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All Xavier Student Newspapers Xavier Student Newspapers

1964-03-20

Xavier University Newswire

Xavier University (Cincinnati, Ohio)

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Recommended Citation Xavier University (Cincinnati, Ohio), "Xavier University Newswire" (1964). All Xavier Student Newspapers. 2166. https://www.exhibit.xavier.edu/student_newspaper/2166

This Book is brought to you for free and open access by the Xavier Student Newspapers at Exhibit. It has been accepted for inclusion in All Xavier Student Newspapers by an authorized administrator of Exhibit. For more information, please contact [email protected]. Xavier University MAR 201964. avler l?lllS

Vol. XLVlll 20 ... CINCINNATI, OHIO, FRIDAY, MARCH 20, 1964 TEN CENTS No. 21 'GESTAPO TACTICS' CHARGED AFTER FOUR ARE OUSTED

Dean Of Men On Student THE FOLLOWING DAY, line to see that they didn't get three of the four students who any of their tuition money back. had rented the apartment from "Father Ratterman's action ia Carpet For 'Inquisition' September 15, 1963, to February · this case doesn't surprise us,'' he 15, were questioned by the de~n continued. "The university oper• BJ' BOB RYAN and required to give a detailed ates under a double standard. News -Executive Editor account of their activities during None of these students' parents has donated a dormitory, ancl Spokesmen for four Xavier -udents who were dismissed from the two. previous weeks. At that none can afford to 'buy his son'• the university last Thursday charged yesterday that Dean of Men time, a defense sopkesman stat­ way back ·in' as has been done Patrick H. Ratterman, S.J., used "Gestapo tactics" and "ruthless ed, Father Ratterman told the students that he had evidence in the past. If anyone wants hJ intimidations" in conducting an inquiry into the students' social that they hosted an unspecified challenge that statement. we can conduct. number of social gatherings in furnish names and proof. Blasting what. they described as "railroad maneuvers," represen­ the apartment s i n c e Thanks­ "Nothing was established by tatives of the ousted students accused Father Ratterman of threaten­ giving. the Inquisition except that the ing the suspects with "economic retribution and employment black­ four students lived in the apart• listing" if they failed to heed his order to leave Cincinnati. _ · The fourth student. no lonirer ment dul'ing the first semester. Included in the qual'tet were a. junior b.usiness administration In attendance a& Xavier, was The dean of men couldn't !ind major in the day division, two part-time evening division students, summoned from his home in anybody else to blame the party and a Dayton, Ohio, resident who withdrew Irom the university Dayton and slmll~rly lnterro­ that Sunday night on, so he last semester. · FATRElt ltATTERMAN &'ated. On March 6. followlnl' exten­ pinned it on the persons who last TllF. FOUR WERE ACCUSED Prob'ed 1ww probing prober •• , alve qulszlnl' bJ' Father Ratter­ rented the apartment. of holding a series of unauthor- out the flve rooms, which were man, the four were brourht be­ "He and his minions went iz~d parties.in an apa~ttnel!~- ~~_er _vacat.ed .. .bY- .t~e ..fol!r .. students .• ;,, • J-. • •-:-;w• • ... fore the Student- Review ·noard · doo1·-to-door .with photograph.t leas·~d ·on the second Hoot,. at 810 of the students he wanted ta ~eek earlier, . Father Ratterman searched those for d I s c I p II n a r y hearln1rs. Crescent Ave., two blocks · Nt~~~11: Father Ratterman quiz?.ed the premises but 'found only the stu­ HFather Ratterman was not pres­ hang and said he recruited wit­ fro.m ·campus. student about the ·identity of dent tenant in the building. The ent at the hearings," one of the nesses. But none of the accused Acting on a "&Ip,"• Fa' her persons who had been in the p.-iest then drove the student students recalled, "nor did any ever saw any witnesses-to thern lbtterinan wen& &o the apart­ apartment earlier. When the stu­ who accompanied him to his of the !IO-called 'witnesses' con­ it is still hearsay. men ·at 9:15 p.m., Sunday, Feb­ dent to-Id the dean he was un­ residence, obtained a key to the front us wHh their testimony." "It was established r.t the Wel­ ruary 23. A lone evenhag 'division North Crescent apartment from fare Committee hearing that na able to furnish any n a m es , .Three days later, a second stude11t was presen& in the Oat him, and. returned to the sus• complaints were 1·egistered while Father Ratterman searched the heal'ing before the administra­ when the dean gained entrance peeled scene of the p r t i e s. the students were living in the apartment then advised the stu­ a tion's Student Welfare Commit­ meveral minutes after knockin!:' dent to accompany him to an­ 'l'here he found three more stu­ apartment. Father Ratterman tee was held. on the door and identifying him­ other residence to which he said dents who he i m m e d i a t e l y had to go out and dig them U[l. Within a week, the parents of aielt. he suspected the party may have bl'Ought to his office for inte1·1·0- We're not even sure they aren't each of the four accused students Articles of clothing, women's been moved. gation. All three denied any con• fabl'icated. received a letter from Father purses, an overnight case, ·and When the pair reached the nection with illegal social activi­ "He Is ruthlessly intimidatinc Ratterman which stated: several dozen half - full heer second apartment at 3012 Mc­ ties and were released pending student.'i to acquire infornu1Uon slasses were scattered tlu·ough- Micken Ave., Camp Washington, Iurthet· investigation, "It is my unfortunate duty to regarding these parties. These are have to inform you that your Gestapo tactics; the cons t ~ n t son has been 'suspended indefi­ hounding reminds one of the Erin Go Bragh Ueber Alles, Meine .Bruederlein? nitely' from all classes at Xavier Inquisition: If he has expelled University. The term 'indefinite the students, what ri:rht dot's he suspension' is used rather than Jaave to tell them to leave town. dismissal in order r.ot to preju­ How can student.'i have any re­ dice his future. The notation of spect for a priest who behavet 'suspension' is not made on a like a keyhole-pe1•1Ji11g SS man? student's official university tran­ "I can't understand why he i:J script. He is allowed to withdraw so interested in forcing them to without notice .... leave town. After living under "Following official notification his reign who would want tG of suspension until his class Le!lmeister Alfred McKleine-Kreutzmann directs the due! ••• versity. He has not done well nati Court of Common Pleas at here ..• ·• the invitation of His Honor Judge Sure'n t'would only come oil at ein's St. Patrick Day Klatsch was things were goin' quite well 'til ';May God bless you e a c h Ralph B. Kohnen, John 1''laharty. Xaviet• in altes a stagge1·ing success. the bt·au hit his head; but he Zi~zinnati. day ..••" secretary or the society, has an• . h 't b b d t th 'Twas a big doin's, it was! started to sing and they wished . W en • egan, no o Y a e he was dead. A SPOKESMAN for the group nounced, 91eetii1g knew whether to polka There was Lord Mayor O'Wenker So they poured It all down and ehat·ged that Father Ratterman Any student who is inleresteil er jig; by the time it was over, and Pah·ick McKleine-Kreut- ft came out his ears, 'ti! a voice also told the students verbally in going should consult the built!• aobody cared. But one, thing was mann and Rudy O'Hasl. Then from the ftoor cried: "Don't waste . that if they did not leave town tin boards for· furlhe1· info1·1na• . he would "tlght them down the . tion, he added• eectaia - the Heidelberger· Ver- there was Tom voa Moser. Now, all them .beet"11." Pqe Twe CINCINNATI, OHIO, FlllDAY, MAllCH 20, 1964 News Platform fC)r Progress At Xavier: e lnc1'eaed emphasis on th~ nsponsibility of the individual "Veritas Vos Liberabil" etudent th1'ough the wise admin­ tstration of the principle o/ sub­ :l:Dl'fOR-Dl·CHlF.F •..•••••••••• , ••• , •• , •••• , •••••••. Hubert J. Gardiner, '65 EXECUTIVE l·:lll'l'OR •..•••• , ••••• ••• ., ••••• , ••• , • ,Robert A. Rynn, Jr., '65 sidiarity. MANAOING Jo:UJ'l'OR .•••• ,, •••••••••• , , ••••••••••••••••• Dnid W. Cook, '65 e Improvement of libra1'y re­ IIUSlNESS M,\!'BGl•:R ..•• , •• ,, ••• ••• , . , , .• , ••. , .••. , ..••••• John Jetrre, '35 Harch facilitie1, .ASSOC lA'fE ED l'l'ORS ••• , •••••• , •• , , Carole Zerhusen; Jmm•• Heiselmann, '64 Robert O'Brien, '64: Hugh Gnrd in er, '65 e Reduction of sundry' costa ll!POR'rs EDT'rOR.,, •••••••••• ,, •••••.•...••••.••.•••••.. Ken Czillinger, 114 to students through the equitable COf,IJM.NlS'rS ••..••..•... , .•..••••• Fred BHOTOGRAPlU:RS ..••••••••• , •• ,, •• , Bill Schlnu1lecker, '65; 'J'om Kilcb, '66; Chnrlie Walker, '67: Jerry Wolter, '67 through the arousal of interest ClRCULA'rTON DlREC'fOR ••• , , •.•• , • , ••.••••.....• , ••••• , .. Dave Long, '65 by dudent leade1'S, l'ACUL'l'Y ADVISOR ••...••••••••. ,, .•••••.••... Rev. Thomas G. Snvnge, S.J'. Puhli•hed weekly durinrr the school year excPpt during vacntion period• by e Elminatfon of duplicadOM. Xavier University. Hamilton County, .Evanston, Cincinnati 7, Ohio. $2.00 per year. wasted motion, discoordination. Bntere1l •• •econd cln•• matter October 4, 1946 at the Posi Ortice at Cincinnati, Ohio under the Act of March 3, J879. and general confusion in regi:i­ tration through general reform o/ the system. Bob Ryan e Expansion of campus pa1'k­ ing facilities. Your Voiee In G..,eranaent e Continuation of the facttlt11 Below The Masthead .;~· evaluation J>1'0gram through vol­ tmtaTJI J>Grticipation.

TO THE EDITOR OF THE NEWS: By BOB RYAN Editorials · :New• Exeeuilve Edlter Dear Boss: Oscar Wilde was dead serious when he observed that "it is always ''Now Is The Time For All Good· Men .. .' the unreadable that occurs." For you will find-as did your once­ The right of a person to criticize, to hold an In a few weeks Council's carping critics will dedicated elders on the nation's dailies-that the bulk of the stories opposing point of view, or to make and to have an opportunit.y to prove thnt they are that should be printed never reach the Linotype machine. But. the declare a judgment of his own on a particular willing to assume their responsibilities as well clashes with conscience that you will have will not be like their's­ issue, has always been and must always con· your rag claims no political allegiance, your few advertisers couldn't as to take advantage of their rights. For in a tinue to be an intrinsic part of American Jife. few weeks the freshmen; sophomore, and .iimior care less about what you publish, and your audience is captive. This is especially true when the issue under el888es will elect next year's Student Counci}; discussion is an act.ion or lack of action by No, the struggles which you inevitably will face are not from the American government. The question is then, will these self-appointed without. You will battle only yourself and your friends. Xavier­ flritics remain just that, or will they show t.hat despite its deceptive roar-is still a small community, and it is This right; and the exercise thereof, is just they are really interested in doing something precisely this lack of size which will compound your problems. as essential to good student government on a about the policies they have been condemning You will be unable to lose yourself in the teeming anonymity where college campus as it is to good government in so vocally? ;your contemporaries on larger campuses find refuge, The storms Washington or Columbus. And fortunately it will be many, the ports few. For Xavier is undergoing the anguish seems that here at Xavier there usually are at Now is their chance. e>f growth, and it is now incumbent upon you to transmit these least a few students who express their "loyal Now they can do more than just complain; pains of progress. It will not be easy. opposition" to one or another of Student Coun­ they can run for Council positions and t1y to eil's plans. do better jobs than their predecessors. . You will be tempted by the expediency of analgesia. There will In fact, this year Council has probably .re­ In today's societ:Y the famiJiar refrain, "I'm be times when it will be more comfortable to look the other way eeived a greater volume of vocal condemn'ation too busy; let Joe do it" is altogether too evident. when a Manion speaks or an Auk Squawk erupts or a Bamett is for its programs than at any time in the past. But what would happen to the: campus-oF ·'° banned. When you cover a sensational event, you will be accused of Those who otYered this condemnation are to be the country, for that mntter-if Joe also de-: ..yellow" journalism; when you chronicle the routine, your work will commended in that they at least took enough eided that he was too busy? . ,. be labeled "dull." interest to consider Council's activities at all. How many Xavier men will show clming th«! But with this right to criticize that these · few weeks of this spring's election campaign lf you are a good newsman, you will muster as many enemies sh1dents have exereised, there goes a responsi­ that they too are willing to assume their re• 811 friends; if you are lazy, you will make more friends, but none bility. l!ponsibilities? · ef them will read your paper. If you remember your decendancy :from the town crier, you will not be loath to "leg" a story; if you l'emind yourself that you are the forerunner of television, you wm •trophy. Vending Barons, Si! Virginia, No! You will face the deadline nightmare weekly. You will scream No, Virginia, It isn't a conspiracy. It'• administration or student council or 1iome­ at bungling cub reporters, curse temperamental photographers, Just that vending machine companies ·are lD body could not take over the operation of m'larvel at imaginative typesetters, cower beneath bull-headed Dutch business for profit. the campus machines and charge reasonable ehop bosses, and wonder what ever happened to your circulation man, No, Virginia nickle soft drink machine1 rateB for the commodities-except that the have not beco~e extinct-you can still find national economy is now based on their When you saze upon empty make-up sheets you will know them in faculty lounges--it's just that the profits and to sell cokes for a nickle might anxiety; when you peck out editorials you will know uncertainty; cause a depression and a revolution would llllllH!llllllllHltlllllllllillllllllltlltHllllll--111-HNllllltlllHllllllHIHllllllllllllllllllllllllNllllllllllllllllllllMlllllll- result. . ' . when you ponder galley proofs you will know exasperation; when A committee iJi a group of the unw·illing 7()U see your finished product you will know humility. No, ·Virginia, If you a1'e patriotic, you wlD 1elected from the unfit to do the unneces.~ary. not complain or boycott automation - for You may think that your duty is to tell; rather, it is to ask. You -Parkin.~on. automation means progress. Who eve1' beard will find the answers you seek in the counsel of the men who sur­ 11111111111111111111111111111111i111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111m11111111111111111111111111111111111 of someone telling a nnding machine that round you: the Deters, the Savages, the Buschmanns, the O'Cal­ suppliers can make more money by selling Its prices are too high? . . laghans, the Marreros, the Shiels, and the Whealens. But there are three-cent beverages for a dime. .ethers .•• No, Virginia, no one will come to yoUI No, Virginia, there is no law that requires r~cue. There is no Santa Claus. . .. ,. cigarette companies, dairies, and candy sup­ You will see your toil everywhere-absorbing soup spills, shut­ pJiers to follow the example of soft drink ting out draughts, bindin1 earbage. bottlers. But, after all, they have a right to Art Uncalculated Risk·· earn a decent Jiving, too. !ti But when you watch the lead take shape and sniff the ink's aroma and hear the rozzer's roar, you'll understand that your 40-plus No, Virginia, these companies are not ap- Robert Taft Jr. is an ambitious youns laasn't been wasted, after all, plying a Robin Hood philosophy to their politician. As such, be doesn't want to loH trade. In fact, it's really just the opposite. any political battles for a long time. Ae a Hard work is its own reward, Arter all, who ever heard of a rich college matter of fact, he doesn't even want to taJle -b. 11tudent or a poor vending machine opera· any unnecessary chances. tor? To any native Ohioan, the fact that tbe .~o. Virgin!~, the present lnnationary rates Rhodes - Bliss - Taft GOP organization op. "''th not decline when sugar returns to ita poses the nomination of Senator Goldwater rht.• J>l l'"'> lllll'i( lw llll

I',,, t I It \11 where someone has decided that it is not . It cannot be emphasized too much that honest to take advantage of nice people. Mr. Taft is ambitious and do~n't want. to No, Virginia, there is no reason wh•, the take cbance1.!•• · CINCINNATI, OHIO, FllDAY. MAICH a, IM ...... l_Jetters to the Editor 'Weak Men and Dirt' Describes News Editorial Policies TO THE EDTTOR OJ!' THI': NEWS: ments. Having a fine university tion the editorials of Friday, Oe· The recent cl'iticisms of the library is a community project. tober 4, that advocate more vig­ 'F'a'n's'h'augh Explains Helmholtz, Xavier News in letters to the O.L.C. and Mount St. Joseph orous cultivation of those aims 1 H asl, Barnett, Tougaloo, and Sugar editor and your recent editorials could not be what you picture for which colleges were founded seem to sugges.t the possibility of them to be. One with a mother, a and recommend that scholarship, l'O THP. F.flTTOR OF TFJF. NF.WS: wife, a sister. a daughter or a scholastic achievements nnd suc­ United Press article was his using your own expression of I must thank you, Gentlemen, work on the now-famous Helm­ "cousin" not eligible to day school cess become the center of student "Weak Men and Dirt" to describe for publishing my offering hist holtz Resonator, and the devel­ at Xavier is made lo feel uneasy interest lo encournge real college week in the pages of yotn· paper. opment of the Helmholtz Reso­ your editorial policies, your let­ by the garbage printed about spirit and proper nlachment to Since you did not seem to object, nating Principle and the Helm­ ters to the edito_r, and your plat­ Cincinnati girls schools. An all­ school. end since I have received no holtz Constant, known to some form. Nothing in the News Plat­ malc prep school might find this Colleges arc institutions whose C!Omplaints from .any other type of talk differellt. Matlll'e physicists as Ulanck's Constant. form For Progress at_ Xavier pre-eminently principal purpose .aurces, I shall be most happy He was indeed a ~ersatile man! Catholic university male studeP 's seems to indicate the fact that is to develop rational. intellectual to continue writing to you. even conservative and opposed to gentlemen. whose interests are But there is one field in which, N.S.A, cou~d hardly be interested. That is especially true now Xavier is a University, a Liberal intellectual, men who can think alas, the beloved Helmholtz was Once it might be funny. Mr ny that I have to do double duty, Arts Unh•ersity, a Catholic Lib­ clearly, correctly, who can dis­ no master, and that is in the times indicates "Weak Men and as it were: for now that Ge0t'!!e eral Arts Universfty and a Jesuit tinguish betwe~n good and bad, field of music. Indeed, his death Dirt," out of joint with the great Helmholtz is dead (God rest his and can arrive at truth and know is perhaps made almost bearable Catholic Liberal Arts University. Catholic era we are' living in. eoul!) I shall have to write A public high school newspaper, it, not whe1·c students no matter by the fact that no more letters You should add a book review enough to flll the space that for­ a secular trade school newspaper how brilliant. train the official~ can appear like that which, section for books which would merly was taken up with his lamentably, was his last and or a Quicky Business College and question official decisions on inform you about the fact that the matters about which thev know magnificent meanderings-other­ therefore is that by· which many newspaper could use your plat­ old-time Jansenistic, ghettoish nothing and about which are •i~e you will find yourselves people will doubtless remember form word for word and the the~· again forced to use filler on your whole thing would fit perfectly. and prep school mentality is leav­ incompetent to judge. Still less him. His ill-disguised complaints ing the university campus and otherwise ex c e 11 e n t ·"letters" · We are living in the great Cath­ arc they institutions whose one about the music of the great that a new age of . a changing page. I speak, of course, of t.hat olic age of John XXIII and Paul important function is lo satisfy Ferenc Sczap are ha1·dly worthy Church and a changing layman is ridiculous article on your stu­ VI. in the fascinating times of the Saturday afternoon crowds of that gentleman; Helmholtz, a in the process of developing. A dent council elections. Why any­ Vatican II and in an enthusiastic clamoring for excitement as they would seem, is so old-fashioned new generation, American and er.e would stand for election to period of renewal for the Chul'ch watch their favorite wal'riors, of• that he must 1 i st en to the Catholic, is maturing, Should student council at all is a ques­ and the layman. Booze, sex, ten highly paid, struggle weekly powdered-wigged, stilted, emo­ your university newspaper not be tion that puzzles me. It is a well- pornography; condemned movies in the arena. tionless, and long-outdated music an instrument for this? How about . known fact that at any respon­ (and the plight of O.L.C. and I am not oppos<:d to students of Haydn or (Heaven help the reviews of spiritually meaningful •il~le university the administra­ Mount St. Joseph girls) are not developing resourcefulness nor poor misguided man) even Bach. Salinger and Updike books? - the main interest of our students am I opposed to athletics. I tors will see to it that the stu­ He thinks that that which con­ (Lest we forget the unanswered and of our university. Most of our strongly favor both. B u t first dent government, call it what tains discords is for that very offensive letter of Fr. Walsh)­ students have neither the money, things first and everything in it.s you will, does nothing that does tains discords is for that very rea­ Other books of real interest to the time nor the energy to wal­ place. Incidentally. English uni­ not win their hearty approba­ son bad music-although I can maturing Catholic university stu­ low and drown, you would say, versities devote more time [() tion. As for Mr. Hasl's presump­ point out to him music that he dents would be worth consider­ in such ungentlemanly enter­ athletics for the entire student tlous statement that "Student probably considers to be at least ing. Daniel Callahan, The Mind prises. These negative aspects of body than we do in America. council here at Xavier can ac­ passable that contains many of the Catholic Layman: Donald personal morals keep their rele­ And we all know-utterly dis­ romplish a lot," one would think "senseless discords." He probably J. Thorman, The Emergi1ig Lay­ vance for the individuals and crcdi ted now-that Waterloo was that he above all people would even feels that a compsition must man; Michael Novak, A New their spiritual dil'ectors. But more won on the playing fields of Elon. know better than that by now. have m e l o d y, as weU as an Generation, American and Cath­ positive personal and community After all, it is quite apparent to "acceptable" harmony, before it olic; Karl Rahner, S.J., The And let us hope now that all aspects should be the concern of anyone who has paid any atten­ can be good music. I would sug­ Christian Commitment; Yves J. the salacious comments on stu­ a university newspaper. I might tion at all to the last few years' gest that he listen to Gunther Congar, O.P., Lay People the dent mol'als and some of the even say that 15 years of "Cath­ in goings on on the Xavier campus Schuller's First Piano Concerto Churc11; Karl Rahner S.J., Theo­ stupid wit are at an end. Un• olic" education has prepared that Mr. Hasl was fired from his -and listen with an open mind logical Investigations: Jean Levie, doubtedly there are some lech­ them to cope with these items. position as student council ·presi­ -and then decide if that isn't S.J., The Bible, Word of God in erous individuals at Xavier, but Marriage, social cocktails and a dent for two reasons: first. his really the greatest of music. And Words of Men. it is hardly fair to indict the en­ efforts on behalf of integration, sophisticated intellectual life will tire student body for the conduct he would, apparently, endorse The point could made that such as his Tougaloo Tour, which take care of these passing issues. be of a small minority, That there only that music which is stilted, your platform is below the level the administration leaders quite should be some of this type must formal, and wholly devoid of Your "old" cartoon indicating of your reporting. I would hope naturally rejected as being in­ be expected these days w h e n feeling, while disparaging tr.e the fact that the library is the so. I have been told that your consistent with their s t a n d, · pornographic "lite r a t u r e" is great m u s i c of Rachmaninoff oldest building on campus is in­ newspaper is great joumalistical­ taken just last year, that th('re alarmingly on the increase, and (even if somewhat adjusted to dicative of a mentality which by­ ly. I should add that I have read was nothing wrong with Xavier's rather distressingly, when such fit the ch a n g i n g times) or passes the true temper of our some good "articles" and editor­ playing in the segregated Sugar muck is put in the hands of our Brahms or Stokowski. He would times and of our university life. ials. Bowl tournament; and commend as the greatest of the high school boys and gil'ls by our Whatever the building, the con­ The reason I love Xavier and second, his daring to invite Gov­ "up-tO-date" composers s u c h priests and sisters. tent is what an academically­ devote my professional life to its ernor Ross Barnett of Mississippi men as Prokofiev and Stravinski minded university society should academic welfare is that the stu­ Why such filth is encouraged is to speak on campus, as the ad­ quite forgetting that these con­ worry about. If you had run a dents I am in contacl with have hard to understand. There is pos­ ministration, quite natm·ally, did servative, even reactionary, com­ series of articles on the nature itively no art in this. The very not desire to have any picket­ little in common with the picture posers were 'totally out of touch and value of the university li­ given, for the most part, by the least we can expect from art is t() ing or rioting on campus. (The with the twentieth century in brary to the college and outside News of Xavier student life and lift us up, to appeal to the nobler statement which the university which they lived. I would recom­ communities you would know mentality. Why not get with it. emotions and feelings, We do not officials issued, w h i c h to the that our problem is not to get a mend to him that- Pacem iM terris! . need to have books f,o drag u• gullible would seem to indicate new library. September 1965 will But I forget myself. I see. It down to the gutter and the filt'1' a turn-about in the universit:v's give us a sumptuous building.. Sincerely yours, of the pig sty. is of course pointless for me to otftcial position, is of course ~n The problem is what kind of recommend anything to him now Bernard A. Gendreau, And it does seem rather incon• obvious cover-up for this real buildin( will be put up and (God keep· him). His views on Philosophy Department. sistent, to put it mildly, for a reason. whether the content will reftect ,,.·music may be unforgiveable, but priest to lecture on the sublimit1' the needs and aspirations of the • ,, But I digress. I had meant to this is hardly the decent time to • • of the great mystery of the Mys• university and CMJtside Catholic begin this letter by expressong disc:uSs them. And, despite them, (F•ther Walsh's lett~r, orig­ tical Body and the Divine Incorp• communities. The library, we are the extreme disappointment I Helmholtz was a ereat man. inally published November 8, oration and descend in the next felt upon reading of the death told, is for the students. You 1963, speaks fM itself - and for class to discuss the "beauty" ot So, give you George Philip of that great man of letters, r should promote an interest in the us.-Ed.) the great cloacae and their or• Helmholtz, theologian, financier, George Philip Helmholtz. The project to make sure that it will dure. The only reason for writint scientist, man of letters, an as­ not fit your of platform. I would like to congratulate United Press International ar­ ty~ · such filth is the buck. tute commentator of his times: you· on your consistently excel­ ticle about him, which you savr Your statement about Mr. Worst's May his soul rest in p e a c e • · worthwhile contribution to the lent editions of The Xavier News, "Paulo majors ca-namus," the fit to carry in full, although Cin­ Amen! ·university library is to be highly feature articles, editorials, and old pagan said. cinnati's daily papers ran only a commended. Many, who do little news that interests and concel'ns short paragraph or two buried ·Your ob't servant, Joseph A. Walsh, S.1., to help him update the methods college men. on page 37, or thereabouts, was Charles Henry and enrich the collection, are Among other things I would St. Xavier High School. ve1·y interesting, I thought, even Featheringstonchaugh. unjustly critical of his achieve- like to single out fol' commenda- Cincinnati, Ohio, though it quite neglected to even mention Helmholtz's C!l'owning achievements-I $peak, of course, of his "letters," essays of great 'An,American Tragedy: Alumnus Traces History Of The News, Suggests Party literary quality on a bevy of interesting subjects. Many o f TO THE EDITOR OF THE NEWS: ·nalism and suggested a student mann, S.J., then Dean of the and it would be appropriate if them, my dear sirs, were jn fact My congratulations on your newspaper to our Professor, Mr. College, he decided to carry on some re-union of past editol'I published in the pages of your new position as editor of the Blakely, of the editorial staff of the "Xaverian News" as a Col· could take place soon to plaa very newspaper! Xavier News. What makes it so the old Cincinnati Commercial lege paper, supplementing the fo1· a golden jubilee. A bouncl Tribune. It was approved, and a "Athenaeum," a student quar­ copy of the first three or four Also not mentioned by the interesting is the fact that you are from the Evening, Division senior member of the Class of terly magazine of the College, years of the "News" was pre• of Xavier University. It bas been 1917 became its first editor; and but far different in appearance, sented to Dr. Joseph Link, Jr, --llJllllllllllllllll/IJlllJllJlllllllJllllJllJJlllllllllJJlllJJllllllJJlllllJJllllllllllll a long, long time since an edito:­ the writer followed as second editol'ial policy and fol'lnat. by my son James who graduated came from this Division. Per­ editor, graduating in the World There were five Degree grad­ with the Class of 1952, and it haps you would be interested to War 1, Class of 1918. uates from the Evening Division should be available in the Pub• SPEEDING learn a few pertinent facts about Mr. Blakely died in the Spring in the Class df 1918, al! of whom lications Library at the Univer• the News, that time almost ob­ CJf 1917 and the Faculty advised were in military service within sity. Those first editions are a literates. those of us who ·were majoring thirty days after graduating, One a far cry from today's splendid paper. DOESN'T PAY • • • Xavier News stems f1·om the in Journalism, that it would be member, George W. Buclde, who "Xaverian News" established by necessary for us to transfer our entered the Service in 1917, died With kindest regards and all the students, some five or six of s t u d i e s to Accounting, if we in action on Armistice Day, No­ &ood wishes. YOU DO! us, in 1916. The writer was a wished to graduate with the De­ vember 11, 1918. Very truly yours, junior at the time, in the Eve• gree of B. SC. To the everlasting We are not far from the 50tb Herbert A. Nieman, ...... --l'..... "Zmlll'M•r•••••H'llSIS'MYr:•t1r•m•"'•"•ll•• nint Division, majorinc in. Jour• foresightedness of Rev. Fr. Heier- Anniversary of Xavier Newa, B.SC. '18 Pare Fow CINCINNATI, OHIO, FRIDAY; MARCH 20, 19'4 MVP THOMAS HEADS FOR ·LEXINGTON International Rules Sho11ld Thomas Near Jlelp Xavier's Scoring Star Career Mark By KEN CZILLINGER the shot, he is given two foul Here is a rundown of the top News Sports Editor tosses. eleven scoring leaders in Xa­ Steve Thomas departs for Lex­ However, if a player is fouled vier's basketball history. The· Hst ington, Ky., Sunday to begin in' the act of shooting and makes c:onsists · Of all the members Of 11reparations for the Olympic the shot, he is not awarded a XU's 1000 Point Club. trials which will take place· on free throw. A three-point play l. Joe Viviano •• , , ••... ·. I,338 April 2, 3, and 4 in New York can only occur when a player is 2. Dave Piontek , , , ; • ; ... 1,28'1 deliberately fouled while shoot­ City. 3 . .Jack Thobe ••• , , , •.... 1,285 Thomas, who received addi­ ing and sinks the basket, 4. Steve Thomas •••..... 1,230: tional honors last Monday when A story in the Lexington Her­ }le was named XU's Most Val­ ald last week indicated that 5. Hank Stein , , , ...... l,14ol \lable Player for the 1963-64 sea­ Steve Thomas would not be play­ 6. Gene Smith •••, •..... l,109 son, is expected to participate ing in the All-Star game at 7. Huck Budde ...... l,O!lt jn the All-Star game at UC's Lexington on Saturday, March 8. Bill Kirvin .. , ...... l ,088 Armory Fieldhouse on Thursday, 28. If this report is true, Thomas 9. .Jim Boothe ...... 1,08e March 26. will be a member of the Blue Tickets are on sale now at the NCAA All-Star squad and will 10. Bob Pelkington , •..... l,07& -N1u•1 (Wolter) Pl1olo Armory Fieldhouse Ticket Office. compete a g a i n st the NCAA ll . .Joe Geiger ...... ~ ... l,068 All tickets cost $2.50. The UC champions on March 28 in the Good Luck, Steve! Ticket Office is open from 9 a.m. home city of the NCAA winner. Steve Thomas accepts MVP trophy from Ken Czillinger. Friends of Xavier Meet Al to 4 p.m. on weekdays and from 9 a.m. until noon on Saturday, Those who have accepted invi­ tations to tryout lor the Olym­ Dana Gardens The fund-raising games and 1832 Dana Avenue pic team are: Steve Thomas 1:he actual Olympic trials will be (Xavier), Golfers Open April 7th FINE FOOD AND DRINKS played according to in terna ti on al (Bowling Green), Gary Bradcls Coach Ray Baldwin's Xavier Cincinnati,. will be the number The Dan Delanys rules. These rules include a 30 (Ohio State), (UC), Golf Team opens its 1964 sea­ lix man on the squad. second time clock, comparable and Gail Goodrich !lon on Tuesday afternoon April to the NBA's 24 second rule, The XU team has two matches (UCLA), Manny Newsome 7. The Muskies host the Dayton DANCING 11nd a funnel-shaped foul Jane carded with eight different op­ (Western Michigan), Jim Davis Flyers in a match at the Ken­ .EVERY SUNDAY· NIGHT which is 19'8" wide at the base­ (Colorado), Dave Stallworth wood Country Club. · ponents-Ohio U., Miami, Cin­ line as compared with the 12' ST. BERNARD EAGLES HALL (Wichita), (Oregon Five lettermen return for the cinnati, Dayton, Villa Madonna, 4815 TOWE~ AVE. wide distance at the baseline in State), (Kentucky), XU golfers. Mike Sweeney, from Bellarmine, L o u i s v i 11 e, and ST. IEllNAllD 211-MJS c:ollege basketball. MUSIC IY IHADIS OF ILUI (Loyola), Paul Silas Arlington Heights, Ill., is the Marshall. These two international n1les (Creighton), Joe Caldwell (Ari­ lone senior among the top six ghould help Thomas, since he's zona State), Jim Barnes ( linksmen. \!Seel to a run and score type of Western), Wayne Estes (Utah Other returnees are: junior · fame and has such a great va­ State), Buel Koper (Oklahoma Jack Martin (Wilmette, 111.) and MILLER ALL STAR riety of practically indefensible City), Jerry Sloan (Evansville), sophomores Greg LaLonde· and ()riving shots. · Doug Moon· (Utah), John Thomp­ Roger Ruhl. LaLonde and Ruhl Other international rules stipu­ son (Providence), Ray Bob are both graduates of St. Xavier late that if a player .is fouled Carey (Missouri), and Bennie High in Cincinnati. DAIRY . ALL ·n11 FOODS, Jn the act of shooting and misses Lennox (Texas A&M). Bob Glueck, a junior from Spring Drills Vnderi.,ag The Shield"' Of Quality!' Biles· Stresses Three Objectives· 656 East McMillan Phone 961 l2474 ·. · Hard-working Ed Biles and his Biles mentioned .Jim Louder, The Xavier staff is anxious to enthusiastic group of assistan ,s D~n Abramowicz, Denny Caponi, see soph ,quarterback Carroll conducted the initial sessions of ar.d Dave Gooding as some of Williams in action. Williams is 11pring football pr a ct i c e this the better sophomore prospects. sidelined with an ankle injury. week. The Muskies are scheduled to ()rill c.n Monday, Wednesday and Friday. Saturday is set aside for scrimmages w h i c h will take place "occasionally" according to Eiles. Weather conditions could c:hange the practice plans. "We are working every other day," remarked Biles, "for two reasons. First, to allow the play­ ers more time to concentrate on their studies and, second, to give minor aches and pains a day of rest." Biles stresses three specific ob­ jectives for spring practice: "to find out just who the players are, to work on the fundamentals of blocking and tackling, and to do some experimenting with dif­ IS .ferent ideas, both offensively and -N1u•1 (Woller) Ploolo defensively." &CIENTIFICI Mitch Dudek, Mike Bonnano, Boxtop Briefing· end Terry Brown drew special To be beautiful, a diamond must have Tom McHugh, new assistant football coach, gets some inside informa­ J>raise from Biles for their "hard tion from Ed Biles on the famous "boxtop plays" which have brought correct color, accurate cutting and com­ work and eftori." national recognition to· Biles and Xavier. parative freedom from flaws. Newstedt's Certified Gemologists will gladly show you diamonds in the Diamondscope . . . 'This scientific instrument makes it pos- New England ·ZIN O'S sible for you to see .the factors that de­ PIZZA CARRY.OUT termine diamond beauty and value! Why Hat For ¥our Eating Pleasure! be satisfied with less? Newstedt engage­ C222 MONTGOMERY ROAD •. NORWOOD ment rings are priced from ~ 1QQ.00. Manufacturing Phone 831·8250 Open Dall1 11:00 A.M. - Sa&urda1 and Bandar 1:00 r.M. Company e PLAIN e MANGOES e PEPPERONI e ANCHOVIES e SAUSAGE e BACON e MUSHROOMS * All Ingredients Proee1111ed In Our Own Kl&ehea Made Fresh Dall1 - No& Pre-Baked - No& Frozen · Diamonds Watches Silver 118 East Sixth Street COMPLETE LINE OF ITALIAN SANDWICHES I Order Spa•he&&I • Maearoal - Bavloll Cooked To 0Ytr ltelf • Cettftrf ef ft11 ...... Cincinnati, Ohio CALL FOB FAST rlCK-11r SEBVICB DeUverr Sentee oa ta.ti Or llere 'l'e All...... _ FOURTH .ncl RAC& CINCINNATI, OHIO, FRIDAY, MARCH 20, 19'4

Pelle, He11gelaold Bo11ored Geiger And Thomas Earn Top Awards Steve Thomas is Xavier's Mo!:t individual records and tied an­ without the words "All-Ameri­ Valuable Player for the 1963-64 other. In less than a week he can" in front of it. Steve has season. XU's bnckcourt sensation ]eaves for Lexington to pla~ in received All-American mention received the MVP trophy at the a series of exhibition games prior from AP, UPI, NEA, ancl Sport­ annual basketball banquet held to the Olympic trials next month ing News. With another year of Monday evening at the Carrousel i!I New York. eligibility left, we all hope that Motel. "Certainly Steve Thomas is no the best is yet to come. News Sports Editor Ken Czil­ ordinary or average ballplayer. "In conclusion, it's my privi• Jinger presented the Cincinnati And so this year's enrra,•inc on lege to present the Xavier New1 Gardens Trophy to Thomas. The the Most Valuable Player trophy l\1ost Valunble Player Trophy, presentation was a first in the Is not ordinary either. donated by Mr. Alex Sinclair of history of Xavier University in "Coach Ruberg said way back Cincinnati Gardens, to (as it'• that the words "All-American" in November that the name Steve engrnvecl on the award) All­ were engraved on the award. Thomas should never be seen American Steve Thomas." Joe Geiger was the recipient -Nc'll'J (Welter) !'hoto of .the Earl Loftus Memorial Trophy as the Most Improved · Anyo~e For Trophies? . Player on the XU team. The award was made by Jerry Fagel : Les Skinner (Master of Ceremonies) and Coach Ruberg help of the Musketeer Club. Joff peiger (Most Improved Player) and Steve ThOmas (Most Valu­ On~~~ Geiger also received a trophy ab~f. Player) display t.hefr awards at the basketball banquet. (A.11Hior of Rally Round the Flag, Boys!" for having the highest free throw c111d "Barefoot Boy With Cheek.") percentage. Bob Pelkington, who was un­ able to attend the banquet be­ cause of an illness in his .fam­ WELL-KNOWN FAMOUS PEOPLE: No. 1 lt:J Ken Csllllnrer, NEWS Sports Editor · ily, was the winner of a trophy This is the first in n series of 48 million columns examining the for being the best rebounder. careers of men who ha\'C significantly altered the world we live ~This is mE .BIG weekend in Naturally, Kentucky backers Tony Lazar, athletic chairman in. We begin today with Max PI:inck. coJlegiate basketball. ·' National were shocked by the Wildcats' of Student Council, awarded the Max Planck (or The Pearl of the Pacific, ns lie is often championships will be at st[lke loss. UK played its worst game first-ever Most Valuable' Frosh called) gave to modem physics the law known as Planck's both in New York City and in of the year as Coach Rupp and Player award to high-scoring Consb~nt. l\fany people when they first hear of this law, thrO\V up their hands and exclaim, "Golly whiskers this is too deep Kansas City. many others have stated. UK's Jim Hengehold. · for little old me!" ' Last :Friday night l watched shooting was poor and their re­ Very Reverend Paul L. O'Con­ . (Incidentally\ s~eaking of whiskm·s, I cannot help but men• Ohio U. cut down highly-favored bounding was even worse. Cottoll nor, President of Xavier, coaches tion Personn:t Stamless Steel Razor Blades. Personn:i is the Kentucky, 85-69, in Minneapolis. Nash might as well have stayed Don Ruberg and Al Gundrum, blade for people who c:in't shave uftcr every meal. It shaves The game was tel e v i s e d by in Lexington and watched the athletic director Jim McCafferty, yot~ closely, cleanly, and more fre~1~1cntly than any other stainless steel blade on the market. 1 he makers of Personna cha:nnel 27 in Lexington. Two ballgame on television. and seniors Tom Freppon, Ray have publicly cleclarcd~and do here !'epent-that if Pcrsonna o~her avid cage enthusiasts and Despite Kentucky's loss, our Mueller, and1.Joe.Geiger all spoke Blades don't give you more luxury shaves than any other I .set out about 6:30 p.m. last little group eagerly awaited the at the banquet., stainless steel blade, they will buy' you whatever blade vo11 Friday evening. Loyola-Michigan contest which Les Skinner, former sports ·· think is better. Could anything be more fair? I, for one, tliink l We didn't know how far south was scheduled to be telecast by writer for the Cincinnati Times~ not~) ·- ~e would have to drive down Channel 27 (Lexington). Many , Star and now associated with the tfS 75 to be . able to view the others had gathered in the lounge Cincinnati Club, was the Master r.tme. We hoped that we would· of the Phoenix Hotel to watch of Ceremonies. riot have to go all the way to ' the' second game. The followlnr is the . eomplete I!.exington, but we were prepared At the 10 p.m. tip off ti~e, a text of Ken Czillincer's talk. The tf> go to the home of the Wildc~ts Channel 27 arinouncer informed Xavier News Most Valuable if necessary. . viewers that because of Ken­ Player Troph:r was a bistorie \ Our first stop was at "tht tucky's Joss to Ohio U., the sta­ award tbfs season In that the Jiotel "Donald in Williamstown, tion would not telecast the· sec­ words "All - Amerlean S t e v e ond game between Loyola and ~y. The hotel had a lounge, a Thomas" were enrraved on the · · Tv, .. and three vacant chairs. Michigan. . trophy Itself. · Talk about angry young men, 1*owever, we were informed that "Shortly before the 1963-64 they were unable to pick up l'll let you imagine how the three of us felt as· we drove back to season began, Coach Ruberg ad­ Channel 27 (Lexington) or Chan­ dressed a group of about 150 nel 11 (Louisville) at the hotel. Cincinnati l i st e n.i .n g to Red Rush's account of '.the game. students at ·a special convoca­ So we drove further south to tion on the ·Xavier campus: a bowling alley in Georgetown, • • • "Dorine the eourse or his talk, Ky. Again there was a television Last year I eorreetly predicted Coach Ruberg mentioned that he and this time our luck was good. the outcome or the· NCAA finals, expected Steve Thomas to av­ But I digress. We were speaking of Planck's Constant, which We watched the first half of the tabbing Loyol;l to upend Cin-· erage 30 pcinf.s per game durinr is not, as nmny think, difficult to understnnd. It simply states game in Georgetown. The Ken­ that matter sometimes beh:ives like waves, :ind waves some­ cinnati. I've decided to go out the season. tucky fans became more and on the limb (in print) two years times behave like matter. To give you a homely illustration, more disappointed as the game "To those who had attendecl pick up your pencil und wave it. Your pencil, you will sul'ely in a row. My fearless forecast: some of the pre-season practice agree, is matter-yet look :it the little rascal w1ivc I Or take progressed and cries of "Turn Duke over Michigan and Kansas the game off" were heard. sessions and had watched Steve· flags. Or Ann-Mul'gret. State over UCLA in the ·semi­ compile a 41 point average, this. Planck's Constant, uncomplicated ns it is, nevertheless pro­ Wen; at the hal1, the pro­ finals: Duke over ·Kansas State prediction seemed to be a good vided science with the key that unlocked the atom, made space prietor. did turn the game off and in the finals. travel possible, and conquered denture slippage. Honors were one. However, others were skep­ heaped upon Mr. Planck (or The City of .Brotherly Love, as ., .... said that he wasn't going to tical. After all, if Thomas were' turn it b a ck on either. We • • • he is familiarly known as). He was nw:mlcd the Nobel Prize, Ticket scalpers will probably to average over 25 points per. the Little Brown Jug, and Disneyland. But the honor that weren'.t ·about to wait and see game, he would have to break pleased Mr. Planck most was that plankton wcl'e named after tf ' he would stick to his ' guns. be in action this .weekend in· several individual records. Also him. The three of us ·headed for Lex• Kansas City. Last Saturday night Plankton, ns we know, are the floating colonies of one-celled scalpers iri Mont.real were get­ he would have to nearly double Jngton, arriving at the Phoeuix his points per game average as animals on which fishes feed. Plankton, in their turn, feed Hotel in time to view the last ting $55.00 for a pair of box upon one-half celled animals called krill (named, incidentally, a sophomore. fifteen minutes of .the game. seats to the Montreal-Chicago after Dr. Morris Krill who invented the house cat). Krill, in Incidentally, the. Phoenix Ho­ hockey game at the Montreal "Now the 1963-64 basketball their tum, feed upon peanut butter sandwiches mostly-or, tel is the place .. where Steve Forum. A season high crowd of season at Xavier is completed when they are in season, cheeseburgers. · 15,368 witnessed the crucial Na­ and Coach Ruberg's prediction But I digress. Back to Max Planck who, it must be said, Thomas ·and the · rest of the showed no indication of his scientific genius as a youngster. Olympic hopefuls will be stay­ tional Hockey League game won came true .. Steve averaged 29.96 points per game, smashed 11 XU In fact, for the first six years of his life he did not speak at all ing next week. by Montreal, 4-3. except to pound his spoon on his bowl and shout "More gruel!'~ .Imagine, then, the surprise of his parents when on his seventh birthday little Max suddenly cried, "Papal Mama! Something is wrong with the Second Law of Thermodynamics I" So aston• Gruber .Previews B·a$eball Campaign ished were the elder Plancks that they rushed out and dug the ger. Anyone comparing th.e won­ peted in national tournaments. Kiel Canal. By Co-Captain Jim Gruber Meanwhile Max, constructing a crude Petrie dish out of two During my freshman y_e a r , lost columns of both. campaigns And when all these players are blended together with hustle and email pieces of petrie and his gruel bowl, began to experiment 1962, Coach Ruberg initiated a would have to admit the vast with thermodynamics. By dinner time he had discovered rebuilding program in an effort improvement. This year it will determination, the result can be Planck's Constant. Hungry but happy, he rushed to Heidelberg to elevate baseball on the Xavier be beyond belief that this is nothing but winning baseball University to announce his findings. He arrived, unfortunately, campus to a point of honor and basically the same team that and excitement for all. during the Erich von Stroheim Sesquicentennial, and everyone prestige. That year we achieved compiled the miserable record On Thursday, April 2, exactly was so busy dancing and duelling th:it young Planck could find nobody to listen to him. The fcstivnl, however, ended nftcr a record of 3 wins and 13 losses, ot 1962. thirteen days from today, the 1964 edition of the Xavier base• two years and Planck was finally able to report his discovery. but th~ dream of Coach Ruberg With this 196'1 season we are ball team will be unveiled here Well sir, the rest is history. Einstein gaily cried, "E equah1 had already begun. rolnr to rive the university a me squared!" Edison invented Marconi. Eli Whitney invented Then in the spring of 1963 team to be proud of, an excUlnr on campus at 3:30 p.m. Eastern Georgia Tech, and Michelangelo invented the ccilin~. This with his promotion to basketball team, one tba& everyone con· Kentucky State College will be later became known as the Humboldt Current. mentor, Xavier was privileged to nected with Xavier will stand our opponent. We hope you Ii.') IU64 1\1~• Sllulmaa obtain as the head of its base­ up and take note of. Why do I attend our games, and root for ball program the grand man of say this? Beeause we have a our team; help us bu i l d a • • • American Legion baseball, Jo­ team that's rolng to hustle every stronger baseball spirit at Xavier Mr. Slmlman is, of course, josl1ing, but tlie mfllwrs of seph M. Hawk, whose highly step of the way and not rive an l!niversity. Your attendance will Personna Blades are not: if, after trying our blades, ymt tl1ink tl1ere'• another stainless steel blade tl1at gi1:es yo11 successful teams numerous ma­ lneb. build a. stronger morale among our players, and will build more more lmmr11 1l1aves, return the un11sed Personnas to IJo• jor league ereats have used as Because the majority of the prestige tor 'our university, Hope 600, Staunton, Ya., and we'U bu11 11ou Cl IHJek of an11 bla"­ the pivoting step to the "bigs.'' players on the team have al• IOU think I• better. Our reeord in 1983 was raised ready been a s s. o c i a t e d with we see you at all our 1amea - 1ou, the 1enth man. to r~~ble • WOD' I lost led• championship teams and com• CINCINNATI, OHIO, FllDAY, MAICH JO, 19"

Carole Zerhusen ~allace Feuds With WiscQnsin '.Archdiocese OSHKOSH, WIS., March 18 evil" at the ae1re1ationist IM• "Never in my life have 1 made (UPI)_:_A Roman Catholic arch· ernor. It said he is "known for a remark which could be inter­ The Night Beat diocese hurled "moral evil" and promoting that type of racism preted as against a person for ~ "racist" charges at Alabama Gov. which has been speciftcally con• his race, color or national orl• S George Wallace to day as he demned by Pope Pius XI." gin," he said. With the primaries well under­ convictions: "Jn 1962 there were campaigned for Wisconsin presi­ Wallace, bidding for support way and the anticipation and over 31h .million more women dential p r i ma r y votes and in a state estimatep to be about Wallace said he would be op.. excitement of the November than men of voting age." against civil rights legislation. 40 per cent Catholic, reported posed to his daughter marrying a Negro because "it is not in the election steadily mounting, let's Wallace denied he is a "racist," that there were many Catholics • • • interest of integrity of the white talk politics. (You fellas nccdn"t suggested Roman C a t ho l i cs among his backers and a Wallace interrupt your "this ought lo be Jerry O'Dowd was erroneously should not let their Church tell aide invited a face-to-face meet­ and black races to become mon­ grelized." He said, "Segregation good"' remarks; this is clircclcd omitted from the ED Dean's List them how to vote and said Pl'Ot• ing between the governor and will not deprive anyone of any t.o the coeds anyway.) Specif­ published recently in the News. estant clergymen should "stay Catholic priests. Formerly a day student, O'Dowd equal opportunities," and added: ically, let's look al the widc­ in their own part of the country Later Wallace told 17 mem• "I believe God made one man open political world for women. is an economics major. His home · and take care of their own prob­ bers of the .Oshkosh Ministerial white and another black for the If any o! you girls arc seriously is in Flushing, New York. lems." Association, a group of Protes­ interested in entering politics, • • • The Catholic Herald Citizen, tant ministers, that "I'm not a purpose that they should be kept now's the time to do. something official newspaper of the Mil· racist - a racist is one who separate." about it; this being a Presidential Is there an Easter Bunny? Is waukee archdiocese, edi.torially despies another man for hi• year. there are plenty of oppor­ it true that Petet· Cottontail hops directed the charge ol "moral color." tunities. "along the bunny trail" and fills baskets with jelly beans, colored How lo lplttcl a WHktnd In an article published in eggs and all sorts of goodies? "Mademoiselle" (March. 1964), ill Chicago for $15 . free-lance writer Roma Con­ With Easter inching its way aoa IOlllllOll closer, I can't help recalling an Luther Colle11e nable suggests thal volunteer Decoreh, lowe work in a campaign is the best experience I had a couple of Seys, "Anir student, man place to get initiated into the po­ years ago with a little neighbor or woman, ce11 girl. Beth was only two years old st•)I' at litical sphere. No matter how Ch1ca,go's small or simple your duties, the and Easter only a. few days off. YMCA Hotel end enjoy a experience is invaluable. So don't We were out riding when Beth weekend for $15.00. Here I• think you have to--or even that spotted a rabbit. which had been how I did it.'' you'd be allowed to--start off hit by a car, in the street. Her doing a job which will win you Urst reaction was one of sur­ fri. P.M. Dinner at YMCA Hotel $1.15 nation wide"·recognition. E\•cn the prise and anxiety. Her face Chicago Sy111phOftJ 2.51 most seemingly insignificant as­ show e d wo1-ry - two-year-old llootRatYffotel · 2.15 signments play a big role in the size, Her main concern: "Is that ht. AJA. ltet11kfa1t at Y H.... .51 campaign and often spell the the Easter Bunny?" She was as­ Art ln1tllule TOtlr free difference between victory and sured it was nol; then, and only Lunch at laMlloo IH us defeat. You may begin by seal­ then was she inquisitive about ht. P.M. -Nat. Hl1t. Mu1euM Taur free ing envelopes at the party head­ that bunny-"wil! he go to bunny DlnneratYHotet 1.15 quarters or just answering the rabbit heaven?" Sot. nit• dance, Y Holll .10 telephone, but whatever il is Cokodato .45 The faith of a child·! Firm be­ you'll be a definite parl of the loo111 at y Holel 2.15 lief in an Easte1· Bunny! Whether operation. it's real or not makes no differ­ Many girls who now hold in­ ence. The child has something to Sun. A.M. lreokfa1t at V Hotel .51 'The Line-Up' Worship al Central Cflwclt teresting and high-salal'ied po­ believe in, something concrete to lvnchlllYffotel 1.31 litical positions, started their ca­ hold on t-0. He is learning a kind :Part of the cast of the Masque Society's next production, "Measure reers as members of Young Re­ of faith. ''"'· P.M, lack le ca111pU1 For Measure" which opens on April, 10th, convenes at the Duke's publican or Young Democrat or­ Is there an Easler Bunny? Just Palace. Back row, left to right, are: Marianne Moeddel as Mistress Tolol$14.96 ganizations. There are about 800 ask any kid. . Overdone, Mary Maloney as Isabella, and Carolyn Maher as Mariana. YR and 600 YD groups in cities MEN • WOMEN • MMILIES and on campuses act' o s s the • • • Front row, left to right: Steven Bush as Lucio, Duke Vincentio, and Stay at Chicago'• country. Happy Easter, April Fool! Steven Fisher as Angelo. Y:MCA 'HOTEL The basic aim should be to get 826 South Wabash involved-get on the "inside." Yoar &roables are as coot aa tit the edge of the Loop From there, work your way up 'Open Forum' Lifts Barnett Ban; aolved when 7oa &ell &hem &e _ ....lllM fir !,Oii e 19111 SUS ... 1p as high as you'd like to go. FrecldJ', Wri&e him often an• Write for re19f'fatio111 or call 921·3113 Former Governor Speaks Tonight read him weekl;r in &be New1. Mrs. Margaret Price. Vice­ Chairman and Director of Wom­ The govemor without a podium "States Rights versus Federal en's Activities for the Democratic - Mississippi's Ross Barnett - Tyranny," at the Hotel Sheraton­ National Committee, sees poli­ will have a chance to tell "The Gibson Roof Garden at 8 p.m. tics as an important and brnad­ Untold Story of Oxford" to a Admission is $1.50 at the door. ening field for women. "Madem­ Queen City audience tonight. Barnett's appearance is sponsored oiselle'' points out that certain Barnett was banned from the by The Cincinnati Open Forum. •••••••• fox trot statistics support Mrs. Price's Xavier campus in January when administration officials ruled that the university could not provide Xavier Represented a rostrum for the segregationist In New Brittanica twist ••• ·waltz .Gl1ost Of Past governor's "immoral position." Paul W. Harkins, Xavier Uni· Barnett had been invited to ad­ versity professor of classical tan• dress students by former Student guages, was a contributor to the Conjured Up Council President Rudolph C. new edition of Encyclopedia Brit­ Hasl. tanica. His contribution was an lindy ••• samba In Fag Fumes His term as Mississippi chief· article on St. John Chrysostom, executive now expired, Barnett Church father and patriarch of In last week's edition of the will deliver the speech, subtitled Constantinople from 398-404, News an article was published mambo ••• cha• to lhe effect that Max Shulman's column had been discontinued due lo pressure. by both Federnl and private groups upon the Na­ tional Association of Cigarette cha-cha •• bend Manufacturers to slop advertis• ing in all scholastic media, Early this week the News re­ ceived a letter from the Philip dip •• hop .. step Morris company, manufacture1·s of Marlboros, stating the Max would continue to be with us. 1'he company has decided to change its policy on the column turn ••• bump ••• in light of t_he fact that, although it is an advertisement, it is also and interesting and well - read 111 column that attempts to serve a whew•• purpose other than simply sell• ing a product. It looks like ol' Max is he1·e again. b~lfih BRENNER'S EXCLUSIVELY ONtWarntr Brothers Records PHARMACY IUSIC HILL TICKETS NOW ON SALE 3618 Montgomery Road t;>owntown Ticket Office, 307 Vine St., Cil1'ti 2 Coke Be1weel"' Ch1cc s aria Shirt laundry Fri., l1r. 28 --~ 8:30 P.M. Pricei: $2.50 -$3.50-$4.50 COCA·COLA IOTl'LIHG WOllS CO. '. CINCINNATI, OHIO, HIDAY, a.MICH 20, 19'4

Dick Grupenhofl Muskies Migrate To Sunny So11tbland With only five days left t;ntil pared to 67 in Ft. Lauderdale. alrtrmed at the similarly unex• Easter vacation, the weather- Xavier News sources in Flor- pected rise in culinary shoplift­ Current and Choice man seems to favor Ft. Lauder- ida report that Ft. Lauderdale is ing. It seems as though their Joss dale over Daytona Beach for the being flooded with co-eds seek- is the bartender's gain. Spring breezes bring a sense sketching and painting for adults most popular collegiate spawn- ing the warmer climate and male Xavier is among the colleges 'of purity, a· chance to start and children, a lecture series ing around in Florida. collegians who object to the rig- which make up the "last shift•• afresh. Likewise, in the spirit with great speakers, and tem­ The meteorlogical prognmitica­ orous efforts of the Daytona law of the mass exodus to our south• of things, we are cleaning off porary exhibits. Some current tion for the coming two weeks enforcement agencies, the alarm- ernmost state. It is, however, our desk tops, clearing up bits exhibitions include "Prints in gets the mean temperat'ure in Ft. ing lack of female companion- significant to note that, in the ship, and those long, cold, and whole history of the land "where 1 and piece1 before the vacation Series," with excerpts from the Lauderdale some 18 d e g re e 11 starts. Goya "Disasters of War," and above that of Daytona Beach. This lonely nights on the tight 1 y tti.i boys are," no Xavier student First of many matters: If you Picasso's "Tauromaquia." Begin­ week's hiih in Ft. Lauderdale packed beaches. has ever come back from Ft. haven't been to a performance ning March 30 and lasting until climbed to 87 while that of Day­ Ft. Lauderdale merchants are Lauderdale unsatisfied, or has of the Cincinnati Shakespeare the end of May there will be tona only r e a c h e d 79. Even both p l e a s e d with the unex- one ever been arrested-or is >t Festival this year, then you're exhibited "Fifty Years of Ameri­ though both resorts are enjoying pected influx of business and eauch&? just not "in." The present offer­ can Prints," an exhibition cir­ clear and sunny skies, those die­ ing at Edgecliff is Shakespeare's culated by the Smithsonian In­ hards who intend to spend their "Othello." It is well produced stitute, Washington, D. C. nights sleeping on the beaches with an interesting sidelight of Just two hundred yards south are reminded that the mercury \Jsing a number of different pe­ of the Art Museum lies the Play­ plunges down to an avt'rage of riod costumes; and, it goes with­ house In the Park, which opened 49 degrees in Daytona as com- out saying that it is well per­ yesterday with its pre-season formed, special, "The Zoo Story" and It is interesting to note that Don Perlimpin. One of Cincin­ the role of Desdamona is being nati's younger additions, the THE SHIRT played by Dianne Kvapil, the Playhouse has taken a leading position in the advancement of LAUNDRY wife of· Communication Arts in- Brand new Corvair Monzas, Chevy II and 361G Montgomery Road 11tructor and Masque Society di­ good t h e a t re in Cincinnati. Chevrolet Impalas at low rates. Rent a car the rector, Mr. Otto Kvapil. She car­ Throughout the summer there EVANSTON BUDGET Way, less per mile, less per day. ries off the role very well. I'd will be selections from Shaw, One Block South of Dana You buy only the gas you need.• get there .soon, aeats aTe going recent off-broadway h its, a Few Blocks North of the Dorm W• Ftalure free Hotel and Airport Moliere, Brecht-Weill's "The Pie/I.up and D1/ir•ry Serrice. fast. Three-Penny Opera," and a post­ BACHELOR SERVICE • • • season return special of last Call 241-6134 FLUFF DRY BUNDLES 123 W. Sixth St.-1 Block West of Terrace-Hilton One _of Cincinnati's institutions year's success, "The Fantastics." • Lobby of the Parkadc Garage most deserving of praise is the Student rates are available on • 4-HOUR SERVICE • Cincinnati Art Museum. Located Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday in Eden Park, the museum is and Sunday matinees. I 11ow in its 78th year of serving • • • ' the public, and is one of the lead- - TICKET STUBS: C a t h o 1 i c ing general Art museums in the Theatre Guild of Northern Ken­ country, tucky coming up with "South The Art Museum offers a Pacific." "Stop the World, I chance to view a vast accum- Want to Get Off" is coming back

1 ulation of art works in 95 gal- to Cincinnati at the end of this

1 leries, membership classes in month, don't miss it.

'64 Jet-smooth Chevrolet Impala Sport Coupe (119·1n. wheelbase) It Rains Mainly on McClain When it rains it pours. At least standing intellectual promise and this is true for senior Charles J, personality, integrity and interest McClain Jr. who has been award­ in religion and high potential for ed a Danforth graduate fellow­ effective college teaching, ship for study in the classics-his­ As a Danforth Fellow, McClain tory field. will receive tuition and fees· for Earlier, McClain wa1 eboeen to one year, 'plus a stipend of up to reeelve a fellowship for tile 6nt $1,500. The award is renewable New Chevene Malibu Sport coupe (115-in. wheelbase) year. of IJ'&duate study from tbe for up to four years. Woodrow WilBOn National 'Fel­ A native of. New Orleans, Mc­ lowship Foundation. Throughout the country, 111 Clain is active in the Mermaid Danforth fellowships are award­ Tavern, the Pre-Law Society and ed each year on the basis of out- is president of Alpha Sigma Nu. Lack Of Discipline Cited For Drop In U.S. Yocations '64 Chevy D.Nova Sport Coupe (1 lO·ln. wheelbase) By .BUGH GARDINER • Psychological immaturity, News Edltor-ln-Cblef especially among city youths. • A distortion of s p i r i t u a 1 A report on vocations to the values. priesthood,. recently released by • Poor preparation in Latin the ·Vatican, contends that "the before entering the seminary, lack of family discipline in the United States and Canada makes The solution to this problem, '64 Corvair Monza Club Coupe (108-in. wheelbase) it difficult for youths to submit the Vatican feels, is not only the to seminary life and forms the improvement of s t a n d a r d s in biggest hinderance to vocations these particular fields, but more to the priesthood in these coun­ important, a general re-a·ffirm­ tries." ent of Catholic principles in the The Holy See's report further home. states that among other unfavor­ a·ble factors operating on voca­ tions in the U. S. and Canada '64 Corvette Stint R•y Sport Coupe (98·in. wheelbase) are: Psi Chi Brass • Modern entertainment. Psi Chi, the national psychol­ • The excesses of youth moti­ ogy honor society, held their Chevrolet will go to any length Yated by p u re 1 y materialistic elections of new officers Monday. eoncept of life, March 9. Elected and installed • Dating at too early an age. were James Johnson, president; to make you happy Simon Maranda, vice president; Maria Zaldiavar, secretary,· and Things have changed a lot since a Chevy rolet and Chevy II (and between parking Joseph Gleese, treasurer. All are was only a Chevy. Especially yotir ideas meters, with five whole feet left over). Sodality Leaders graduate students. of what you want a Chevy to be. Then, too, there's the sporty 15-foot Taking over immediately, tho So now you have the Jet-smooth Chev- Corvair, so right for so many people (you Gather Ton1orrow new officers have scheduled a rolet-17Yz feet of pure luxury, bumper girls, in particular) that we've never student research convention . to• to bumper. The size makes it a luxury car. touched an inch of 'it. And finally, Cor• The eighth annual Training But not the price. vette-still 14Yz feel>. and still too much April 19th. Dr. Roger Russell. Or you can choose the thrifty Chevy II, for any true sports-car lover to say no to. School for Catholic Leaders will chairman of the Department oJ , a 15~-foot family car with all kinds of The long and short of it is, you don't be held on the Xavier campus Psychology of Indiana Universit3' ~nger and luggage space. have to go to any length to find exactly and national president of Psi Chi tomorrow, sponsored by the so­ 1 This year, your choice might be the kind of car you want. Just clality which puts on the program will be the keynote speaker. the new 16-foot-plus Chevelle, lihtry'•"fl' see the five different line~ of cars every year to improve training sized to fit nicely between Chev- --·· ••H • at your Chevrolet dealer s. Df Catholic leaders in high school You're la tbe loeker room al 11odalities around the country. ball Ume eaeb week wbea yo• THE UEAT ,_.Gl-..S Cllet...W • Cllntlle • Cllevr D • Conair .. Corvette More than 600 schools were in­ read Sport. Editor. Kea Csllli1.. -y 'Wited, the,)' said. ser'• "Koraer.• Su ~~ al II°"" Chcorold Showroom Pare Ell'b& CINCINNATI, OHIO, FRIDAY, MARCH 20, 1964 · Worst Flood in 20 Years Strikes Ohio Valley

,\.:,,;Ji -Nrw• (R_v•n) l'liol• Firemen Patrol Inundated East End Streets Xavier Students Aid The Homeless · All'eady having rescued 60 per·sons, the crew of Ladder Company No. 3, manning Xa.vier students were among the first volunteers to an amphibious firehoat, searcl1es Donham Street for more stranded residents after a six­ repol't to Red Cross headquarters for disaster work during inch rainfall sent the Ohio River to a level or 66.5 feet, more than 40 feet above pool stage, the flood. The above group, manning an emergency shelter last week. Within 12 hours the rampaging waters had left more than a thousand Greater in totally isolated New Richmond, Ohio, 20 miles ~ast ~f Cincinnatians homeless, killed three pe1·sons, and caused an estimated $10 million Cincinnati, assis~ed dozens of the stricken families. l\fol'e 1wopel'ty damage". than a hundr·ed Xavier students took pal't in various flood relief activities. Father Holland to Speak Sodalists From 13 Colleges Meet Tomorrow Fred Bernstein The Xavier Unh•el'sity Sodality fo1·me1· directm· oC the Xavier Know the Truth and the Tl'uth will sponsor its eighth annual Univel'sity Sodality, will give Shall Make You Free." Dear Freddy Tl'aining School for Catholic the fil'st talk entitled, "To.Give DI'. Bema1·d A. Gendreau, Pro• Leaders Saturday, March 21. The That They May Not Pe1·ish." fessor of Philosophy at Xavier, program is open to college Social­ This talk will center on every­ will consider the daily· spil'itual ists from all over the Midwest day social life, dating, and mar­ life of the collegian· in his talk, The sweet joys and ruptures drive-in movie mll'h& be &he an­ and to certain high school senior riage. "That the Light May Come Into of sp1·ingtime are upon us. It is swer, a11d wl&h &wo quar&s of Socialists from the Greater Cin- Pointing out modern heresies, the Wo1·ld." a most fitting season for adven­ wine Instead of &he usual case of cinnati area. . theil' dangel's, and the use of tures and the bil'th of new ideas. beer. Perhaps an excitlnl'· rou11d The Reverend E d w a r d B. The theme of this year's pro­ reason in relation to the college What an excellent idea to em­ of ·miniature coif, wi&h special gram is "The Lifl:! of Life." student's Sodality life, Revel'end Bl'ueggeman, S.J., Professor of ba1·k upon some truly cultural attention &o &be 11Cenic wonders The program will consist of [our Jel'emiah J. O'Callaghan, S.J., Theology at Xavier, will descl'ibe adventure this~spring. There a1·e &hat would usually surrou11d U, main tc:lks. Each talk will_ be Dean of Arts and Sciences at the dignity and majesty of the so many oppot·tunities in Cin­ mi&"ht afford &he most pleasure. followed by a fo1·ty-five minute Xavier, will speak on the in­ true Sodalist in the light of his cinnati.· Don' t misunderstand! it depends really. upon how discussion period. tellectual life. Fr. O'Callaghan's being a som·ce of" grace in the Nothing ·like the Playhouse in deeply you wish to become i11- Reverend Frank Holland, S.J., talk will be entitled, "You Shall Mystical Body, the Park or the Edgecliff Acad­ ~olved. emy) (devoid of any student You might consider joining the participation) or the symph-0ny twenty-01·-so other people who would be quite appropl'iate. ~-Way Crash Fatal To Xavier Senior will YTitness the Masque So­ The reference was to some­ ciety's fo1·thcoming · pl'Oduction ·Hc·nrv Ausrwl were also injured. John Walker, the city limits-by preference And, then again, you rnighl not! in an il\\l.n rolli"i~n Oii u;e .l\lill­ feet over the center divider, and 26, 1224 Race St., received a skull and a hastily enacted law. This How about a legitimate stage CJ'(•pk l•:xprcssway fi vc h o u rs slammed I n t o Ausdenmoore's fracture; William Hurst, 52, 421 "gathering" is n-0t a · common production at the Imperial Fol­ e111·lic·1". northbound car, which was spun Hopkins St., suffered fractures of mixer because recently no young lies. Thet·e's usua1ly a good stage A u;.tlen rnoorr. pn rl iarncnl a!'· around and struck by another both legs, Walker and Hurst wen! men have been invited. But may­ show at the Melish Show Bar on ian of l he F.v<'ninµ; Di\•i,.:ion northbound auto driven by Chas. reported to be in "fair" condi­ be some young men, filled with Tuesday evenings, 01· perhaps Sttrdl'nl Co11nril, s111·1·11111hc·rl lo R. Cole, 21, 39'79. Avilla· Pl., Nor- tion at the hospital. the exuberance of youth and you would pi·efer to join the dis­ a ,;kull frarl.ur·c n11d ;o;C'Vl're in­ The accident occurred about Ausdenmoore was employed as spring, could Cl'ash their pal'ties cussions of Jitera1·y cl'iticism that t.ernal inilll'ics. 500 feet south oC the Mitchell assistant trnnsportation manager and perhaps even ruin them. It so often can· be found at Babe's Rcquie;n High Mass was in­ Ave. entrance to the expressway. at the Heekin Can Company, Cin­ would be the natural thing to Coffee House on almost any eve­ toned fol' Ausdenmool'e al St. It was the second collision on cinnati. He completed the bulk of do. And there are S-O many lovely ning. AloysiuR Gonzaga Church, Tues­ the "death strip" al'ea of the his studies last semester and was young ladies ready with a warm If you yearn for the classics, day morning, highway to claim a Xavier stu­ awaiting receipt of a .B.S.B.A. and friendly smile (if nothing why not gather in _the old (and 'l'HE VICTIM'S 1961 model dent's life within the last three degl'Ce in June. else) that would be happy to c1·umbling) Xavier Colosseum compact vehicle was struck head­ months. On Decembel' 22, 1963, A 1958 graduate of Elder High greet them in one way or an­ for a classic baseball encounter. on by a car operated by Gilbert Justin J. Murrny, Jr., 20, a School, he lived with his pat·ents, other. Don't forget that gilded If you happen to be awa.v. from Profl'cll, 20, 3781 W. Liberty St., junior, was killed when he lost Mr. and Mrs. William Ausden­ palace of mid-Victorian splendor according to Trame Bureau Pa­ Cincinnati (ah! the Emerald control of his auto and struck moore, 3586 C h u r ch Lane, when considering a delightful City) for awhile, you'll need no trolman Walter Dickerson. two utility poles on a cul've one Bridgetown. spl'ing outing. There might not suggestions; that should be WITNESSES told police that a mile nol'th of where the Ausden­ He also leaves two brothers, be anything lo do, but there is pleasunble experience in· itself. Prolfett's a u to was travelinr moore crash occurred. William, Jr., and David, and a a very pleasant view ••• of the Whatever be your decisl~n, al­ llOUth on the expressway when PROFFETT, who was cited for sister, Miss Mary Ausdenmoore. rivet. low me &o wish you a verF Why no& a&tempt some&hlnr In­ Happy Easter. And I really meaa tellectual as well as cuHural. A it this lhne, Herbie! Look· Out: Women Drivers!-.

It's entil'ely a coincidence, but Xavier University Alumnae As· In the same year that a woman 90ciation of which Miss Helea has decla!'ed herself the first Twomey is president. Members presidential candidate froin the of the Assc.ciation will ·no longet' feminine set, the alumnae of Xa­ pay dues and activities· will be ·· viel' are rearing their heads to cal'l'ied on thl'ough a budget reg•. show they can s u p p o r t their ulal'!y ·appl'Op!'iated by the Uni· · Alma Mater jusl as the men do. versity. Miss Twomey has named Miss Ol'ganization of the Alumnae Catherine F; Miltz, a teacher at Living Endowment Fund appeal the G o o d Samaritan Hospital . among w o m e n graduates and School of N u r s i n g, to the former students has·. begun to be Chail'man of the i964 appeal p r o v i de funds for the future which will get under way with a grow.th of Xavier. The fund is kick-off dinner on . the campus·· to be an annual appeal similar on Mal'ch 5. to the pl'Og!'am that has been in Solicitation will be on a geo-­ effect for the men of Xavier for graphical basis and participa• Shattered Wreckage Of Death Vehicle the past 11 years. tion will be. the pdmatJ' aoa\ ta Henl'¥ '.Ausdenmool'e died five bom·s · l1&te1· ••• Sponsorin& the effort ia the · be achieved.