stood as he means it. upon this fundamental nothingness of the self, for any such stioicture can always be stripped away by a new choice. Ga­ COMMON ELEMENT, A VERB briel Marcel differs from Sartre on two levels of this analysis If there is a common element in the diverse philosophies of man. First, on the level of ex-sistence, he asserts the in­ called existentialism, it may be located in the peculiar mean­ timate union of consciousness with its body. Human subjec­ ing which they assign to the verb "to exist." Only man exists tivity is incarnate subjectivity. The significance of this differ­ — this means that only man embodies that unique manner of ence lies in the fact that the self is no longer conceptualized being which may be called ec-centric rather than ego-centric. in terms of emptiness, but that there is a mutual imbrication This notion of existence (or ex-sistence, as some prefer to of flesh and spirit — mysterious and yet undeniable. I cannot write it, literally "to stand out from") is a transformation say that I have a body (this would be to think the self as sepa­ of the scholastic theory of intentionaliiy; the transformation rate from or independent of its body) nor can I say I am my consists in the fact that intentionality is no longer taken to body (for the very statement of such an identity suppresses be an accidental attribute or mode of being, but rather the the experiential awareness of my body which differentiates very structure, the very manner in which man is. me from it). My body is at the intersection between being and St. Bonaventure, in the "Mind's Road to God" characterizes having. man's preoccupation with the things that manifest themselves to him (as distinguished from preoccupation with himself) in MARCEL: A REACH ABOVE the following way: On a second and hi^er level, Marcel asserts that a move­ ment from existence to being is not only possible, but needed for the human mind, distracted if man is to become a person. Agrreeing with Sartre that man's by cares, does not enter into freedom is such that, for example, the marriage vow may al­ itself through memory; obscured by ways be repudiated. Marcel refuses to admit that it foUaws phantasms, it does not return into that fidelity or lack of fidelity to the promise leaves the self itsdf through intelligence; allured unchanged. Fatherhood is not merely a role, a mask assumed by concupiscence, it never by the self, there is involved in it an act of commitment of returns to itself through the desire engagement of the innermost nature of the person. It is for inner sweetness and spiritual through such a commitment, through the free forging of an gladness. Thus, lying totally in intersubjective bond, that the person comes into >being. Such this sensible world, it cannot return an act is not purely of one's own choice: it involves an answer y'\ to itself as to the image of God. to the innation of another, it involves the recognition of and We can take this text as a point of departure for the ex­ response to the presence of a person. As a result, the level istentialist problonatic, but only if we make one crucial dis­ of being to which one accedes is not ihat of Descartes' ego tinction. St. Bonavmture is here opposing the spiritual soul cogito: it is. Marcel writes, the level "not of esse but of cum- to the sensible world. But the soul in this sense is not the esse." same as the "subject" or the "subjectivitj^' of modem philo­ This order of reality is accessible only to what Marcel calls sophy. We can bridge the difference by noting that the im­ "secondary reflection," because 1) it is not manifest to a de­ material ideas which manifest thonsdves to the soul also ap­ tached impersonal observation, which views the data of its pear toi in other words, that the self can "lose itself" in ideas (primary) r^ection as so many problems to be answered, as 18 The Scholastic separate from the observer; 2) it is beyond the level of any the meaning of the Sacred, Heidegger declares that his philos­ sort of objective verification; no one can prove that someone ophy is neither atheistic nor theistic. It is, thus far, sSleat on loves him, or that he loves. He either knows it immediately, this question, sane to remark that "perhaps the trait which intuitively if you will, or not at all. most marks our epoch Ues in the disappearance of the dimen- It is in this order that man encounters, or can encounter, sion of the Sacred. Perhaps this is our unique misfortune." the presence of God. God is the Absolute Thou, the Absolute Faith remains, for him, a specific manner of existing in the Person, who will never repudiate His covenant with me, with truth uf Being, but it is a way not open to philosophy as sneh. us. But the order of being is an order of freedom, and it is only if God freely presents Himself to me, and I freely open A SUMMING UP myself to Him, enter His Presence, in response, that "being- I would like to conclude with a very brief summing np of with" on this level is possible. some main points: Martin Heidegger stands apart from Sartre and Marcel, 1) Through two events — the repudiation of the corrosive not only in his attitude with respect to the religious encounter, rationalism of transcendental idealism by Kierkegaard, and but in his insistence on ontological questions. His philosophy the recovery of the notion of intentionality (though with a is a philosophy not of man, but of all existents, who raise the fundamental reinterpretation) by phenomenology — the period question about Being. of modem philosophy inaugurated by Descaters has been, I It is in the sti-uctui'e of man's existence as being-to-the- think, decisively closed and transcended. world, as "transcending himself toward the world," that Hei­ 2) One of the most significant elements in that modem degger locates the secret bond between man and Being. Man's penod was the deepening of the notion of human personality existence is accomplished in revealing, in bringing to light to through the introduction and clarification of the category of significance of things — in the laws of Newton, a painting by subjectivity. At once its merit and its fatal flaw, this notion Van Gogh, the language of a philosopher, even in the every­ proved to exercise an overwhelming attraction upon the other day actions of every man, when he says "Today is Friday," data of experience, washing away their ontological roots, so "This is pure gold." to speak, until it ended by draining all things mto itself in Man can lead things into the light of Being, of truth, be­ Hegel's Absolute Idea, concerned as total presence. cause he is the hearer and guardian of that light. The error 3) By rejecting the intoxication of reason with its sense of of modern thought, according to Heidegger — an en-or whose systematic totality, by asserting at once the irreducibility of seeds were so^vn by Plato — has been to forget that the the individual person, and his incarnate ex-sistence, the exis­ "world" within which things exist and manifest themselves, is tential analsrtic has shown that the experience of the other­ essentially related to human existence. The world — this open­ ness which man encounter is the experience of finitude. ness in which things exist — is a result of man's ec-centric 4) The crucial problem that has therefore been posed is mode of existing, of man's transcending himself toward the that of the relation between that finitude and the transcendent. totality of existents, such that he comprehends them all in Is the encounter with the transcendent impossible, does it im­ some way. ply the impossible acceding of man to the knowledge of abso­ But precisely because this openness — this Being — is lute truth, and absolute godness? Sartre maintains that it translucid, is that which reveals things, it is itself, in a way, does, while Marcel contends that the very meaning of inten­ unrevealed. Man forgets Being and occupies himself with be­ tionality, as consciousness of something other than itself, per­ ings, with existents. The whole philosophical effort of Hei­ mits an opening beyond the finite. Heidegger, as we have seen, degger is to think that being directly, in itself, to ponder the permits that encounter to faith, while refusing to either allow "ontological difference" between beings and Being. it or disallow it for philosophy. Within this universe of Heidegger's philosophy, God can 5) Nevertheless, by returning to the world of "human be identified with neither beings — finite and dependent on things" (to use Plato's phrase), existentialism has placed once Being — nor with Being, which Heidegger declares, "cannot again at the center of philosophy, the quest for the meaning exist without existents." Since, however, he insists that he of human existence. Not the least of its merits is to have re­ has no answer to the question about Being, and since he main­ cognized the intimate bond between that quest and the mys- tains that we must resolve this question before we can decide tei-y of Divine Transcendence.

Dome editors weren't always sports figures, though. Paul History of the DOME J. Hallinan was editor in 1932. He is presently the Bishop of Charleston, South Carolina. (Continued from page 16) Yearbooks have usually concerned themselves with a cen­ was the popular word for anything done illegally, such as tral theme. In 1956, for example, the Dome celebrated its leaving the hall by the fire escape after night check. 50th anniversary, calling itself the Golden Dome. And in Everybody had nicknames in the yearbooks of many years 1941, with the addition of new buildings on the campus, the ago: Doc Pickles, Midge, and Smush were B. M: O. C's. in yearbook used the theme: "Notre Dame, a suburb of South 1913. But if a student did not have a nickname, one was Bend — a city without women!" promptly made up and printed under his picture so he wouldn't A theme which has always recurred is Notre Dame's close be considered "out of it." association and Platonic relationship with St. Mary's College. The size and shape of the Dome has changed from time to The Dome recorded the reign of Mother Claudia as president time, but there is one thing that has never changed. In the of St. Mary's from 1896 to 1934. During those years the 1906 issue, the very first. Dome, the by now almost legendary girls were not allowed to accept single dates. Students would, picture of St. Mary's Lake with the Dome and Sacred Heart therefore, send iws^cards to St. Mary's girls and through a Church's spire in the background was printed. This picture pre-arranged code set up a meeting place — such as inside a has found its way in one form or another into every Dome theater, or a very popular spot, the Oliver Hotel's Mezzanine. published since that time. Still, the girls were not supi>osed to be seen on Sooth Bend The Dome has not been published continuously, however. sti-eets with a man. They came in large .groups to events, In 1919, the year following the end of World War I, the such as football games and dances. And at specific hours they Dom^ was not published. During the second World War, the returned in a group. Capstan was printed three times a year. From 1943 to 1946, The Dome can be humorous or serious, it can tell the Notre Dame was transformed into a large naval training news or interpret it. It is a book of which Notre Dame can center, and oflicers were graduated three times a year, oc­ be proud, because it is Notre Dame's own. And throng the casions for the three annuals. years it has proved the forecast of its first editors many times Knute K. Rockne, better known in another field, was over: activities editor of the Dome in 1914. And Walter Wellesley So this, then, is the Dome, the first, let us hope, (Red) Smith, as editor-in-chief of the 1926 Dome, portrayed of a long series of yearbooks that for originality, for the Rock's triumphs. Red Smith was better known as "Brick" variety and excellence of their contents wiU stand Smith in those days. with the best university annuals in the eomitiy. .. May 22, 1959 19 HAVE BUSES . . . WILL TRAVEL . . . • Departmental Field Trips Geographic Clubs Group Movements of all types Contact ED SILUMAN, Campus Rep. 263 DiUon Ext 631 CHARTER A — CajudJuruaL BjULd.

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Ttte safe stay awtake tablet- a«ailal>le everywtiere 20 The Scholastic Undefeated Irish Netters Meet Detroit Here Today NCAA BERTH LIKELY FOR KLINEMEN Detroit visits the Notre Dame tennis coui-ts this afternoon to battle the un­ beaten, high-flying Irish netters. Mar­ AS GLENYIEW INVADES TOMORROW quette sends its tennis team against Coach Tom Fallon's squad tomorrow In a recent three-game road trip the feated Michigan, 9-8, at Ann Arbor, afternoon on the ND courts. Notre Notre Dame baseball team lost two out Mich. Sophomore Jack Mitchell, taking Dame will carry an unblemished 11-0 of three games. The Irish dumped Mich­ over for starter Charlie Scrivanich in recoi'd into today's meet. igan, 9-8, while bowing to Michigan the sixth inning, pitched three-hit ball Notre Dame's latest victory came at State, 5-4, and Western Michigan, 3-0, the rest of the way to post his fifth the expense of Noi-thwestern last Fri­ victoiy of the season against a single day. Winning evei-y singles and doubles Michigan State came up with a three- run rally in the last half of the ninth loss. match, the Irish shut out the Wildcats, The Irish batted around in both the 9-0. inning to edge Notre Dame, 5-4, and hand the Irish baseballers their fourth first and the third innings. In the first Three winning streaks were kept alive loss of the season. The game was inning, four walks, three Michigan by the Irish victory as Ray Bender played last Wednesday, May 13, on the errors, Duffjr's two-run single, and a and Bill Heinbecker won their 13th Spartan's diamond in East Lansing, sacrifice fly by Bob Broenunel netted straight victories, while Don Ralph Michigan. four Irish runs. But Michigan tied the chalked up his twelfth win in a row. Junior pitcher Jim Hannan started score in the second inning, getting two Bender beat Bob Bard of Northwestern, runs on three walks and two singles. The 6-1, 6-2; Heinbecker downed Vandy for the Irish and had a confortable 4-2 lead going into the ninth frame. How­ Wolverines had picked up two runs in Chi-istie, 6-4, 6-2; and Ralph won over the first inning also. Steve Hibben, 6-0, 6-1. ever, Michigan State centerfielder Art Luplow slammed a two-run homer to tie Notre Dame again built up a four- In ; the remainder of the singles the score. Hannan, giving up two solid run cushion in the third. Second base­ events, Max Brown won 6-0, 7-5; Ron singles and placing the winning runs on man Dick Selcer delivered a key two-run Schoenberg was a 6-1, 6-4 victor; and base, was then relieved by sophomore single in the rally. But once again Chuck Stephens won 6-1, 6-0. ace, Nick Palihnich. With two out and Michigan tied the score with a tally in Against Northwestern in the doubles. a 2-2 count on catcher Bob Monczka, the fourth and three runs in the sixth Brown and Heinbecker beat Christie it seemed as if the game was going to go inning. and Hibben, 8-6, 4-6, 8-6. Ralph and into extra innings. But Monczka The Irish scored the winning run in Schoenberg notched a victory in their- smashed a solid single into left field to the seventh when Mike Graney doubled match 6-0, 6-2, while Bender and Step­ score the winning run for the Spartans. and then scored on an error. Mitchell hens came through in the final match, Mike Sinks, the fourth Michigan State held Michigan in check the rest of the 6-0, 6-2, to complete the Irish sweep. way. The Irish netters had already cap­ pitcher to appear in the contest, got credit for his fourth victory against a Graney and John Carretta led the tured their tenth victoiy in a row when Irish with two hits each. Duffy and Sel­ they defeated Wisconsin on May 11, single loss. Hannan gave up twelve hits in r^stering his second loss cer were the runs-batted-in leaders with 8-1. Sweeping the singles, the only Irish two RBI's each. defeat came in the doubles. Balfe Wagner against two wins. Catcher Ed Wojcik led the Irish with The baseballers finished their Michi­ and Bill McGivern lost a professional gan tour against Western Michigan at set, 8-3, to Badgers Dick Tracksel and two hits and drove in a run. Gene DuflFy, with a ground-rule double. Jack Kalamazoo on May 16. The Broncos Lon Ruedesili. shut out the Irish, 3-0, on a fine four- In the other two doubles matches, Gentempo, and Dick Selcer each batted in a run for the Irish also. hit pitching performance by righthander Ralph and Heinbecker won, 8-3, and Bill Topp, winning his seventh game. On the following day, the Irish de- Notre Dame sophomore, Nick Palih­ nich, was handed his first defeat of the season. Palihnich, giving up eleven hits, seven for extra bases, managed to keep Bender and Stevenson also won by the the score low with the help of fine de­ same score. All doubles matches were fensive work by his teammates. How­ pro sets of the first eight games. ever, only Graney, Dan Hagan, Selcer, Number one singles man Brown start­ and Frank Finnegan managed to hit ed Notre Dame olf to their sweep of safely, Graney smashing a double in the the singles by defeating Keith Anderson ninth and Finnegan lining a single to of Wisconsin, 5-7, 6-0, 6-2. Ralph, who center in the fifth. incidentally finished the Northwestern Then on Monday, May 18, the Kline- meet with 24 straight winning sets, beat men, led by Hagan and Duffy, with five Jerry Rotter 6-4, 6-1. hits between them, downed Valpandao Bender triumphed over Badger Bob 9-5. Darling in identical sets of 6-2; Schoen­ The win gave the Irish 'baseballers berg won 6-4, 6-3; 'Stephens was a 6-2, an 1^5 over-all record and a 14-4 record 6-3 winner; and Dee Stephenson also for regular season play. Coach Jake won two identical sets of 6-2. Kline stated that our games against Going against Detroit tomorrow. Valparaiso and Northwestern tiiis week Coach Fallon's squad will be looking for should decide whether the Irish will be their thirteenth straight win of the year invited to participate in the NCAA and 15th straight including the last two tourney at Omaha. Valparaiso is also a matches of the season. strong contender for the tourney berth. Yesterday the Fallonmen hosted Tomorrow the Glenview Naval Air' Southern Illinois but the SCHOLASTIC Station ball club visits Cartier Fidd for MAX BROWN went to press before the results could their second game of the season against Co-Captain on ND's best tennis team. be reirarted. the Irish. May 22, 1959 21 Irish Linksfers Place 3rd in Big Stale Meet; Trackmen Top Indiana Finish Regukr Season Pkiy With 12-5 Record To Capture Big State The Irish outdoor track team won Notre Dame's golf team finished its Irish scoring for the day with 82-81— the Big State track championship May regular season with a 12-5 record. The 163. 13 as they amassed 93 points, outscoring last two losses were incurred at the The morning round was a disastrous their closest competitor, Indiana LTni- hands of Indiana and Purdue last Sat­ one for the Notre Dame golfers as only versity, by ten points. The victory urday in the Big State golf meet at one man on the squad broke 80. The avenged last year's meet in which Notre Bloomington, Ind. scores in the afternoon were much bet­ Dame lost to the Hoosiers by three. ter, as Lally, Flanagan, and Zesinger Indiana defeated Purdue and Notre shot rounds of 74 or less, but the large Eon Gr'egory, Mike Morando, Ken Dame to win their first Big State golf Indiana and Purdue lunchtime advan­ Scarborough and Jenry Fitzpatiick were title since 1952. The Hoosiers finished tages proved to be insurmountable. outstanding in the Irish triumph. Greg­ with a 751 total, three strokes ahead of Purdue is the defending Big Ten ory, running on a rain soaked track, runner-up Indiana's 754. Notre Dame won the mile with a 4:20.9 time and the finished with a 783 aggregate score. champion, and Konsek is the Big Ten in­ dividual titleholder. The Boilermakers two-mile with a 9:18 effort. Fitzpatrick The event was ran as a triangular have lost only one match this year, and also won two events as he sprinted home meet, with the low five scores on each that was to Michigan on the rugged with a :09.7 in the 100-yard dash and team counting in the Big State score. In University of Michigan course in Ann broad-jumped 23 feet, nine and one- the dual competition, Indiana and Pur­ Arbor where the Big Ten champion­ half inches. due battled to a 18-all tie. Notre Dame ships are being played today and to­ Mike Morando won his event with a lost to Indiana by a 25^-lOJ^ score morrow. record breaking 208-7 javelin toss. Ken while Purdue was victorious over the The meet was played on the new Indi­ Scarborough threw the discus 147 feet, Irish delegation, 22-14. ana University Golf Course which was five and one-half inches to win this John Konsek, Purdue's defending Big just built in 1957. The course is laid event. Both were defending champions. Ten titlist, was medalist for the day out over a rolling, wooded area just Dan Rorke was the only other first with 72-73-145. Jon Sommer of Indiana northeast of the campus. More than place winner for the Irish, and he won was close behind Konsek with a 72-74— 10,000 trees were removed to clear the the 880 in 1:56.3. 146. Notre Dame's Budd Zesinger led first fairways alone, and an under­ ground watering system keps both fair­ Teams who participated in the meet the Irish with a third place on the in addition to Notre Dame and lU were strength of an 80-74—154. ways and greens in excellent condition. The greens are some of the largest to Purdue, Wabash, Butler, Hanover, De The five other golfers who figured in be found in the Midwest. Pauw, Ball State, Indiana State, Man- . the Irish poinr total were Terry Lally, The NCAA tournament is the next Chester, Indiana Central, Evansville and Ray Patak, Christie Flanagan, Jim tentative event on the Notre Dame golf Rose Poly. Stahl, and Frank Hund. Lally had an calendar. The University of Houston On May 15, the Irish won their only 85-71—156. Patak was one stroke be­ will defend its championship on the home dual track meet of the outdoor hind Lally with an 80-77—157. Flana­ University of Oregon links in Eugene, season as they downed Michigan State gan tied Patak at 157 on rounds of 83 Ore. from June 22-27. Purdue, Ohio 74-57. Two meet records were set in the and 74. State, and Michigan from the Big Ten, contest. Stahl led the Irish in the morning along with the southern schools, will Fitzpatrick won three events, and with a 77 but shot 82 in the afternoon pi'esent Houston with its strongest op­ Steve Dombach won two to help Notre for a 159 total. Hund closed out the position. Dame take nine of 15 events. Fitz­ patrick won the broad jump with a 22- feet, nine inch leap, the 100-yard dash with a :10.1 time and the 220 with a "* :22.0 time. Dombach won the 120-yard high hurdles completing the course in 15 seconds flat and the 220 low hurdles in :24.6 seconds. Other Irish winners were Ron Greg­ ory, Dick Monjeau, Mike Morando, and Ken Scarborough. Gregory came out of the infirmary to win the half-mile with a 1:52.5 time. Monjeau jumped five feet, eleven and three-quarters inches to gain victory in the high jump. Morando threw the javelin 209-1 to win this event, l] and Ken Scarborough won the discus with a 154-foot, two-inch toss. Gregory set both a meet and Cartier "' Field record with his 1:52.5 half. Bob Lake of-Michigan State ran the mile in 4:13.7 to break the meet record which was set last year by Michigan State's I Willie Atterbury. ^' Gregory's time in the half broke a dual meet record that had lasted for nine years at 1:54.3 and the 21-year old Car- tier Field mark of 1:53.2. CHHSrY HANAGAN DMVES ON THHID HOIE This was the last home appearance for seniors team Captain Dombach, Moran­ JHnior Irish linkster from Texas leans into a tee shot as Captain Gerry Webster do, and Marty Clynes top member of the Cleft) and junior Frank Hund watch admiringly. Irish distance relay teams.

22 The Scholastic ND Sailors Qualify Two In Pan-American Trials On Sunday eliminations were held for representatives in the Fin class cham­ pionships, and for the Pan-American games to be held in Chicago next Sep­ TIME OUT tember. Notre Dame took two of the three berths alloted to its area as Jack Devanney and Joe Boland made appai- The Gerity Golf Tournament which is usually held sometime in May ent their ability as expert sailors. each year has been cancelled. An insufficient number of entrants is the reason for the cancellation. This is hard to explain in view of the fact that Last week end Notre Dame, sailing on Burke Memorial Golf Course receives steady play each day of the week Lake Mendota at the University of Wis­ and is literally jammed with golfers on the week ends. There are probably consin, tied with Wisconsin for first in more active participants in golf than in any other spring sport with the the area eliminations for the Midwest possible exception of softball. Championships. Purdue, Marquette, and Washington were the other schools rep­ Poor publicity of this year's tournament plus the inefficient handling of resented. past golf events of this kind at Notre Dame appear to be the two main reasons why the tourney failed so miserably this year. Probably not more- Skippers Mickey Pavia and Dan Schu­ than one-fourth of the potential entrants in the tourney were aware of the ster combined their talents to take date and those who knew about it were likely to have been discouraged from either first or second in all of the ten entering by preArious experience of the tournament's disorganization. races. Jim Kuras crewed for Schuster and Devanney for Pavia in the shifting LACK OF PUBLICir/ light airs. This week end Notre Dame will be There were no notices published on the hall bulletin boards. There were competing against Wisconsin, Purdue, no "flyers" distributed. There was only a drab, routine-looking, notebook- and six other top teams in the Mid­ sized announcement tacked up on the bulletin board of the golf shop. The west for the Midwest sailing crown. simple reason why there were so few interested golfers is that nobody knew The regatta is being hosted by Ohio about it. State. The top two teams as decided In the past the Gerity Golf Tournament has been run very informally. by this regatta will sail at the nationals, Those who wish to participate go out with their friends and dioot a quaU- this year being held at Brown Univer­ fjring score which is used as a basis for a handicap. Then the field is di­ sity in Providence, Rhode Island. vided into flights and the remainder of the tournament is match play. Basically this is the only feasible way that the event could be handled under the given conditions. There are, however, a few improvements that could be made which would measurably improve the appeal of the tourna­ Campus Softball Teams ment. Ploy for Championship WRITTEN ENTRIES The Interhall Softball championship First of all, the entries should be received in written form and pairings will be determined today when the win­ should be made up for the qualifying round by the tournament committee. ners of the interhall and interclub Thus players of approximately equal ability could be paired together, col­ leagues meet this afternoon for the laboration and "sandbagging" among friends would be eliminated, and a campus title. limit 'to the number of entries could be set before the qualifying round. In the three divisions in the club Secondly, the matches should be played on the week ends at a time league, the Calumet club won the divi­ specified by the tournament committee. A major problem in past years has sion one title with a 4-1 record. In the been for two contestants to find a time which is suitable to .each of than in second division, the Cincinnati club went which to play their match. Such things as eighteen-hole putting contests undefeated with a 5-0 record while the have been resorted to in playing ofp the matches. This type of thing dis­ Hispano-Americano club won the third courages any serious golfer from entering the touiTiament. Playing on the division with a 4-0 record. week ends would virtually eliminate class conflicts which have been the main problem in arranging satisfactory times in the past. Badin finished on top of division one in the club league with a 4-1 record. GOOD POTENTIAL Keenan Blue led division two with a 4-0 recoi-d. Farley, the winner of division With golf becoming increasingly popular each year, an event such as three, and the fourth division winner, the €ierity Gk)lf Tournament seems to me to have great potoitial in the Zahm, also were undefeated in four campus sports program. As yet this potential is unrealized but I hope that games. in the future this tournament AVIU grow to the popularity and importance which it deserves. The sports staff of the ScHOLAsnc will make every ef­ The baseball championship was played fort next year to help the Gerity Golf Tournament "make good." last Wednesday, too late for publication. Ron Gregory continues to have a great year. Last Friday evenincr he got up out of his bed in the Infirmary with over a one hundred-d^nive tem­ perature and ran the half-mile in 1:52.5 against Michigan State to bfrndc GERITY TOURNEY CANCELLED the Notre Dame outdoor and meet records. Gregory, who had been iU witii The annual Gerity Golf tourna­ the flu for several days, put on his overcoat and returned to the Infirmary ment was originally scheduled to be immediately after his record-breaking performance. played, starting with qualifying The track team has two more events on their calendar, the CCC ont- I rounds on May 10, has been can- dor Championships ih Milwaukee and the NCAA at Lincofan, Nebraska. Both I celled. This announcement was of these meets are in June when warmer temperatures make possible faster made by Mr. Napolitano, head of times. Perhaps Ron will lower his present best outdoor time in the mile of the intramural athletic program. 4:11.3. But whatever happens at Milwaukee and Lincoln, Ron has made the Mr. Nopolitano said that there track season interesting and exciting. Only a sophomore, he seems a diieh were not enough entries to make the to be the best Notre Dame miler ever. — T. R. holding of the tourney possible.

[May 22, 1959 » Nagei, Miller Presented College of Commerce Groups Elect Officers; Current Review Awords HewActivitieson Agenda for Nexf September The winners of the 1959 Dean's Awards have been named by the editor­ In recent weeks, the various clubs and president in charge of publicity; Pat­ ial staff of the Technical Review. They rick J. Crawford of Des Moines, Iowa, are David Nagel and Robert Miller. organizations of the College of Com­ merce have elected their officers for the vice-president in charge of membership; First place award, of $35 for the best coming year. These officers-elect are now Dan McVeigh of Bellerose, N. Y., sec- article published in the Review during in the process of making plans for activ­ retaiy, and Howard Foley of New the current school year went to Nagel ities. Canaan, Conn., treasurer. for his article, "Eye to the Universe," Mike Murphy, a junior from Beverly To investigate the real-world applica­ in the November, 1958, issue. A junior Hills, Cal., president-elect of the Ac­ engineering science student, he attends tions of classroom studies is the avowed counting club, has stated a desire to take Notre Dame on an NROTC scholarship. purpose of the Marketing club. In order his organization on tours of local in­ to fulfill this purpose, the club invites The second prize of $15 was won by dustries and private accounting firms guest speakers from industries in the Miller, a mechanical engineering major beside their regular field trip. The rea­ area. This group is most noted for its from Milwaukee, Wis., for his arti­ son for these tours is the same as the annual fall sale of green hats, the pro­ cle "Free-Piston Engine," in the general purpose of the entire Account­ ceeds of which go to the missions. March, 1959, issue. He is a member of ing club — getting its members into a The Finance club, with its limited the A.S.M.E. enginering honor society, professional attitude by supplementing and the Milwaukee Club of Notre Dame. membership of 30, has set its goals on classroom theory with practical appli­ an active and progressive year under cations and study. Another function of the able leadership of its president, this club which follows along the same John Carretta, a junior from Arlington, Juggler Staff lines is the auditing of the books of W. Va. The aim of this club is to ad­ the LaForlune Student Center and stu­ vance the interest of the members in (Ck)ntinued from page 10) dent government. mattei's pertaining to the field of Fi- ' Pidgeon, Richard Sampson, and Art In the past, Accounting club meetings nance. This objective will be pursued Editor Joe McDonnell. The Juggler is have been headed up by various seniors by means of the two projects of the privil^ed to have Professor Prank reading papers they have written. club for 1959. First, they will expand O'Malley continue as its faculty advisor Murphy is interested in getting next on this year's successful Finance Forum. for next year. year's juniors to take over some of these Second, the members will conti-ibute There are a limited number of posi­ meetings. Other officers under Murphy their own money to an Investment Fund tions on the Auxiliary Board open for will be: Vice-President Bill Kelly, Tea- and will analyze and buy their own se­ freshmen. Mainly, the duties will con­ neck, N. J.; Secretary Joe Shaw, Bloom- curities out of the fund for experience sist of typing, publicity, sales, and dis­ ington. 111.; and Treasurer John Doren- and profit. tribution work, and there will be ex­ busch, Middletown, Ohio. cellent opportunities for advancement The Marketing club, in its elections, Junior Bill McCormick, vice-president­ into higher positions in the future. In­ has named Junior Drew Barton of Cin­ elect from Merrick, N. Y., will be head­ terested freshmen should write a letter cinnati, as its president. Assisting Bar­ ing up a move to initiate a commerce of application to Jim Yoch, 127 Pang- ton will be: Tom Mekus of Archbold, magazine similar to the Tech Review of hom, stating their background, in­ Ohio, vice-president in charge of pro- the College of Engineering. Handling terests, and qualifications. gi-amming; Bob Toland of Chicago, vice- the clerical work for the Finance club will 'be Secretary-Treasurer Mike Feld- meier of Chicago. The Labor-Management club will be bringing imion and management lead­ ers to the campus next year in order that its members may get a fuller and closer understanding of industrial re­ lations. Terry Conway, a junior from Kansas City, Mo., is the club's president and will be working with its moderator. Dr. Lyons, to attrad; these speakers. Other officers of the Labor-Management club will be: Vice-President Ray Hurley of Kansas City, Mo.; 'Secretary Bill Lehr of Silver Spring, Md.; and Treasurer Peter Boyle of Sharon, Pa. A Commerce school discussion group, the Commerce Forum, will characterize its meeting next year by having its seniors deliver papers on general business topics. In this way, the members can share their outlooks on current business situa­ tions in formal discussion as well as on the informal social level. President-elect Bill Phelan of Chicago will be inviting the applications of Com­ merce students as of next September. Helping Phelan in the administration of the Forum will be: Brian Foley, vice- president from New Canaan, Conn.; Clay Smith, recording secretary from Indianapolis, Ind.; and Mike Dalzell, cor­ responding secretary from Kokomo, Ind. AVAILABLE AT THE NOTRE DAME BOOKSTORE —Ron Bukowski 24 The Scholastic News Briefs FOR FREE! (Continued from page 4) Notre Dame's yearbook, the three-year appointments as advisors to the DOME, will be distributed this Mon­ OINOEIHK Jacques Maritain Center at Notre Dame. day in the back of Stanford. As in W« fonidi The center is an international clearing the past, the book will be passed house for friends of the French philosopher out from the truck to students who in fa where all his writings are being catalogued. present their IBM cords. Those who [ .^^mif|itnnn Some of the 31 newly appointed con­ did not get their cords earlier may J outfit, fiiM food-ldl a*la« sultants are Rev. Philip S. Moore, C.S.C., do so on Monday from noon until itO$ ntik Witts todi^ fc CMBH academic assistant to the president at Notre 5 p.m. in the DOME offices. The tV^B nlSBUOtf kuB BB^OU JlflBL MBl& (Ml Giiii nuto cmoa trin «>d> Dame; Rev. Herman Reith, C.S.G., head of offices are located on the second the University's philosophy department; floor of the LoFortune Student Cen­ •ontar lokM OolMMif Mortimer Adler, director of the Institute ter above the Huddle. P.O. BOX f «9H av, MINN. for Philosophical Research, San Francisco, Calif.; Louis Gardet, Islamologist, Paris, France; James Kritzeclc, assistant professor of Oriental studies, Princeton University, Princeton, N. J.

Francis Lavalle of South Bend and August VerhofF of St. Louis, Mo., have been awarded first prize in the St. Louis Section of the Institute of the Aeronautical Sciences Annual Student Paper Competi­ Storage for tion. The winners are both seniors, majoring in aeronautical engineering. They titled their combined effort, "Negative Magnus on Winter Garments a Smooth Sphere."' Stepping up to receive the annual award from the Commerce Activities Council was CLEANING CHARGES the president of the Finance club, Dan only $2.95 Cullen. The award is presented each year to the organization that is voted the out­ standing club of the Commerce school on the basis of the activities that the club sponsors. FOR ALL YOU CAN STORE In elections of their own, the Council selected Bill Phelan, an accounting major, as their president. His chief aid will be Vice-president Dave Broecker. The club's secretary is Drew Barton and the treasurer IT ISn I necessary to ship your winter garments home and is Mike Murphy. then bock to school again in the fall. You con store them at RUBIN CLEANERS in their SAFE, INSURED STORAGE VAULT. . . . Your clothes will be cleaned and HUNG in our storage vault. They ( GetWILDROOT will be ready when you wont them. And you don't pay until you pick them up. . . . The $2.95 pays for storage and insurance up to 1 CREAM-OIL Chariie! $150.00 in valuations. Excess values ore 2% of additional J amount.

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OR STOP IN FOR MORE INFORMATION AND FURTHER DETAILS AT Rubin Gleaners ^UENOF TBOY,N.Y. says: "There's no gxeece, just natural good grooming!" 217 E. JEFFERSON CORNER UNCOLN WAY EAST ON THE BUS UNE Just a little bit of Wildroot s and...WO\^l Mas 22. 1959 2S Back PoftfB by W. DENNIS SHAUL youth at Vienna

The Western World's struggle against The question thus becomes one of not only hinder the democratic cause at Communism has often been termed the what is to be done about the non-Com­ the Festival, but stand in grave danger stmggle for the minds of men. At first munists in attendance at the Festival. of losing their own beliefs. It is a sad glance, the West's victory in this strug­ Clearly, for thinking students every­ but tme fact that most American stu­ gle might seem both assured and i-apid. where in the democratic world the an­ dents have not devoted themselves For to our eyes, it is a clear contest in swer is an obvious one. These students thoroughly enough to the questions of which the foi'ces of insidious, loithless, from neutral countries should not be left the day. Most surely those attending tyrannical government ai*e opposed by to hear only the Communist side of the the Youth Festival would have to an­ the forces of freedom and human dig­ story. The democratic viewpoint should swer questions on a great i-ange of sub­ nity. But our very difficulty in this be represented and articulated at the jects, explaining our country's policies struggle shows that the fight has never Festival. on such things as suspension of bomb seemed such a simple war of black But, there are other considei*ations. tests, recognition of Red China, racial versus white to the rest of the world. It should be equally clear that in no way integration, our Pakistan policy, the In part this is a severe condemnation of should any sort of approval or sanction Berlin dispute, and so on nearly ad our own fervor; in greater part it ex­ be given by American students or Amer­ infinitum. emplifies a tragic flaw of the West—its ican student groups to the Festival it­ Despite this, there is a neai-ly non­ failure to be firmly, passionately de­ self. Any American student or any stu­ chalant attitude toward the Festival on voted to a positive ideology. We tend to dent from a democratic country should the part of the student ti-aveler. He believe that the triumph of right is in­ not attend the Festival in any represen­ treats it as if it were one more at­ evitable, that Communism can be con­ tative or official capacity, or even as a traction on a star-studded, all-European quered without our working to defeat it. spokesman of a college or local commu­ tour. He treats it as if it were the The Soviet World, on the other hand, nity organization. Thus it is clear that 1959 sequel to the 1958 Brussels Fair. has always devoted itself wholehearted­ American students should shun partici­ He does not ask himself whether he is ly to its own self-appointed destiny— pation in such groups as the United capable enough to attend the Festival; to conquer the woi-ld for Communism. States Festival Committee operation out with a great surety he answers he is. He A large part of their effort centers in of New York City and the American fails to realize the gravity of the event attempts to convince the youth of the Youth Festival Organization operating and he fails to realize that a few un­ worth of Communism. This summer the out of Chicago. We are left then with qualified students attending the Festival Communists are holding their seventh this position: it is desirable to have could undo all the good that a much ^'World Youth Festival" in Vienna. American students at the Festival, but laiger number of capable people could not as representatives of any official bring about. The history of the Festival, its role as delegation. a component of Russian propaganda, This is the position of the United It is essential then, that only the ex­ were described in a previous back page States Depaiiment of State. In an ceptional student-traveler attend the by Mr. Paul Body. Unquestionably, the article which appeared in the March 17 Festival, and it is essential that this ex­ Festival must be seen as a highly-de- issue of the 'New York Times, William ceptional student be most well-infoi-med. •\-eloped and centrally-controlled pro­ Jordan wrote: "The United States Gov­ It is for this reason that the Independ­ gram of activities designed by its organ­ ernment is quietly and unofficially en­ ent Service for Information on the izers to present a selective and flattering couraging the participation of able and Vienna Youth Festival has been estab­ •view of Soviet cultural achievements and thoroughly prepared American students lished. This group, formed with the policies. Yet, it should not be forgotten in the Communist dominated World backing of such organizations as the that for hundreds of Asians and Afri­ Youth Festival in Vienna this summer." Young Republicans and Young Demo­ cans, the aims of the Festival will not The same position has also been voiced crats, is trying to inform all American "be so obvious. by United States Senator Hubert H. students about the Festival. From its The one hundred million dollars spent Humphrey. Senator Humphrey, a mem­ Cambridge, Mass., office it has attempted by the Communists on the Festival in- ber of the Senate Foreign Relations to channel information to universities

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