I VoL XLIV, No. 12 , WASHINGTON, D. C. Thursday, December 13, 1962 I t, Thespians Present ChrisllUos Message Swiss Prod.uction Met Clubs Announce Gentlemen of Georgetown: Using Large Cast f The critical events of recent weeks star­ Yearly Yulet·ide Plans I The Mask & Bauble Society tlingly reveal how delicate, how precariously

! will present its second pro- poised a thing is peace; how much its preser­ duction of the year - The vation demands from all of us in effort, in Visit by Friedrich Duerren­ vigilance and in prayer. matt-tomorrow and Satur­ We have much reason for thankfulness and :joy in the 'I day evenings at Trinity The- approaching Christmas season, and these I wish praye1-fully III atre. for all of you in full measure. But we have equal reason to Ii The play, which contains both attend to the deeper meaning of the Feast: the lesson given macabre and comic elements, deals to us in lifelong example by the Incarnate Son of God, of ( with the revenge of a woman who • was shamed from a small town virtuous acceptance of the Divine Will which is the only \ after her lover escaped his re- way to peace, in the heart of the individual and in the world sponsibility in a paternity suit. at large. Years later she returns as a rich woman to attempt to buy her own With warmest good wishes for a happy and a holy kind of "justice." Emily Michaud Christmas, stars as Claire Zachanassion, the Devotedly yours in Christ, jilted woman, and Alec Healy por­ trays Antone Schill, the culprit. Edward B. Bunn, S.J. The Visit, to be directed by Donn President B. Murphy, head of the public speaking department, ran for two DUE TO SNOW ... classes will not be held from December 19 years on Broadway and then did to January 3. Merry Christmas to aU from . . a stint in London. It has only re­ " cently been released for amateur ResolutionBindingHOYA by Tom Simonet. production; and great care has Georgetown's regional clubs are planning holiday events • been taken to preserve the original I' flavor of the Swiss playwright's Defeated By Wide Margin in many cities to entertain vacationing Hoyas, the club pres­ I work. idents announced this week. Antoni Sadlak, president of the by Atchity and Haggerty In New York City, the Metropolitan Club will hold its Mask & Bauble, said that in the The final Student Counc!?meeting of 1962 opened with play Duerrenmatt presents "the annual Christmas dance on December 27 in the Terrace r~signa­ ! civilized animal, man, as very Yard President Altobello's announcement of the Suite of the Hotel Roosevelt. More than 250 couples are I laughable and at at the same time tion of junior class treasurer Gregg Kepley. The Council expected to attend the semi­ n very brutaL" He feels that, al­ was informed that nominations for the vacated office will formal affair, according to I:~ though the play will be difficult to Autocrats,' Knights i. present, it "is probably t;he best be held on January 7, and the election on Friday, January president Pete Melley. 1\ production in my four years at 11. The time and location for the two functions will be an­ To Perform Sunday The evening will feature the ! I. Georgetown." nounced by the class council hazard" coverage of important music of the Francis Walther I Lucky M&B immediately after the holi­ In Gaston Songfest I Sadlak went on to say that the lectures held on Campus. His reso­ orchestra. Tickets are five dol- · ., M & B has been very fortunate days. lution called for a schedule of As if the Christmas dance 'i'in assembling a high caliber cast, weekly lectures to be published in lars for members, six dollars for Acting upon a resolution weren't enough, Georgetown non-members, a dollar more at the I and that the players should be sure each issue of The HOYA. Burgess II: of their roles and give fine per­ introduced by senior represen­ questioned the Student Council's students wiIl have a further door. I :, formances. "I hope that the audi­ tative Lambert Spronck, the right to "bind" The HOYA on chance to get into the yuletide In Boston, Hoyas will dance to : ' ence is good," he concluded. "It is policy, and a heated discussion of President of the Yard was directed mood at the annual Christmas the melodies of Bob Mulcahey's important for amateurs to know The HOYA's news service ensued. to request the Student Personnel orchestra at the Woodland Country • that the audience is giving so they Although the general opinion of the concert in on Office to submit an itemized report Club in Auburndale. The Boston , can give." Council, voiced by sophomore rep­ Sunday, December 16. The admis­ for services rendered in return for Club's annual affair will run from Miss Michaud has been a lead­ resentative Tom Pauken, was that sion-free songfest will begin at the payment of fees for the use of nine to one on the evening of De­ ing lady for many other produc­ such a resolution would be a bad 8:00 p.m. Campus facilities. Ed Koepenick, cember 28. i .~, tions, including Othello and Detec- precedent for the Council to set, Co-chairman Dave Marantette president of the Washington Club, 1:'1 tive Story, and she played a prom- Mietus refused to withdraw his and Joe Carlucci promise a fine ... Boston ... offered his experience with the ar­ inent role in Calliope III. Alec motion which, he said, "was not representation of local talent, and Kevin Leary, president of the 1 rangements of the Fall Festival , Healy will be making his debut as intended to reflect on the quality to enliven the proceedings they club, said that there will be a as an illustration of the critical f an M & B performer. of The HOY A." A vote was taken, have invited all neighboring girls' champagne raffle at the dance. ! situation necessitating the resolu­ II The Visit will feature one of the and the motion was defeated by a schools to the concert. Price of the function is five dollars .,'largest casts ever assembled for a tion. vote of 14-5. Highlighting the entertainment for members, six dollars for non­ President of the senior class will be the appearance of the Georgetown production. It was the Amendment members. I. ~ last play used by the Lunts in James Mietus took the floor to Georgetown Chimes. Other Uni­ An amendment to the by-laws of The Detroit Club will feature a ! their final appearance on Broad­ recommend an official request for versity performers will be the party on December 29 after the \ way. The HOYA to improve its "hap- the Constitution was introduced by Autocrats, a group from the Jesuit Randy Maloney, reqUIrmg the Motor City Tournament, in which r :i community; the Restless Knights; Georgetown's Hoyas will ! Council to vote on each item of the the G e 0 r get 0 w n chapter of compete. Dress will be informal at weekly treasure's report separately SPEBSQA, national barbershop Military to facilitiate and clarify the pro­ the rockn' roll affair. The Detroit Ball Queen quartet organization; the Glee Club is also reserving a block of cedure of the meetings. The reso­ Club; and the Band. lution was referred to the Consti­ scats at the tourney for students Also expected to make the con­ and their parents. tutional Committee. cert scene are the Trinity Belles, The Council unanimously ap­ Immaculata Choiraliers, and a ... Detroit ... proved Jack Burgess's motion that group of Georgetown NUrsing A formal New- Year's Eve party the Placement Bureau inaugurate thrushes. will take place at the home of Bob a photostatic file of faculty recom­ A number of innovations, de­ Desmond, president of the Detroit mendations for students of the signed to enhance audience inter­ Club. Music will be provided by a University seeking job opportun­ est, will be added to the songfest. selected jazz combo, Desmond said, ities. Paramount among these will be a and roast beef and champagne will Tom Scheye announced that the dialogue master-of-ceremonies act be served. Price of the evening is Academic Committee is in the proc­ by Fred Williams and Bob Dunn, ten dollars per couple. ess of sending copies of the Student which (hopefully) should involve Council questionnaire to all stu­ In St. Louis a smoker for pro­ rehearsed skits. spective Georgetown students will dents and College faculty members. Marantette, commenting on the Sophomore class president Vin­ be held at the Greenbriar Country affair, predicted that this will be Club, Jon Dehner, .president of the cent Gallagher requested that his the best Christmas concert ever. class be authorized to operate the The Very Reverend Edward B. '" St. Louis •.. fall carnival in September, 1963. Bunn, S.J., President of the Uni­ Club, announced. A film on the The carnival, which has received versity, will deliver his yearly University's development will be the approval of the Dean, will be Christmas message during the con­ shown at the affair, which will take held on John Carroll Weekend. cert, and students and guests will place on December 19 at 7:30 p.m. SNOW WHITE . . . and the three dwarfs. The queen of the mil­ Profits of the carnival will be con­ join in singing popular Christmas The Connecticut Club's dance itary ball, Jean Fee, is crowned by Col. Jam~ W. Davis. Major tributed to improving the Univer- ~carols at the conclusion of the Ferrato looks on. (Continued on Page 7) son~fest. (Contin,ued on Page 8) Page ,Two THE HOYA Thursday, December 13, 1962 Editorial [ Letters To The Editor ] , Some Versions 01 the Christmas Spirit .,~ This is the season in which it is more blessed to give The Academic Committee, an or­ ent use and that this problem will ':Jli: ganization bent on bearing' the Library Plea obviously become more serious as -~~'< than to receive; but this spirit of giving has been in evi­ academic standard to newer fron­ To the Editor: the University expands. These esti· : dence around the Campus throughout the semester. Instead tiers, is still accepting the' ques­ mations are based on actual ex· ..;; of sending Christmas cards, we take this opportunity to tionnaires which it caused to be Three weeks ago there appeared perience. We would not protest, ~' distributed a week ago. It would in The HOYA a detailed report thank some of the people who have given of themselves prefer to have the questions an­ of building plans for the next few to Georgetown. So, a "thank you": swered in printable language and years at Georgetown. In this plan wree;~eoWt:epnentc~u~ll;a!r;:tao~us:s :a~I~OrneessFhreorme " ". have some relevance to the prob­ an· it appears that the construction of personal contact with OUt; fellow ~'~ To Raymond Reiss, and the other generous alumni who lems involved. Questionnaires can a new library has been postponed students, we have learned that this '~ made possible the Science Building, a significant addition be handed in to Room 201, Copley until after 1965. For a number intense interest in an expanded li· where coffee, doughnuts, and sym­ i of reasons, we feel that this is brary is a common one throughout "~:iii to Georgetown's prestige. pathy will be cordially extended to a far more important project than the student body. If the adminis· ( To the administration, for Dr. Frank L. Keegan, an all. those given preference. J tration should sample this general For all who will come away from administrator who has not yet been overburdened with ex­ First, it must be clear that this opinion, we feel our observations .,!, ' tomorrow's dance dazzled by the letter does not rise from the de· would hold true. We ask only that ,: ecutive work and so still has time for informal exchange social acumen of the junior class, sire to be disputatious. This is a the administration· consider our ;:.~ with a student. they have announced that they'll letter written in true concern for suggestion. We honestly feel that ,) be having another affair-but on a To Captain Fotta and the police force, for being as co­ our University. We feel that a plan could and must be worked much grander scale-on February out, if the Georgetown we are all operative as they are vigilant and friendly as they are Georgetown is the finest Catholic ~:"~ 14 and 15. Dedicated to the tra­ university in this country, and we proud of is to fulfill its destiny. , ~ ditions of its University, it will be professional. all sense the deep value of its tra· Ed. Note: This letter was signed . 1 a Junior Prom. Entertainment at ditions. We have personally prof­ by 25 members of the Class of . ~ To Richard McCooey whose 1789 has taken the place the so-called Prom will be the Ivy 1965. • _ ited from many of the recent in­ ·4 of our non-existent student union and has started as many League Trio and Bo Diddley, what­ novations at the University, such ever that may be. j traditions as it is dedicated to. as the Honors Program and the I The winter or third number of new Reiss Science Building. We ... We Nurses Too! '/ To the track team who worked so hard and then won the Courier is out with an indigo do not question the sincerity of even harder. nant hoot from the last nominee the administration. However, we To the Editor: We understand that plans are And to the basketball team for providing more spirit for their pageant of exotic beau· honestly feel that, for the good of ties and a coloring book that the University as a whole, the being initiated for expansion of and a more exciting spectator sport than has been seen here matches anything Betsy MacCall really pressing need for a radically the University and we are con· in many a day. ever dreamed of. The Courier, due expanded library must be the first cerned as to whether or not a li· no doubt to its outstanding journal­ subject for any construction plans. brary is included in these plans. To the Mascot Committee and all the shareholders, for istic merit, has been troubling our There is a definite need for more Jack, a much loved dog whose presence at University func­ sleep lately. Aside from the night· The Rev. Joseph Sellinger, S.J. dormitory space but as the student marish recollections of their purple in his message to the Domesday body increases in number, it will tions suggests that there is something to be loved at George­ Rooke 1962, called Georgetown an become evident that the present prose, we wonder why they con· ~ town. tinue to print short stories and "awakening giant". There can be study facilities will not be suffi· ., \ no doubt that this is so. But if cient to accommodate the census. To President Kennedy for taking a stand on Cuba and other fictional items, besides their descriptions of Miss Foreign Servo this giant is to raise his head into We feel it is quite obvious to giving the nation the spirit of the "frontier" without the ice, as a regular practice, when the the stars, he must have a base up­ those who frequent Riggs Library "new," for a change. Journal has been made open to all on which to stand. We feel that that it is barely adequate to meet the schools of the University. Per· the base which is absolutely essen­ our present needs, not to mention To Pope John XXIII for the Ecumenical Council which haps if this clash of interests tial to every great university is those of the future. ' should get Catholics and non-Catholics alike thinking about ceased, the Journal would 'get bet­ a library that is not just satis­ Although our Library is a part factory, but one that is excellent. ..,f the significance of their religion in the twentieth century. ter contributions and the Courier of the Georgetown tradition, we , could settle down to honest news It is true that we already possess should not lose sight of the mod· ...' To our parents, for supporting us, in every way, in our reporting. a fairly large and well run library. ern advances in education. To cope But we feel that the existing fa­ four years in need. The HOYA would be very in­ cilities are not adequate for pres· (Continued on Page 6) terested in receiving for Christmas And though we've said it before, to Father Bunn­ or immediately after it, some new for ten years. talent. What they have is getting Finally, to the Editorial Board and Staff of the HOYA, pretty worn down. Every staff has an opening for students from every for making our job very pleasant, and very satisfying. year. In return we offer you a good place to be in when the bomb falls Arts null 14rtttrn or the heat fails. The Quayle Club is trying in Viewpoint Review Journal Review (Continued on Page 8) by Dr. Frank Keegan by Michael Libonati Marlboro Smoker (The HOYA with the following If there is one printable word Editor-in-Chief ...... THOMAS E. SCHEYE review, initiates what it hopes will which adequately captures the 11 Managing Editor ...... •...... JOHN B. OVERBECK .... , Business Manager •...... RICHARD BARONE Takes First Prize be a successful program in which spirit of the newest issue of the News Editor ...... PETER STARR the faculty and administration will Journal, that word is derivative. Sports Editor ...... •...... •...... STAN SAMORAJCZYK address the students through the The poems and short stories in the ~ Feature Editor ...... •...... JOHN J. GLAVIN In latest Drawing fall number take form from the C. newspaper. We are proud that Doc· .' Copy Editor ...... WILLIAM SULLIVAN An a I way s-popular Marlboro L Make-up Editor ...... JAMES MELBERT tor Keegan, the Associate Dean of student·author's favorite writer. In ' II R.ewrite Editor ...... •...... •...... BILL HODGMAN contest, sponsored twice a year by the College, has consented to write some cases, I am almost afraid to 1- Photography Editor ...... HANK ZAMENSKI the Philip Morris Tobacco Co., the first article and contributed criticize the student·author's style was held in the New South Cafe­ 1 Advertising Manager ...... •THOMAS DUNGAN the excellent review which follows. for fear he will leap out of the -;, Circulation Manager ...... MICHAEL LERNER teria on December 4. Headline Editor ...... •...... BILL BlEGEN Ubiquitous Father Richard Mc­ J.J.G.) shrubbery (or wherever such fel· ~ Executive Secretary ...... EDW ARD RAFFETTO Sorley, S.J., strode up to a vat of lows hide), brandishing his under· "*l'.' Moderator ...... FR. JOHN JACKLIN, S.J. In last winter's edition of View· lined copy of Salinger or William approximately 14,000 colorful pack­ point, Msgr. John Tracy Ellis said: News Staff ages (ranging from Philip Morris Carlos Williams, pointing to a·' .'... Viewpoint will contribute to Assistallts to the News Editor: Ken Atchi/y, Tom Simonet to ALpine) and clasped a Marlboro passage that he copied out ver· Frank Aiello, Robert Barone, Dan Brocki, Ed Coletti, Dick Conroy, Ken overcoming one of the most serious wrapper inscribed by senior Jac­ batim. Even the very, very rare OJ , Cote, Dan Duff, Bob Echele, Lee Ewing, Ed Fallon, Joe Fallon, Pete Finley, and widespread defects in Catholic Joe Frederick, Ray Furlong, Frank Gunnip, Robert Haggerty, Peter Holmes, ques Finlay. flickers of originality in an indio • John Kelly, Pat Kellogg, Paul Kennerson, Herb Kenny, Don Manning, Dan Finlay confided that he had en­ higher education, namely, its fail· vidual piece are quickly over· \ Moriarty, Bob Nocera, Dan O'Leary, Mike Rees, Bill Scharf, Bill Singer, Mike listed the aid of numerous feminine ure to produce students who are shadowed by some lumbering Sullivan, Gerry \Verckle. lieutenants in his campaign to as­ genuinely articulate, who respond phrase or lame image. ,.I Sports Stnff semble 600 entries. One rather to intellectual challenge, who are Assistallt to tho Sports Editor: Jolm Feldmalln pathetic contestant told The HOYA unafraid of new and original ap· It makes no difference whether' j Pat Bright, Art Collins, Paul Danneberg, Herb Gatalder, Steve Joyce, angrily that he had submitted over proaches to life's problems, and the poetry or prose is disposed of (j Gregg Kepley, Ed Leary, John Lee, Mark Pisano, Rory Quirk, Tom Sullivan, 2000 ,packs only to be frustrated first, since Journal writers are • , Tony Thomas, Mark Winter. who have the perception and judg· when Father McSorley bypassed equally ill·at-ease in both mediums. .~j Feature Staff: ment to know when to invoke the his top entries to reach far into But just to be arbitrary, suppose Assistallt to the Feature Editor: AuthollY Thomas the middle. •. eternal truths and principles of Jeffrey Boly, Bill Clark, David Crosby, Joseph Dunigan, Bob Flaherty, divine wisdom. To have fulfilled we inspect the prose first. Someone Nandor Fournier, Peter Handal, John Hayes, Michael Libonati, Bob Nye, Finlay received a Philco stereo named Madigan attempted to cash .. ~ George Patrick, T. A. Quinn, Bill Singer, Lambert Spronck, Carl Utsinger, console with an AM-FM radio. such a task is to have more than justified the existence of a stu­ in on the current college frenzy;' • John Whipple. Second prize of ten stereo albums for J. D. Salinger'S style. Those of went to the Delta Pi Epsilon fra­ dent journal ..! Copy Staff: you who were charmed by certain Jeff Boly, Joseph Dunigan, Robert A. Frederick. ternity, and Charles Indelicato won Viewpoint continues to justify R.ewrite Staff: a month's supply of Marlboros' cute phrases found in The Catcher T David Crosby, Dan Duff, Bob Echele, Frank Gunnip. for third place. its existence in these terms, and in the Rye will recognize them in· Photography Staff: the present issue sustains the high stantly in A Very Thin Piece of I Anthony Fernandes, Karl Kamper, Robert Peraino. quality one has come to expect of Jade. You will not, however, ree· ~) Make-ttp Staff: NOTICE it. The articles reveal students ognize the torturous sentence struc· .. Bob Barone, Ray Kaulig, Joe Keating. "genuinely articulate," able to "re· ture which seems to have borrowed Headlille Staff: Rev. Joseph A. Haller, S.J., Uni­ spond to intellectual challenges," from Jack Kerouac, dean of the Peter Adams, Bill Fickling, Frank Kiepura. versity Treasurer, has an­ having "the perception and judg· beatnik authors. Salinger'S words ..' Circulatioll Staff: nounced that all students who ment to know when to invoke the are not enough to save this short J. David Adler, Jerry Dempsey, Joe Linnemann, Bruce Pfeffer, James wish to apply for National De­ eternal truths and principles of story. The images selected by the Salvin, Alex Talbot. fense Education Act Student divine wisdom." (The articles show author, e.g. "wheels clacking over ~ Vol. XLIV, No. 12 Thursday, December 13, 1962 Loans for the year 1963-64 must pick up the forms this week in an even more precious attribute: the rails like rosary beads," are Published by the students of Georgetown College every Thursday during order to be eligible for the fall the perception to know when not meaningless. The mind of the the college year except for vacation and examination periods. semester of 1963. (Continued on Page 7) Subscription rate, $6.50 per year. (Continued on Page 9) ------

Thursday, December 13, 1962 Page ,:Three Dr. Evans Announces Carols, Candles, Danc,e [ Council Capers N. Y. No/it/IIY Meeting by John Whipple For Pre-lll~ Stut/ents Show Christmas Spirit v,ast Sunday's Student Council meeting was the occasion of an Dr. Frank E~ans, Director assault upon the constitutionally guaranteed freedom of the press of Special Programs, recently the like of which has not been seen since the Zenger case a few years announced that Georgetown ago. The situation was like this: During New Business Mr. Mietus • presented the following explosive resolution: students have been invited to ,Whereas a most stimulating variety of lectures has been attend a pre-law conference at available to the Georgetown student body in the recent past, Columbia University on Sat­ but urday, December 22. Whereas in the past the publicity for these various lec­ The confercnce will begin at tures has been haphazard and not uniform 10:30 in the morning with pre­ Therefore be it resolved that: liminary addresses by Dean Wil­ The HOYA be requested to include in each issue a sched­ liam C. Warren, Kent Professor ule of lectures on Campus the following week. of Law, and by Professor Conrad , Arose then Mr. Supreme High Hoya asserting that notice of lectures G. Paulsen, who will discuss indeed is given in The HOYA. Mr. Mietus assured Mr. Scheye that "Studying Cases and Legal Ma­ to say that publicity for lectures has been haphazard and not uniform terials." is in no way to cast adverse reflection on The HOYA. At this point After the buffet luncheon, which the exclamation, "Ha, ha!" was heard to come from ,the direction of is free of charge, the afternoon Mr. Maloney. And Mr. Burgess noted that a weekly calendar of events will begin with a panel discussion , published by his Publicity Committee would handle the matter equally of "Legal Education as the Basis well. But earlier in 'the evening the Council had indicated that it was for a Productive and Challenging of the opinion that a bi-weekly calendar of events was unnecessary, Life." Dean Warren will moderate in part because there was already enough publicity being given. A the discussion and members of the question by Mr. Maloney brought the announcement from the Yard panel include Walter Gellhorn, that the Council lacked power to bind The HOYA to print anything. Betts Professor of Law and Pres­ Now debate turned more toward the real issue at hand. Mr. ident-elect of the Association of Scheye expressed satisfaction with the pUblicity given coming lectures American Law Schools; the Hon. · in The HOYA and announced that the request would not be granted Paul R. Hays, Judge in the United even if the motion were passed. To which Mr. Maloney asked whether States Circuit Court of Appeals; The HOYA was for the students or the Editorial Board. The reply William Kenneth Jones, Professor was that it was for the students and it was hoped that the product of Law and Staff Director, Com­ (Ed. Note: The picture above and the carol below offer just two was satisfactory. To Mr. Scheye's defense then came Mr. Pauken, who mittee on Licensing, Administra­ of the contributions that Georgetown students will be making to the said that his constituents were satisfied with The HOYA as it was, tive Conference of the United Christmas season. The picture shows Christmas dance chairman Joe that Mr. Mietus was indeed implying that The HOY A was inadequate, States. Keating with Miss Sue Conway ,under one of the candlebearing chan· and that the resolution would set a bad precedent in trying to tell At 1 :45 a Moot Court will be deliers that will be the keynote for the dance in New South tomorrow. , The HOYA what to do. And upon reflection it seems to us that, al­ staged on "The Right to Counse1." The carol was written by Don Colleton, College junior, and will be though the Council makes requests of the administration with a fre· Noted members of the Columbia one of the numbers in the Chimes' Christmas repertoire for the Christ­ quency bordering upon the alarming, they have never had the effrenate faculty will take part in the court, mas concert Sunday night. J.J.G.) temerity to request an extra-curricular activity to change its modus which will be followed by semi­ operandi. nars in the study of law at Co­ Mr. Mietus, commenting that in view of Mr. Scheye's remarks lumbia. he might as well withdraw the resolution (but he didn't), again tried All College students interested • to assert that it was in no way derogatory to The HOYA. in attending the conference should The angels didst a shepherd boy accost, Let no one be deceived by the word "~equest" in the resolution. contact Doctor Evans as soon as And with exalted tongues to him didst say: For, as all those who have observed the creeping totalitarianism on the possible for reservations. "Why sitst thee chilled upon the nocturn frost When Babe divine doth sleep on yonder hay? (Continued on Page 4) 3 Sisters Bridge Ah, play thy plaintiff shepherd's pipe no more; But join with our angelic lullaby, To Cure Road Ills, And hasten to the Infant King adore Who sleeps in peace beneath the Virgin's eye. Close Lower Gate The ancient world hath yearned to see this night Mr. Harold Aitken, direc­ Of which Isaiah long ago didst speak. tor of the District Highway Where once the darkness was, let now be light; Department, announced Sat­ And let the wanderer no longer seek; To make your Christmas shopping a pleasure, "And let," they said, "the burdened world arise, urday that the District Com­ For He is born Who is King of light: we have gathered together a wide assortment of mission was still studying Who shall our burden take, our hopes revise." plans for the construction of The shepherd boy arose and left the night. traditional apparel for those who want and de­ the controversial Three Sisters Bridge. The bridge, which Mr. serve the finest. Aitken has called "predestined," will have noteworthy effects on Discussion On AlheisDi the approaches to the College Shetland jackets, Cashmere, Lambswool and Campus. Given By Rev. Mu.... ay It will be erected between Key Shetland sweaters, three-piece suits, sport shirts and Chain Bridges, near Three "Modern and Postmodern Atheism" was the theme of Sisters Island and will handle all a lecture by the eminent theologian Rev. John Courtney of imported fabrics, fine wool vests, cashmere freeway and truck traffic, leaving Key Bridge solely at the disposal of Murray, S.J., at Georgetown's Campus last week. The lecture, hosiery, Bay Rum, Caswell-Massey and Canoe local drivers. witnessed by an overflow crowd in the Hall of Nations, was Proposed Ramp sponsored by the East Campus Sodality. colognes, Camel Hair topcoats and odd jackets, The construction of the bridge and of the Commission-approved Father Murray stressed in his talk the act of will button-down and tab-collar dress shirts, and fine Potomac River Freeway will neces­ which, he said, always pre­ which, it is believed, God is not sitate the closing of the Canal cedes atheistic convictions. silk neckwear are just a few of the many items Road entrance to the University. needed. The third, that of the "Atheism is not the conclusion "city", comes when religion has no Mr. Aitken said that after confer­ place at all in public affairs. "One to choose from. ing with Fr. T. Byron Collins, S.J., of an argument," he said, "it wonders", Father Murray added, Georgetown's Vice-President for is a free decision made within "whether we are not approaching Business Management, the Com­ the heart of man." that situation in America." For the gentleman who has everything, our gift mission has arrived at a plan satis­ factory to the University adminis­ He described two basic types of Existing Evil bar o:ffers a wide collection of gifts . • . and for tration. This plan calls for the atheism, one that stems from a Postmodern atheism, according construction of a ramp connecting metaphysical problem and another to the speaker, begins with the the ladies, our Women's Sportswear Department an extension of Prospect Street to that grows out of a moral ques· problem of the existence of evil the school parking lot. tion. The first he termed modern, in the world. The two basic athe· will provide just the gift she has been looking for. Citizens' Opposition the second postmodern. istic answers to this problem are Although University officials ap­ Modern atheism, Father Murray those given by Marx and many ex· proved this plan, there is some said, is the answer given by some istentialists. Father Murray termed opposition to it among Georgetown Who find inexplicable the coexist· the first of these the atheism of citizens, and Brig. General Frede­ ence of the necessary and the con· the state, the second, that of the rick J. Clarke, Engineer Commis­ tingent, the eternal and the tem­ theatre. sioner for the District, said the poral, or the infinite and the finite. The postmoderns accept the Niet· possibility of an alternate plan still Their initial will is that they must zschean myth of the death of God. remains. choose either "God or the world." Believing that there is no need to The Three Sisters Bridge became Such a decision, the speaker said, make a positive case against God, a center of controversy between results in pantheism, materialism, they maintain that He is a menace, or agnosticism. University Shop those urging mass transportation the enemy of human freedom. Their and those advocating an improved Three Types common will, Father Murray said, road system as the cure for the He divided modern atheism into is to destroy God. at 36th and N Sts.-FE 7-4848 District's traffic problems, when three types. The atheism of the The Jesuit lecturer is a profes· Congress placed these problems in "academy", he said, attempts to sor of theology at Woodstock Col­ Open for your Convenience the hands of the District Highway explain the world without God, lege and editor of the quarterly 9 :30 A.M. to 6 :30 P.M. Commission. Georgetown Univer­ starting with the premise that all Theological Studies. His book, We THURSDAYS till 8 P.M. sity was introduced into this con­ truth is scientific. That of the Hold These Truths, was published troversy when the problem arose "market place" begins with the will in 1960. Father Murray is an concerning its access rights. to make a living in the world, for honorary alumnus of Georgetown. Page Four rHE HOYA Thursday, December 13, 1962 Varied Repetoire, Council Capers (Continued from Page 3) part of the federal government know, controls begin in small things Distinctive Playing The Magic Lantern and in a minor way and are gradually increased. It is "request" one by Bob Flaherty week and "require" the next, a little calendar in one corner this week Highlight Recital and whole articles next week. A week ago we suggested that Mr. by Bob Nye Scheye wants to write "Council Capers"_ This week we see that -Mr. CHRISTMAS OFFERINGS Mietus wants to take over as Editor so that Mr. Scheye will have In an almost unprecedented Back in their hometown of Xenotts, Ohio, or Brookfieldfarms, enough time to write his column. We eagerly await the next Council effort, Georgetown's Colle­ Vermont, many formerly-happy Hoyas will find themselves bewildered meeting, at which we will learn who wants to be president of the gium Musicum performed its by the snow and somewhat bored by quiet evenings in front of the senior class. Meanwhile we can all rejoice at the Council's firm sup­ home-fires. Standing in jostling crowds to catch a glimpse of the latest most valuable contribution yet astronaut or to see Washington's upper echelons at a Dean Rusk party port of journalistic independence in defeating the resolution.} for the University on Decem­ -may have spoiled some freshmen for the simpler pleasures of home, ber 2, in bringing pianist such as making fudge, or even watching "The Dinah Shore Show" immediately followed by another gripping episode in the various lives Arthur Fennimore to Gaston Hall of Loretta Young. However, there is still hope, Brookfieldfarms; do not for a solo recital. Robert Haggerty, despair, Xenotts! MGM, Warner Bros., Walt Disney, et. al., in co­ Professor Robert Lowe, and the operation with your local movie theaters, offer to you, the discriminat­ other members of the Collegium ing public, the cinema, for all sorts of transitory and lasting pleasures deserve great credit, for they have this vacation season. done their University a great (Author of "I Was a Teen-age Dwarf", "The Many Loves of Dobie Gillis", etc.) service. For those dating history majors from the local state U., Darryl Fennimore, a brilliant young art­ (with two "r" 's) F. Zanuck has created especially for you The ist in his early twenties, provided Longest Day. If your date brings a box lunch for two (with a re­ the could-have-been-Iarger audience serve of hot chocolate in an extra Thermos), you may survive this with a program that few veteran slightly over-long epic. It will certainly provide many topics for future

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r 8 A.M. +0 BREAKFAST...... _ SANDWICI-IES •. , ...... MIDNIGHT 'ihe ~=- 11:30 A.M. CI-lARCOAL HAMBURG ERS .... I! +0 ... SANDWICI-lES .... BAR B CUE. IIt MIDNIGHT GREAT DRAFT BEER • .Dinin.y FRIDAY fill 2 A.M. LUNCH ..... D\NNER... ~ Pub REASONABLE PR\CE.S... c:b ATMOSPHERE_ ..... CONVERSATION ...... LUNCH .... NoON +0 2 P.M. COCKTAI LS ...... DINNER .... bP.M.to MIDNIG~T NOON +0 2:30 P.M. 5:30 P.M. +0 MIDNIGHT Page Six 2'HEHOYA Thursday, December 13, 1962 that our noble Student Council is Letters Critics, Critics, Critics being ill treated or not, The HOYA (Continued from Page 2) To the Editor: should respond to its duty as Cam­ pus newspaper to treat the highest ma,."iott Key Bridge with these advances more recent I am a freshman in the College student activity with dignity. publications as well as a greater and perhaps am not as well ac­ Mr. Floyd's letter is another ex­ number on more varied subjects quainted with the traditions of the ample of the typically undeveloped should be available. In addition, University as Mr. Chad Floyd is; BARBER SHOP since the amount of studying is and cynical collegiate which roams however, I am confident that his directly proportional to the atmos­ Georgetown's Campus criticizing letter to The HOYA regarding the phere in which this studying is other typically undeveloped and Welcomes Discriminating done, improved lighting and more column "Council Capers" is not in cynical collegiates with as much pleasant general conditions would our best tradition. childish vigor as he does on every prove beneficial. To economize on It seems to me an insult to the other campus in America. I am ( Hoyas time, a more compact, less awk­ integrity of everyone involved that dismayed that The HOYA would ward arrangement of rooms should he is allowed to air such pompous devote any space to someone with Open be considered. Georgetown is well and dogmatic views in his letter. so little to say except that he wants known for its academic achieve­ Not only is his subject very carp­ his name to appear in print. Hi ya 8:30 a.m. to 6:00 p.m. ments which can be traced to the ing but the manner in which he Mom! many hours the majority of the handles his subject is absurd. Re­ JAMES MATA Monday thru Saturday students spend in the library. In gardless of whether he believes Class of '66 view of this, an occasional relaxa­ tion period is necessary and a con­ venient "robot room" would satisfy the many students addicted to nico­ time and caffeine, as well as re­ lieve tension. We, as nurses, feel justified in making these suggestions in light of the fact that we have liberal arts courses in addition to our professional sUbjects. We appreciate this opportunity to voice our opinion on a subject pertinent to the entire University. Ed. Note: This letter was signed by thirty-eight membe1's of the Class of '65 of the Georgetown University School of Nursing.

Alas, Poor Maverick To the Editor: Last Wednesday a sign went up on the Non-Resident Cafeteria bulletin saying: "Card playing is not allowed under penalty." This order was promulgated by the SPO and I would like to know why this office had to perform such an act. I think it is the first time in the history of any college that the ad­ ministration issued such a ridicu­ lous edict. For the last four years we have been playing cards in the N on­ Resident Cafeteria while taking a break between classes. If we were running a casino or playing black jack and poker, I could understand the situation but it is nothing but Hungry for a friendly game of bridge in which no gambling is involved. We look forward to playing bridge for an fLavor? hour between classes and it is one of the real pleasures we have Tareylon's for getting away from study and classes. got it! If this card playing is to be prohibited, why was it not pro­ hibited three years ago, Card play­ ing went on then. Also I would like to point out that the Cafeteria is not that crowded so that we "card .players" "Tareyton's Dual Filter in duas partes divisa esH" are a menace to other people and I see here no reason for stopping says Marius (Gay Blade) Ca:millus of the Forum Fencing Team. Says Gay Blade, "Anyone on terra firma card playing. will agree Tareyton is a firma, fina cigarette-packed with tobacco bono. No wonder you enjoy de gustibus you As a protest to this absurd edict never thought you'd get from any filter cigarette." we "card players", who number about twenty-five, are boycotting Dual Filter makes the difference the Non-Resident Cafeteria and we hope that some action will take place in the near future to remove this monstrosity. Ed note: This letter was signed by 20 students of the Coilege.

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OPEN FROM 7 A.M. ON cf ;;., Pitchers 40c on Thurscf~' Special Daily Dianers HAMBURGERS ~ ConopIe lEVERAGES FREE PAIIIUN& 2213 Wisconsin Ave. Phone FE 8-8025 25% Discount on List Prices to G.U. Students with this CIcI. Thursday, December 13, 1962 rHE HOYA Page Seven Student Council Journal Review classification all its own-it is a (Continued from Page 1) song lyric. If Mr. Smith can find (Continued from Page 2) himself a guitarist with a plaintive DOING IT THE HARD WAY by h9ff sity, at the discretion of the Col­ reader boggles at certain unspeak­ voice and a kazoo accompaniment (GETTING RID OF DANDRUFF, THAT lSI) lege Dean. Nick Nastasi, junior ably awful slang phrases like we might be hearing it on WEAM class president, voiced his "whole­ "crudhole", which in addition to one of these days. Two longer hearted approval" of the sopho­ being hideous are not even authen­ poems, Hurricane Coming and Per­ more resolution. tic_ The plot of the story, boy ambulatory Moonbeam Seminar In answer to a query from the meets girl, etc., never goes beyond (whatever that may be), deserve the comic book level. The second fioor, Gallagher made it clear that some comment if only because they short story, called The Rubber the carnival would be run by the must have taken longer to type Plant is a very talky piece. If the Class of '65 next year only, and out. In Hurricane Coming the author's theme is lack of communi­ was not intended to be a class words of the poem seize the author cation between people, his own who coughs them out and doesn't function. The sophomore base their prose reflects this universal inar­ claim for operation of the carnival bother to revise them. I suggest ticulateness. A more rigorous selec­ that he either take Vicks or prune on classmate Edward J. Carolls, Jr., tion of words in the narrative pas­ of Springfield, Massachusetts. Car­ the much too long first draft which sage would have helped unify the he has published. With a serious roll has had wide experience in story. The dialogue, stilted in the management of carnivals and effort to eliminate narrative pas­ places, could also stand revisin~. fairs, as his father operates an sages, this inflated giant could be In short, the story as printed lS amusement park, and he himself compressed into a striking poem. undisciplined and needs more work. The other poem, the one with the works at the county fair in Bar­ The poetry is every bit as bleak rington, Massachusetts. strange title, makes me think that as the prose. Lack of originality its author would have better suc­ easier 3-minute way for men: FITCH Tentative plans for the "George­ is a prime feature of some of the cess with prose. The most accurate town Carnival" include improved poems notably Autumn, which criticism of the Journal was sound­ Men, get rid of embarrassing dandruff e!lsy as 1-2-3 with equipment, games "of chance and must have been filched from Wil­ FITCH! In just 3 minutes (one rubbing, one lathering, one ed, perhaps involuntarily, by one rinsing), every trace of dandruff, grime, gummy old hair skill," a beauty contest for Campus liam Carlos Williams' waste bas­ of the contributors, Charles Rosen­ tonic goes right down the drain! Your hair looks hand- "beauties," and several circus-type ket. At any rate, imagist poetry berg, in To Find a Voice. He ® somer, healthier. Your scalp acts. Carroll attended a national has never been so poorly repre­ writes, "But rarely do I hear a tingles, feels so refreshed. Use convention in Chicago over the sented. There are other poems note that sounds by me and not FITCH Dandruff Remover Thanksgiving holidays where he in­ which are merely strangely shaped by rote". That is precisely what FI"CH SHAMPOO every week for vestigated possible games, food cryptic sentences, signifying noth­ is wrong with the poems in the L..EAOING MAN'S positive dandruff control. concessions, and raffles to be run ing to the reader. In this batch, Journal. They read more like as­ Keep your hair and scalp by outside operators and financed the most flagrant offender is Dark­ SHAMPOO reaIIy clean, dandruff-free! =-=--- signments than free creative ex­ with a percentage of the Carnival's ness which is entirely unenlighten­ pressions. gross. ing. The poem, j'ever, requires a The malaise that affects the J our­ nal is symptomatic of the disease from which the College as a whole s u f fer s. Academic assignments stress our need for contact with the minds of others. The pressure engendered by these assignments keeps us from coming to grips with ourselves. For someone who is de­ pendent on research, it is easier to synthesize from others than to express oneself. If we are to have creativity on Campus, the academic workload must somehow be reduced. Otherwis~ the Journal will con­ tinue to be a collection of half­ baked derivative pieces. The Jour­ nal is only a literary gesture.

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"Looks like you've got something there," the Army Tank 1963 Command said in effect to Ford Motor Company engineers. bigger, busier, "Let's do a feasibility study on tracklaying military vehicles." better than ever! The story begins in 1957 when Ford engineers conceived • Informal welcoming dance to start the idea of a plastic-bonded glass filament torsion bar for the fun. vehicle suspension systems. It was a revolutionary departure • College Day at the Beach ... the biggest beach party of the year. from the use of solid steel. It promised dramatic weight • All-day cruise to historic St. savings in battle tanks, in personnel carriers and other George. Luncheon. Calypso music. Gombey Dancers. military vehicles. For example, as much as 1,000 pounds MOTOR COMPANY • Round Robin Tennis Tournament. The American Road, Dearborn, Michigan in medium tanks. • College Talent Revue. PRODUCTS FOR THE AMERICAN ROAD. THE HOME • Fun Festival with jazz concerts, Compared to steel, the tubular-shaped glass filament com­ THE FARM. INDUSTRY. AND THE AGE OF SPACE choral groups, dance contests. position has greater energy storage potential-is stronger • Barbecue Luncheon. and more flexible under heavy load. It may well prove to be • Sightseeing. the automobile suspension material of tomorrow ... cars • Special Tennis Trophies. suspended on glass! ALL YOURS AT NO CHARGE Another example of engineering leadership at Ford and The BERMUDA new ideas for the American Road. Trade Development Board 620 Fifth Ave., New York 20, N. Y. Page Eight rHE HOYA Thursday, December 13, 1962 Dances RounJ- Up (Continued from Page 1) (Continued from Page 2) will run from nine to one on the vain to have its initial meeting of evening of December 27 at the the year and wish its members a Oakdale Tavern in Wallingford. Merry Christmas. It can not seem .:, ...... · ..u ..... <',~ ...... The informal affair will have music to contact the members because by Pat Dorn. Tickets are four dol­ the activity space of the Student lars and five dollars, one dollar Council Bulletin Board is so additional at the door. crowded with messages from other bigger, more powerful groups. If In Chicago, a dance will be held it could meet it would extend its in conjunction with Windy City message to a tearful Happy New alumni, but details are not yet Year and a heartful admonition to final. Members should keep in touch all to drive safely. with president Bill Clark . ... And Here " 'THE PRIESTHOOD 01 the Laity' is a Notre Dame Hall, at North cant phrase 01 the decade and abhor­ Capitol and K Streets in Wash­ rent to those oJ us who have met it.

ington, will be trimmed with Yule­ We claim no equality with our priests. ":'" tide decor for the Washington Anythin4 in costume or manner that Club's dance on December 26. Pres­ tends to disAuise the mystery 01 their ident Ed Koepenick says that beer unique callinA is somethin4 IeadinA us will be served at the party, which awny from the sources 01 devotion. will feature the music of the Night­ The failure of the French Iworker caps. priests' is fresh in our mernories." -Evelyn Waugh For the current issue Tickets for this dance are two Oft the Vatican of NATIONAL REVI EW dollars and fifty cents for members, Council, in the write for free copy, three dollars and twenty-five cents current issue. 150 E. 35 St., New for non-members. York 16, N.Y.

BE ELEGANT BE INDEPENDENT The one lotion that's cool, exciting Finding an inexpensive hotel in New York City isn't easy. But the TUDOR HOTEL - brisk as an ocean breeze! is insxpensive; and offers comfort with convenience while catering to college stu­ The one-and· only Old Spice exhilarates ... gives you that great·to·be· dents. This year the TUDOR HOTEL offers these special features: alive feeling ... refreshes after every shave ... adds to your assurance ... 1. A special College weekend package that includes your room plus continental and wins feminine approval every time. Old Spice After Shave Lotion, breakfast. $10 for a double, $6 for a single. 1.25 and 2.00 plus tax. SHU L TO N 2. Suites for fraternity parties and meetings. Priced from $20. ///) -..«>1. 3. Unbeatable location - steps from the United Nations, Grand Central Station, and the shave lotion men recommend to other men! the Airline Terminal. c.:JB ~"ice - The TUDOR HOTEL is located on 42nd Street at Second Avenue, in fashionable TUDOR CITY. WRITE MR. EARL R. POWERS, GEN. MGR.; TEL. 212 YU 6·8800. TUDOR HOTEL • 304 EAST 42ND ST., N.V.C.

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Remernber 1955, when Marlboro carne to town? Suddenly, the U.S. had a flavor cigarette with a filter on the end. Sales grew in every town, in every state. Today the whole place is Marlboro country-land of the filter cigarette with the un­ filtered taste. Behind this popularity is the farnous Richmond :.!Ik,.lJD/'O/~:··~Old and enjoyed in all 50 states recipe of ripe tobaccos (the finest grown), and the pure white and in more than 100 countries around the world Selectrate Filter. Pack or box, you get a lot to like. Thursday, December 13. 1962 rHE HOYA Page Nine It is usually safer to allow the That Arthur, his knights and la­ Viewpoint Review genius of the artist to be revealed dies forever wear girdles of green (Continued from Page 2) in his work rather than in his only underscores Gawain's "im­ to invoke them.) But do they re­ commentary. Most composers, and mortal existence in memory" for veal minds "unafraid of new and I suspect Strauss included, would these remarkable feats. original approaches to life's prob­ agree. Even Mr. Overbeck might, Sebastian Mezu has written a lems?" I am less sure of this. for he has wisely used, not merely competent, descriptive piece cover­ the correspondence of Strauss, but There are five articles in all: ing the main problems of that STAR "OTOR the last opera, Capriccio, to make large independent African state, CORPORAT ON John P. Kelley's "Opus Dei in his major points. His perceptive Spain," James A. Wiseman's "The Nigeria. On the other hand, Mr. description of the mutual trans­ Kelley did not cover his subject, Esthetic Norms of Jacob Burck­ mutation of words and music is preferring half the job to all of it. hard," Sebastian O. Mezu's "Chris­ especially fine. tian Proselytism in Nigeria," John One cannot deal with the criticism B. Overbeck's "Richard Strauss: Moral Meaning? of a thing without dealing, more The Nature of Opera," Michael J. fully than Mr. Kelley does, with Mr. Maloney's piece, on the con­ the thing itself-in this case, the Maloney's "Sir Gawain's Chivalric trary, suffers from being under­ Code." The variety wiII satisfy a nature and role of Opus Dei in written. But his has perhaps a modern Spanish society. And the range of readers and is itself evi­ graver flaw. Though Gawain and dence of that catholicity of taste flrticle has a polemical cast, as if the Green Knight is didactic ro­ the author were more bent on prov­ one has come to expect of George­ mance, it is hardly sound to search town College and of Viewpoint. ing and disproving than in dis­ as persistently as Mr. Maloney covery and expression. Of course the articles are un­ does for Christian and other moral equal in length and in quality. meanings, for such orthodox prac­ As in the case of Mr. Overbeck's One might wish Mr. Overbeck's tices as meditation, mental prayer, work on Strauss, one strongly sus­ interesting articles were more eco­ and mystical union with God. And pects the presence of more prim­ nomically stated, with fewer repe­ whether Gawain is altruistic or itive assumptions than those which titions. On the other hand, his selfish is not as central to the deck the page. For example, when 3000 10th STREET, NORTH conclusion may move some readers work as he believes. The wonder Mr. Kelley tells us that the con­ ARLINGTON, VIRGINIA to wish he had lengthened it. There of Sir Gawain is that he survives, servative outlook among members is an old quarrel between artists however blemished, two crucial hu­ of the Spanish Opus Dei seems to and their historians, but it is dis­ man battles, one in the field, the stem less from membership in the concerting to be told at the end other in the bedroom. And the gift Institute than from membership of an essay a principle assumed at of immortality for these successes, in a Church "whose members can the beginning, that "the genius of far from being the "abandonment still recall the discriminations of the artist can never be understood of the rational conviction that he the liberal Third Republic," we or appreciated unless the genius must die," is simply the honest re­ may well be in the presence of a of the theoretician is known also." ward for so great an achievement. fact about some Spanish intellec­ tuals, but other members of that Church may feel, once again, that conservatism and Catholicism are being identified. So at least it will THE BELL TELEPHONE COMPANIES seem to some American Catholics, and to the liberal Spanish intel­ SALUTE: PRESLEY SHEPPARD, JR. lectuals. Burckhard Model Presley Sheppard, Jr. (B.S.E.E., 1958), is responsible for of nearly 600 people in the district_ And from there he Mr. Wiseman's piece on Burck­ the performance of 285 telephone people. Presley is assist­ moved to the staff of the General Traffic Manager, the last hard is a model of its kind_ He ant District Traffic Superintendent with Southwestern Bell step before his latest promotion. writes well, cites with authority, in Dallas. Presley Sheppard, Jr., and other young engineers like nicely limtts his subject. If one Even on his first assignment, Presley had considerable him in Bell Telephone Companies across the country help can criticize the article, it is for responsibility_ He was put in charge of much of the training bring the finest communications service in the world to the being almost too craftsmanlike, too professional. One wonders what for a Chief Operators Group. He also scheduled the work homes and businesses of a growing America. kind of articles Mr. Wiseman might write if he placed Burckhard's esthetic norms alongside those of, BELL TELEPHONE COMPANIES say, James Joyce, where individ­ ualism in art is not part of the theory of history, but part of the .' ...... work of art itself. But these are .' small caveats and finally unim­ .. ; .. TELEPHONE .MAN-OF~ THE-MONTH. • ". I ' portant. Mr. Wiseman's work shows high promise. These critical remarks should ··f not be taken as essentially critical :,,:,..... of Viewpoint which produces schol­ arly, articulate articles of a very high order among American col­ lege students. Undergraduate writ­ ing offering itself as research and criticism should be judged by the ,'" .... ,. ':-, same standards. Actually there was little choice in the present is­ sue, for the articles are, with the ,-:.,:: exception of Mr_ Maloney's, his­ torical papers. Perhaps this is not .. a bad thing at Georgetown College, but this reviewer vainly hoped for some articles dealing with "new and original approaches to life's problems," even to life's mysteries. • Where are the Georgetown writ­ ers able and willing to deal with , the saint and Christian, poet and critic, composer and artist, philoso­ pher and theologian in a general way? Where are the writers able to deal with the perennial themes of western civilization, with the conflicts between the poet and phi­ losopher, between the person and society, between the new psycholo­ gy and the old, between the God of the saints and the God of the philosophers? Are the articles re­ viewed above so closely tied to cer­ tain works and sources, and to certain traditions of established scholarship, that they only rarely • transcend the texts? At the risk of some misunder­ standing, this reviewer hopes the editors of this remarkable under­ graduate journal will encourage in ... the future the fallible statement of personal, as well as scholarly, preference - even some wrong­ • headed philosophizing and some too passionate attachments to certain poetic or political ideals. I look forward to a Viewpoint with more unconventional essays, more ex­ pressions of personal insight and perhaps more irreverence toward the reigning scholars. Pflge. T~n r.B E . H o,~,~ Th~rsday, De~mber 13, 1962 I

Violet Attack Halts Hoyas .I, I, ,.~ ,: For Second'Loss Of Year I', A 6'4" junior from Sche­ '/ nectady, N. Y., named Barry Kramer proved to be too much ~~-\SPORTS for the Hoyas as he pumped "~ in 42 points and led the NYU ~-~~ Violets to an 85-65 win in Friday The Christmas season will be a busy one for the Hoya I night. The Georgetown squad ap­ Cagers as they face more of the heavy end of the schedule , peared to be suffering from a case '" of "Garden jitters" as shot after before meeting the less awesome opponents. Before these "',\ shot missed the mark and the Vio­ pages again appear the squad will play George Washington, lets swept the rebounds off the Rutgers, Army, The Motor City Tourney, George Washing­ boards. In the first half NYU jumped off ton again, and American U. to an early lead as the Hoyas just The Colonials come to McDonough tonight minus the great Jon .b couldn't find the mark. Kramer Feldman, but in his place come a group of fine sophs along with re­ drew first blood but Lopata came turning lettermen Joe Adamitis (14.4 p.p.g.) and Mike Checkan (13.4). ;: right back to tie the score at 2 Coach Bill Reinhart is counting on newcomers Kenny Legins (22.8), all. This was the only tie of the Mark Clark (20.4), and Phil Aruscavage (18.6) to give his team • evening as the Violets then pulled added scoring punch as he continues to rely on a fast-breaking offense ahead to a 22-12 lead at the end BUD FOR TWO O'Donnell scores against as Lopata and a man-to-man defense which occasionally shifts to a zone. It is of ten minutes. At this point the and Mazelin look on. interesting to note that the back of their basketball brochure bears Hoyas shifted to a zone defense a picture of last year's four-overtime Hoya frosh-GW game and the but this didn't contain the Violets. caption reads: "Proof that three good men are better than five any Scoring by Jim Christy, Jim Barry, day ..." Joe Franz, and Bud O'Donnell kept GU OvercolTIes Maryland The next stop is New Brunswick, N. J., where the Hoyas take the Hoyas in the game but couldn't on the Scarlet Knights of Rutgers. Coach Don White is at the helm make up the difference as the half until a new coach can be signed for the 1963-64 season. His biggest ended with NYU leading 42-28, As Outside Shooting Hits man is 6-5 Don Petersen and his other scorers are Vince Ciaglia and with Kramer claiming 20 points Clif Petersen. The last two frosh squads were mediocre thus giving thus far. The first leg of the battle for the Washington area Big White a team that is in trouble again this year, with fair scoring The Violets cooled down briefly Three championship went to the last and little or no rebounding. in the beginning of the second week as they defeated Maryland, 79-70. Paced by the brilliant Army is next on the agenda and with a team that is short on half as the Hoyas held them score­ experience but may be somewhat long on talent. The loss of record less for over three minutes. Dur­ second half shooting of junior co-captain Jim Christy, they scorer Stu Sherard will be deeply felt as coach George Hunter's .J ing this lull Barry and Christy brushed aside a modified zone set up by Maryland in an starting lineup will have only one of the three returning lettermen, tossed in six points and brought attempt to keep the Hoya forwards outside. Christy dumped center-captain Bob Foley. the game to 42-33, the closest it Other probable starters are guards Frank Lambert and Joe would be for the rest of the eve­ in 17 in the second half, most­ Kosciusko and forward Al Treado and Charles Hutchison. Kosciusko ning. Then Kramer, Neil O'Neil, ly from outside or deep in the time out to regroup. Buddy O'Don­ and Hutchinson are expected to be the big guns in what looks like " Gene Fish, and Steve Jordan came corner, to finish the night nell was inserted at this stage and a good defensive squad. The biggest job for the Hoyas may come in up with a scoring barrage and by sparked a rally by scoring on two the form of the Army psychological attack for the cheering section, .. the time Georgetown scored again with a game high 26 points. drives and setting up two other which has been known to rattle many teams in the past. The best they were behind by 21. From The game was close all the scores. Joe Mazelin, playing con­ defense against this is a strong Hoya cheering section to counter the there on out it was a matter of way and midway through the sistently fine basketball, hit a Cadets' attack. keeping the gap as narrow as pos­ jumper to climax the rally with Three days after Christmas the Hoyas travel to Detroit to face sible as Coach O'Keefe tried vari­ first half the Terps, led by senior the Hoyas ahead 23-22. The re­ guard Bob Eicher, broke a 12-12 some of the best competition in the Midwest. The University of ous combinations in hopes of cut­ mainder of the half was a see-saw Detroit is hosting the annual Motor City Tournament and it should ting the Violet accuracy. The high tie and raced out to a 22-13 ad­ battle which saw O'Donnell bank vantage before the Hoyas called be a fine one this year. The Titans are in the process of rebuilding point of the second half came as in a hook seconds before the buzzer after the graduation of three-time All-American Dave DeBusschere, " Kramer set a new scoring record to give Georgetown a 38-37 lead and they have a top-flight crew of sophomores to help them. Leading by sinking both halves of a one­ to win 85-65. It appeared that at the half. the way will be Billy Downs, who joins Al Cech (13.4) in the back­ and-one- with 63 seconds left to NYU Coach Lou Rossini was not Maryland stormed back in the court, and ex-Hoya Walt Connolly who would like nothing better than play. The 42 points by Kramer going to let the Hoyas forget that a good day against the Hilltop. broke the old record of 40 set by just two years ago they beat him second half and opened up a two Cal Ramsey in 1959. Kramer then 92-62 and ruined his chances for point advantage. Jim Barry, Western Michigan has a real scoring threat in Manny Newsome came out as the Violets went on an NIT bid. hounded all night by the over­ (24.0) and Bill Street (15.2). The Broncos have some good, tall sophs shifted Maryland zone, evened the too, and could be plenty of trouble if lack of depth doesn't hurt them. count at 44-44; then Joe Franz in­ DePaul is the big favorite in the tournament, having been ranked tercepted a pass and drove for a 20th in the nation by such pUblications as Sports Illustrated. The big Maaricel..Nee Honored score. The Hoyas were never gun is 6'5" M. C. Thompson (16.3) who is an outstanding rebounder. ., headed again. Eicher and Connie At center will be 6'9" Bill Debes. The backcourt features a talented Carpenter kept the Terps close soph named Jim MUrphy who averaged 24.7 last year with the frosh. By 'Sporls Illuslraled' with a combination of driving lay­ The Blue Demons will be tough. Maurice L. Nee, Class of ups and fade-away jumpers until The Hoyas start off the New Year with a game against Loyola of Baltimore. The Greyhounds are a small independent team-so 4 (Continued on Page 12) '38, was named to the Sports small in fact that they are not covered by the Official NCAA Record Illustrated Silver Anniversary Book. Their main problem is with height and they rely principally .... All-American Team last Mon­ on speed and the fast break. The game is usually quite colorful, last Navy Tops Frosh year's contest being marked by some 67 fouls. day. Nee, who starred as de­ The next contest of the new year will be a tougher one as fensive end in the hey-day of American University hosts the Hoyas here in the coliseum. Coach Hoya football, joins such notables In Final Seconds Jim Williams will have a strong squad this year headed by 6'3" as Supreme Court Associate Jus· After opening their 1962-63 Al Dillard, 6'4" Jim Shickora, and 6'0" Ron Rawlins. Added to this • tice Byron White and Yale quar· will be five sophs who averaged in double figures as frosh. Dillard terback Clinton Frank, the 1938 basketball season with two is the big man who pulled down 16 points and 21 rebounds per game Heisman Trophy winner. Members victories, the Hoya frosh last year. If Williams can come up with a couple of good backcourt of the squad were picked on the traveled to Annapolis to meet sophs, the Eagles will be as tough as they were last year. basis of their achievements in col· lege and their accomplishments in the Navy plebes. The plebes the 25 years since the finish of sank the young basketballers their collegiate football. by eking out a 73-72 victory. As star end on the 1937 squad, Nee is best remembered for the MAURICE L. NEE Georgetown broke on top quick­ punt he blocked in the Maryland ly, as they did in their triumphs game November 21, 1936. With nomics Department of the Texaco over Richmond and Maryland, by Georgetown trailing 6·0 late in the Company. He became Director of ramming home 14 fast Ifoints in game, Nee broke through, blocked the Budget in 1960 and was pro· the first three and a half minutes. a punt attempt, scooped it up, and moted to the post of Secretary last The boys then. lost their hot hands raced 12 yards for the score. year. and could only manage to hit the Georgetown won 7·6. Nee was also Nee resides with his wife Mary twine four more times. As both an outstanding golfer in his col· Louise and his six children in Rye, teams left the floor for half-time lege days. New York. His daughter, Frances, intermission the score was 30-22 After graduation,' Nee entered graduated from the Institute of in favor of the plebes. the Naval Reserve, and saw active Languages and Linguistics in 1961. As the second half began, plebe duty in both China and India. He Sixty college presidents were John Radcliffe threatened to make was awarded the Bronze Star and each asked to nominate a single the game a runaway. He enlarged the White Cloud and Banner of football star who displayed leader· the gap to 14 points by tossing in the Republic of China. He resigned ship in and after his athletic ca· five baskets. The Hoyas didn't reer. From the sixty, twelve his commission in March, 1946, as Sports count themselves out yet, because a Lieutenant (j.g.). judges selected "the 26 Illustrated Jim Brown got Georgetown back who have most distinguished them· From 1954 to 1956, he was Con· in the game with some of his noted sultant on Distribution for the Or· selves in their fields and who have sharpshooting. B a eke 0 u r t ace ganization of European Economic best represented 'the human values Brown, like Navy's Radcliffe, Cooperation, serving in 14 nations. in which athletics and education scored five quick baskets. With Nee resigned in 1956 and accepted are joined.' " Each winner received BIG SCORE ... Maurice Nee makes his famous save against Mary­ a position in the Finance and Eco· a silver goalpost from Time, Inc. (Continued on Page 2) land in 1937 game. Thursday, December 13, 1962 THE:HOYA Page- Eleven 47 'TealRs..Join post­ C625641 Good Rebounding sary. Any team that forfeits two , marked),y Dec, 26, 1962-aod received byttffl 4. BB98060 The game remained close for the games is dropped from the league. judg';ls !"P lat!'lf than Defember 31, 19~2. - , first few minutes of the third pe­ Otherwise, intercollegiate rules are 5. C479646 riod, but then the ball handling followed. If you hold a consolation prize number, you win and rebounding of the Hoya frosh The program is split up into a 4-speed Portable Hi-Fi Stereo Set, "The Waltz" by began to tUrn the tide. Strong play three leagues, each with a differ­ RCA Victor. Or, you may still win a Tempest! (See underneath by John Gibbons -and ent level of skill and finesse. The CONSOLATION fastest league is the AAA league, official claiming rules on reverse of your license Owen Gillen coupled with the play­ plate, and observe claiming dates given above.) PRIZE NUMBERS! while most frosh squads demon­ making and shooting of Brown, strate their wares in the slower 1. 8258729 6. C233412 Philbin, and Ed Solano enabled the A league. Hoyas to build an ever-mounting The intense interest in basket­ 2. C065695 7. C375972 lead until the first team was re­ ball at Georgetown is clearly in­ • 3. A014505 8. B398344 moved with minutes left in the dicated by-· 'the hearty response to game. the intramural program. There are 4. C403887 9. A487788 Gillen was high scorer for the forty-seven tea m s competing, twenty-one of them in the AA frosh with 23 points. Gibbons con­ 5. C001596 10. A121605 league. Only eight teams have con­ tributed 17 points and was strong sidered themselves of AAA caliber. off the boards. Brown and Philbin Qualified Hoya students referee each tossed in 12, and Solano had the games and receive compensa­ 8 points before running into foul tion supplied by the entrance fee • bMG PRIX 50 trouble in the second half. submitted by the respective teams. Sweepstakes for colleges only Hoya Varsity Marksmen More than 50 times the chance to win than if open to the general public. Bow To Terps~ GW~ W &. L • 45 Tempests 10 go! by Herb Gstalder Get set for the next lap ... 10 more Tempests and The Georgetown rifle team fired in two matches this 15 more consolation prizes! Pick up an entry blank week, losing the first match by one point and the second to where you buy cigarettes. Enter now-enter often. an excellent Maryland squad. In the first match Georgetown Any entry received by January 18th can win one of was the host to George Washington University and Wash­ the 45 Tempests still to go! Of course, entries you've already submitted are still in the running! ington and Lee on Tuesday. The result of this match was a score that could happen only once in a lifetime: George Washington 1363, Washing- EXCLUSIVE FOR THE GIRLS! ton and Lee 1362, and George- was the high man for Georgetown If you win a Tempest you may town 1361. Jerry Nice was the with a score of 280. choose instead a thrilling ex­ high man for the Hoyas firing On January 4 the rifle team, pense·paid 2·week Holiday in 275 out of a possible 300. Each coached by Sergeant John Young, Europe-for two! Plus $500 travels to Richmond in hopes of in cash! man fires 30 rounds: 10 from bettering its 0-3 record. The the prone position, 10 from the team is suffering from inexperience kneeling .position, and 10 from the this year, with only three men re­ standing position. turning out of the ten on the team Get with the winners ••• On Wednesday the team trav­ last year. The team is composed elled to the University of Maryland mostly of sophomores and fresh­ far ahead in smoking satisfaction I to fire against one of the top teams men, who are building towards a in the area. Maryland racked up team that they hope will be as SEE THE PONTIAC TEMPEST AT YOUR NEARBY PONTIAC DEALER! the tremendous score of 1445 to good as last year's team that had the Hoyas' 1337. John Feldmann an 8-7 record.

Where the CoDe ge Crowds Meet Pqrt of Youi'" Social Curriculum the SPEAKEASY CASINO ROY AI. • RClgti",e Piano - licorice Stick NightlV Sonio - Peanuts NO COVER ).ftNUlUM OR ADMISSION CHARGE: CO-EDS WELCOME 14th and H Streets, N.W. Below The Cosino Royal ~~~~_;:....·:;:::,.;:;;~":.t'" ___ I~U='d'e~~~~~~';;$:· ,>?~~c:; ....-;;;:.o;;;:.;;':'~';::':'~~~""')000b00:4=JT I Page Twelve rHE SOYA Thursday, December 13; 1962 ,- Mary/and Frosh Undaunted Faculty Cagers Christy Selected (Continued from Page 10) (Continued from Page 10) .1, Christy began his scoring spree of Owen Gillen and John Gibbons grabbing the rebounds, the frosh .) Ready -To' Try New Sport Athlete of Week five jumpers and two layups in This week's WGTB Athlete of tied the score at 72 apiece. eight minutes. A new tradition has come to Hilltop sports in the form the Week is Jim Christy, the jun­ With 18 seconds remaining in ior co-captain of the Hoya basket­ Barry fouled out on a couple of the game, the Hoyas committed of challenge contests between the faculty and students. The a foul. Navy sank the charity ball team, for his 26 point perform­ questionable calls, with 3:20 to go; throw to take the lead by one. The initial encounter came at the pep rally where the faculty ance against the Maryland Terps he was soon followed by Mary­ land's senior captain, Jerry Green­ frosh desperately tried to get off ~il members took to the court in answer to a challenge from at McDonough Gymnasium on De­ one more shot before the final buz­ span. Georgetown went into a the students. Lack of experience hurt the "Frisky Few" cember 4. Maryland was deter­ zer but it was blocked. The frosh .~'! of the faculty and they fell 64-38 before an aggressive mined to stop the drives of the semi-freeze, and the game soon went down to defeat for the first Hoyas by resorting to a tight zone degenerated into a foul shooting time, 73-72. student squad. contest, with Eicher cashing the Dave Philbin, a fine performer Before we play ball defense, but failed to stop the This temporary set-back final charity toss as the crowd filed in his first two outings, was out of To show you we're men. great outside shooting of Christy, did not discourage the "Fris­ who hit consistently from the out after the final buzzer. action with a foot injury. He ex- - The sun shines eternal pected to return to the line-tip .,\ corners when the pressure was on. ky Few" as they immediately And then's when we'll wait If this game can be taken as any after the Christmas holidays. It was in the final minutes of play indication of things to come in area began planning for another After equinox vernal John Gibbons con t l' i but e d -ii contest. After much delibera- By yon Kehoe gate. that Christy unleashed his most competition, the Hoyas must be another fine .performance by lead­ important scoring spree, hitting considered a power to be reckoned tion it was decided that basketball ing the frosh with 18 points. Owen Rev. E. Paul Betowski, S.J. two jump shots which put the with. George Washington had bet­ Gillen, Jim Brown and Ed Solano is a lost cause but a softball game Coach & Trainer-The Frisky Few game out of reach. ter look to the west this year. also turned in a fine game. would be ideal, since it will give the John V. Quinn faculty more time to practice. A Ass't. Coach & Trainer­ formal challenge to the students The Frisky Few was drawn up and it reads as fol­ lows: "We're beaten-unbowerJ." Say the Frisky Five Heads high and proud CONTACTS 'I (More dead than alive.) !";.=:--~al~= Undaunted though losing ..... co.l. '1'_, ... b ... ye_ 8)0" .... (How lucky you were!) $85 ..rloeJ.... _. ina, In a sport of onr choosing :re- .-.....y. We hope you'll concur. TI",. '''Y'''."ts-Ho EIdrv Cost The game is called softball For FilII D.",;/. And we hope you'll agree To cross bats with us-all CALL CO. 1·1411 On the diamond in the lea. SCOT OPTICAL CO. The time now's not right ..... ST. a CDl.UIIIIA u. LW. For a brush on the heath: The sun is not bright, The ground frozen beneath. So let's wait for old Sol To shine once again

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