VOL. IV. No. 101 SnrinJ the Nutrt? Dame aiiLI Saint !llano'.~ College 011111111111ity WEDNESDAY, APRIL 8, 1970 Krashna appoints cabinet by Bill Carter sophomore from Puerto Rico we emphasized in the campaign: and will direct a newly struc­ getting things back into the In one of his first ofricial tured Human Affairs office, halls, organizing seminar groups functions as new student body which will focus to a large ex­ or whatever just to get things president Dave Krashna an­ tent on getting the forrign stu­ moving in the right direction nounced his ~.:hoiccs for appoint­ d~n ts at Notre Darr1e in to a within the halls." ment to his cabinet yestcrd

poets Stuart Montgomery and becoming a full-time poet. He Greek poet Odysseus Elytis in the transcendental element of This year the Sophomore Lit- Lee Harwood, and American founded the Fulcrum Press four translation of his work. humanity. erary Festival, being held from poets Allen Planz and Michael years ago which produces the Montgomery believes that Montgomery and Harwood April 12-16, hopes to introduce Anania. most significant international every poet at some time has to will be reading Monday, April 13 the student body to contem- Stuart Montgomery is a twen- poetry list in England or Amer- become his own publisher, at 3 p.m. in the Library Auditor­ porary poetry. Included among ty-nine year old Rhodesian who ica. Prior to this he spent some arrdnge his own readings and be ium. the guests attending are British qualified as a doctor before t'me in Greece, workin~t with the involved in his own production. Allen Planz is a thirty-three year old native of New York .• 0 5 -~:~e~l;;:t 1;:;~G~~:esn~~::~~~ who attended Hofstra and New Po II U t n co_ ·" fe re "· ce •. p Ian ned :aid of it " ... it's one of the York Universities. He has been by Steve Hoffman . wdl be free ?f charge, w1th fr~e Dr. Echclberger and Dr. Sing- most erotic things I've ever seen active for several years in poetry programs in New York as one of In the hope that res1d~nts of lunches provided, and the pubhc b 0 th 0 f the Civil Engineering · -also masterful suspense and the South Bend Area w1ll rea- is· invited to attend all or part of eDr, t t t N t e D me Super-Elliptical! Splendid job!" the organizers of the St. Mark's lize and ·work to counteract the th epar men a 0 r ,a • e program. teach the course Man and His A native of England, Lee Mar- Poetry Readings, and in readings dangers of environmental poilu- The schedule of even_ ts for the Envi·ronment offered on ··ampus. sponsored by the Academy of ~ wood has edited various maga- tion, the Michiana Committee Earth Day Progr_ am. mcludes a In add!.tl·on, Notre Dame American poets. zines, the latest being Tzarad. He Planz, who is representative of for Clean Environment will gen_eral_panel d1scu_ss1on on pol- Seni·or John Crump, a General was awarded the Poetry Founda- sponsor a Conference on Envi- lut10n m the envuonm. ent and Program maj·or, w·11 speak on today's angry young writers, 1 tion (New York) annual award ron mental Concern on Saturday • ~hat can be ~one to discourage household ecology, explaining in 1966. He has traveled exten- finds his poetry in the decay he sees characterizing America. He April II at the South Bend 1t, t_o be chaued by Dr. L_arry how each person can t1·ve w1·th- sively in the U.S. and has given Public Library. Davis of the Notre D~me ~!Oio- out polluting and poisoning the readings from his work in is also a political activist and as The Conference, to be held gy Department .. Panelists w!ll be environment. England, Denmark and the U.S. such his writing reflects the from 9:30A.M. until 5:00P.M., Notre Dame BIOlogy Professor, The latest of his four volumes of chaos and violence surrounding Dr. Thomas Griffing, Dr. Julian Later in the afternoon, Dr. poetry, The White Room ( 1969) us and our apathy concern in~ it. Month of May Pleasants, Ass't. Professor of Donald Levy, a chemist from the is widely acclaimed. Of it, noted Mr. Planz' poetry has appeared in Microbiology at Notre Dame, University of who has poet John Ashberry has said in many· magazines and anthologies Available for May 4 Dr. Wayne Echelberger, an spent much time organizing the Sunday Times of London, including Chelsea, Chicago 4 bedroom house authority of air pollution, and people to fight pollution and "It is carelessly wise, that is, Review, Massachusetts Review, sleeps 10 Dr. Philip Singer, a specialist in polluters, will address the Con- wise without knowing or caring Poets of Today and Where is the field of water pollution. ference. what wisdom is." Vietnam. A selection of his ooet­ fireplace ry won the 1966 New York Lee Har~ood bitterly admits private beach on Lake The Conference will conclude Y M-YMHA Poetry Center 11- John Fonseca * that industrialism has nearly des­ Award and his first volume of Michigan near Warren with three workshops designed troyed the culture of the English to educate the public on specific poetry, A Night for Rioting, was Dunes State Park Jim Balcerski countryside. In an effort to reaf­ methods of coping with air recently published by Swallow Call Mr. Christiansen: DAYS, Niles firm the balance between man pollution, water pollution, and Press. Mr. Planz lives in New 683-5300; EVENINGS. WEEK­ Fri -Sat and nature, Harwood dedicates ENDS, (616) 42.6-4174 ecology. (continued on page 6) himself, as a man and a poet. to Agnew may have to break tie vote WASHINGTON (UPI) bility that Vice President Spiro publican Marlow W. Cook of Today's showdown vote on T. Agnew will have to save him Kentucky and of Mrs. Margaret Judge G. Harrold Carswell looks with a tie breaking vote. Chase Smith, R-M"aine, were to be the closest on a Supreme Carswell's Senate opponents listed as the chief question Court n9minee in almost a · claimed yesterday they had the marks. Carswell's opponents said century-with a very real possi- votes to deny him confirmation if they won either vote the if they could pick up the vote of nomination would be rejected. only one more uncommitted The Senate debated other on your block when you Republican. But Carswell's matters the day after the 5 2-44 come home with a lil'ing re­ supporters disputed their head vote against resubmitting the plica of the Notre Dame count. nomination to the Senate Judi­ Mascot. The male in my life The possibility still existed ciary Committee. But through- was a champion and I expect that Agnew could cast the vote out the Capitol, Carswell was a great things on I 7 April. If for Carswell that would break a chief topic of conversation. The you have $$ and desire write: 48-48 tie when balloting begins atmosphere was that of the eye LADY KAY O'SHA Y at I pmESTtoday. of the storm. Irish Terrier AKC A UPI poll showed 48 sena­ With four senators expected Box 65/Notre Dame, 46556 tors publicy or privately wm­ to be absent for Wednesday's mitted to vote against confir­ vote, two on business and two in mation, or leaning that way, and the hospital, the .anti-Carswell Applications now being accepted for: 46 committed or leaning toward forces required 49 votes to supporting his promotion. defeat elevation of the 50 year In the intense nose counting old appeals court judge to a by both sides in the long strug­ lifetime term on the Supreme STUDENT UNION gle, the votes of freshman Re- rourt.

If you're 18 or over make the

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WEDNESDAY. APRIL If. 1970 THE .O&ri:RfiE& PAGE 3 Effects of law discussed

(continued from page I) if things get ~esperate enough wonder what the constitutionali­ the Court will tell the world that ty is of a non-declaration of war civilians and drop more bombs this straw is a sturdy elm. And at which was procurred by lying." on North Vietnam than in the least the citizen of the United McCarthy saw further implica­ entire Second World War in an States will say 'The Court must tions of this Ia w. effort to prosecute an unconsti­ know what's constitutional'?' "Who knows maybe the Bcrri­ tutional activity (mass murder) There is an interesting tidbit gans and the resisters are not the without simultaneously bringing here though. I wonder what the real enemies of the slate (crimi­ Johnson and Nixon to trial for court will do with all of Senator nals). After all, if the war is war crimes.~· Fulbright's statements since De­ unconstitutional, then the pre­ Shaffer explained that the cember 1969 where he has point sent heroes are the criminal and court probably will not hear the blankly said in the press and on the present criminals are the case because it has ruled way T.V. that he was lied to by the Heroes!" "' back in the New Deal that a executive about the Gulf of ToJ1- "I suppose it won't be long "state cannot represent a citizen kin incident and all the other before we see a bumper sticker as against the federal govern­ eidence that now has been ac­ reading 'My country, constitu­ ment. We are citizens of the cumulated about the 'incident'. I tional or unconstitutional'." federal government which is a iederation of states," he sai(L "This is what the whole Civil Cabinet appointed War was fought about," Shaffer commented. (continued from page I) said he delayed on that ap­ pointment because he intends to Wall Williams a black junior Shaffer also explained that in revamp the organization, give it has been chosen as Chairman of the past when other challenges new direction and see exactly the Recruitment Action Pro­ to the war h"avc been brought what is needed in the racial gram. Williams has worked in the before the Supreme Court, they question on campus before he program for the past few years have always failed to get the makes his choice for chairman. and will have the duty of caring minimum of four members to Krashna said the selections for the needs of the freshman want to hear the case. He said up had been based on careful consi­ group next year as well as to now only two judges have deration of qualifications indi­ Profeaor Chula McCarthy heading an extensive recruitment usually voted to hear similar program for the next year. cated in the applications he had cases. The new NSA Commissioner received for each of the posi­ McCarthy, however, saw the will be Steve Novak whose ex­ tions in addition to his personal matter differently. perience in the association the contact with a few individuals Reds attacked by Migs past few years has given him who had impressed him with "The Vietnam War and the some idea of the benefits the special abilities and interests. Laotian War have been going on region which juts into South NSA can bring to the campus. ,-----p------. PHNOM PENH, Cambodia more or less for eight years. And Vietnam to a point only 35 Novak hopes to increase those at Clinton ( lJI'l) - Russian-made Ml Gs of miles from Saigon. for eight years people, almost benefits. the Cambodian air force joined a Field reports said Cambodian monthly, have tried to bring Two positions remain unfilled This Weekend battle yesterday against Viet troops, many of whom moved actions that would get the court Cong guerrillas in jungles I 2 and Krashna indicated the ap- A mert·ca into the region as reinforcements to rule on the constitutionality pointments will be made as soon miles from the South Viet­ during the past week, hurled of the war. And for eight years as possible. He indicated that the 1------======t namese border. Cambodian· hack the attack and counted 40 the Court has very conveniently position of Judicial Coordinator troops reported killing 40 Viet Viet Cong bodies when the stuck its head in the sand." could not be filled until the C'ong in fighting that started smoke of battle cleared. government learns exactly what Monday night. McCarthy discussed the Gulf The town of C'hipou was the set up of the new judicial Cambodian losses were placed of Tonkin Resolution as a possi­ virtually· deserted Tuesda~, code will be. The other open at two killed and IX wounded. ble declaration of war. according to newsmen at the position is chairman of the Stu­ The combat was near the "Why not -anything will do- scene, hut several miles to the dents Against Racism. Krashna town of Chipou in Svay Rielilg east MIG jet fighter bombers province, the same general area flown by Cambodian pilots where five newsmen, including streaked over jungles at treetop two Americans, were reported WHEN DREAMS level to rake Communist posi­ missing and possibly captured by tions witH machine gun fire and the Viet Cong. bombs. One oif the Ameri.can news­ COME TRUE men was identified as Scan Flynn, a freelance photographer Take by Father Jan on assignment for Time Maga­ applications zine. He is the son of the late Applications are now being movie actor Errol Flynn. The taken by the new officers of qs there other was Dana Stone of North Student Government for the Pomfret, Vt., a camera man for SMC Judicial Board. The posi­ The story of a boy, a student, a the Columbia Broadcasting tions open are for one senior aPaulist System. chairman, and three other sen­ in the crowd? Military officials in Phnom iors, two juniors, and one sopho­ graduate of the Class of '22. Learn Penh said an undetermined more. The positions are appoint­ number of Communist troops ive. Applications should be sub­ Believe it or not. a campus pro­ started the fight by attacking mitted to Jean Gorman, Box test group is not an unlikely Cambodian forces near Chipou 212, by Thursday, April 9, at about old Notre Dame. place to find a Paulist. in the so called "parrot's beak" noon. Why? Because Paulists are the M un<:ie Ameri<.·ans mediators of our time ... stand­ Appoint editor ing between God and man ... Rich Mathys - Fri. ON SALE IN THE BOOKSTORE understanding, helping, loving . .. trying to bring together the Sophomore Steve Hoffmann Phil Orth -Sat. extremes of the world we live a Government major from Lilt!~ FOR $5.00 in and the Church. Rock, Arkansas, has been ap­ America pointed Observer News Editor t------J...._------', Wherever he is ... as a college chaplain, working in a ghetto for the coming year. Hoffmann, STUDENT UNION or helping in a parish ... the who served as an Assistant News Paulist is serving. Fdilor and reporter during the past year, will succeed newly- SOCIAL COMMISSION If you're interested in finding appointed Campus Editor Glen IS ACCEPTING APPLICATIONS FOR THE POSITIONS OF: out more about the Paulist Corso. priestly spirit. write for our illustrated brochure and· a copy of our Renewal Chapter Guide­ Assistant Social Commissioner Ticket Manager lines.

Collegiate Jazz Festivai·Chairman Concert Chairman Write to: Special Projects Chairman Promotion Director Vocation Director ~~~~~~~~ Homecoming Chairman Business Manager 'Paulisth du~~~ the colle~\~~ester ~X~~~~ Grand Prix Chairman Mardi Gras Chairman 'Pat erG vacations by students of the Uni· Room 400 verslty of Notre Dame and St. Applications should be submitted by April 15 to: Mary's College. Subscriptions may 415 West 59th Street be purchased for $8 from The Social Commissioner New York, N.Y. 10019 Observer, Box II, Notre Dam~>, Box 427 Ind., 46556. Second class post~ye paid. Notre Dame, Ind., 46556. Notre lnd WEDNESDAY, APRIL 8, 1970 PAGE 4 THE OBSER.fJER. THE OBSERVER Glen Corso An Independent Student Newspaper The SI..C Since its inception in the fall of 1968 the Student Life Council GAETANO M. De SAPIO, Publisher has done quite a bit towards changing student life at Notre Dame. DAVID C'. BACH, Editor Parietals, which except for football Saturdays were non-existent several years ago, may, pending the decision of the Board of Trustees, now be on the verge of becoming among the most liberal in FOUNDED NOVEMBER 3, 1966 NOTRE DAME, INDIANA the nation. Other students drink without fear of repris

Moose Krause past .. . Miamlle~~eh is 81 ad ••J foe of Globetrotters The presented the stands started to laugh. I looked their razzle dazzle show at the around to see what they were laughing at brand new Athletic and Convocation Cen­ and I couldn't see the ball. ter on the University of Notre Dame "I finally looked down on the floor campus last season and among the turn­ and there was· the ball, lying there be­ away crowd of some 12,000 was the tween my feet. Well, I chased Jackson all st:hool's athletit: director, Ed (Moose) over the gym and he was having a tough Krause. time keeping ahead of me because he was The present:c of Krause, one-time foot­ laughing so hard. My teammates finally ball and basketball All-Amerit:an with the calmed me and l had a good laugh about Fighting Irish, stirred a lot of memories it afterwards." of the past - back to the days when he Occasionally, Krause and Jackson have had a professional team known as the the opportunity to reminisce about "the Minnesota All-Stars, opponents of the good old days." They've remained close Trotters more than three det:ades ago in and valued friends. many t:ities of the Gopher State. Jackson is still associated with the "I was coaching at St. Mary's College Trotters, serving as consulting coach and of Winona, Minnesota, at the time and coordinating the development of raw organized a team of wllege and high talent into polished Globetrotters. school coaches to play a game against the Trotters," he recalled. "We had a good ball club and the Trotters really had to hustle to beat us. Ice Capades to After that game we got together and decided to play each other as often as hold auditions possible. From 1934 until I went into the Navy in 1942, we played something like lee Capades' scouts and coaches are sixty games. It was a great experience. constantly searching for new skating "The Globetrotters were a great ball talent. Local and area skaters are invited club then, as they are now. I enjoyed to audition this year at Notre Dame at watching them in action again after so 4:00 PM, Friday, April 17 and at another many years and hope they'll make a stop session immediately following that even­ at Notre Dame a regular part of their ing's performance at the Athletic and annual schedule. Convocation Center. "We beat them a few times but not In addition to good pay, performing very often. The Trotters would do very with Ice Capades offers the opportunity little of their clowning unless they were to tour the United States, Canada and on the front end of the score, but they summer tours overseas. had great shooters and wuld pass like Though amateur skaters need they were born with a basketball in their not be champions, the~· must be skaters hands." of superior merit. Ice Capades' profes­ In all the games he played against the sional coaching staff will train acceptable Globetrotters, Krause always had Inman applicants before they are assigned spe­ Jackson, the team's original clown, as his cific spots in the show. Those who do not opponent. Both played center and both pass the initial audition may try again were about 6-3, though the 230 pound after following prescribed skating recom­ Krause had about 25 pounds on "Big mendations. Jack", whom he claims was one of the Prospective male skaters must be I 7 to greatest players the game ever produced. 25 years of age and measure between five They became good friends, and still are feet eight inches and six feet two inches today, but it wasn't always that way in in height. Girls must be between the ages their battles against each other. One night of 17 and 23 years and between five feet Krause really got heated up, he recalls. two inches and five feet nine inches in ' J "The game was dose and we were height. ·--~· ------~--- -- giving it everything we had," remembered Applicants are requested to bring their Freddie Trenlder, left, will appear with the Ice Capades at the ACC begjnnina Krduse. "The Trotters had possession of own skates and costumes. Judging will be Wednesday, April IS. the ball and all of a sudden, everybody in done by the Ice Capades coaching staff. WEDNESDAY, APRIL 8,1970 Concert band performs under new conditions ous existence, of an all-male The Notre Dame Concert tradition, the Band has finally Band, fresh from its 3,500-mile gone co-ed. ~ix young ladies tour of the East, will present its successfully competed and annual Spring Concert at 8: I 5 passed auditions in December this Friday evening in the Athle­ and were thus the first ever to be tic and Convocation Center. admitted to the Concert Band. There will be no admission The Band's program, which charge. was well received in the cities of Although this performance Boston, Lewiston, New York, The Univenity of Notre Dame Concert Band has served as the traditional cli­ Buffalo, and Montreal, will con­ max to the tour for several sist of show tunes, marches, and 5 e years, this year it will be marked contemporary jazz. Selections C a by several noticeable changes. from the award-winning movie No indictment in Kopechne Most obvious is its new location. 0/irer the "UN March," and Instead of Stepan Cente1, where the Dukes County grand jury, arrangement of which the EDGARTOWN, Mass. (UPI)­ Mary Jo Kopechne in Sen. Ed­ the sound and the seating are after deliberating three hours Marching Band performed at this A whirlwind grand jury, which ward M. Kennedy's car. The unfavorable to musical presenta­ and 15 minutes, apparently year's Cotton Bowl Game, and heard just four witnesses, ended district attorney pronounced the tions, the concert· will be held in found no evidence to indict "Harlem Nocturne" will be fea­ its investigation without indict­ case "closed." the ACC. Kennedy or others in connection tured at the Concert. ments yesterday in the death of The lO meri and lO women of A second change involves the with the 28 year old secretary's Mr. Robert F. O'Brien Will composition of the Band itself. death last July. direct for the I 7th consecutive After 123 years, making it the Conclusion of the grand jury year, and he will be assisted by oldest college band in continu- NJS i~:o probe, one of four in the James S. Phillips. ACUtTY Kopechne case, seemed to pre­ dude any further possibility the sole sur-viving Kennedy son Festival invites poets IMAKE~IMONEV!~SAVE I would face additional criminal and makes his living teaching at • LP RECORDS , • AUDIO EQUIPMENT charges stemming from the fatal (continued from page 2) car accident last July. Chicago Circle Campus and as York City and makes his living • PRE~ECORDED aild BLANK TAPES District Attorney Edmund S. Poetry Editor of Swallow Press. as an independent fisherman and • MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS Dinis said as much when he e­ His first collection of poetry, as poetry editor of The Nation. merged from the old court house The Color .of Dust, ~as recently Allen Planz will be reading here: published by Swallow Press_ :~" ·WIIBtESAtE·PRI CES Thursday, April 16, at 3 p.m. in "This is the end of the the Library Auditorium:· investigation into the death of MPElE(WlTH ANYONE Michael Anania, who will be I~0 I Mary Jo Kopechne. The case is reading Thursday afternoon with closed." Allen Planz, was born in 1939 The jurors apparently were and attended the University of denied access to the impounded Nebrasi, Tile Nature of the Cl!ai­ On April 8, 1967, at a meet­ The Fellows are responsible Board." During its six required governed'!" We will then ask if for: ( 1) electing and removing meetings per year, it is chaired there is a hetter way to govern Jenge ing of the Fellows, the stat­ utes were ratified and m·w Trustees, ( 2) iidopting and by the President, and its ex this university. Perhaps the only way to really By-laws were approved which amending the by-laws of the officio members are the Chair­ In attempting to answer this appreciate how Notre Dame is delegate the ordinary power University (by 2/3 vote), (3) man and Secretary of the Board, question we will propose, in governed is to be Notre Dame's of governance of the Univer­ approving the selling of a "sub- and the Executive Vice- contrast to the administrative President or Chairman of the sity to a Board of Trustees. stantial piirt of the physical President. status que, an alternative plan Board for a day. Since this properties," (4) making sure... (3) (Sec. IV) "if a matter of for the governance of Notre option is clearly not open to us, The "Fellows of the University," "the essential nature of the Uni- serious importance" concerning Dame. In the development of we are forced to draw on the referred to in this passage, are versity as a Catholic institution "university policy which in the the Chancellor-President struct­ written description of Notre six C.S.C. priests and six lay (is) maintained," and ( 5) that usual course would be resolved ure we will focus upon "How Dame's structure. Keeping in fellows, all I 2 from the Board of the C.S.C. priests are a vital by decision of the President, (it) would (or should) Notre Dame mind that how a structure Trustees. They have all power component of the "university's may ... be referred in the discre- be governed'!" Our last question, appears on paper, and how it and authority granted by ... the operations." tion of the President to the quite separate from those above, actually operates may be quite state of Indiana I in I the Char­ Except for these "powers... all Board of Trustees for final deter- yet at the same time essential to different things, we intend to tering Act... on January 15, powers for the governance of the mination " .. .If it is impractical University shall be vested in a or untimely to refer such ... to the Board of Trustects which shall full Board of Trustees for appro- consist of such number of Trust- priate action, the matter may • in SMC program on Urban Studies the discretion of the President, ees not less that thirty ( 30) nor be referred to the Executive A unique interdisciplinary vice teachers, public officials and 0ffer course work in three disci­ more than forty ( 40) .. .The six concerned citizens an under­ Committee ... " program combining the forces of plinary approaches. "American ex officio members of the Fel- (4) providing for the safe- standing of urban problems in the social sciences and the Urban History" will study the 1ow s as well as the Vice- keeping and the handling, of the humanities for the study of ur­ their historical, political and eco­ significance of the city on Amer­ -President for Business Affairs, University's properties and ban problems has been initiated non1ic aspects and to provide the ican history from colonial times are ex officio members of the funds. by Saint Mary's College, in co­ regional and ultimately the to the present. An analysis of Board of Trustees. The member- operation with the University of national communities with the political and social dimensions ship of the Board may be altered <5> Alteration of "these by- Notre Dame. Recognizing the results of Program-directed re­ of urban life will be the concern by removal (requiring the recom- laws" requires "at least two­ challenge facing the country to search. of "Political Problems of the men d ation o f the Board and thirds of the Fellows" concur- A successful pilot program in Metropolis and Its Communi­ renee. implement a truly human envi­ approval of the Fellows) or,------~~~~-==--~ urban studies conducted at the ronment for urban living, the ties." "The Economic Aspects of retirement to the status of Hon-~ NOTICE Saint Mary's Program for Urban College last summer led to a Urban Development" will inves­ orary Trustee (mandatory at age Studies will apply the resources grant of $25,000 from the tigate the role and contribution 70). Students planning to of the liberal arts college to the National Endowment for the of economics to urban problems The Board is presided over by student teach during First problems of cities and their Humanities for funding the and relate questions of contem­ a chairman, who is elected by SemesteJ; 1970 7 L must minorities. current program. The grant will porary value to the traditions of the Board every two years. Rec- report by April 10. Under the co-direction of Dr. also make possible full tuition . the humanities. The interdiscipli­ ords and proceedings are the Charles Poinsatte, chairman of remission for 30 participants. nary character of the Program responsibility of the Secretary. St. Mary's College students the history department, and Pro­ Approval of the grant was an­ will be emphasized through joint The activities of the Board, go to Room 320, fessor Louis Tondreau, chairman nounced April 3 by Congress­ seminar examination of research which require a quorum of "fif- Madeleva Hall. of the department of political man John Brademas of Indiana's results. teen persons," are; University of Notre Dame 3rd District. Mr. Brademas, who science, the Program for Urban Community research at the (I) Election of "all officers of students go to Room Ill o chairs the House Sub-Committee Studies intends to bring in-ser- outset will be focused primarily the University." East, Memorial Library. on Education, is a former facul­ on the Michiana area cities of (2) servin& oo tbe Boud'• ty member of Saint Mary's. South Bend, Mishawaka, Elkhart Overrules Kirk In cooperation with the De­ and Niles. It is hoped that stu­ TAMPA, Fla. (UPI) A federal partment of Graduate Studies in dent research will aid in provid­ district judge overruled Gov. Education at the University of ing the communities with a clear Claude Kirk's intervention in a Notre Dame, students enrolled community self-image and in es­ school desegrega lion case yester­ in the Urban Studies Program tablishing a concrete research day and sternly told the govern­ will earn graduate credit for each spurce and a pilot program for or to "he here personally" Fri­ session attended. The projected the significant relation of city day to answer civil contempt long-range ;:>rogram offering and academic communities. charges. several semesters of classroom, Urban affairs consultants will Judge Ben Krentzman rein­ laboratory and in tern study ex­ assist the staff and students in stated the Manatee County periences in large metropolitan establishing research studies and school hoard-which Kirk sus­ areas such as Chicago and De­ techniques to provide the great­ pemled Sunday night in a move troit will lead to a master's est impact on local and national to foil the court ordered desegre­ degree from the University of urban problems. The consultants gation -and told the board he Notre Dame. and regional public officials will wanted the court ordered plan The initial summer session, also address class sessions on June 2 2 through July 3 I , will carried out by Thursday. relevant topics. Kirk was to have appeared at yesterday's hearings, hut sent ICE CAPADES word he was too busy because of the opening session of the legis­ ,. lature. The governor did not appear Wed. April 15 .t concerned over the possibility of being cited for contempt. "I to don't think they'll do anything to a sick, old expectant father," Sun. April 19 he said. Kirk referred to his recent kidney operation and the fact his wife is expecting the birth of a child shortly. Student Discount lie later told the legislature he intended to fight the busing For Thur. 8 pm issue all the way to the U.S. Sat. 2 pm the natiOnal shakespeare company Supreme Court. Sun. 6 pm Only $1.25 tix Paul Guernsey Remain (Reg. $2.50) MACBETH For jit/1 price shows some $4.50 THIIIATURDAY, APRIL 11 - 1:• PM & Jim Moran and $2.50 tix remain O'LAUGHLIN AUDITORIUM- ST. MARY'S STUDENTS $2.00 ADULTS $3.00 TICKETS ON SALE IN DINING HALLS America Sponsored h}' Om temporary Arts Festival PAGE 8 TilE OBSERJJ£R. WEDNESDAY,-APRIL 8, 1970 Irish netmen beat Boilermakers by Jack Schaefer three doubles matches. Bernie Le Sage of N.D. dropped three set singles matches. Murray and Schefter. Observer Sports Writer Sophomore Buster Brown an extremely close match to Jim In the second doubles match With yesterday's victory the The Notre Dame varsity ten­ won the number one singles Mansfield 64, 1-6, 64. After N.D.'s Brown and Theissen ably Irish upped their season record nis team opened its home season match defeating Nick Giordano Mansfield had taken the first set disposed of Anderson and Ham­ to three wins and two defeats. with a solid six to three victory 4-6, 6-2, 6-0. Buster as the score La Sage roared back as he com­ mond 6-3, 6-1. However, the The next Irish match is Friday at over the Boilermakers of Purdue. indicates got off to a slow start pletely dominated the second third doubles match was won by Northwestern. The next home The Irish won five of the six before he started to play in his set. However, Mansfield regained Purdue's Callison and Di:.;k match will be April 18th against singles matches played while accustomed manner. control in the third set for the Cochrane 64, 8-6 over Greg the University of Cincinnati. Purdue captured two of the In the number two singles hard fought victory. Notre Dame's Mike Reilly de­ feated Purdue's Dick Cochrane JIM MURRAY in the number three singles match. Reilly won 7-5, 1-6, 6-2. Gil Theissen, one of the two freshmen to crack the Irish start­ ing six, beat in the number four singles match. Nothing has changed Theissen won in straight sets 6-1, 8-6. Meanwhile, the other frosh starter, Rob Schefter won the number five singles match with a © 1970, Los Angeles Times 64, 6-0 victory over the Boiler­ As previously noted, sending Lew Alcindor to UCLA was a maker's Chuck Callison. Notre monumental redundancy on the order of sending a parade to Dame co-captain Rob "Bounce" Germany, a singer to Italy or a hot watch to a hock shop. O'Malley trounced Purdue's Phil John Robert Wooden must have felt like a guy living in a trailer Hammond, 6-1, 6-0 to win the who suddenly wins an elephant. number six singles match for the For Alcindor's part, he must have felt like a guy who suddenly Irish. steps through a door marked "1890." In the number one doubles First of all, there was the language barrier. To , match Giordano and Mansfield "dig" is something you do with a shovel. When he says "it's cool," of Purdue defeated Le Sage and he means the sun isn't out. Reilly 9-7, 5-7, 64. The match John Wooden was so square, he was divisible by four. Lew was a gruelling affair lasting over Alcindor was from New York where they're born knowing every­ two and one half hours. It was thing. made tougher by the fact that all Alcindor later confessed in his memoirs that he thought Johnny four players had participated in lob O'Maley •ad • easy tillle ,.... Ida lolenubr oppoaeet Wooden was something that escaped from that painting of American yesterday at the Convo. O'Malley won 6-1 and 6-0. Gothic. Lew wondered where he put the pitchfork. No one asked Wooden to write his memoirs. For one thing, they'd be rated "G." But to the rest of basketball, Lew Alcindor looked like something that nested in the Andes. His legs were longer than 'Living legend'is dead some streets. Wooden had always been successful because he taught his teams CINCINNATI (UP I) - For­ National Invitation Tournament. N.Y. fundamentals. Teaching Alcindor fundamentals was like teaching a mer Cincinnati Royals star He was named the most valuable Stokes turned down an offer shark to bite. Wooden concentrated on the supporting cast. , who became a player of that tourney and by the Harlem Globetrotters. He The result was a Johnny Wooden team minus one. John stoically "living legend" at St. Francis finished his senior year at St. was named "rookie of the year" endured the Alcindor era. The rest of the community was not so College, will be laid to rest Francis with a 26.6 scoring in 1956 when he set a league fortunate and got a pretty good going-over from Lew under the Thursday in the Franciscan average. record with I ,256 rebounds. In boards. Cemetery on the Loretto, Pa. He was the first round draft> his three year career, Stokes "I think," signed Wooden, "we changed each other." campus. choice of the Royals, then in scored 3,315 points, an average If you were reading the bulletings out of College Park, Md., a Stokes, whose brief profes­ their final year at Rochester, of 16.4 per game. week ago, you will know thia is not altogether so. That team which sional basketball career ended John put together so painstakingly, ignoring a few off-court after only three years, died deton_ations here and there in the Alcindor era, turned out to be the Monday after suffering from a Masters are ready best m the country as usual. They played so well together the heart ailment. He was 36._ Augusta, Ga. (UPI) - Gary four-time champion Arnold vagrant notion might have crossed your mind Alcindor was lucky to Stokes, once considered big at Player says that although his Paimer and Tom Weiskopf, only make it. 6 foot 7 and 240 pounds, was victory at Greensboro indicates man to be under par in each of stricken with encephalitis March Wooden didn't have any canary feathers trickling out the side of he's playing well e·nough to win his last seven rounds here. his mouth when I cornered him in his office at UCLA the other' day. I 5, 19 58. He suffered a heart here, "It's a brand new ball game Palmer, the darling of Masters' If he's changed any, it wasn't visible. It was I 0 o'clock in the attack March 30: Doctors said wlJ.en you get to the Masters." fans, didn't arrive until Ia te in morning and his feet were killing him but he was wearing a shirt and the heart attack complicated his The muscular South African, the afternoon, explaining: "I tie and cuff links. He didn't have "shades," he had his usual bifocals. condition and attributed death only foreigner ever to win the just decided to take the day off" It was Good Friday and the rest of the college was shut down. to the heart attack. Masters (in I 96 I) which is being after a gruelling 36 hole Sunday John had to get an early start because he would be busy in church "We're all very much broken played for the 34th time starting finale at Greensboro. from 1:2 'til 3. up," said Jack Twyman, Stokes' ·Thursday, says "This is the only Nicklaus, who skipped Green­ He wasn't wearing bell-bottoms. He didn't have buckles on his legal guardian because he was course I know where you start sboro to get m three practice shoes._ He was reading Luke, Chapter 6, Verses 36, 37, not Harold "the only Cincinnatian with the choking when you drive through rounds here last wrckend, left Robbms. Royals at the time of the trag­ the front gate." Sunday night to spend a couple I sneaked a look at his walls. Everyone in the pictures had all his edy." The layout at the 6,980 yard of nights with his family in clothes on. There were kids on a court and kids on a bicycle. A special Requiem Mass was Augusta National favors the Florida but was expected hack The wall poems didn't run to "Howl!" but to Elbert Hubbard He planned for tonight in the power hitters-men like three­ today. was leafing patiently through a stack a mail on the off-chance there Chapel at Good Samaritan Hos­ time champion Jack Nicklaus. was ~ne from a kid who could play the corner in a pressing defense. pital where he died. The body I listened c~refully but I didn't hear a single word that would have will then be taken to the St. offe~?ed Loutsa Ma~ Alcott. There were a lot of "Gracious sakes!" Francis College campus for a MAJOR LEAGUES and Goodness gracwus alive!" and all that kind of jive talk that student mass Thursday after­ American-East National-West must have made Lew think he was putting him on. noon and a funeral mass in the TEAM Won Lost Pet. GB TEAM Won Lost Pet. GB No, John Wooden is still keeping the mod world well in the chapel that evening. *Detriot 1 0 1.000 *Cincinnati 1 0 1.000 backcourt. Lew Alcindor's world has been changed. You can tell Boston 1 0 1.000 Houston 1 0 1.000 Baltimore 1 0 1.000 *LosAngeles 0 0 .000 y, that from Dun & Bradstreet but for John Wooden, things are still Stokes brought fame to the y, Standard and Poor. small St. Francis College near New York 0 .000 Atlanta 0 0 .000 Cleveland 0 .000 San Diego 0 0 .000 y, No, I don't think the change is too visible. John Wooden is still Pittsburgh when he scored 43 *Washington 0 .000 Siln Fran 0 1 .000 the best basketball coach in the world. Lew Alcindor is still 7 feet 2 points and grabbed I 9 rebounds West East inches tall. against Dayton in the !955 Oakland 1 0 1.000 New York 1 0 1.000 Minnesota 1 0 1.000 Philadelphia 1 0 1.000 y, California 1 0 1.000 St. Louis 0 0 .000 Chicago 0 1 .000 1 Chicago 0 1 .000 Hockey playoffs scheduled Kansas City 0 1 .000 1 Montreal 0 1 .000 Milwaukee 0 .000 1 Pittsburgh 0 .000 Detriot at Washington. night *-last night's game not included. NEW YORK (UP!) - This is Series "B" Missesota April I I, I 2 aft Cincinnati at Los Angeles. night Boston-New York Boston 4 New York 3 the schedule for the first round St. Louis April 14 Baltimore 8 Cleveland 2 New York 5 Pittsburgh 3 of the National Hockey League Boston April 8,9 Minnesota April 16 California 12 Milwaukee 0 Philadelphia 2 Chicago 0 playoffs: New York April I I , I 2 St. Louis April 18 or 19 Oakland 6 Kansas Citv 4 Houston 8 at San Francisco 5 Eastern Division Boston April 14 Minnesota 12 Chicago 0 Atlanta at San Diego, night Series "A" New York April 16 Series "D" Chicago Detroit Boston April 18 or 19 Pittsburgh-Oakland Chicago April 8, 9 Pittsburgh April X,9 Detroit April II, I 2 aft Western Division Oakland April 11,12 Chicago April 14 Series "C" Pittsburgh April 14 Detroit April 16 St. Louis-Minnesota Oakland April 16 Chicago April 18 or I 9 St. Louis April 8,9 Pittsburgh April 18 or 19