Spectator 1961-02-24 Editors of the Ps Ectator
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Seattle nivU ersity ScholarWorks @ SeattleU The peS ctator 2-24-1961 Spectator 1961-02-24 Editors of The pS ectator Follow this and additional works at: http://scholarworks.seattleu.edu/spectator Recommended Citation Editors of The peS ctator, "Spectator 1961-02-24" (1961). The Spectator. 698. http://scholarworks.seattleu.edu/spectator/698 This Newspaper is brought to you for free and open access by ScholarWorks @ SeattleU. It has been accepted for inclusion in The peS ctator by an authorized administrator of ScholarWorks @ SeattleU. SEATTLE UNIVERSITYE Spectator Volume XXVIII Seattle,Washington, Friday,February24,1961 ,o.^^,. No.17 Small Baby Registrar Needs Blood Gives Six volunteers willing to do- nate a pint of bloodfor a small Sign-Up Process baby soon to undergo heart surgery are urgently needed. The registration forms to be used for the first time at The request for donors was is- spring registration will greatlyspeed up the process,Mary Mice sued this week by the Office Lee,S.U. registrar, said this week. of the President. "WHERE REGISTRATION used to take two days." Miss Lee said, "we will be able to do it between 9 a.m. and 5 p.m., TYPE is impor- DONE? The experts were wrong it BLOOD not March 22." COULDN'T BE ... tant, although if six donors The new forms consist of one registration cardpaek and could. High school students published a newspaper in with type "O" negative are one fee cardpaek. Only the original of each will be filled out less than 24 hours. Pat Stoker (1.) and two of the high found, it willmakethe job eas- and carboncopies will eliminate the tedious filling-out process. ier. What is important,Father school delegates to the Press Workshop here last week- A SPECIAL ball-point pen that insures clear carbon copies Student Pat was President said, is that the end look over a copy of The Prints^ blood must be fresh, and there- must be obtained. The pen costs 35 cents and will be on sale advisory photography editor. (See page 2 for a report fore cannot be taken from the in the registrar's office and in the Chieftain the week preced- workshop.) S.U.Blood ing registration. on the Bank. Students are asked to follow all registration rules care- The six volunteers will go fully. Class schedules must not be filled out on registration down in a group the blood to forms until class cards have been obtained. Since there is no March 2 Elections: bank Thursday and should vol- space on the new forms for classroom numbers, students will unteer at the president's office be responsibleforkeepinga personalcopy of the room numbers. as soon as possible. If all six have type "O" negative they THE REQUIRED adviser-approved slips, available art; the Small Candidates Field Requires will go down Wednesday. registrar's office or from advisers, should be filled out no later than March 10, Miss Lee said. Miss Lee said that possibly not all transcripts would be Small Field of Candidates Means ready at registration time due to the short period between the Primary runoffs for only three positions will be INSIDE end of this quarter and registration day. Sickle, co-ordi- THE SPEC She said that those students who do not receive their next Thursday, Jim Van election board transcipt when they register will be advised whether the tran- nator, Wednesday. ASSU and AWS posts said The other Spectator editor chosen script will be mailed or can be picked up later. In either event, have onlytwo nominees or are uncontested. "best dressed" p.3 Miss Lee added, transcripts will not be given out at the regis- trar's office until after late registration closes, March 29. to which two nominees to be chosen for the Chieftains "almost home" THE POSTS are with NCAA bid 6 pictures packs final elections are ASSU publicity director, ASSU treasurer and p. THE SPECTATOR will run of sample card AWS secretary. Examination (sobl) in the March 10 issue to familiarize studentsi with the new Voting will be by machine from 9 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. in the schedule p.8 procedure. L.A. Bldg. and from9 a.m. to 1p.m. in theChieftain. RESULTS OF the election will be announced in The Spec- tator next Friday. Final elections will be March 9. Sodality Sets Conference on 'Sacrifice' The list of candidates, released by Van Sickle, include: A campus conference on aspects of student vocation in in the intellectual virtues of ASSU President, Ed Chow, C&F, Seattle; Dave Irwin,realestate "Sacrifice" as applied to col- relation to the sacrifices in- wisdom, knowledge and under- and insurance,Seattle. lege students will be sponsored volved in the daily pursuit of standing; and going beyond First vice president:Mike Fischer, political science, Seattle; by the S.U. Sodality Sunday. the primary goal of a Catholic mere requirements for a pass- Mike Flynn,politicalscience, Seattle. Guest speaker will be Mr. John university. ing grade by doing outside Second vice president: Jerry Flynn, politicalscience, Seattle; Peluso, president of the St. "Much of the discussion will reading and participating in Paul Maffeo,politicalscience, Seattle. Vincent de Paul Society. also be centered around the seminars." Publicity director: C. J. Michaelson, pre-med,Dallas, Texas; students' obligations and chal- The conference is open to all Burke McOormick, economics, Billings; Neal Supplee, political THE CONFERENCE will lenges as students, not only students, not just Sodalists. science, Seattle; Bob Corlett, pre-law, Vallejo,Calif. follow a format similar to that during the period of formal The only charge is $1 for Treasurer: Tom Mulledy,C&F, Port Angeles; Terry Turner, of the fall conference, accord- education, but after, when col- town students for theChieftain political science, Ontario, Ore.;Bill Seubert, C&F, Ellensburg. ing to Margot Cooper, Sodality lege graduates must confront breakfast. Secretary: Jan Marino, first humanities,Los Angeles. secretary. It will begin with the problems of materialism, THOSE WHO PLAN to at- AWS President: Mary Lee Walsh, humanities,Seattle. 9:15 a.m. Mass at St. James secularism and religious indif- tend the 9:15 a.m. Mass are Vice president: Shelly Fountain, education (history), Se- Cathedral followed by break- ference," Margot said. asked to meet in the Cathedral attle; Kris Matronic, first humanities, Seattle. fast at the Chieftain. THE SEMINARS will also vestibule at 9 a.m. Secretary: Maxine Ortmeier, first humanities, Port Town- Followingbreakfast, those discuss the practical side of Members of the administra- send; Mary Alice Gilmour, first humanities, Seattle; Terry attending the conference will student intellectual, spiritual tion, lay and religious faculty Schmeckel, C&F, Spanaway. assemble in four seminar and apostolic life now. These members and ASSU and AWS Treasurer: KathleenKelly,chemistry, Anaheim; Jan Green- groups. The discussions will include "studying with the officers also have been invited field, psychology,Albany,Ore. concentrate on the intellectual right intention; growing daily to attend. Construction Activity Changing Face of S. U. Campus Construction on the new Science Bldg. is work of the six-story building will be com- week period allowed for submission of bids. proceeding on schedule,a contractor's spokes- pletedina month. This announcement was made this week by man said this week. The building is about 40 The picture (left) shows the new building Fr. Edmund B. McNulty, S.J., business man- percent completed,based on the total contract from11th Avenue near East Columbia looking ager. work to bedone. northwest. Meanwhile, a contract has been let for clearingold buildings from the dorm site. The CONCRETE for the final story will be BIDDING for construction of the newmen's view (right) of the location looks north along poured this week and the structural frame- dormitory will start March 20, with a three- 12th Avenue. THE SPECTATOR Friday,February24, 1961 2 AnnouncedMonday: Prep AmateursProve Experts Wrong Choose By MILT FURNESS for dinner. In the evening, reporters were as- ROTC Cadets signed to cover the S.U. basketball game and High school students proved the "ex- to do a playreview. Ball perts" wronglast weekend. Court for Annual THE STAFF wrappedup its work at 2 a.m. THE "EXPERTS," professionalnewspaper- and hustled home to grab a few hours' sleep men, saida group of high school students could before leportingto their Saturday assignments. not publish a four-page newspaper in 24 hours. The editors and part of the staff traveled to The "pros" were wrong by 40 minutes.... just the print shop. The rest had Saturday morn- 23 hours, 20 minutes after the official opening ing conferenceson high schoolnewspaper work. of the first Northwest Catholic High School At the print shop the tightest timing of all Press Workshop here, the first 200 issues of was scheduled. The linotypemachine operators The Student Prints were distributed to the a-rrived at 7 a.m. Headlines and stories were delegates. set. Pictures arrived from the engraving shop. The workshopopenedat 1p.m.,Friday,with Proofs of the stories which had been set in a welcoming address by Fr. Francis J. Greene, print were corrected and the stories were S.J., chairmanof the workshop and head of the pasted on "dummy" sheets in the position in department of journalism. Expanding the which they would appear in the paper. "Christ's Communicators workshop's theme, THE PRESS CREW started work at 11a.m. Must be the Best," Father exhorted the dele- the plates the paper they the privi- and removed from gates to bear in mind"Catholicshave had published Thursday night, The Spectator. leged responsibility of spreading the love and threading the press paper to fit the the world After with life whichChrist wanted to dominate four-page format, the first copies were run off for all ages." for corrections.