GEORGETOWN UNIVERSITY, WASHINGTON, D.C. Thursday, September 30, 1971 Vol. LV.~ No.5 v-p Kelly Clarifies Dixon Investigation by Art Wheeler nature, however, Kelly stated that Questions on the Dixon affair, the report would probably never be modification of the Task Force on made public. the Quality of Student Life, fund· The senators then questioned ing of a poll·watching campaign, Kelly on the subject of restitution sponsoring of an International Stu' of student funds misappropriated dent Conference and the adoption by Dixon. Kelly insisted that, even of election procedures highlighted allowing for the considerable sums Sunday 'night's student senate meet· misspent by Dixon, the student ing. government still overspent its )Jud­ get. Accordingly, he said, restitu­ James P. Kelly, vice·president , tion is not in order, except in for administrative affairs, and the , .... .-~: person in charge of handling the particular cases where misappropri­ Dixon case, was at the meeting to ation has forestalled capital pro­ / answer questions. Former Student jects. ~ Activities Director Dixon is cur­ In other news, several modifica­ / JOHN KERRY rently under investigation by the tions were added to a proposal for a 1 US attorney's office for the alleged Task Force on the Quality of The University Task Force appointed to study campus radio station Student Life which will be convey­ '" War Activists misappropriation of $83,000, a WGTB-FM completed an eight week study of the station on Monday. substantial portion of which came ed directly to the Board of The report strongly recommended that the beleaguered station be from the student government bud­ Directors, bypassing University returned to the air as soon as possible. (Photo by Pat Early) get. President R. J. Henle, SJ. Blame Disunity When asked why the invest­ Student vice-president Nancy Kent igation report on the Dixon affair stated that this approach was was not made public, Kelly re­ necessary because of a failure to Task Force Advocates On Asian Ills sponded by differentiating between reach agreement with the President an audit report and an investigatory on the composition and nature of by Daniel Hogan report. the committee. Quick Return jor 'G TB From front center of George­ He said that since an investiga­ The student government had town's Gaston Hall came an intelli­ tory report flows out of an refused to nominate representatives Citing the campus radio station's Fr. Henle suspended the gent and poignant appeal Monday allegation of misconduct, it relies to the Task Force, thus blocking "responsibility to the community", station's operations on July 15, night for an end to the war in much more heavily on informal effective organization. the University Task Force following a period of technical Southeast Asia. The plea was personal interviews than an audit It has, however, offered to appointed to study WGTB-FM has difficulties compounded by critic­ delivered as the culmination of a report does. Accordingly, as Kelly nominate students if the modifica­ "strongly recommended" to Uni­ ism of the station's student manage­ day's activities at Georgetown by explained, "We would impair our tions are accepted by the Board of versity President R. J. Henle, S.J., ment from inside and outside the John Kerry, leading spokesman for ability to carry out an investigation Directors. that the station be returned to the station. the nationally organized Vietnam if we carried it out in such a way The basic modifications are that air as quickly as possible. Reasons cited by the committee Veterans Against the War. that certain people could be identi­ the express purpose of the Task The Task Force, chaired by in calling for a return of the station Kerry's group was the first of its fied as a source of information." Force be advisory, not legislative; Director of Public Relations Arthur included disapproval by the Federal kind to add unity and public Kelly stressed that the repre­ that its composition be divulged V. Ciervo, yesterday submitted its Communications Commission of awareness to the strength of the sentatives of the attorney's office prior to nominations and that 24 recommendations to Fr. Henle. The any extended periods of in opera­ convictions of many disenchanted and the bonding company agreed hour parietals be implemented, if 11 member group studied the tion and student interest in the soldiers in Vietnam. The Vietnam that the report was highly compe­ the majority agrees, on entirely long-troubled station for more than station's return. Veterans were also responsible for tent and fair. Due to its private (Continued on Page 9) eight weeks. the GI march and subsequent Two problems juggled by the encampment in Washington during committee are the need to maintain April of last year to protest US J hell D -nner control of the station by the involvement in Southeast Asia. 0 n arro I University President and Board of Preceding Kerry's speech the Directors, holders of the FCC Georgetown University Lecture station license, while at the same Fund, sponsors of the event, time satisfying students that the presented Skip Roberts, a GU Hagerty Alllong Award Recipients station is a student activity. graduate now with the US Marines The apparent legal need for and recently returned from Viet- by Bernadette Savard lives and accomplishments, have total number of awards given to control of the station by the nam. Mrs. Valerie Cushner, whose News Editor reflected credit on the University. date to 135. One recipient is Dr. President and Directors will lead to husband has been a prisoner of war The Georgetown Alumni Club of For the third consecutive year, Harry J. Connolly of Baltimore, the appointment of a professional in Vietnam for three and a half Boston will host the 20th Annual the Patrick Healy Award will also Md. Dr. Connolly received his BS to direct the station if the report is years, was also introduced. John Carroll Awards Dinner in be presented at this Dinner to a from Georgetown in 1934 and accepted. Mrs. Cushner very quietly and Boston on Sat. Oct. 2 at the non-alumnus member of the completed his MD in 1938. Begin­ If Fr. Henle decides in favor of effectively told of the tragedy of Sheraton-Plaza Hotel. Georgetown community. ning his practice during World War the station, the report recommends being caught in the political web Traditionally, the John Carroll The John Can'oll Award is II, Dr. Connolly participated in that the station be operated on a which traps both the families of Award is presented at this dinner named for Archbishop John Car­ both the North African and temporary basis until such time as prisoners and the prisoners them- by the Georgetown University roll, founder of the University and Normandy landings. Following the the committee's other recom­ selves. She spoke of being a Alumni Association to alumni or the first bishop of the Roman war, Dr. Connolly took up private mendations are implemented. (Continued on Page 10) alumnae who, by example of their Catholic Church in the United practice in Baltimore. He is the The recommendations include: States_ The Carroll Award is the vice-president of the Georgetown highest honor a Georgetown gradu­ Alumni Association and a member • Organizational changes: if the Task Plan's design is adopted, the ate can receive from his fellow of the Board of Governors. In station would be governed by a alumni. addition, Dr. Connolly is a coun­ four-member board of directors, The Patrick Healy Award is selor to University President R.J. including a professional station named for the Rev. Patrick F. Henle, SJ. manager. The manager would be Healy, SJ, the first black to head a As a player and coach John nominated by a special committee, university. Similarly, this award is L. "Jack" Hagerty of Washington, with final appointment by Fr. the highest honor that can be DC, led Georgetown to the "most Henle and the student directors. conferred upon a non-alumni memorable hours" of Georgetown's Under the projected reorganization, member of the University com­ football history. As captain of the munity. 1925 Blue and Gray team, Hagerty (Continued on Page 12) Recipients of the Carroll and helped to achieve a 7-1 record Healy Awards are nominated by culminating in the "All-East" title. fellow alumni on the basis of the After six years of pro football with INSIDE following standards: a nominee the , Hagerty must have completed at least one returned to Georgetown as head "Walk-in" Draft Counseling semester in any of Georgetown's football coach from 1932-1948. Opens in University schools and must have manifested a During this period, Georgetown Center ...... p.3 consistent interest in Georgetown won 23 consecutive games ending Join the Cyclist by way of service and support; he with a trip to the Orange Bowl. Movement! . p. 11 "'" ,it must have reflected credit on the From 1949-1969, Hagerty acted as Social Events Commission ,.~,;, ~J; . l~~ • ~ ... University by distinguished service athletic director for the University. Created by Unanimous to Georgetown, his community, A 1954 graduate of the George­ Senate Resolution . . .. p. 2 r.: ..j .~:~I':~" \ }it.·, business, profession, vocation or town School of Dentistry, Dr. "You've Come A Long ~'I !f .I~~ .f" ~ government and must be an indivi­ Henry J. Heim of Bethesda, Md. Way," A-V ...... " p. 9 A lighthearted John Carroll looks down upon Healy Circle. The 20th dual of exemplary qualities in his was the national chairman of GU Master Plan Affects annual John Carroll Awards Dinner is being held in Boston Saturday personal life. Georgetown's alumni fund drive for Athletic Facilities '" .p. 14 night, at which time the GU Alumni Association will present a total of Six John Carroll Awards will be 1970-71. Joining the faculty of the seven awards. (Photo by Pat Early) presented on Saturday, bringing the (Continued on Page 8) Thursday, September 30, 1971 Page Two THE HOYA 'Symbolic Significance' BSA Contributes to Scholarship Fund 1".. by Larry Peters far away, physically and p,sycho- town as ~cho~ars. The Program problems which might arise. The Black Student Alliance of logically from Georgetown. serves all mmorIty groups; however, Regarding prospective Scholars, Georgetown University recently Cogd~ll feels that t~e ~S~:s thre,:-fourths of the scholar~hip Cogdell stated that the Program contributed $1,375.85 to the Com­ contribution has "symbohc slgmfl- candidates come from the Washmg­ looks for "quality rather than munity Scholars Program. The cance" because it indicates that ton area. quantity." He hopes to "help amount, which will be used over a "the black students are solidly In addition to the Black Student students become aware of their fine four year period, will be overseen behind the University in its com- Alliance, other contributors to the qualities-historically and con­ by Roy Cogdell, director of student mitment to make a quality higher Program are members of the temporaneously. And to develop a community programs. education available to qualified Georgetown faculty and administra­ level of awareness in them that According to Conan Louis, residents of Washington without tion, the Jesuit Community, the would enable them to detect the chairman of the BSA, the money respect to their socio-economic Marriott Company and the Ben­ tendency on the part of the whites was raised "to give black people the conditions." He believes that "the jamin Banneker Fund. The scholar­ to project their (the whites') opportunity to get the type of Black Student Alliance is worthy of ships are "financial packages" inadequacies and weaknesses upon education Georgetown offers." By its existence particularly with which are made from contributions, the blacks." The blacks, according sponsoring a dance last semester, respect to the myriad of construc- the College Work-Study Program, to Cogdell, must stop their ten­ the Alliance was not only able to tive activities it has initiated and the National Defense Student Loan, dency to accept these weaknesses as raise funds, but also to bring "black sponsored during its short but the Educational Opportunity Grant their own. CONAN LOUIS people in the DC area to the productive years of existence." and the Georgetown University University, since most blacks live BSA officials hope to surpass Grant. last year's figure by $700 through To be eligible as a Community sponsorship of two dances and Scholar, candidates must be from Events Committee Born, other social functions this year. low income families and belong to a Besides helping more blacks to disadvantaged minority group. The '':'11 attend Georgetown, the BSA also prospective students are required to gives students "somewhere to talk have a high school diploma or its Kenyon First Director to other blacks about their situa- equivalent. They must also demon­ tion at the University and in the strate a high degree of motivation by William Campbell the position of director. Working world," said Louis. The Alliance through an academically pleasing A Social Events Commission was under Kenyon as commissioners also intends to publish a booklet on high school record, satisfactory established Sunday night by unani­ will be: Steve Worth (Coli. '74), the life of the black student at SAT scores or other accomplish­ mous vote of the student senate, Rich Berlanti (ColI. '73), J. Garvin Georgetown which will be used for ments. Finally, a reasonable degree settling the problem of student Walsh (Coil. '72), Peter Gordon recruiting. of success at Georgetown must be entertainment which has been (Coil. '74) and Jill Conlon (CoIl. The Community Scholars Prog- apparent in each individual. pending for nearly two years. '74). ram was introduced by a "group of Scholars have other advantages The Commission is an outgrowth The first meeting of the Com­ dedicated administrators, faculty in addition to financial aid. A of the Student Entertainment Sub­ mission is expected to be held this members, teachers and students at six-week pre-college summer pro­ scription which raised $11,235. week, when it will define its Georgetown who saw a need for gram is conducted to orient stu­ Funds were collected through activities and begin to draw up a Georgetown to become involved dents to college life. Three scholars registration, where the $5 fee could social events calendar for October. with the inner city," Cogdell noted. from the senior class will also help be added directly to the Univer­ The Special Events Commission will The first Community Scholars came monitor the social as well as the sity's student registration receipt. also begin to look ahead toward the to the University through the academic aspects of the Program. Discount cards were issued last second semester, forming several Program in 1968. Forty-three stu- They will set up study schedules week in the student center to all subcommittees, each of which, it is ROY COGDELL dents are now attending George- and advise students about any those who paid at registration and expected, will be directed by a may still be purchased. commissioner. Acting as an autonomous body, ,...... ------, the newly-created Commission will Placement Office Warns Seniors: be budgeted from the SES funds and from the proceeds of any future sale of discount cards. Former President of the Quad Employment Opportunities Lagging Mark Kenyon (Coli. '74) will hold by Pam Tighe Mrs. Guinane helped to found City Bank of New York, RCA and WRITING A PAPER "If you want a job this year, IBM. Other companies that have the Placement Office in the early you'd better get on the beam," says been interviewing at Georgetown 1950's, served as its first director, Let us help. Name the subject and we will write a paper to your Mrs. Estill Guinane, director of for many years, however, such as and remains in that position to the length and specification. placement. She is particularly en­ Goodyear, will not be returning. present. She was also registrar at Educational Research Associates couraging all seniors to come into Georgetown for five years prior to after 5 PM weekdays. Any time on National Security Administra­ weekends. 544-8781 the University Placement Office at tion and Foreign Service exam her appointment as Placement Of­ 1316 36th Street NW as early as applications are available in the fice director. possible to discuss their career Placement Office as a service to r·------., plans. students. The State Department is The Placement Office assists sending representatives on Dec. 4 to about 400 seniors each year in discuss careers in the Foreign finding post-graduate employment. Service while several accounting Because of the economic slump, firms are offering intern programs they were able to place only 29 per to qualified accounting majors. cent of the students that came to see them last year, down from Many direct referrals are also nearly 50 per cent in previous years handled through the office. These when the economy was stronger. are from companies in search of FOR EVERYONE IN YOUR PARTY Only about 66 companies have qualified individuals for a particular WITH THISAD arranged to come to Georgetown job. Several hundred of these this year to interview seniors as referrals are handled each year. ALL THE BEER YOU CAN DRINK* prospective employees. Again due Undergraduates may receive help PLUS to the lagging economy, this in looking for part-time or full-time number is down from approximate­ temporary jobs. Between 15 and 20 ALL THE SALAD YOU CAN MAKE ly 125 firms, a decrease of almost undergraduates each day are inter­ PWS 50 per cent. viewed and all are usually placed in The number of jobs offered by suitable jobs. j~ BONE-IN SIRLOIN STEAK those companies coming to George­ Georgetown alumni may also town is also drastically reduced. receive counseling and aid from the Although the Placement Office will University Placement Office. About be counseling as many seniors as in 75 graduates per month, who have previous years, the selection of job either been in the military or who ONLY~~~ $2 • 95 ~~i~AD opportunities is greatly curtailed. were laid-off from or dissatisfied REGULAR MENU PRICE $3.95 Among the returning companies are with their jobs, are aided by the Cliff's Notes are great any time you J. Walter Thompson, First National Placement Office. need help In literature! We recommend bUYing early so that EMERSONS, Ltd. you can use them as you study SPRING SEMESTER-ISRAEL unlimited steak dinners the aSSigned play or novel and as Oplln for Dinnllr 4:30 p.m. Mon. thru Sat.; Sun. from 3:30 p.m. a helpful review prior to exams. FOR HUMANITIES STUDENTS Get the Cliff's Notes you need WASHINGTON, D. £.-1511 K Street, N.W ...... 659-8170 today. You'll see why they're the Brandeis University/The Jacob Hiatt Institute Study (next to Statler-Hilton) preferred study aid of millions of BETHESDA, MD.-WildWOOd Shopping Center .... ___ 530-5300 students nationwide. (P.S.) If your centered in Jerusalem/February-June, 1972 (Old Georgetown Rd. & Democracy Blvd.) dealer's out of a title, he can get another fast With Cliff's "Hot Line". Limited to 30 Students SILVER SPRING, MD.-7820 Eastern Avenue __ .. _._.726-7300 Juniors, Seniors, and Grad students eligible (where Georgia and Eastern Aves. meet) FAIRFAX, VA.*-10900 Lee Highway (Rte. 50) ___ ._ .. 591-7780 F our courses/History, Literature, Archaeology, Bible (near Kamp Washington) ALEXANDRIA, VA.*-4349 Duke Street (Rte. 236) __ .. 370-5500 Earn 16 credits (1 Y2 miles East 01 Rte. 95) MT. VERNON, VA.*-8626 Richmond Hwy. (Rte. 1) 780-1111 ~/'v.,. Knowledge of Hebrew or Arabic preferred (Engleside Shopping Center-1 mile North of Fort Belvoir) I Cost: $2000/Tuition, room, board, round-trip travel ROSSLYN, VA. - 1515 Wilson Blvd ••.••••••.•••. 524-7070 -LC.liffS~ND.tSL .!. *In Virginia Price Includes First Pitcher Application deadline November 1st. WHAT DO YOU WEAR? ANYTHING! • GREAT ATMOSPHERE Nearly 200 titles-always available PRIVATE PARTIES ACCOMMODATED wherever books are SOld. THE HIATT INSTITUTE © General Restaurants, I A Publicly Owned Company Brandeis University Only $1 each Waltham, Massachusetts 02154 Thursday, September 30, 1971 THE HOYA Page Three GU Center Offers Counseling Frosh Inquisitive About Draft by Andy Lang position now and that will con­ here with a non-specific problem" Last week's Senate passage of tinue for another week and a half, he said. "A lot of people come in amendments to the Selective Serv­ or so. with a medical problem and don't <' 1 ice Act has caused a scramble "When I finally get settled," know if it's disqualifying or not. among Georgetown's freshmen for Daley continued, "and when I have Others come in with a classification draft counseling. The amendments all the information that is current, I which they don't think is justified will allow President Nixon to should be able to counsel people at and which their board just gave eliminate the "2-S" college defer­ times that are convenient to them" them. Then I have to tell them ment for the Class of 1975 but will in addition to "the open hours I about appeal procedures. A lot of retain deferments currently held by have here in the office when people come in with feelings that GU's upperclassmen. anybody can walk in. " aren't well-developed about their After publication of an article in Daley explained his duties in position regarding the draft and the Sept. 23 issue of The HOYA relation to student medical defer­ war. If so, I encourage them to explaining the nature of the new ments. "I do a little bit of screening read, to search themselves out, draft regulations, the number of myself," the counselor noted, "to because one thing I don't do is to freshmen seeking help at the try to find out what the nature of try to convince them." Georgetown University Center draft their problem is, give them the The counselor observed that Newly appointed University draft counselor John Daley has his work cut counseling service dramatically in­ name of a person who is probably a misconceptions regarding the re- out for him since the passage of the draft extension act. (Photo by Glenn creased. medical student who will then quirements for a conscientious Moses) "It would indicate to me," further screen them and decide if objector deferment are common observed draft counselor John their problem is of a serious enough among students. "Some of them," Daley, "that after this date I'll nature to submit to a doctor. The he observed, "believe that you have probably be swamped with a lot of doctor will examine and then, if he to totally disavow violence. Some U ndergrad AdDlissions freshmen. " feels they should be exempt from people believe that you have to be a The counseling program was the draft, he will write a letter to member of a particular religious initiated Sept.20 in the center, that effect and give the necessary sect. Some people believe that their Aided by Students located next to student government supporting materials." beliefs have to be religious, which offices in the basement of the "This isn't to be considered just they don't have to be. They have to Acting as "a liaison between student-interviewer fills out the Healy Building. The service is a draft evading thing," Daley be held with the same intensity that student government and the admis- regular interview form that an available to students from 7 to 10 emphasized, "but a lot of people orthodox religious objectors hold sions office," the Student Admis- admissions officer would complete. p.m. Monday through Thursday have a disqualifying condition their beliefs. Some of them believe sions Committee met Sept. 22 to This report then becomes part of and from 11 a.m. to 3 p.m. on which they're unsure about and that they have to believe in God organize volunteers and committees the candidate's file. Friday. many people have problems with and they don't. for the coming year. Rae Hoffmann (ColI. '73) heads Daley, a newcomer to the their own doctors. Some doctors "A conscientious objector," Meg Gehres (SFS '73), chairman the weekend committee which Georgetown campus, was trained at are just hostile." Daley continued, "has to object to of the committee, outlined areas sponsors Georgetown weekends for the Tempe Peace Center near Daley listed typical problems all war. If they can see clear where the student committee aids high school seniors who have Phoenix, Arizona. He pointed out encountered by the students he has distinction when they would and the admissions office in acquainting applied to the UniVersity. About that he is "in a rather unsettled counseled. "Most people come in would not fight under reasonable prospective students to George- five high school weekends are town, both on campus and in the scheduled for the year, with the ,.Ii!!::~!::~!::~~~~~~~~=~~===~=~====~=~=~ don'tassumptions, conform tothen the law."they clearly classroom. first planned for early decision Daley criticized the Selective The sixty-member student applicants in November or Decem- Service System's Counseling pro­ admissions committee is broken ber. Students are invited on the grams, which he termed inadequate. down into six committees which basis of interview recommendations BASS TACKS "The Selective Service law," he seek to cover every aspect of from admissions officers or on the claimed, "was designed to build an student life. The student interview basis of the candidate's "general army. Their interests thus manipu­ committee is headed by Steve Bono potential" to contribute to the lative, they've very often stepped (ColI. '73). As the name suggests, University community. on people's rights." the members of this committee are Students participating in the A full-time draft counseling available to interview prospective admissions committee weekends program, Daley concluded, is need­ students -..yhen ad~issions officers arrive Friday morning and are the ed "because of the vagueness, the are unavailable or If the students guests of the University until very many different interpretations tI:emselves request an interview Sunday at brunch. Students are and the complexity of the draft With a Georgetown student. After required to cover transportation law." interviewing candidates, the (Continued on Page 12) Ingmar Bergman's first English language motion picture starring Elliott Gould, Bibi Andersson, Max von SydOUJ t~The Touch" The Oxford-British tan leather with brass eyelets & rawhide laces

A large selection of shoes are chosen with the students in mind: high and low boots, Frank Bros. crushed leather loafers, desert boots, Topsiders and Bass tacks.

McFeorge Shetland Sweaters from Scotland Crew Neck $18. Austin-Hill & Corbin Slacks $19 to $35 Corduroys in Ten Shades $19 to $23

...... : I,. ..'

EsTABLISHED~ 1930 Georgetown University Shop Presented by ABC Pictures Corp. 36th & N Streets, N.W. • A 5ub5ld.ory of the Amertcon BroodcQ5ltng Componles Inc I Color \ D.slflbuled by C,nerama Releas'ng 337-8lO0 ~--"·':~--...c.l Store Hours: 9:30 to 6 Daily, including Saturdays. Free Parking on our Lot middle of our block on 36th Street. 7IeA/tt¢ .." ...... wo . ..- _._- THE HOYA. Thursday, September 30, 1971 Page Four

Editorials I Rostrum ,I WGTB: Both Sides Now Campus Ministry: What's It All About? I The chaplains of Georgetown University are now going station. Far from a case of the pot calling the Page two of the WGTB Committee under a new name, the Campus Ministry Team. Why the kettle black, however, we feel that construc­ Report states: "The possibility of using the switch? Madden has been appointed Director of this team. tive suggestions on the nature of campus radio station as a public relations tool also What's he trying to do? They've taken over three parlors journalism, particularly in this situation, are was considered. It was felt that the university on first Healy, there's a full-time chaplain now m the called for. could best benefit, m the area of public Walsh Area, and the chaplains of the Law Center and Any campus medium should take into relations, from a station that was managed Medical Center meet with the other campus ministers consideration the fact that even though and operated properly." Granted, the Univer­ every week. Why the increased personnel and activity? Is students are the raison d'etre of the Univer­ sity Board of Directors is the station licensee the University hiring more hands to polish the brass on the sity, the University community IS much for WGTB, but on paper at least, the sinking ship of religious life at Georgetown or are there wider, encompassing faculty, staff and admin­ administration also has ultimate control over grounds for hope in a more vital religious presence at the istration. As such, the campus media should The HOY A and the Voice. It does not, University? acknowledge this diversification and capitalize however, generally choose to assert this I've been on campus a little over a month now; I find on it to draw from and appeal to the broadest control, nor should it: as student activities, it some grounds for optimism, but over all, it's too early to possible audience. Thus, for 'GTB to play should be the job of students who are tell if what we are attempting to do will have any degree of nothing but hard rock would be much like particularly interested in he fields of journal­ success. The Campus Ministry Team is attempting to serve The HOY A and the Voice running nothing I ism and broadcasting to responsibly plan and the religious needs of the Georgetown University com­ but record reviews from week to week. run their own organizations, and any attempt munity and to facilitate this community's service of the Not to recogmze this IS to shortchange on the part of the University or anyone else larger society outside the University gates. We hope to do both the students and the Washington area of to use any campus media as a public relations this in at least these four ways: planning religious services; the vast cultural and intellectual wealth that is 1 tool is deplorable. assisting those of no particular confession to express their Georgetown's and any campus medium which By the same token, however, it would beliefs through action; acting as a liaison between different does not strive for that diversity is falling far appear that while insisting on student rights sections of the community and facilitating greater co­ short of its potential. But it should be the and opportunities, much of the staff of operation where needed and, to the best of our ability, students in these student activities who mold WGTB has been glossing over the Issue of criticizing and shaping University policy in the light of the their particular medium around the many and format for the station. Just as it is not the Gospel. role of the administration to impose its will diverse activities which they must endeavor to This means that In addition to the functions we on WGTB, so it is not the role of another present, not the administration or some normally aSSIgn to chaplains: counselling, conducting omnipotent "Board." student medium to impose its will on the religious services, retreats, etc., we are concerned with the corporate impact of religious sentiment and conviction on GU: University life and activity. Campus chaplains have, in the The Village Green past, spent most of their time working with and for The unveiling of the University's Master dents; and their projects, if completed, students; we intend to expand this to include all segments Plan earlier this month has touched off a would be available to everyone m the of the University. In the past, chaplains have operated considerable storm of dissent. Critizing it is Georgetown Community. almost exclusively within individual schools of the Univer­ becoming as fashionable as knocking the When the average denizen of Swift sity; we intend to view the University as one community architecture of the Kennedy Center. Potomac's Lovely Daughter is asked about (granted a complex one) and will work as a team with a The basic gripe seems to be the buildings expanSIOn, his reflexive reaction (quite certain amount of shared responsibility for all segments of are arbitrarily dropped onto the nearest understandably) is, "We need more our ministry (e.g., the Walsh Area chaplain might be patch of grass and that our land will be dorms." working on Some projects on the main campus or at the stuffed with buildings [or no particular Law Center). . Surely enough, we shall have our dorms. reason. Of course, this is a rash statement, Years ago, Georgetown reflected only the Roman But should we expect to keep our open and an untrue one when facts are Catholic tradition In its student body and in religious space at the same time? In our search for investigated. witness on campus; today, while remammg a Roman more we cannot go out into Case m point IS the Athletics Depart­ Lebensraum, Catholic institution with a predominantly Roman Catholic the Georgetown community; we should ment, which needs more greenery than any population, Georgetown IS, nevertheless, a pluralistic not. We cannot go skyward, thanks to other interest group in the school. Previous religious community and Campus Ministry recognizes and zoning laws (that's why New South, expanSIOns at Georgetown seem to have intends to serve the religious needs of every denomination. conceived as two attractive high-rise tow­ almost totally disregarded the athletics We VIew our pluralistic situation, not as a regrettable ers, IS today, well, New South). We can program. dilution of our former Roman Catholic atmosphere, but as only go down, underground, as we shall, Not so the Master Plan, which has big a positive advantage for vital religious life and growth. but that can only go so far. things in store for sports, on the order of a In the past, chaplains at Georgetown's undergraduate swimming pool and a multi-level fieldhouse Therefore we gIve up our patches of schools have been part of the University's Department of topped by a football field. grass. The Planners have given us a village Student Life. As of this year, chaplains form a separate To be sure, there will be an outcry over type campus, free of the automobile division of the University, operating under the Director of the planned athletic additions. GU does (which will go underground). Their ingenu­ Campus Ministry, a new post which I came to Georgetown hold a certain antipathy for sports. True ity is commendable. Their Plan, which of to fill. The University has given this post cabinet rank, enough, the athletics people can be course does possess weaknesses, IS com­ (Continued on Page 5) self-centered, narrow-minded primadonnas, mendable. ~ always looking only for their own benefit. Let's face it. We're an urban campus. At THE STAFF I But they are hardly different from any least we won't look like GW when it's News other faction among the faculty-or stu- through. Dennis Barbour, Mike Blatty, Tim Brown, Stuart Chessman, Eduardo Cue, Rob Fleishman, Scott Friedman, Daniel Hogan, Ed Hughes, Bob Kiley, Steve Kurdziel, Andy Lang, Patty Markert, Jim Nass, Cheryl O'Brien, Jack Pedak, Anne Peskoe, Larry Peters, Frank Scinto, Tom Sutula, Pam Tighe, Ray Trifari, Mary Wack, Art Wheeler Features William Campbell, Susan Charters, Mary Jo Cinnater, Peter Barry Chowka, Mary Beth Corboy, Mike Hughes, Paul R. Hume, Edward J. Maloney, John Maruskin, Francis R. O'Keefe, Anne O'Loughlin, Mike O'Neill, Tom alp, Mark Sawtelle Sports i Established January 14, 1920 Libby Heskin, Ned Hogan, Jim Keane, Greg Kenny, Dave Kopech, John McGowan, Mary Pat Michel, Peter Morris, Mike Posillico, Lance Ringel, THE BOARD OF EDITORS Tom Ruddock Photography I Don Hamer, Editor-in.Chief Moses Albert, Mike Bonu, Thea C. Brun, Eric Craig, Tom Hannan, Keith Bob Bruso, Managing Editor King, Fred Kohun, Glenn Moses, Jon Platt Bernadette Savard, News Editor Gary Nitch, Layout Editor Copy i Pat Rogozinski, Features Editor Chuck Lloyd, Business Mgr. Darcy Miner, Robert Sullivan Paul Bernabeo, Bob Hayes, Sports Editor loanne Piscetta, Exec. Secretary Layout & Headlines Pat Early, Photography Editor Mike Vick, Circulation Mgr. lean Finefrock, Walt Albano, Arlene Banks, Rick Berzon, Bill Blood, I Don Maldari, Copy Editor Rick Horvath, Ass't Business Mgr. Tom Sheeran, Diane Rogozinski, Mark Speca Edward w. Bodnar, S.l., Moderator Don Walsh Advertising I Ed Bucciarelli, Deb Pack The H?~ A is published each week of the academic year (with the exception of holidays and examination periods). I Subscrzptlon rate: $7.50 per year. Address all correspondence to The HOYA Georgetown UniverSity, Washington, D.C. Circulation ~ 20007. Telephone (202) 625~~5?8. The HOYA is composed at Polygraplzic CompOSition Corp., Washington, D.C., George Murphy, Tom Walton and printed at Cooper-Trent D,v,s,on of Keuffel & Esser Co., Arlington, Va. Secretaries The writing, a~ticles, layout, p~c~res .and fonnat are the responsibility of the Board of Editors and do not necessarily News: Martha Bauer Features: Carol Young Sports: Jeannie ShalhOUb represent the views of the Admmlstratlon, Faculty and Students of the University unless specifically stated. The University Cartoonist subscribes to the principle of responsible freedom Of expression for our student editors. Carl LaRoche ~l

Thursday, September 30, 1971 THE HOYA Page Five

i I Letters to the Editor • • • i'"I

to happen at all. The task before us accept the theory as fact. No is rather one of constructing a matter how little attention a school along rational lines, without student pays to his grades (and it is regard to tradition, prejudices or a rare individual who can truly say cultivated fears-presuming that we that he pays none at all), he lives in desire to see education not as it is, a society where his grades may be but as it ought to be. instrumental in gaining a place in a Michael R. J. Roth good graduate school or attaining SFS Academic Committee '74 late. Some will not permit male Providing students to attend class without Faculty Pettiness neckties on. One instructor has ''professional been known to demand several An Open Letter to the Rev. extra hours of lab practice because Thomas R. Fitzgerald, academic the student was a few minutes short guidance vice-president: of the requirement of one week. Dear Father Fitzgerald: Some have even openly persecuted to students Last spring an incident occurred students who take certain other which may be of some interest to courses within the SLL. you, both because of its value as an I have met students from the working individual case and as a typical, other undergraduate schools who I although rather extreme, example have similar stories to tell, though I at the of what many students in the have not witnessed those examples undergraduate schools of this uni­ at first hand. Of course, different versity are subjected to. It was types of prejudice are difficult to station. " suggested to me by the vice prove; as racial and sexual discrimi­ l"' president of the undergraduate nation is often subconscious, so are - WGTB-FM Committee Report student body that I write to you, in a professor's attitudes to his classes. spite of the fact that I started Among their students various pro­ preliminary appeal proceedings fessors have reputations for liking within my school, the School of girls, not liking girls, preferring Languages and Linguistics. liberals, preferring conservatives, or What happened was this: on favoring those who sit in the front Tuesday 11 May, 1971 at 9: 30 a.m. row. I appeared at the door of 295 Walsh An inevitable consequence is the can expect to feel the sting of significant extent. The key word to take my final examination for SuspICIOn that these preferences Thanks, Collegiate Club "hypocrisy" and "hypocrite" flung here is "significant," for even Intensive Basic French II. The affect grading and it is given weight at it by the next generation and Jesuits have been known to agree professor refused to allow me into some such goal. with more profound vengeance. with the idea of student partici­ the room on the grounds that I was When a person must tailor his To the Editor: More efficient forms of energy pation in affairs that concern not wearing shoes. I explained that habits and personality to get the Please pass along our many, are being suppressed. Why? Will students. I did not own a pair, as my only mark that should be determined by many thanks to the people respon­ those concerned about the future But there is a grave philosophical sneakers had fallen apart a few days his academic performance alone, sible for moving our freshman of this country win out over greed, difference between what I am previous. He suggested that I go out something very valuable is lost. I daughter into her dormitory and or will greed write the final propagating and what administra­ and borrow a pair on the spot. I personally was a sophomore in high making us feel welcome. chapters to this planet's history? tors admit to. What the student found, and still find, this demand school he fore I realised that there It was wonderful after a long Kenneth Quade movement has been (or had been) to be rather unreasonable, even was a reason for reading Engligh drive to find the boys waiting to Pembine, Wisconsin culminating in was a contention ludicrous. literature beyond that "A" in unload our heavily loaded auto­ that educational institutions are After a few more minutes of Shakespearean drama. Many college mobile. With my husband's foot Kennedy Center basically of, by, and for the attempts to take my exam I gave up students do not see this until all broken, I am afraid it would have student, that learning must be free and left. I did leave a note at the their time and money is behind been quite a chore without their (take it as you like) and voluntary. office of my French teacher, Mme. them. To the Editor: Naturally, to think that great Morris. The French department did I was unwilling to bow to the help. I was disappointed with the I cannot believe anything nicer numbers of people can just decide not contact me before I left eccentricity of one professor for "review" that appeared in the Sept. to learn on their own all they need Washington the following Saturday, the sake of a mere grade; in that will happen on Georgetown campus 16 issue of The HOYA concerning this year. Keep up the good work to know about the complexities of and I incurred an "F" in the course. particular course that is, in effect, the opening of the Kennedy Center coping with and influencing the Thus, though my Quality Point the only purpose of the examina­ (and it was work) for it means so Concert Hall. It is my impression much to so many. modern world is fairly absurd; Index after three semesters in the tion. I am fortunate, however, in that a critic's primary responsibility however, the idea of a university School was a 3.66, I am currently that my stand has only put me on If the Collegiate Club was is to judge-on the basis of a responsible for this "act of mercy" consisting solely of teachers and on academic probation. academic probation. In the case of specialized knowledge of the field­ administrators is totally absurd. I I am unable to find any point something similar happening again, they cannot be praised enough, so what is being presented on the please relay our deep appreciation don't think that anyone holds to where my behavior in this matter the result might well be suspension. stage. that particular image as any sort of was unreasonable; thus I feel that I am not entirely sure about what I for their help and thoughtfulness. Unfortunately, the reviewer Mable C. Stanley ideal. the burden was on the French would do if put into that position. ,;eemed more interested in criti­ Unfortunately, there does seem department to contact me and not To benefit fully from a college (Mrs. Leonard W. Stanley, Sr.) cizing what was going on in the Jacksonville, Florida to be a standing opinion that vice versa. I am not a grade experience a person must be inter­ Presidential Box than recognizing education is a commodity to be conscious person; I did not take the nally motivated and willing to grow Ecologically Speaking the significance of the fact that held in reserve by those who course to obtain a good grade, but and question as part of the learning Washington finally has a home for already possess the key until to learn French. I am more than process. The importance of the To the Editor: the arts. distributed to those who pay for it; satisfied with my progress during academic environment cannot be The youth of this country has an Mike Hughes but I cannot view the university as the semester. over-emphasised, but unfortunate­ important decision to make. Will SFS'72 a distribution point-I would rather That is not the important issue, ly, a favorable environment is not they or will they not allow oil into SFS's SAC see it as an academic community however. What concerns me is the something that can be established the Arctic of Alaska and the where students are able to develop eccentric, even capricious, use of solely by departmental directives construction of the trans-Alaska To the Editor: as fully as possible their human professorial prerogative in this and and student demonstrations. pipeline? What they decide will This letter is not intended as a potential. And, to me, this implies other cases. In my two years at An integral part of the ideal determine whether we continue this criticism of particular errors or freedom: freedom to learn, to make Georgetown I have seen several academic atmosphere is mutual downward spiral of our society and failures, but rather as an explana­ decisions that determine the direc­ other instances of such abuse; many respect between teacher and stu­ its environment or whether we tion of my reactions as a member tion of development, and the cases were probably brought to dent. The professor who finds it • finally turn the country around of the Student Academic Commit­ freedom to make mistakes, includ­ your attention as a result of the necessary to tyrannize his classes toward a better tomorrow. tee to the intrigues of the School of ing errors in the administration of strike in the spring of 1970. with picayune, arbitrary rules that We should not be debating this Foreign Service. I want to make it their school. Certain language professors have have little to do with learning may issue of oil in Alaska. Instead we very clear that none of the We ought to rely heavily, I refused to allow girls wearing pants force compliance from his students, should be demanding a full scale objections I have arise out of think, on the voice of the exper­ into their classrooms. Some make a but he will neither earn nor merit investigation into why the oil bitterness, for I feel very strongly ienced, but the final decision habit of locking the classroom door their respect. He will not facilitate industry has become so powerful. that the SFS is moving in an should be ours. It will take some to students who are 30 seconds or encourage learning. If a professor The petroleum industry is under­ enlightened direction. This is es­ time to achieve that goal, but the in enough cases for many of us to (Continued on Page 12) mining national security and threat­ pecially true in regard to the process must not stop. Thus it is ening our very survival by squander­ proposed curriculum, which, hope­ important that the school constitu­ ing away resources in its lust for fully, will go into effect next fall. tion go into effect, but only with profits. However, the school will yet the understanding that there will in Rostrum Continued In less than ten years we put a have to undergo some transforma­ the future be a more suitable one to man on the moon. But in nearly 80 tions in the area of administration replace it. affording us independence in our activity and direct access years since the automobile has been if it is to become a truly meaningful We have been hindered in this by to the highest decision-making body on campus. on the streets of this country, we force for change in the world (here several factors, notably Dean still get less than 15 miles to a I am presuming that it ought to do Krogh, who, with the best of None of the goals set forth above can or should be gallon of gasoline. This is progress? so, which, I imagine, brings me into intentions, has acted without con­ reached on our own. Thejob is immense. We are not answer Where are our priorities? direct philosophical conflict with SUlting students on important occa­ men and women; we view ourselves more as facilitators, Our mass transit system is on the some of the men who presently sions; and a weak and ineffectively brink of collapse, yet the oil control the administration of the organized student academic com­ relying on the creative efforts and energies of other industry vigorously promotes the University). mittee. Such things have allowed members of the community to make the religious presence highway trust fund. Eighty per cent One of the concepts I endorse is the myths to continue that we need at GeorgetowIt u. living and growing thing. We need your of all our miles of highways are that the student must actively to be forced to learn and that we paved with asphalt. What kind of engage in the process of education; need wiser men to direct our lives. help, your ideas, your work. While we don't intend to stay social responsibility does the petro­ I believe an understanding of We are in a period of transition. behind our office doors, we are there often; please come in leum industry practice when it lets learning itself is an integral part of If things are to go the way I would and talk to us if you are concerned with the quality of life our cities strangle themselves just so understanding subject matter. This like them, it would require the oil can satisfy its own selfish aims? can be accomplished in part in the participation of SFS students in on campus and with the way the University is responding But will the young generation classroom, certainly, but it must be school affairs. The administration to the needs of society. We are at your service. That's what follow the same path of apathy that carried further so that the decision­ claims this will never happen, and "ministry" means-simply "service." the older generation did? If it does making processes of the school they may be right. It is not our task it will be sowing the seed for which determine the direction the to decide this, however, for these Rev. Lawrence J. Madden, S.]. alienation and a generation gap far student's education shall follow events will come about in due Director of Campus Ministries greater than exists today. It, too, come under his jurisdiction to a course if allowed to, and if they are THE HOYA Thursday, September 30,1971 Page Six Music 'Cowabunga!'

SURF'S UP. By the Beach Boys. Nice?" or "Sloop John B." Which And didn't we know it all along. brings us to the record at hand, The scene is the Fillmore East, the Surf's Up. Dead are ripping it up as usual and While the production is not so when Jerry says that he would like lavish as on the magnificent but to introduce "another California neglected Sunflower (try the back­ group" (what volumes are .spoken up vocals of "This Wide World" on in that simple epithet), and It'S ... for size), all elements are so we.ll The Beach Boys. Then it's all true! fitted into place that the effect IS So began the resuscitation of up to anything they've done in the one of the finest things this nation past. AI's ditties about feet, pollu­ has produced, after years of point· tion and resigned pride are approp­ less tragedy and seeming oblivion. riate lightweight counterpoint to Why didn't people admit that this the cosmic flights of the Brothers was a truly great rock and roll Wilson. Bruce Johnston shows him­ group? Ah, that is a subject for a self a sly master of the monu­ different story, touching on all mentally wistful. Mike Love gets bases of our cultural odyssey of off on a delicious thruway of past years. But here and now we soft-edge heavi~e~s. They are ut~er ...,.... have proof very positive that, like knockouts, fulfIllmg every promIse . the Beatles, the Beach Boys knew the Beach Boys ever made us. Two Last weekend's Baroque Concert was well-received in spite of the less than perfect performance of featured what they were doing when they minor Brian classics lead into the artist Martin Berinbaum (right). Photo by Thea Bruhn decided not to change their name. home stretch. Long ago, the phenomenon of Out of the ashes of the aborted surfing led them to a commitment Smile, the album that could have to The Wave and as years passed, knocked off Sgt. Pepper, rises the Sensitive Selection Of Baroque the realization came that they were title tune. Lenny Bernstein's praises on to something bigger than they notwithstanding, it was worth every The concert of Baroque music then do a series of runs very Brooks, a noted soprano, was the had bargained for. Much in the week of the wait. The group teased performed in Dahlgren Chapel last sloppily. My first impression was soloist. Unfortunately, something same way that Dylan made inex· us by including the legendary Saturday was an interesting exam­ that he was not quite warmed up had a hold of Miss Brooks' voice haustibly stunning use of the Moan "bicycle rider" verse in the Central pIe of the difference between and would doubtless improve as the and was not letting go. Her diction and Whine, Brian Wilson fashioned Park version of "Heroes and Vil- expectation and event. While I am piece progressed. This impression was sloppy, and her control frag­ a musical statement of awesome lains," but now they deliver, in not overly fond of chamber music, seemed to be correct, for in the mentary. How much of the difficul­ unity around the oceanic dynamic spades. The marriage of Van Dyke I had heard glowing accounts of the second movement, a larghetto, or ty was in her voice and how much that reconciles absolute simplicity Parks' fractured baroque lyrics and careers of Martin Berinbaum and moderately slow section, his play­ in the acoustics of Dahlgren, which of form with all·encompassing com­ Brian's unique melodic vision must Miss Patricia Brooks, featured trum­ ing was surer and much mellower. are so brilliant as to magnify a small plexity of content, power of the have been made in heaven. Every- pet and soprano respectively. I was But in the third and last, the flaw, I do not know. Suffice to say whole with weakness of the part. one is here at the absolute peak of more than a little disappointed. andante movement, he had difficul­ that Miss Brooks was not in What could be more malleable than his form. How you can build The program consisted of the ties similar to those he experienced particularly good voice that night. water? What could be more unstop­ intensity by cutting the arrange- Concerto in Ab for Trumpet and in the allegro. Despite this notably The final piece of the evening pable than a tidal wave? ment from full orchestra and Strings, by Vivaldi; Concerto in weak playing, the audience seemed was the well-known Second Bran­ In like manner, the epitome of chorus to single piano and voices is E b for Oboe and Strings, by satisfied enough. denburg Concerto of Bach. The the Wilson sound is the surging beyond me, but there it is. This Allessandro Marcello; Torreli's So· The oboe concerto was, by itself piece is for trumpet, recorder, oboe blend of voices and instruments song seems impervious to the nata a Cinque No.7; the Cantata, and not merely by contrast, excel­ and violin, with string ensemble. I that has no definable edge but question "why?" Sur Le Sponde del Tebro and the lent. The soloist, Miss Patricia regret to say that Berinbaum fell which possesses a central core All things considered, the Beach Second Brandenburg Concerto of Grignet, handled her instrument back into the weak playing he had capable of sweeping along anything Boys have finally broken through Bach. superbly both in the uptempo first evinced earlier in the evening, willing to be swept. The blissful their teeny-bopper image and estab- At the beginning of the first and third movements and in the which impression was heightened nothingness of heaven is there for lished a place for themselves in the movement of the Vivaldi, I was second movement, a largo. The care by the more than competent the asking. Forget the words and tradition of rock music. rather surprised to hear Berinbaum and feeding of the notoriously playing of the other three soloists. I simply flow with "Wouldn't It Be Mark Sawtelle hit a number of false notes and balky oboe was demonstrated dur­ was particularly impressed with the ing one string passage, when Miss recorder playing of Paul Jordan. Kennedy Sampler ~rignet efficiently disassembled t!te While one knows that the recorder mstrument and swabbed out Its really is an instrument, to hear it played like one is a rather surprising experience. - htfull D fi -t I R b t ~~~a:::d 7:~:e;~~~~;:'~~~~~! I was also well satisfied by t!le D I performance of Miss Anne Ka .ra­ e 19 y, e IllI e y 0 er a i;:~:::n~o:~~~::~~~~:e~~~t~i:~i~ fion, the principle violinist. Her 1 feel this tremendous compul- apparent in the first half and many have his own concert just for Berinbaum returned in the playing showed a superb sensitivity sion to tell you that Kennedy people left in disgust. After all, people who like to be blasted at. Torelli Sonata and played very and power in the demanding violin Center puts on a fantastic concert. most of the audience had come to But my main quarrel with Kennedy competently indeed. His attack was passages of the concerto. Miss But I have this thing about see Roberta Flack and were not in Center, is that Roberta, who much stronger and his notes had Grignet's oboe work was as good as honesty.... the least bit interested in being seemed to have top billing, did not stopped faltering in pianissimo before. Only the trumpet section Somebody tried too hard. There assaulted by so much raucus, appear until four o'clock in a passages. The third movement was left anything to be desired, which were too many acts and not enough grating, bleating. Ornette Coleman concert that started at one. particularly enjoyable, being pri­ was a pity. I must in fairness add continuity. This was especially is a great performer but he should If the concert had actually marily a trio for the trumpet, cello that the audience did not seem to started out with the beginning of and harpsichord. Ed Laut was the share my dissatisfaction, for at the the second half, this would be an cellist and performed admirably in end of the piece their applause article of praise. As it was, thank the antiphonal passage in question. elicited an encore of the third God for Buster Brown. He managed The harpsichord, the very backbone movement of the concerto. to get people out of their angry of any and all strong-oriented The ensemble was admirable and mood from the first half. Had he chamber music, was excellently the direction of conductor Michael not been there, most of Roberta's played by James Weaver. Weaver is Feldman showed a deep sensitivity set would have been lost in the a professional harpsichord player of for the music coupled with the confusion, despite her delightful the Washington area and is a hairsbreadth control vital in the stage presence. member of the musical staff of the conducting of Baroque music. As.I Her renditions of overdone songs Smithsonian Institution. say, the main disappointment was were fresh, almost as if she had The projected high point of the in the sub-standard performance of written them and was performing evening was the Scarlatti cantata, the two featured artists while every them for the first time. For Sur Le Sponde del Tebro. Not that other element of the evening was instance, I have heard "Bridge Over this is the greatest music Scarlatti far better than I had expected. Troubled Water" so many times ever wrote, but Miss Patricia Paul R. Hume that I wince at it's very mention, but her opening version of it left the others far behind. ************************ Considering that four years ago Roberta was teaching school, she has come a long way. Part of this is NOTICES due to a wide range of musical tastes, from Bacharach to Gene McDaniels as well as to have her Mask and Bauble season subscriptions still available. Save very own style which she in'sists is, 33% on tickets for seven plays. Call 333-1789 or not necessarily "black" but is not necessarily anything else, either. 625-4960, or contact Stage One, 3620 P Street N.W. "I want to be a singer, not a black singer. I am black ..... I think * black is beautiful, but there is so * * much gorgeous music in the world that has nothing to do with black." Advanced Seminar in Magick. Free university course Stephen Stills is reputed to have beginning Monday, Oct. 4. Call 625-4801 for location. had three standing ovations at a recent concert. Roberta got two. Instructor: Paul Hurne. After the first, she came back on saying, "1 know you love me. I've known it all along..... " and * * * launched into her version of "Save the Country" at the audience's request. If she'd come back after Corning soon to Midnight Theater: Once Over Nightly. the second, we'd have let her go on Noted blues singer Roberta Flack brought the house down during all night. Kennedy Center's jazz festival. C. Michael Hughes Thursday, September 30, 1971 THE HOYA Page Seven Books A Numbers Game

THE DICE MAN. By Luke Rhine- the paper and stare out of the hart. Selections for review provided window; two, wearing rags, walk by Saville's Book Shop. down to Wisconsin and hit tourists One, three or five, I write this for spare change; three, hitch review straight, praising what I like, downtown and take the 12:00 criticizing what I don't; two, four, I White House tour; four, practice denounce the book as a pack of with the football squad for a day lies the ill conceived scribbling of a and see from underneath how GU's lite~ary know-nothing; six, I scream football team is shaping up; five, and throw the book out of the make a~ appointment fc:>r next window, scrapping the review. The mont? with ~ather H~nle 10 order die rolls, six, then four, on the 'Mto ~ISCU~tS. his rtefltehctlOnps ~nd lat~t edge, cyclops eye up: the review a~ s ~l -10. a e r.eSI en. s goes straight. office; SIX:, kill your~elf, WI~h a fhp I handed myself good odds for o.r the WrtS~ and whlspere,d mca~ta­ writing this review and probably tlOn for dICe luck, the die dec~des would have written it had I tossed a y:our rol~ for the day, (you might two, four or six. I haven't yet hke to. glv~ the last option less than become addicted to the very ~ one m SIX odd~). As y~:ll~r courage addicting dice life, although that mcreases, you Will be willing to. p~t Guy Frangin and Dominique Sanda sensitively portray the troubled husband and wife in Une Femme Douce. addiction might not be far off. mo~e. and more of. Yjmr hfe s The Dice Man, a novel by Luke decIsIOns un~er the die s scepter. Rhinehart (who is not really Luke From a mild mannered, well­ Film Rhinehart but someone else), behaved twit of a. student, you recounts the history of Rhinehart's could become.... Dlceman, the dice life and describes what dice totally random man. living is all about. The book is The dice life, according to Wife Triumphs In Tragedy chock full of dice games and dice Rhinehart, can change not only experiences. Rhinehart's aim is to your attitudes towards people and UNE FEMME DOUCE. Directed by begins to feel trapped in her dialogue, which in the beginning is transform "normal" everyday things; it can change those people's Robert Bresson. At the Circle. existence. The smile on her face as stiff and unbelievable, improves people into dicepeople. attitudes toward y~>u. You might Une Femme Douce is an excel­ she makes her final and ultimate tremendously when the viewer If you lay in bed at night well find yourself 10 a nut h?use lent film which describes the escape leads the viewer to see her realizes that the narration is based wishing you could trade places with eventually. Whe? courage. strikes, rebellion of a young woman (Dom­ act as triumph and averts their pity upon the husband's remembrances. Casanova for an evening, or if you you put your Wife. and ch~ldren or inique Sanda) and the failings of towards her poor, unenlightened It is also helpful if heavy reliance spend class time dreaming about a your school career ID the dl? stakes. her shallow husband (Guy Frangin). husband. on the subtitles is avoided. Finally, dozen or odd people you would Your job migh~ go. The die <:ould From the outset the viewers realize The movie contains excellent the superb performances of the like to be, then you are prime for order you to kill your best friend. the tragic result of their union, yet camera techniques such as the three main characters makes this a dice therapy. Rhinehart wants you You might rob a bank, or blow l:lP a as the movie continues a sense of constant closeups of Miss Sanda's film that one shouldn't miss. to split up the self inside of you building. Needless to say, society triumph can be felt for the face in the past and present. The W.F.C./M.T. that makes you act "normal" and frowns on such attempts of ex­ beautiful young wife. let the suppressed bits of your treme individuality. But even in. a At one point in the film the Joe and Harriet Hoya personality take the stage one by men~al in,st.ituti?n you. could still couple attend a performance of one, until your homosexual tenden- contmue hVID~ via the die. . Hamlet and it is the parting words cies, your masochistic bend, your In The I?lce Man such ~hmgs of Hamlet to Horatio ("And in this fetish for stealing cafeteria silver- happen. Rh10ehart leads a hfe of harsh world draw the breath in pain Perle Mesta Lives ware, your secret urge to break constant chan~e, rhyt~med to the to tell my story.") that are the mood and form of narration of this windows or your inclination to pulse of the die. He lIves a month Though the opening of school IDJurious to the stomach lining. Its film; for as Horatio stands witness chase school buses expresses and of drunken slobbering, then for a may mean for some the drone of various soubriquets, "bash," "Liq­ to the events which kill Hamlet, satiates itself in your activity. week he switches to a mad sex professors' voices or the silence of uid Wrench" and "Purple Jesus" Guy Frangin stands witness to the Rhinehart's dream is "to free the maniac. He plays the gentle parent the library, for the true Hoya the more or less warn one of its life of his young wife. individual from the need to lock during the day and, for an evening, musical tinkling of ice is the sound potential. To help along the happy himself.... men should be comfort- dons the killer's cloak. The die even The central story is portrayed by that initiates the new semester. hippy Hoya, there is usually an able in floating from one role to applies to Rhinehart's writing: his Miss Sanda's expressions and Keeping tune is the hiss of a adequate supply of homemade another.... away from challenge and book ends amid sentence by order actions in the flashback sequences hand-pump kicking more life into a cigarettes in circulation. change .... we want people to greet of the die. rather than the obvious one-sided keg and the Grateful Dead and the However, even the lure of a each other on the streets and not The Dice Man paints an interest- account of her husband. In her Rolling Stones competing to ob­ weB-stocked bar does not insure the know who is who, and not care." ing and amusing idea in a book that desire to escape her relatives, the literate all but the most trivial of success of a Hoya fest. It is The way to get all those is a patchwork of incidents, pseudo­ young girl marries Frangin. When conversations. Though parties are necessary to know how to mix not suppressed tendencies unsuppressed philosophical remarks, juicy sex she becomes dissatisfied with the not a distinctly Georgetown pheno­ only drinks but people. Though and not to feel unwanted conse- scenes, and funny details. Its overall state of her marriage, she attempts menon, they certainly have a scotch, bourbon, gin and vodka are quences for them is to surrender merit is to be questioned and it is to cheat on her husband, who unique flavor in this neighborhood. all quite warming when served over yourself to the die. The die is God doubtful that a dice life would subsequently finds her and brings Since the astutely handled cam­ ice, together they are apt to induce and you are God's partner in an prove to be a legitimate escape her back. Her resentment grows pus housing situation has forced nausea. So it is with the diverse ever renewable living experience. from the boredom and apathy that towards her husband and their students to seek shelter all over the campus factions. You create options and the die face many people today. If your relationship becomes formalized to metropolitan area, parties are gen­ Though there are many of both crystallizes them into fact. life lacks excitement, you might the extent that she is physically erally given their definition by the sexes who would not care to admit For example, on Monday morn- just take up dice throw~ng. But if cared for without emotion. dwelling place of the hosts. Lives it, one of the greatest attractions of ing you wake up and decide to you want to buy The DlCe Man to The wife's rebellion intensifies there a Hoya who has never seen a the party circuit is the potential for create certain options so the die can see what dice life is like, toss the and she broadens the realm of her house party that was confined to male-female interaction. If any help you to relieve the normal die first and grant the book odds no disgust to include all facets of the living room or even the first among you think that today's Monday doldrums: one, stay in bed better than one in fifty. order, even to the disgust of species floor? The most considerate of Georgetown man or "finishing and skip classes and instead, read Thomas Dip and the order of life itself. She hosts is the one who examines his school" lady has become too property well before signing on the sophisticated to resort to a line, let dotted line and can creatively him lend an ear to some; of his exploit its party potential. The neighbors. One enterprising youth kitchen should be centrally located tried to recruit girls by the rather between the front door and the direct technique of accosting even­ farthest reaches of the back yard. A ing strollers and asking them to stone or brick patio is most accompany him to a party in , desirable for those who feel about Virginia. He apparently thought to swoon from whatever smoke that having accepted his trans­ may be in the air, and is quite portation they would feel socially useful for isolating the more ener­ indebted to him and thus would getic guests from their langorous chat pleasantly with him at the neighbors inside. Though one need party, if indeed a party was his not worry about ruining a rug or intended destination. piece of furniture, there are the At a recent gathering, the level somewhat hidden disadvantages of of cheer had progressed to the small animals or mud upon which point where Mitch Miller and one may unwittingly sit or step. Lawrence Welk records were ac­ Certainly the most appreciated ceptable parts of the musical favor a host can do his guests is to program. An ambitious young miss provide adequate sanitary facilities, invited a promising looking by­ preferably two or more bathrooms. stander to polka with her and to At one affair last year, the comfort her acute embarrassment he ac­ station was unfortunately located cepted. Another sweet young thing on the third floor and thus two tried to impress a senior in the flights of stairs were covered with business school with her intelligent impatient and hopefully not incon­ inquiry about the quality of the tinent revelers. secretarial courses in the curricu­ Libation naturally is one of the lum. She has not been seen since greatest factors contributing to the and that Georgetown student has success of a college gathering. The become wary of strange girls. everpopular keg is a well-accepted It is impossible to capture the stand-by and is even more warmly true spiri t of Georgetown party life welcomed if it is in the company of merely through the recounting of a several other kegs. A punch of few memorable vignettes. Rather, unknown recipe is also a crafty way one must experience for oneself the of employing any wine or liquor beer-soaked, smoke-laden, music· that guests may happen to bring, ally deafening atmosphere which but care must be taken in the characterizes almost every weekend. Several of Georgetown's more prominent weekend revellers strike a typical pose. Y.D.B. consumption thereof, as it is often Mary Dore · , Page Eight THE HOYA Thursday, September 30, 1971 Rusk, Mathias Named to SFS Board Members of the board were and former Nigerian ambassador to Meeting regularly at the school by Tim Brown to discuss its program and activities, Former Secretary of State Dean chosen by the dean on the advice the UN; James A. Perkins, former of and consultation with members president of Cornell University who the advisory board will suggest Rusk and Senator Charles McC. means for improving the school. Mathias (R-Md.) are among seven of the dean's staff, faculty and is presently serving as chairman of students. Criteria for selection in- the International Council for The first of these meetings will be persons who have been named to a held on Nov. 10. At this time it is new advisory board for the School volved accomplishment and stand- Educational Development; Harry J. ing in career fields relating to the Noznesky, president of General expected the board will meet of Foreign Service. together with University President The advisory board was estab­ mission of the school, particular Battery Corporation and a 1933 interest in special programs at the graduate of the School of Foreign R. J. Henle, S.J., Dean Krogh, I lished by Dean Peter F. Krogh to members of the faculty and stu­ l "provide the school with the kind School of Foreign Service and Service and Katie Loucheim, dents. It is also likely that board of expert advice on international ability to assist the school in its former deputy assistant secretary of affairs education that only practi­ financial development. state for cultural affairs. members will sit in on a few classes. , tioners of foreign affairs are able to Chairman of the board is Paul C. Dean Krogh is especially pleased The Board of Advisors will be give. " Warnke, a Washington lawyer, who to have former Secretary of State concerned with the School's needs, formerly served as the assistant Dean Rusk on the advisory board. I, Assistant Dean David Raymond goals, and plans; its curriculum; the I, secretary of defense for internation- Since leaving the State Department commented that the board's pur­ quality of students, faculty and H;: pose is "to have people in the field al security affairs when Clark Rusk has kept a low profile and has staff; physical facilities and equip­ come to the school advising us on Clifford was defense secretary. been reluctant to involve himself in ment and budget and endowment. whether our program meets with Other members of the board public affairs. He is presently a the realities of what will be include: Chief S. O. Adebo, di- professor of International Law at The advisory board will be expected in the future of interna­ rector of the Institute for Training the University of Georgia. Rusk's limited to between 12 and 15 tional affairs personnel." and Research at the United Nations acceptance of appointment to the members. Tenure on the board is ______Board of Advisors indicates that he expected to be limited to three still retains a great interest in the years with one-third of the board being renewed each year. ~. MD's , LLB's , DDS international affairs field. DEAN RUSK i Ex-Gov, Jock Feted (Continued from Page 1) dental school in 1956, Dr. Heim Completing his undergraduate taught until 1961. As a practicing studies at Georgetown, the Hon. orthodontist in the District, Dr. James C. Shannon of Bridgeport, Heim served as the president of the Conn. received a law degree at Yale. DC Dental Society. During World War I, Shannon Jeans. Slacks. Shirts. Jackets. Socks. Western Wear. Boots. He is a former member of the served in the air arm of the US Alumni Association's Board of Navy. After the war, Shannon Governors and is a member of the practiced law in Bridgeport. He Alumni Senate. later became a prosecuting attorney President of the McCue Mort­ and also served as a city court and gage Company of New Britain, juvenile judge. In 1947 Shannon Conn., William D. McCue is a was elected Iieutanant governor of 1932 graduate of the Georgetown Connecticut and the following year, Law Center. In 1963 Pope Paul VI governor. Shannon was appointed named McCue a Knight of St. a judge of the Superior Court of er Gregory. McCue is a past president Conn. in 1953 and was named of the Georgetown Club of Con­ chief judge in 1963. Two years necticut. He received the 175th later Shannon became a justice of II anniversary medal of honor from the State Supreme Court, a position the University in 1964. he held until his retirement in The fifth recipient of the John 1966. Carroll Award is a native of Boston The third annual Patrick Healy and graduated from Georgetown in Award will be presented to Dr. W. 1925 as president of his class. The Proctor Harvey of Falls Church, Va. Hon. Frank J. Murray was a 1929 Dr. Harvey has been a member of graduate of the Georgetown Law the faculty of the Georgetown School and has been a US District School of Medicine since 1950. He Court judge for the District of completed his undergraduate stu­ Massachusetts since 1967. Murray dies at Lynchburg College and received the Alumni Achievement received his medical education at Award from the Georgetown Law Duke College. Dr. Harvey was a Center and is a member of the fellow in cardiology at Harvard University Board of Regents. After University from 1946-48. Prior to two years as corporation counsel his position as a professor of for the City of Boston, Murray medicine at Georgetown, Dr. became an Associate Justice of the Harvey was a resident in medicine Superior Court of Massachusetts in at Boston's Peter Bent Brigham 1946, a post which he held for 21 Hospital. He served as president of years. Murray is the chairman of the American Heart Association the Board of Directors of the during 1969-70 and is presently National College of State Trial director of Georgetown University Judges. Hospital's cardiology division. FRI. OCT. 31, 8:30 PM FOLK MUSIC SAMPLER MIKE RIVERS DICK DREVO'S JOEL & CATHY BLUEGRASS BAND MICHAEL aUITT M. C. ANDY WALLACE

10th & Const. Ave. Presented by the Folklore Mr. Wrangler® Sportswear Society of Greater Washington

FSGW Members-$1.00 and the Division of Performing Arts Non Members-$2.00 Smithsonian Institution ' Woodward & Lothrop Washington, D.C. BROTHERS III CARRVOUT Men's Budget Dept. PIZZA SUBS Downtown & Branches 5117 MacArthur Blvd., N.W. Hours Mon-Thurs 11 AM-12 PM Fri-Sat 11 AM-12 MID The Hecht Company Sun 12 NOON-12 MID Washington, D.C. 244-9191 I. IS OPEN HOUSE Men's Budget Dept. Wed., 6 Oct. 1971 Downtown & Branches 7-10 p.m. i ISH-3509 Prospect St., NW i All I nt'l Students Welcome Thursday, September 30, 1971 THE HOYiI Page Nine A-V Department Expands, Includes Ten Video Channels by Ed Hughes Sanford is primarily responsible good movies. One of the newest and probably for the purchase of materials for The horizons are unlimited on the fastest-growing of Georgetown's the department and has helped in the multi-media field today and resources is the audio-visual depart­ the expansion of the tape collection present quite a challenge to the ment located on the first floor of from about 1100 almost exlusively already-busy A-V staff. Sanford Lauinger Library. spoken or classical titles to the 1600 sees expansion as inevitable-but he The department's facilities for titles the department now owns. sees it in the strictly academic the student include 32 listening Also in the department, but not spheres as far as his department is carrels equipped with ten video so widely known or used, are concerned. channels, 50 audio channels and microtexts which include, among A-V facilities have been used eight listening booths with stereo many diverse topics, presidential lately by many students for recrea­ equipment; a far cry from the audio papers, The New York Times from tional purposes and although San­ room in the old library with its one 1851 to present and extensive ford finds this good, he feels that stereo and, five tape decks. Georgetown memoribilia. Thirty­ this function could be better served Why the tremendous expansion? eight movies, generally for class­ by the student center rather than An unidentified GU student grooves on Channel 34 while waiting for a Essentially because the expansion room use, and a small video tape the library. picture to appear on the TV screen at Lauinger Library's new of the library into its new facilities studio are also kept on hand. Students have been careful with Audio-Visual Center. (Photo by Pat Early) in Lauinger came at roughly the All of this obviously requires the equipment, but the facilities' same time as the amazing increase money and though the department acoustics were planned more for in interest and technology concern­ operates on a "not large but string quartets than the Rolling Senate Funds Poll-Watching ing the newer media. sufficient" budget, a few experi­ Stones. If the increase in the (Continued from Page 1) candidate for governor, has made A-V manpower has increased to ments are under way to increase number of patrons keeps up, upperclass halls in order "to pro­ an appeal to college students keep pace with the demand for income. Sanford noted that the strictly vide a solid factual basis for the throughout the nation to participate. • facilities. The department is now The first of these was the academic functions will suffer. Task Force's discussions." Georgetown students will act as staffed by five full-time employees, showing of Tom Jones in Gaston Sanford would like to see similar Miss Kent added that while she non-partisan poll-watchers in var­ including the head of the depart­ Hall last Tuesday. The student facilities in the student center, understood the President's empha­ ious regions of the state. Their duty ment, Gary Sanford. Sanford showing came about somewhat perhaps with a hook-up to library sis on the value of an external audit will be to make certain that anyone came to Georgetown in April of last unintentionally as the movie was equipment. He also foresees a of student affairs, she did not entitled to vote can do so without year with an MA in instructional originally ordered for an English possible video hook-up with a fine concede the right of an external interference. communications and five years class. If enough interest and money arts classroom and perhaps even a committee to legislate these affairs, In further action, the Senate experience as supervisor of campus is shown, the program will probably video system connecting the whole drawing the analogy that "an extended the use of facilities to the services at Howard. continue featuring low prices and campus. external auditor does not make National Student Association for an University fiscal policy." International Student Conference. The Senate also voted to fund Over 30 student government repre­ transportation costs, up to $1,000, sentatives from foreign countries, for a delegation of Georgetown together with a large number of students to participate in a poll­ American representatives, will at­ watching campaign in Mississippi. tend the conference. Charles Evers, an independent black The purpose of the conference is to discuss worldwide issues which Upcoming Elections affect students and to attempt to College Academic Elections: coalesce student opinion. Doug Today 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. at Kelner (SFS '74), the sponsoring Copley steps and Dean's senator, noted that the internation­ office. al nature of the conference definite­ SLL Academic Elections: ly encourages Georgetown's partic­ ipation, especially by the School of Today 8 a.m. to 4 p.m. at Foreign Service. Walsh lobby. Besides providing representatives Student Senate Elections: to the conference, Georgetown will Wed., Oct. 13 (filing deadline extend the use of the multi-lingual Fri., Oct. 7) SBA '73, At­ conference room for simultaneous • large '73, GUNS '74 and ten translation, as well as classrooms class of '75 seats by district: for discussions. first-second. Darnall; third, The Senate also acted on elect­ fourth and fifth Darnall; St. ions for the Class of '75 and three Mary'S; East . Campus; first­ seats vacated in the other classes. second New North; third­ Elections for the University Resi­ fourth New North and Old dence Board were also announced. North; Ryan, McGuire and The three upper-class seats open Healy; first New South; two are Business '73, Nursing '74 and senators from second New an At-Large '73. South and off-campus (at CAMPUS REPS least one residing off­ Opportunity for sharp business- campus). minded student to earn top cash and University Residence Board: get unparalleled experience working (same dates as senate elec­ for self on campus. Start immediate­ tions) Voting for three seats: Iy. Send brief resume an; phone num­ one male, one female and one ber to; Mr. C. R. Danforth, Box 75, D.C. area resident. Swampscott, MA 01907.

Make sure you're in the listings!!! Call the Information Office 625-4866 c§torgttotun g(U£'tt Guitars Lessons Accessories Repairs Rentals 1738 WISCONSIN AVE 965-4215 THE HOYA Thursday, September 30, 1971 Page Ten Kerry: 'We've Lost Our Conscience'

(Continued from Page 1) husband and the more than 1600 Army men in all ranks commodity at the bargaining table men imprisoned in Southeast Asia." locations of the Army. and in the news dispatches. Representing the Concerned Kerry, the featured speaker and Accusations of "betraying our Officers' Movement, Army Lt. Dan mouthpiece of the veteran organiza­ country" have met the entreaties of Churchill emphasized that dis­ tion which has chapters in all 50 POW's to Hanoi, claimed Mrs. illusionment with United States states and has received world-wide Cushner, who also stated that policy in Vietnam is not only a attention, said that the United families of POW's have "more than widely held tenant among draftees States is faced with a "question of p~id the price" of war. She referred and those serving in Vietnam, but survival." "Survival" for Kerry has to Kerry as the "brother of my also among a growing number of come to mean the "capacity of human beings to relate to other human beings." In his deep, Massachusetts­ flavored voice, Kerry said that the ills which beset the United States, including racism, poverty, disease and the war in Vietnam, have yet to be solved because of widespread public cynicism. Kerry terms this cynicism "the most dangerous thing facing us today." Cynicism has left the people of the United States disdainful of the institutions that were created to serve that people and this disdain has caused the population to lose faith. "This has left us with a feeling of powerlessness and it is this powerlessness that has let the war in Vietnam continue." "We have lost our conscience" to the "callous use of men's lives toward political ends." We should aspire "to not condone mendacity and duplicity in our leaders." Kerry pleaded with his listeners to remedy this situation, shedding any cynic­ ism they may harbor. "Claim the voice that is ours," he urged his audience, reminding them that an increased public awareness might affect this issue, tantamount in so many of the lives of those in overcrowded Gaston. As a tribute to what each individual is capable of doing, Kerry: The U?,ited States is faced with a question of survival, a "capacity Kerry quoted Robert Kennedy: of human bemgs to relate to other human beings." (Photo by Moses that we in an age aware of the Albert) "enormous array of world ills" can uncompromisingly sincere, Kerry audience that his group is "trying ! each work in a small, fully helpful, gave answers on many war-related to politicize people and show that fully contributing way so that the issues and adroitly handled being they have the capacity to effect \ "total of these 'acts will write the labeled a Communist filled with change." ~ John Kerry, leader of Vietnam Veterans Against the War, spoke at history of this generation." words that are "cheap." Working to build a broad voter : Georgetown's Gaston Hall Monday night after spending the day talking Fielding questions at the close of He summed up the commit- coalition, Kerry hopefully eyes the to students on campus. He warned against a "cynicism" which has his address, at ease with his ments of the Vietnam Veterans upcoming elections and the gradual developed in America. (Photo by Moses Albert) audience, obviously in earnest and Against the War by informing the shifts in power which may result.

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.11 Thursday, September 30, 1971 THE HOYA Page Eleven Scores of Cyclists Pedal to Hilltop

Barrick, a 22-year veteran of the different cult because you have force, said that failure to register a broken out of the control of bicycle in the District makes a automation." cyclist subject to summary arrest Avoid the Joggers and punishable by ten days in jail and/or a fine of $300. He admitted, Now that you've bought your­ however, that he had never seen self a bicycle, you should know such an arrest made. where to ride it in the metropolitan area. Camaraderie First, you must ride the tow­ path along the C & 0 Canal. Easily Dr. Jesse A. Mann, professor of accessible along the foot of 29th philosphy and former acting dean and 30th Streets, the tow path is of the School of Foreign Service, long and flat, and the scenery is has had two bicycles stolen, includ­ worth the effort of steering around ing a five speed Gitane and a ten the joggers. speed Raleigh. He now rides a nine Completed last week, a bicycle speed Raleigh daily between the path between the Sheraton Hotel University and his home near (at Woodley Road) and the Ken­ Tenley Circle on upper Wisconsin nedy Center is interesting, although Ave. He thinks nothing of riding to many curbs still have to be Connecticut Ave. for dinner, then smoothed over. returning to campus to teach a Beyond ihe Kennedy Center you night course. can duel with the four-wheeled Like most dedicated cyclists, dragons which are in orbit around With bicycling the rage, cyclists come to campus from near and far to avoid the rush of traffic and get in some however, Dr. Mann dwells less on the Lincoln Memorial. From here exercise. (Photo by Fred Kohun) the problems of bicycles than on to the Capitol, the traffic is slower, if you stay on The Mall­ are either new or in very good the joys of riding them. by Tom Sheeran where bicycles are fighting with just avoid the low-leaning cherry Contributing Editor working condition. "I think it's "For me it is good exercise and a cars, instead of desegregation taking very good experience. It's a good tree branches encircling the Tidal "It's helpful, it's quick and it's place." some ring stealing them, painting thing for you to ride a bicycle," he Basin. good exercise," says Doug J. But for most students and them and then reselling them," says Fotta. says. "It's one of the best joys I've In the other direction, Glover Seidman (SFS'73) of his five-speed faculty members who ride bicycles Archibald Park, just beyond the English racer bicycle, one of scores onto campus, there are the more He, along with Housing Director had." Medical Center, is a good bet if you of new and newly-arrived bicycles immediate problems of where to Suzanne Forsyth and University Dr. Charles W. Kreidler of the Linguistics Department touched on are a naturalist. Otherwise, the back on campus. park and chain a bicycle and how Safety Engineer Patrick J. O'Hara, "Last year mine was stolen but to prevent it from being stolen. are looking for well-lit areas where this year I've come back with a Bicycle racks are few, and bicycle racks can be placed. Neither heavier chain and lock," he adds, although the University plans to Harbin nor New South Halls, with a showing the determination and place more racks near classroom total resident population of more optimism any cyclist needs in an buildings and dormitories, most than 800, have racks nearby. automobile-oriented society. riders are forced to chain their O'Hara says racks will help to But in the face of technological bicycles to traffic barriers, guard alleviate the epidemic of bicycles opposition, cyclists have declared rails, signs, lamp posts or anything chained in residence corridors and war on the smoke-fuming auto­ else which will prevent the bicycles stairwells, which, he says, pose a mobile, urged on by the knowledge from being picked up and carried safety problem. "A good example is that theirs is an efficient, inexpen­ away. the power breakdown in Darnall sive and healthy form of personal If chained-down bicycles were Hall last week when all the lights transport. theft-proof, cyclists could relax; were off in the exits. Someone can Gawaina D. Luster, an assistant but as the head of the campus come out of her room and run into professor of German who has police, Capt. William Fotta, points a bicycle in a dark corridor," he ridden her ten-speed French-made out: "Chains don't do any good. said. Gitane racer between her home Even the cable type lock can be Few Recovered near the Washington Hilton and the cut." But chained or unchained, a University for more than five years, Increased Thefts bicycle, once stolen, has little says there is an intolerance towards chance of being returned to its cyclists which does not exist in He added that "it's great pick­ owner. Capt. Fotta said he can A student peddles his Schwinn along the tree-lined driveway in front of Europe. ings" for bicycles on campus, recall no reportedly stolen bicycle Healy. One of the advantages of bicycles is that you can ride where cars "In America they try to over­ noting the increased theft of being recovered. and motorcycles are a no-no. (Photo by Fred Kohun) come intolerance by making a law, bicycles. Twenty-two bicycles were Outside the campus, Washington as giving cyclists a lane in the stolen from Jan. 1 of this year until Metropolitan Police officials say the camaraderie between cyclists: roads behind the University will roadway. But in Europe, they give September; more than 25 have been they have witnessed no serious "People who ride bicycles talk to offer you a high brow (and bicycles the right of way," she said. stolen since then-a rate of almost increase in the number of stolen one another and tell each other generally uphill) ride toward the "But if you give cyclists a lane in one stolen bicycle per day. bicycles. Officer Pete Barrick of the what they're doing." He rides a American University campus. But if the road you will have a situation The majority of stolen bicycles Seventh Precinct said that the only I5-speed Gitane and has taken his you persevere all the way to AU way to recover a bicycle that is racer to Harper's Ferry, a two day, beware-they revere the automobile found by police is to have it I20-mile round trip. somewhat more there. registered, which can be done "It's fun. I don't think of it as Rental Advice without charge. Proof of purchase exercise. If I did I probably would If you don't own your own is required for registering a bicycle. never get around to it," he said. bicycle, and you feel the urge (or "It's also cheap transportation." the need) to ride one, there are The feeling of individuality several locations near campus where which long distance runners deve­ they can be rented. Most rentals are FRANCIS OF ASSISI lop is analogous to cyclists. Barbara less than $1.50 per hour, but you FLAME OF HOPE Comerford (GUNS'72), now riding may do better renting a bicycle for is alive and well at Graymoor . INC. her one-speed for the twelfth year, an entire day, when the rate a place in New York's Hudson Highlands Need Campus Salesman compared cycling to driving a averages $4-5. Most locations re­ Volkswagen: "You're kind of a quire some identification (driver's Large Candles made by and a way of lzie throughout the world. minority. You feel as if you are a mentally retarded license, student LD., etc.), or a minimal deposit. We'd like to invite Average commission $3/hr. The rentals nearest the Univer­ possibly more FOR SALE sity are Jack's Boat House, 3500 K a limited number of college men 1970 Honda 350 Scrambler Call 439-5008 for Excellent condition St. N.W. (on the river, two blocks to find out about us information Price: $400 from the foot of Wisconsin Ave.), Call 356-4989 this Sat., and Tow Path Cycle Shop, 2816 and a little more about themselves Oct. 2, after 9 a.m. Pennsylvania Ave., N.W. to a weekend retreat in Virginia's Shenandoah Valley Further from campus is Flet­ October 16 and 17. cher's Boat House, 4940 Canal Road, N.W., about two miles west of the University on the C & 0 Are you interested? Canal. Near the Mall area, the NOON UNTIL 5~OO National Capital Parks rents bi­ cycles at Hain's ·Point in East Write or call soon: Potomac Park. At Hain's Point you can rent only on weekends and BUY ON£ LUNCH­ while the weather remains good.

Jim Puglisi, S.A. Atonement Seminary GETON£ FR££ Wed., 6 Oct. 1971 7-10 p.m. 145 Taylor Street, N .E. FOR A. FRlEt.JDI ISH-3509 Prospect St. NW Washington, D.C., 20017 All I nt'l Students Welcome 529-1114 S1»cCIALTI£S t VE~L. IdIIb HAM 'PIE &. P~OU~HM"N"S \.J)t.)c..H. BLACK ROOSTER PUB 19190 St. N.W. CWARJlUl1 d\OSS Watney's - Bass Ale - Heinekins - Guinness Stout on draught 302..1 M ST. " ..W. Two Dart Boards THE HOYA Thursday, September 30, 1971 Page Twelve Flexible Format Letters to the Editor • • • (Continued from Page 5) administration at the present time for more reasonable, intelligent is so distraught at having bare feet does not encourage me to proceed attitudes on all sides. Extreme in his exam room, men without ties with my appeal. My experience in grade consciousness on the part of Seen For WGTB or girls in pants in his classes, I two years as a member of the SLL students is as much a block to suggest that he is the problem, not Academic Council has led me to creative intellectual activity as ca­ tion would control the two of five his students. conclude that this administration is pricious tyranny on the part of (Continued from Page 1) votes under the present reorganiza­ Obviously major distractions reluctant to examine general issues professors. th~ manager would hold two votes tional ou tline. must be dealt with properly, to the such as the quality of an academic As the vice-president for aca­ on the governing body. As the committee sees the advantage of all, but that is a environment, especially when demic affairs, you have a certain The three other members of the situation, the station would be on a separate issue. In general, if a points are raised by students. It influence that no one else has. I board would be elected by the temporary basis until technical practice does not interfere with the tends to see each case, each need hope that you will do all you can to radio's staff. difficulties concerning radio wave running of a class, it should not be for reform or re-evaluation as an foster mature attitudes in the • Adoption of a policy interference with research con­ prohibited. Such a guideline would isolated event. members of the faculty and the statement, which would include the ducted in the Physics Department probably be a suitable first step If I were interested only in administration; many of us are following points: in Reiss Science Center are correc­ toward the establishment of an vindicating myself and cleaning my engaged in a similar task wtih the No one authorized to use the ted. This would be done by either environment conducive to learning record, I would not have written members of the student body. radio's facilities would be unreason­ moving the antenna off-campus or and growth, not just quality point­ this letter. I imagine that I will Thank you for your attention. ably denied access to the station. broadcasting only after working collecting. accept the risk inherent in being on Susanna Jordan Sturgis Flexible programming would be hours, thus eliminating the possi- The nature of my school's probation and do all I can to work SLL'73 used to encourage all members of bility of interference. .------, the University to submit sugges­ The station presently has no tions or material for broadcasting. operating radio tower should Fr. This recommendation was under­ Henle approve the committee's stood by observers to be an effort recommendations in the near to move away from the "free form" future. The tower atop Copley Hall programming developed last year at was blown down by high winds on the station, which resulted in March 7. The station has not almost all rock music broadcasting. broadcast since that date. A student staff would be kept Although some WGTB veterans "numerous and well-informed." A were pleased by the prospect of an radio spokesman for the station early return to the air waves, many said the station would need 30-40 voiced doubts that the University student workers. could attract a station manager, Students would be recognized as even with a $15,000 plus annual participants in the decision-making salary, who would be willing to process of the radio organization. share control of a station with three In effect the University administra- student directors. 'Back-to-School' Needs More Student Support (Continued from Page 3) order to create a more even expenses, while housing and meals geographic distribution in the are provided by the University. student body. Applicants are given the oppor­ The back-to-school committee tunity to attend classes on Friday this year wiJI work with admissions afternoon, and are usually the officers in attending college and guests at a reception attended by career evenings at high schools. The faculty members, deans and other team of admissions officer and University officials. Saturday morn­ student will offer a broader view of ing is left open for the students to the University to potential discover the Georgetown area and applicants. Questions on student to sightsee downtown. Dates for life, dorm living, social activities, ad infinitum can best be answered by a student himself. Initiating a new approach this year, the commuter applicants committee will conduct informal receptions for students within the University's commuter radius. The committee will also arrange for these students to visit classes and talk with Georgetown students. In an effort to more quickly involve transfer students in George­ town life, a new committee on transfer students was formed. This committee will publish articles in Indicators of special interest to transfer students, such as informa­ tion on housing. Assistant director of admissions B. F. Price Ivins is the moderator of the student admissions committee. Charles Deacon, now director of MEG GEHRES admissions, was the previous the high school weekends are moderator of the committee which selected to include a student was originally formed in the mid- sponsored activity, such as a Mask 1960's. Committee chairman Meg & Bauble production, one of the evenings. Generally 50 applicants Gehres feels the Georgetown are invited, but only 20 or 25 students involved in the commit­ students actually attend. tee's work make the overall impres­ Beginning its third year the sion of the University "pretty newsletter committee, headed by objective." Rae Hoffman added John Flood (Coli. (73), plans to that the diversified members of the committee present "a multiple publish four issues of Indicators. image of the campus." The magazine is written by students and faculty members who are asked to contribute articles on topics relevant to applicants. Sent to all freshmen and transfer applicants, 'Need Help?' Indicators seeks to acquaint candi­ dates to the people and activities of Georgetown. Peggy Shannon (ColI. '74) heads the back-to-school committee organized to interest Georgetown Call students in returning to high schools in their home neighbor­ hoods to talk with interested seniors. The back-to-school Hot Line committee is presently trying to The first malt liquor good enough recruit Georgetown students from areas of the country which do not ANHEUSER·BUSCH, INC •• ST. LOUIS to be called BUDWEISER® send many students to the Univer­ sity. Committee members from these areas wiJI hopefully be able to 625-4194 encourage students from their region to attend the University in - Thursday, September 30, 1971 THE HOYA Page Thirteen

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- - THE HOYA Thursday, September 30,1971 Page Fourteen Master Plan Projects Pool, Gym

by Lance Ringel Expansion, which is endemic today at American universities, is not sparing Georgetown as has been discovered in the recent release of the already controversial Master Plan. Probably for the first time, the University's athletic program has been taken into account by those who would further develop its land. The first phase in GU's physical - expansion concerns a project called Mandate '81, which as the name implies, should be completed by 1981. According to the Rev.

See Editorial, P. 4.

Thomas R. Fitzgerald, SJ, academic vice president, "the only athletic addition to Mandate '81 is a swimming pool. The need for the pool is fairly urgent and Fr. Henle is pushing ahead on the idea." Such words are music to the ears of swimming coach Jake Hengstler, whose tribulations are many. "I've always been amazed that we don't have a swimming pool," the be­ leagured coach murmured. One of the proposed structures to replace McDonough Gymnasium in include a swimming pool, fieldhouse and handball and squash courts "Georgetown always likes so much the University's Master Plan. There is hope that such a building could for untramural use. to compare itself to the Ivy League, but what Ivy League school has only one swimming pool, let along Col. Robert Sigholtz, director The result is a plan which seems would be ample parking space for will be a walk-and-bike type of none. A swimming pool is a work of athletics, and the proponents of astonishing to the laymen: it calls football fans. campus. We do hope to have an for an underground, multi-level Fantastic? Perhaps, but as Chris outlet with the Metro or some of prestige, you can't call yourself the Master Plan do not see soccer field house underneath what is now Hansen, vice president for planning other public transport." outstanding without a pool." as being jeopardized, Soccer Coach Paul Kennedy is understandably Kehoe Field. and physical plant and another of After the dizzying visions of the "Is it feasible? Absolutely it's the men behind the Master Plan, Hello Swimming Pool not pleased. future pass, one is compelled to ask Sigholtz noted that "the soccer feasible," declares Dean Price, spells it out, "We're discussing a the price tag. "We have allotted a director of planning and master of plan for the best use of space for 360 foot square for the football Both Fr. Fitzgerald and Hengst­ field is in the best condition that it's been in for years." Apparently the Master Plan. Both Sigholtz and Georgetown UniVersity. We're a field-fieldhouse complex," ob­ ler mentioned the fact that George­ the Master Planners point to Prince­ city college, available space must be served Price. "We haven't run an town did at one time have its own that will just help the builders. Sigholtz is also hoping for ton's L. Stockwell Jadwin Gymnasi­ used." It seems difficult to argue official estimate, but ten to 25 pool. Where is it now? "Under sixty um, a new multi-level complex built with the fact that having the field million dollars seems to be a fair feet of fill," Fr. Fitzgerald replied. squash and handball courts along with the swimming pool. "We could at what has been termed a "modest on the gym would save space. guess. Much depends on what ideas "It was near the cemetery," investment. " Colonel Sigholtz advises." noted Hengstler, "and it was a have had it underneath Mc­ Donough," Sigholtz stated, "but Jadwin is just one more example Good-bye 'Open Spaces' Needless to say, such money is casualty of progress. I don't know not readily available. Charles Dea­ if it was a victim of Harbin Hall or the rock upon which the gym is built is poor for construction." "We must realize we can't keep con, Acting Director of Admissions of expansion of the cemetery." and president of Hoyas Unlimited, At present the Hoya swimming Details on the actual pool are our open spaces," Price insisted. "The Master Plan gives the campus dispelled notions that his group was team uses the pool at American sketchy indeed. No doubt it will be a standard-sized pool, coeduca­ an open feeling without the large to be heavily involved in raising University on what Hengstler des­ funds. cribes as a you-scratch-my-back­ tional in nature. It is hoped that a green areas we have now. From an I'll-scra tch-yours arrangement. retractable roof will be part of the athletic point of view, it's actually "We're a booster club, not a "You can imagine the sales pitch I bargain. The Planning Office has better. " fund raising organization," he have when I say we have an $1.5 million earmarked for the The reason it is to be better is corrected. "We try to fit needs not off-campus pool. pool, but Coach Hengstler has never because there will be some athletic budgeted to the athletic depart­ "I've approached good swimmers been consulted about it. facilities scattered all about the ment. We're just a fledging bunch in here who were interested in the A swimming pool is not the only campus, rather than all in one our second year of organization. team, but when they find there's improvement GU athletes would place. "The Master Plan gives the Certainly I am not opposed to not even a pool, they say to hell like to see and the total Master Plan University a 'village' look which these plans. We should not, how­ with it. If there's a pool on calls for many more changes by the includes self-sufficient housing, ever, be unrealistic." campus, the good swimmers dawn of the next century. Prime each of which would have its own "This is up to the President and migrate to it. Recruiting of both mover behind the other changes is workout gyms, or a gym nearby in the Master Planning Board," freshmen and transfers is extremely Col. Sigholtz. a separate building," Price said. Colonel Sigholtz admitted. "We in difficult. And of course there are "The decentralized workout area the Athletic Department make no no swimming scholarships." idea is tremendous and should give pretense of control." At least Hengstler is no; longer Good-bye McDonough sports in general a big boost. " Fr. Fitzgerald summed up the crying in the dark, for the swim­ "The biggest advantage is con­ Administration's attitude: "The ming pool is to be built. "I think venience," Hansen said simply. fieldhouse is in the Master Plan in Georgetown will be a better place "McDonough Gym is clearly "You are more likely to make use the sense that there is space with a swimming pool," com­ inadequate," the Colonel pro­ of such things if they are nearby. designated for it. There is no mented Fr. Fitzgerald. "Let me put nounced. "The undergraduate DEAN PRICE "The Plan keeps the tennis commitment, just a plan which we courts between Lauinger Library hope to follow." it this way: I would not be the only student body is one-quarter female, of the spectacular things arising in and New South and those near the Thus the plans are all drawn for one to use it." yet the gym is not made for use by collegiate sports buildings. The very current gym. More may be located what could be an exciting expan­ When Fr. Fitzgerald or anybody girls." C?r, as Fr. Fitzgerald put it, lowest level of the gym features else desires to use the new pool more pIcturesquely: "McDonough near Harbin and Reiss," Hansen sion of the Hoya sports program. grass and dirt, enabling many continued. Will it actually occur? "Georgetown they will find it where the soccer was designed when Georgetown was outdoor activities to move inside. stag. " is a funny school about athletics," field is now. Thus swimming's gain "Builders always appear at There are of course other sports may be soccer's loss. Although "The nursing school has manda­ to be considered. The Master Plan pointed out Deacon. "We're relativ­ athletic conferences with their ely anti-athletic. Requests, large tory physical education," Sigholtz latest ideas. I constantly send plans has the baseball field located in continued, "and of course a what is now the New South parking and small, are met with skepticism. to Dean Price's office asking is this "Any plan like this has a lot of physical education class gets prior­ feasible?" Sigholtz's mind has lot. ity for use of the gym. But the problems to overcome before reach­ clearly been on the future. He has "Parking goes underground in place is not well suited for use by the plan," Hansen explained. "This ing beyond the planning stage." coeds. researched Idaho State's incredible accomplishment in building a "When I first came here men and domed football stadium for $2.8 women were not allowed to be in million. As for McDonough, it will the gymnasium at the same time. house offices for the Physical Plant. Those rules have of course been The latest fad in stadiums is relaxed, but the problem of co­ educational recreation is not expected to be geodesic domes the settled. " brainchild of R. Buckmi~ster Fuller. Their big advantage lies in Nor is that the only problem. "In the past few years our intra­ their lack of columns since the roof is self-supporting. However this ~ural program has quadrupled," SIgholtz announced. "To me intra­ kind of dome is unlikely fo~ GU murals are the meat of any the reason being that the roof is t~ s~hool's be flat--supporting a football field. athletic program. Our current facili­ Sigholtz continues, "Our ties cannot cope with the increases immediate plans for Kehoe Field in this program. " are to reverse the bleachers since What did the Master Planners do there is a sunlight-glare problem in with the problem? "I knew I had to the afternoons. We'd like to see be realistic," Sigholtz said. "We're locker rooms, training rooms and • an urban campus and there is going equipment storage facilities under­ to be vast resistance to any neath bleachers." expansion. I had to try to hold on But the far future would be to a~ muc~ greenery on campus as more exotic: an artificially turfed pOSSIble WIthout expanding off the footbal~ field would sit atop the COL. ROBERT SIGHOLTZ current campus." gymnaSIUm, under which there Will such an eerie structure ever grace the grassy knolls of the Hilltop? Thursday, September 30, 1971 THE Htl Y A Page Fifteen Will Hoya Fans Witness • IGrace on the Gridiron?' by John McGowan Anyone who saw the Texas-Arkansas game last Intelligent football fans across the country love year knows how effective the T can be. Although to explain to the baseball die-hard that it is not the Georgetown hasn't adopted the T with the fervor violence of crashing bodies that has made their of Texas, a 6-2 record is more than respectable for game the nation's number one pastime, but rather a team competing on the varsity level for the first the intricacies of strategy that mark football as the time. truly perfect sport. The man responsible for the Georgetown-T is It is the spectacle of 22 men at the moment of Scotty Glacken, a product of St. John's College the hike, springing suddenly to action in carefully High in DC and a quarterback standout at Duke. plotted movements that only the most educated Now 27, he has been coaching football here at GU fan can hope to understand or appreciate fully. since 1968 and has been handling the head The culminating violence of two contradictory coaching job since mid·season '69. strategies meeting head-on in a battle of strength C.oach Glacken has gathered about him a group and execution can often leave bodies strewn over a of aides that have two things in common-all are battlefield limited to a scant six or seven yards. from the DC area and all are young. Dan Droze, Football has become the thinking man's , old man of the group at 35, game-especially now with pro coaches like Hank went on from high school ball in the city to play Stram taking the game away from the old-line for North Carolina and in the military service. executionists of the style. The growing complication of pro football has David Alexander, backfield coach, holds all kinds of rushing records at East Carolina State and certainly affected college play in the past few Coach Scotty Glacken pauses during practice, seemingly meditating on played a year with the Oakland Raiders of the old years. School football, whether collegiate or Saturday's clash with cu. schoolboy, used to be a question of a bull fullback League. plunging into a seven man defensive line, or a ~he youngest member of the staff, Tom quick halfback or tailback taking a pitch and Folhard, 25, was an honorable mention All­ trying to get outside to turn the corner. In either American linebacker at Mississippi State. He'll Itinerant Swimmers case, once the dust settled it was usually apparent h~ndle the defensive line while Harry Jenkins, a that the bigger team had won the day. But today high school teammate of Coach Glacken, will work Astro-Turf has just about done away with dust and with the offensive line. quickness had its chance against size in the With the continuing complication of the game Borrow AU's Pool deceptive ploys of an offense called the Wishbone­ of football, the dependency of Coach Glacken on T. these men is readily apparent. Each is responsible (Continued from Page 16) ing is nearly double what it was last The main emphasis of the Wishbone-T is still for molding his group of players into a cohesive Still, Hengstler finds the arrange­ year at this time. Divers, much needed last season, are also regular­ the running, ball control type of game which may unit that can work together effectively under ment far from satisfactory, incon­ ly working out. Together, they may disappoint those John Brodie and Joe Namath fans pressure situations. veniencing swimmers and spectators provide the extra depth which among us who like to see the ball leave the This year the task is made easier due to the alike. As co·captain Jim Rummage could have reversed many of last quarterback's hand via the air lanes about 50 times large number of experienced players returning to puts it, "With travelling it takes us year's close losses. a game. the squad. But the task of integrating players from two hours to get in t.he one hour of In the Hoya tradition, a plan to But the object of football, like every high schools that played all different styles of practice we have scheduled." Attendance at home meets is hold wine and cheese receptions traditional sport, is to win. Although a Namath football is still a difficult one-especially for a new minimal. after each home meet may also can occasionally pull off an upset like the '69 team like Georgetown. There is also the problem of getting the most But interest is rIsmg. The increase student participation. , the consistent winners have always number of swimmers actively train- But the team is still far from emphasized ball control. "Only three things can out of the available talent. Georgetown is hardly anyone's idea of a football school and the being complete. Coach Hengstler happen when you pass," goes the old saw, "and believes" ... that we should have at two of 'em are bad." pea-brained giant defensive end of schools like PREDICTIONS Alabama and Notre Dame is nowhere to be found least three boys for each competi­ Well aware of the odds, the ideal of the T is to tive slot. That way there'll be limit passing situations to a bare minimum. The T on campus. Only with an understanding that Georgetown 21 Catholic 10 football is not the sole reason for existence could If the Hoyas are not looking competition for different positions demands of its quarterback, not a strong arm, but in the line up." an ability to handle the ball and run with it. any coach hope to survive here. ahead to Juniata and can use As of now, due to the small ;"" The difference in the Wishbone-T is not the Although this attitude could not be better as the Wishbone T effectively regards University finances and intellectual health, they should beat the Cardinals. number of swimmers, every man in amount of running but the options the quarter­ the team is assured a place in the back has once he gets the ball. On anyone play he it can be a nuisance when people start demanding Watch out for surprises if competition. can give to his fullback straight ahead, pitch to his a winning football team. The ability of the the Hoyas find difficulty Coach Hengstler is still seeking tailback outside, give to his halfback who follows coaching staff, all of whom except Dave Alexander getting untracked. After last swimming recruits. He contends the fullback off-tackle or run with it himself. are veterans here, to survive in this atmosphere has year's Hoya romp (30-2) the that GU's lack of depth is his Each decision can be made at a moment's been ably demonstrated. Cards have everything to gain biggest obstacle to success in finally notice after the play has begun and the There seems no reason to expect any less in the and nothing to lose. bringing Georgetown a winning quarterback sees how the defense is setting up. upcoming season. - Dave Kopech swimming team. E TO PUS your nutshell advertisers

Army ROTC • Chowder House, Inc. • District Sound • Emerson's Ltd. • Harding's Cloakroom • Lustre Cleaners of Georgetown • Macke • March • Michael Piano Contemporary Hairdressing Studio • Port 0' Georgetown Restaurant • 1789 Restaurant • Specialized Management Services • Stereo Set • Sunshine Candle Shop • University Air Charter • Viscount Records • The Wardrobe • - Wine & Cheese Shop • Page Sixteen THE HOYA Thursday, September 30, 1971 Svvimmers' Intramurals Referees Football - Basketball' Enthusiasm Needed S:eason Tickets IHighest'Yet by Peter Morris "In the four years I've been For Information involved with the swimming team, this year's swimmers are displaying $10 for all hotne gatnes the greatest enthusiasm of any year." Contact So says Dave Donavan, co· captain of this year's Georgetown swimming team, as the Ho~a natators continue their workouts m Greg Schulze No separate season passes preparation for this winter's competition. Donavan continued, "It would for football or baskeball seem that the boys are simply tired at of losing. With a little help from our friends, this should be the available finest season in over a decade." 625-4292· joinCo-captain Donavan inJim leadmg R;ummage the sWIm- 'Y"ill ~======~======~ ming team through its expanded 16 meet schedule this year. Included in the slate of meets are traditional rivals Catholic and American Universities, as well as five new teams including Duke and Virginia Military Institute. Swim­ ming giants University of Virginia and William and Mary have been dropped in the interest of fairer competition. "With no pool, we can't be expected to come up with a real championship team," contends Coach Jake Hengstler. "I can chase after all the prospects on campus and knock on their doors, but when they hear we haven't got a pool, you can imagine how their interest dwindles." Facilities and student interest are the main problems confronting the team. A deal with American University allows the use of the pool five nights a week plus Sunday afternoons, with provisions for hosting G U home meets. (Continued on Page 15) Sailing (Continued from Page 17) mores, many who have had little sailing experience. With the arrival of the three new 420 sloops, an expanded member­ ship and a more concentrated practice program, Kennedy hopes that circumstances will improve in time for the remainder of the fall schedule. Comparing the new sloops with the tech dinghies, which have kept Hoya sailors dry for the past decade and a half, Kennedy said, "It's like trying to compare racing a Porsche or Masserati at Le Mans with racing a Sprite on a local track." The Hoya sailors hope those new 420's become Porsches before long.,

WEEKLY HOYA SPORTS MENU

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SATURDAY Schlitz Malt Liquor X-COUNTRY; Navy, Lower Field, 10:30 a.m. can give a lazy Libra the FOOTBALL: Catholis U., Ke­ hoe Field, 2 p.m. lift he needs. SOCCER: at George Mason, 2 p.m. Libra-Y~u're thoug~tful, clever, congenial,.and gifted with a magnetic personality. And -you're also lazy. SUNDAY That's why you should team up with Schlitz Malt Liquor-Taurus ~ the Bu~1. The B~II is k!10~n for its powerful, dynamic, dependable BASEBALL: Doubleheader vs. good. taste. SChll~z. Malt Liquor IS Just the thing to melt away the gloom George Mason, Lower Field, and fire your ambition. 1 p.m. But, ~~ careful. W~en you get together with your most compatible signs, RUGBY: Turkey Thicket (CU), Gemini and Aquanus, you can tend to go overboard. And that's not wise when you:re dealing with the Bull. You'll need all the good judgment Lower Field your sign IS noted for when you drink Schlitz Malt Liquor. TUESDAY Libra~s like good food, good clothes, good music. And that kind of good taste Just naturally leads you to the good taste of SChlitz Malt Liquor. BASEBALL: Catholic U, Lower Field, 4 p.m. Nobody makes malt liquor like Schlitz. Nobody. WOMEN's FIELD HOCKEY: At U of Maryland, 4:30 p.m.

WEDNESDAY SOCCER: at Navy, 3:45 p.m. Thursday, September 30,1971 THE HOrA Page Seventeen A Toast That Invincible Bunch

"There goes old Georgetown Henle and he said my 2.1 wasn't too bad, Straight for a touchdown . .. " and ..." "What kind of a football game is this? "How radical chic-a game. Serving New York Champagne!" So nostalgic. I mean I'm really into nostalgia. "I've had more excitement at a Holy Cross Like I saw No, No Nanette and everything. game." Who's playing?" "Holy Cross! Are you from Worcester? Oh, "Is this the football field! Even Sleepy my God!" Hollow High had a better field than this! If I "Lie down, forever, lie down." were Sigholtz ..." "Someone made a touchdown I think." "Oh, I'm so excited! Oh, Like fun!! Oh, "That was 15 minutes ago and anyway, it Like wow!!! Oh, like ..." was the other side." "Cool it, toots." "Oh. Well, am I supposed to know "Hey, what's Susquehanna?" everything? " The baseball team continues to struggle through their fall schedule, "What's J ew-niata? - or is it Y ou-niata?" "In tegra ting the Animal Section was more experimenting with new players. The infield allignment remains Coach "What about West Chester State B team, fun anyway." Nolan's biggest headache. . speaking of oldies but goodies." "Where are you going to law school?" "Where're you going to law school?" "Here, I guess ... Davis is my mother's "GULC '" you see, I know Fitz and I cousin and Freeze said a 200 LSAT isn't Autumn Baseball figure ..." really impossible and anyway, Bunn and I "Umm, isn't her coat divine? I bet it's St. settled the whole thing over a bottle of Old Laurent. That tacky bitch." Smuggler's. He said he'd blackball Adrian Troubles Continue "I just love football and Bobby Sherman Fisher from the bar at University functions by Ned Hogan holding the Terrapins to three and Porsches and rich boyfriends and money. until I was admitted." The Hoya baseball team, con- hits. He also led the attack on Mostly money, though ... oh, and football, tinuing its lackluster play, emerged offense with a double, an r.b.i. and "You know I love football and the with a 1-1-1 record following a run scored. too. " wage-price freeze and Sartre and the growing encounters with Navy and Mary- In the nightcap the Hoya bats­ "Of course." . . h d' land last week. men got their licks in but so did the S oVlet presence In t e Me lterranean and The Middies completely .out- "Oh, yes, of course." Terrapins. After two innings the Bergman and Lindsay and ... " classed the Hoyas in their 4-0 Hoyas led 3-0, with runs scoring on "Why, I bet you go to Marymount, "You wouldn't be from Trinity, would victory. The Navy pitching held the singles by John Lacci, Tim honey." you?" Hoyas to a mere five hits. Lambour and a wild pitch. "How'd you guess?" In Saturday's twin-bill against Then the roof fell in on frosh "I could use a bloody Mary." Maryland, the fortunes of the Hoya hurler Mike Mattingly as the infield "What's the score?" "You mean you really know all about pitching staff improved, with GU committed a pair of errors to allow "Did they score already?" football?" winning 2-1. Sophomore Ed three unearned runs. The bats "Scoring! Right here in the bleachers!?!" Stakem pitched a complete game were calmed until the seventh, "Sure, but can we go to the Third after the when the Hoyas struck with two next home run?" runs. The Terps came right back "See how they gain ground. " and scored twice on a double and a "Damn it, we're out of wine." GU Sailors home run. The contest ended at a "Did anyone bring anything to eat?" "Please don't sing that. It brings back bad 5-5 tie. "It's late. I can tell by reading the hands on These games bring the Hoyas fall memories. At Homecoming last year I was Blovvn Out my brand new Givenchy ...Oh, don't get the record to a dismal 1-2-2. so ... so ... so ... inebriated that I sang the Ray O'Brien, the captain, ex­ wrong impression. Actually Daddy got it at fight song at Communion during Midnight plained, "The reason for our poor bargain basement prices when he was in Paris Of Regatta showing is two-fold. First of all, Mass in Dahlgren. Mortifying!" last week." by Chuck Lloyd we're pretty inexperienced and "Is that why they call you the Sponge. " "We've never sailed these boats Coach Nolan's been experimenting "Is anyone watching this?" "Everyone's leaving." before" was the excuse of John with a lot of different combina­ Kennedy, the Hoya sailing club's tions, especially in the infield." "Mary Pat and Moe, probably." "Is it over already?" "What was the score?" commadore after Georgetown was Stakem, who's been leading the "No, MP hasn't left Chadwick's SInce knocked out of contention for the team both on the mound and in "vVho won?" Tuesday." national championships in the batting, commented on the young "Who played?" MiddlE' Atlantic Intercollegiate Sail­ pitching. "Conley and Mattingly "Darling, I simply adore football ..." "Who cares?" ing Association's Varsity Elimina­ have both been impressive, especial­ "Go back to Mount Vernon." tions last weekend. ' ly Conley, since he had a sore arm "Where're you going to law school?" "There goes old Georgetown. " Hoya sailors could do no better this summer, but he's throwing real than gain two third place finishes in well now." "Probably Georgetown ... see I know -B.B. the 16-race competition at Anna­ Coach Nolan is counting on polis and placed seventh in the steady improvement in the defense Hoyas Face Navy Next eight team event. and is looking for Hoya bats to Hoya sailors encountered several brighten up the fall season. problems throughout the regatta. "It's difficult switching from our Powers: ILucas in East's Top 5' tech dinghies to the Naval Aca­ demy's 420's," Kennedy said. WishboneT: (Continued from Page 18) "Reinhart pushed me more than I top five. Avoiding injuries, the rest In order to make a good showing Disappointed with several lack- thought. I was always afraid that he of the season looks great." you need "that certain feeling luster performances, Coach Powers was coming up on me." Lucas was Georgetown coach Frank Rienzo which can only be acquired through Sal/Control was very gratified with the showing thrilled with his time. "I started off refuses to predict what Lucas may practice with the boats that you sail (Continued from Page 18) of Dave Reinhart, who placed second not even thinking about a record; do. Obviously pleased with his in competition." to Lucas. "Dave stayed with Lucas times and records just come." star's performance, Rienzo will not The team also resorted to a fullback and a reverse hand off to a much longer than we expected. I AU coach Powers puts Lucas in be satisfied until more Georgetown system of rotating skippers in the halfback. It can also be run in have to believe he inspired Joe's the East's top five cross-country runners break McKay's record. two-man boats which proved dis- possible passing situations, with fantastic time." runners. Lucas is quick to agree. This Saturday will present asterous to the Hoyas. one halfback set out as a wingback Lucas concurred with Powers. "I've got to consider myself in the Georgetown's harriers with an op­ Irregular winds on the mile and a or flanker. Look for Gray to fake portunity to fulfill Rienzo's expec­ half triangular course varied from a the whole thing and roll out to tations when the midshipmen from complete calm to gusts of 20 knots throw occasionally-Glacken does the Naval Academy invade the or more. Such conditions proved not have Royal's aversion to pass- Hilltop. less than ideal. ing. Navy has got to be considered Perhaps the biggest problem was The Wishbone, as a running Saturday'S favorite on the basis of the high caliber of competition attack goes, is essentially a ball­ last year's competition. The Hoyas which the eliminations presented. control offense, with an emphasis beat the Middies in thE' varsity race Navy, who won the regatta, and on grinding out both yardage and by a scant point last fall while the Penn State continually demon- the clock. Both Texas and GU have GU frosh were overwhelmed by the strated their superior sailing abili- had decent, if not outstanding, plebes. ties. defenses over the past wishbone In last year's frosh race four Among the Hoyas' opponents history. Without them there would Navy runners finished before a was Midshipman Billy Campbell, have been trouble. single Hoya crossed the line. In last fifth place finisher in last year's Baylor gave Texas a scare last Saturday's race five of the first Nationals. He proved this feat no year by simply having their de­ seven Georgetown runners were on fluke by continually outdistancing fensive end knock down the trailing the last year's frosh cross-country the field last weekend. halfback on every play. Aided by a squad. Headed by a strong Navy crew, solid pass defense and two TD's on Coach Rienzo really isn't expect­ the Mid-Atlantic region will be long returns, Baylor put up a stiff ing a loss, however. Faced with represented by four schools in tight before they bowed in the these seemingly overwhelming odds further trials for the national title. fourth quarter 21-14. against Navy, Rienzo was asked if "Despite GU's feeble showing at You need the personnel however these facts on paper were meaning­ Annapolis," Kennedy contends, to make defenses work, so Catholic Lucas, Mull, Martinelli and Riley jog down after sweeping AU and ful. Rienzo smiled wryly and "potentially we're a very good might have trouble Saturday. But Gallaudet in their cross-country inaugural last Saturday. Lucas broke replied, "Well, I guess we'll see team." The club is composed Glacken may have trouble with Georgetown's school record in winning the race, while Mull turned in a Saturday. You know what I think, mostly of freshmen and sopho- some other higher-quality opposi- strong fourth place finish. though." (Continued on Page 16) tion later in the season. GEORGETOWN UNIVERSITY, WASHINGTON, D.C. Thursday, September 30, 1971 Page Eighteen Gridders Meet Cardinals In Season Opener Sat. by Dave Kopech quarterback Jeff Gray, with a good A few freshmen will start on the Georgetown opens its second individual performance by halfback offensive and defensive lines for year of varsity football this Satur­ Gerry O'Dowd. O'Dowd, who sat GU, which will probably be the day against cross-town rival Catho­ out last season with a knee injury, most inexperienced areas. lic University. This first game scampered 70 yards on one run and Another weakness is in the should indicate the eventual out­ looked very strong on other plays. Hoya's defensive backfield where come for the season-be it as good The Hoya defense held the again there is some inexperience. It as last year's or one ending in Eagles scoreless and at one point is here that the Hoyas could find failure. held them for four downs after the difficulties against the Cardinal's Although CU was romped by St. Eagles had penetrated the Hoya ten fine aerial attacks. Francis 34-6 last Saturday, it is a yardline. American, however, does Reviewing future Hoya op­ much different team from the one ponents, Juniata lost to Albright Georgetown faced last season. It See Hoya Predictions, P. 15 last Saturday 6-0. They will play has an all new look due to a Susquehanna this Saturday, which completely new coaching staff led not emphasize football whereas on should tell how good the Indians by John Rossiter, who Saturday the Hoyas must prove will be. Dickinson, whom the Hoyas will be out to improve last year's their ability to fend off a team that meet Oct. 30, won Saturday over 2-5 record. many consider better than AU. Lebanon Valley while Susquehanna Coach Rossiter thinks that the The possibility of being over­ lost to Westminster. Cardinals have a good chance for confident may plague the Hoyas At 2:00 p.m. Saturday the improvement and "sees no reason after their romp over Catholic last speculations of Hoya football fans why they shouldn't start with year. Catholic, however, should will end as another Georgetown Georgetown. " really be "up" for the game. football season opens Kehoe Field. His team is basically a passing team but has an ample running attack led by veterans John Hoya quarterback Jeff Gray (19) fires bullet over outstretched arms of D'Agostino at halfback and Ed McNertney Sparks defensive teammate. Gray will lead Georgetown into their home opener Monteya at quarterback. The Saturday at Kehoe Field. biggest problem facing Rossiter is lack of depth. He has only 32 players-many of whom are fresh­ Noyas' 6-3 Victory men. Harriers RompAs In spite of this, the Cardinals by Tom Ruddock After a goal by Gallaudet in the maintain a strong desire to revenge The Georgetown soccer team opening minutes of the second last year's 31-2 romp by the Hoyas. opened its 1971 campaign against quarter, Georgetown picked up the Coach Rossiter said, "I'll have no Gallaudet College last Saturday pace of the game and followed Lucas Sets Mark trouble getting the guys up for this afternoon, drilling a 6-3 victory Coach Paul Kennedy's encourage­ one." into the nets. ment to "get hungry for the goal." by Bob Hayes honors, AU head coach Jerry For the past month, the Hoyas The booters got off to a quick Giraldi quickly put a chip shot to Sports Editor Powers was duly impressed by have been preparing for the opener start in the opening period, when Pat McNertney who fired the ball With cross-country captain Joe Georgetown's depth. "That's our and are beginning to get into two Gary Lanzara gave a lead pass to for Georgetown's third goal. Lucas smashing Georgetown's big problem," Powers complained, workable units. In a scrimmage right wing Pat McNertney who Later in the second period, school record, the Hoyas opened "We don't have the depth. If one against American, Georgetown passed on to Captain Tony Giraldi. Frank Prial chalked up another their 1971 cross-country season guy gets hurt or doesn't run well scored four times while shutting Giraldi shoved the ball to lineman point on a brilliant pass from with easy victories over American we're finished." out AU. Skip Sawch. Sawch set, shot and fullback Jeff Covel, who had U. and Gallaudet College last (Continued on Page 1 7 ) The Hoyas ran well behind scored. dribbled upfield. Halftime came Saturday. with Georgetown enjoying a com­ Lucas' winning time of 25:40.5 Wishbone T Analyzed fortable 4-1 lead. for the hilly five mile course Gallaudet came storming back eclipsed Garth McKay's old record with two quick goals opening up of 26:12 set last year. Penn State the third quarter. One came from a star Greg Fredrichs holds the course head shot on a corner kick, the record of 25 :22. Gray Engineers Attack other as a result of a shot from a Lucas led his teammates to Gallaudet lineman. impressive victories in last Satur­ by Don Walsh make it go, the quarterback has If the end moves laterally outside The Hoyas entered the final day's double dual meet. Although Contributing Editor essentially only two "keys" to read. to pick up the trailing backs, the quarter determined to stretch their A U runners copped second and Georgetown football is entering If the defensive tackle pulls later­ quarterback keeps the ball himself lead. Reed Goldsmith took a pass, third places behind Lucas, George­ its second varsity year at the same ally to follow the action, the and cuts into the hole. If the end dribbled around an opponent and town's Rich Mull (4), frosh Steve time the Hoya offense enters its fullback gets the ball on a belly goes for the quarterback, GU's Jeff kicked to Pat McNertney. With the Riley (5), Justin Gubbins (6) and second year of the triple-option handoff as he hits the line and rips Gray will simply pitch the ball back Gallaudet goalie racing to pick up Jim Freel (7) ended any threat to a attack of the Texas "Wishbone T" up the middle. The fullback hits the to the second back, who sweeps Goldsmith's pass, McNertney's kick Hoya win. formation. line anyway on every play, since he end with the first back blocking. sailed into the goal. The team battle turned out to be The successful use of the Wish­ must carry out a fake plunge Naturally, there are other op­ The charge continued as George­ between AU and GU since Gallau­ bone brought Darryl Royal's UT without the ball if the tackle did tions. Texas' most popular (used town's attack intensified. GU's final det, obviously out of their league, Longhorns a 30-game win streak not move. several times in the UCLA game) is goal came on Giraldi's pass to "Hat failed to place a single runner ahead and a national championship. With If the quarterback doesn't hand a counter with a quick fake to the Trick" McNertney, who scored his of the slowest Hoya or Eagle no such lofty aspirations, George­ off, he watches the defensive end. (Continued on Page 17) third goal of the day. finisher. town fans can at least look forward After a pedestrian first mile in the race, AU's Dave Reinhart and toScotty an Glacken'sexciting season,charges providingcan make '-,""1 Gary Cohen broke from the pack with Lucas hot on their heels. it ;o~.: j~~~e"what is the Wishbone? -.:'~;l ~. Lucas, running consistent loops of the course, wore down his oppo­ IsRoyal it asof uncomplicated Texas would ashave Darryl us ..~~~.~~~~;;~~~~;:;;~"":,~~~",,,",,,,~-..:'~~~',,;-.~?-:';;:2:S!i:=~~~;""""""""""''''''''-:: nents and was away on his own by believe? Is it as indefensible as the three and a half mile mark. Rice, Arkansas and TCU seem to Running the final mile in an feel it is? Or can it be handily incredible 4:37, Lucas stretched his whipped, as was proved last New margin of victory to nearly 200 Year's in the Cotton Bowl? yards over Reinhart. AU's Cohen The Wishbone is a fancy name finished just six seconds behind his for the old Steve Owens Y -formation teammate. used experimentally by the New Soph Rich Mull ran an excep­ York Giants in the early 1950's. tionally tough race on his way to a With the quarterback over center, fourth place finish. Mull, long the fullback directly behind, and plagued by injuries and illnesses, the two halfbacks split behind had been the center of controversy the fullback, the Y (or wishbone) earlier in the season when several shape emerges. team members became disen­ The quarterback is the key to chanted with his training habits. the attack's salient feature-the Because of his history of poor triple-option. The basic move is at health, Mull had been permitted to the snap when the backs move work out on his own, much to the laterally to either side, with one chagrin of other team members. A halfback trailing the other and the team meeting resolved this problem fullback cutting in front of the and nobody was complaining Satur­ quarterback into the line. day after Mull's fourth place finish. The relatively simple character Noting the 23-36 score for team of the offense is now seen, since to