GEORGETOWN UNIVERSITY, WASHINGTON, D.C. Friday, April 6,1973 WGTB Claims Harassment by Federal Agency by Andy Lang The Federal Communications Commission is trying to "harass" WGTB radio, Program Director Thomas O'Brien (ColI. '73) said this week. The F .C.C. is conducting a nationwide investigation of obscenity on radio, he said. Investigators from the agency visited the station March 23 and requested information on the station's format and music programming. "They asked to inspect the log --"-T-h-e-M-o-n-d-ay-a-f-t-er-,-th-e-y-c-a-ll-ed­ of the previous week, looked around the control room and talked back and they asked to speak to an announcer and set up an appoint­ to Ken Sleeman for almost an hour, ment for an hour," he added. asking about our policy for select· ing music," O'Brien said. "They (Continued on page 6) had Ken pull from our library "Woodstock," " Gays Meet WGTB claims the F.C.C. is trying to harass the radio station. (Photo by Fred Kohun) Radio Dinner" and some Jefferson Airplane and Frank Zappa. They Jesuit in Congress listened to some of the music and To Decide made Ken sign a statement on what our music policy is: The Board of Future Plans Directors must approve all music Eigat persons attended an orga­ Drinan Speaks at G.U. that is broadcast on the FM in nizational meeting Wednesday night advance." Sleeman is the profes­ for the Gay Georgetown Com­ by Mark Von Hagen Starving Third World of humanity growing in hunger, sional manager of the station. munity. The group, originally the U.S. Rep. Robert Drinan, S.J., "In a civilized nation, we can't growing in illiteracy, growing in "The statement also included a Gay Georgetown Students, was said Monday evening that God sent say we're· going to waste our desperation. " brief statement on. our format, guaranteed the right to organize him "to Washington to drive the resources on the assumption that After the speech, Fr. Drinan which is progressive rock, and that unofficially by Executive Educa­ snakes out of the federal govern- our alleged enemy will use nuclear answered questions from the audi­ our announcers are free to broad­ tional Vice-President the Rev. ment." Fr. Drinan spoke to an weapons. The industrialized nations ence. On abortion, he said that the cast whatever we have screened Edmund G. Ryan, S.J. last month. audience of 60 people in Gaston are starving the third world," Fr. Supreme Court decision was "prob­ first." "We're going to try operating Hall in the third lecture of the Drinan said. ably inevitable. But the reasoning is The F .C.C. investigators also under Fr. Ryan's guidelines for the Lenten series. "We do pretend that we're a quite faulty in my opinion. Abor­ asked Sleeman if the station had time being," said William Appert Fr. Drinan, the first priest- moral nation. Catholics, Protestants tion laws, however, as they stand played a specific selection by a (SLL'74), a coordinator of the Congressman since 1882, was and Jews have assumed that religion are unenforceable. certain male vocalist, O'Brien said. group. "We've decided not to elected from the Massachusetts will produce moral individuals to "The ball is in the hands of the "They did not say if they were appeal to Fr. Henle right away, but Third District in 1970. He was go into government, but I suggest medical profeSSion. Can we educate acting on a specific complaint. Ken take full advantage of Fr. Ryan's returned to his seat last year. Fr_ that all churches are responsible for (Continued on page 16) said he didn't know. guarantees. " Drinan was graduated from the the hideousness of the military Organizers of the Gay George­ Georgetown Law School in 1950 establishment and the bankruptcy town Students were denied their and has been living in Georgetown's of our budget for programs in the Academic Council second appeal for recognition March Jesuit community since 1970. He Judeo-Christian rationalist ethic." 15. In a letter to the group, Fr. also served as Boston College Law Fr. Drinan has voted against the Ryan promised to "support and School Dean from 1956 to 1970. Vietnam war, the $85 billion Vote Next Week protect the exercise of your rights "I see a crisis in the political military budget and any form of as students of Georgetown Univer­ order" Fr. Drinan said. "I want the military draft. He claims the Viet­ Campaigns are underway for 29 composed of ten students, five sity ." voice 'Of morality and religion· in the narn war is the best example of positions in the academic councils appointed by the administration The Student Life Handbook chambers of government. I want a government neglect of religion in of four of the undergraduate and five elected by the student grants students the right to post peaceful revolution for our bicen- the United States. schools. A heavy turnout is expect­ body. In the past year, the group signs, place announcements in stu­ tennial celebration. "The churches should not be ed for the academic elections has organized majors associations in dent publications and reserve Uni­ "Our ·foreign policy is intimidated," he said. "I'm en­ because balloting will take place as several departments, initiated the versity facilities for activities. n~thing part of undergraduate pre-registra­ more than a coexistence of terror. couraged that so many people "lemon day" protest against in- Fr. Ryan withheld formal re­ tion next week. We support the fascists wherever we know tha~ thi~ country has gone (Continued on Page 17) (Continued on Page 13) can find them while containing the astray. ThIS natIon has fallen to the Voting will be at the dean's communist conspiracy;" worship of its own P?wer. Nixon offices of the College, School of says 'we must be first, but I want Foreign Service and School of to be first in the things that count." Business Administration. Balloting Fr. Drinan accused the Nixon will be at the Assistant Dean's office administration of perpetuating an for the School of Languages and ethic contrary to Judeo·Christian Linguistics. The election will be selflessness. "I was appalled when from 10 a.m. to 4· p.m. Wednesday Nixon said in his inaugural address, and Thursday. 'what have you done for yourself?' Four positions are open in the Such words are the opposite of our College Academic CounciL Candi­ religious traditions of helping dates for At-Large Academic Re­ others. King Richard gives off the presentative are Charles Fazio, work ethic as the eleventh com­ Thom Laurino, Steven. Garbini, mandment. Keith Johnson and Valerie Bailye. "You must rise up and say that In the race for Class of '75 we are not going to be silent. We Representative are Stuart Garfinkle, are not going to be good Germans. Ron LeFrancois, Michael Mc­ You have to fundamentally radica­ Carthy, Ed Papa, John Wooters, lize your lives. You have to get Joan Planell and Robert Devaney. radicalized and politicized and not Candidates for the Class of '74 live ordinary middle-class middle· Representative are Alice Manning, age lives in your suburban home in Judy Orie, Camilla Broderick, Scarsdale trying to send your kids Frank DiGiammarino, Patricia Cain to Georgetown. and Sam Rieff. Candidates for Class of '76 Academic Representative are Rank Fifteenth Brian· Smith, Robert Read and Kris Niedermeier, chairman of the S.A.B., has announced elections for "We rank fifteenth in the world Patrick Smith. four school academic councils will take place next week (Photo by Keith FR. DRINAN on aid to third world nations, half The College Academic Council is King) Page Two THE BOYA On English Lit. stoned soul I H.J. Nora We are supposedly living in history's most highly educated society. Yet one wonders why intelligence is so rare. One studies our country's history and is struck with the brilliance and number of men who led the colonies to independence. Then one regards -the number of govern­ ment students at Georgetown and is amazed at the lack of originality brought to bear on our modem - problems. Today illiteracy is almost completely eradicated in the U.S., but what do Americans read? Love Story, The Odessa File, and that great moral teacher, who might someday replace Rod McKuen as the All-American seer, Jonathan Livingston Seagull. Despite Mr. Nixon's cuts in aid to higher education, we may assume that for some years to come, past and present students of English literature will constitute a large segment of the population. What are they reading when '-.' " they leave college? The major problem, I believe, is that students have little of the necessary time and energy to read literature outside University President Fr. Henle (left) has written a letter to D.C. Mayor Walter Washington asking him to end of the formal academic situation. This would not be bad, if discrimination against students looking for apartments in Washington. Student Body President Doug Kellner has met with other D.C. area college presidents on the issue. (Photo by Keith King) - formal academics did not emphasize only one aspect of a reader's skills. During my freshman year I had to read Sartre's Nausea for a Theology course. The book was so compelling that I G . U. President Attacks had to read it a page at a time, ten or twenty pages an hour. (Today readers are only compelled by those books which they can read at once-e.g. Rosemary's Baby and The Andromeda Strain.) I finally decided to quit reading Housing Discrimination Nausea three days before my midterm exam. Not only did by Mark Forster with Catholic and American Univer- of university presidents who have I have other books to re-read before the test, but I had to University President the Rev. R. sity student leaders to organize the pursued the matter." readjust my relationship with Nausea and become an J. Henle, S.J. has urged the D.C. Consortium against housing dis­ Johnson cited former Student analyst instead of a reader. Besides, the peculiar theme of government to end discrimination crimination. Consortium re­ Government President John Ken­ against students in a letter sent to presentatives hope to appear before nedy (C'73) and his staff's "action the book not only threatened to destroy my objectivity D.C. Mayor Walter E. Washington. the D.C. city council in a hearing to prevent discrimination" by list-_ during the test, but may also have inspired me to miss the concerning housing discrimination ing local real estate agents who are test and leave school. In a related development, Fr. against students, schedUled for willing to rent to students. Henle also urged that the Con- A student's academic objectivity does not always sortium of D.C. Area Universities mid-April. involve such an extreme emasculation of the author's art. "have someone look I'nto the "The D.C. Housing Code permits A'Ival abl e: M-dI - M ay to M-dI A ugust discrimination against students in But any work with literature in formal academics will alleged discrimination or possible housing," said Keith Johnson Fully furnish,ed, partially involve a degree of this destruction. One simply should not discrimination against students" (C'74), former University Resi- air-conditioned, House for four approach Homer and Shakespeare thinking, "there will be and place the matter on the agenda dence Board Chairman. "Through in Georgetown for the group's next meetl-ng Rent $325 per month plus utilities a test on this book in two weeks and I must read it now, . the effort of Student Government H , t' It d f Call 965-1496 for I must finish three other books before Sunday"-all enI e s ac IOn resu e rom it has been brought to the attention '--______....1 information given to him by Stu- ,------t this before opening the cover! dent Goverment President Doug When one analyzes a work of literature, whether it is Kellner and Vice-President Neil OPPORTUNITY with a theory of aesthetics, or with the psychological and Shankman after their meetings with Summer jobs in Europe available on priority basis. A work adventure_ sociological orientations of an individual's professor, a other Consortium university presi­ dents concerning housing dis­ Travel and learn. Sound Exciting? Campus Agents will soon be accepting great deal of the art's reality is abstracted away. We are left .applications: Call 354-2803: Ms. Stewart. crimination. with economics, philosophy, or some other discipline that -In his letter to Washington, Fr... ______... could more profitably be confronted elsewhere. Henle stated "it seems that dis­ This does not discredit the real purpose of a formal crimination against students in the education in literature. A freshman recently complained Nation's Capital is altogether inap­ TERM PAPERS & about her poetry class. The class, it seems, is being propriate and unjust." He suggested subverted by a group of "free spirits" who refuse to that it is "possible for landlords to draw up contracts to protect them THESES Typed consider rhyme patterns and metre as relevant to the from the irresponsible type of meaning of poetry. It is true that metre and rhyme do not young person" while making it KNOWLEDGEABLE - EXPERIENCED constitute the art or complete reality of poetry, yet a possible for the "majority of knowledge of them can deepen our awareness of a work of Georgetown students to obtain We will assist you in meeting GUs proper Jonnat requirements. art. But before we can reach this dimension of housing on an equal basis." EFFICIENT BUSINESS SERVICE appreciation we must have a strong and broad relationship Put Pressure SIS-15th St., N.W. - Our 19th year - 783-0715 with the art. The problem is more readily recognized in a Shankman said that Student poetry class, perhaps, because poetry is rarely read outside Goverment "has been in contact of formal academics. with Consortium schools" and that "together we hope to put pressure Students come to college with only a minimal on city government." GU Special background in literature. In college they do not have the The External Relations Office of time to approach the art without a high degree of formal Student Government headed by $ 1LoOi OFF objectivity. They can avoid being extreme in this Dart Westphal has held meetings approach, but they are confronted with those more Any Dinner Purchase "successful" students who have bastardized their intelli­ Alternative Sun thru Thur gence until they can bring their academic work a glibness To Abortion: with this ad that is impressive, intelligent, and so thoroughly developed that they miss the entire point. For aMEMOBABLE .If I were a Georgetown professor of English I would EVENING ••• • German A,meri.. • Accordion shudder at the number of philistines I was turning into the can Specleltles • Piano • Imported & Do- "'-_-'- Ni ...... world and would work to decrease the academic pressure ..-Ile Beers on Tep • _ ... ~.ts 19 .. ". • Bohemian Atmoo- that reinforces their thinking. More importantly, George­ • Vintage Wines pi..... town students must learn to "read for the reading"; they must allow themselves the subjective pleasure of Art, something which never will be - graded, critiqued and encourage by anyone but themselves. • Free Cheese & Crackers OLD STEIN Note: Since this is the last edition of Stoned Soul, I would THE ORIGINAL take this opportunity to thank all those who have OLD STEIN PUB - Open 5 p.m. to 2 a.m. criticized, disagreed with, and commented upon the Noon till 2 A.M. column, especially, Deeda Cunniff, Rev. W. Schweder S.J., 1_339 Conn. Ave., N.W. 2603 CO",'II. Ave., N.W. 265-0100 Joseph Tecumseh Nora, and my friends at The HOY A. 785-2362 Friday, April 6, 1973 THE HOYA Columnist Speaks On 'Chi~a Today.1 by Dr. Stephen Cheston , Graduate Dean's Seminar, March 27 Assistant Graduate Dean , oil "China Today." Joseph Alsop, the noted syndi· cated columnist,.,' spoke at the "There is a 30 percent chance of war between China and U.S.S.R. in the near future," said Alsop to the 30 invited faculty members, Evaliiation graduate students and guests at the seminar. "The size of the Soviet Booklets mobilization on the Chinese border is equivalent to the U.S. moving The Student Academic Board one million men to Alaska with full will distribute copies of the supply and logistic support, a task Undergraduate .Student Course of monumental size and cost." Evaluation today and next week Alsop continued that "an invest­ at LaUinger Library. ' ment of this dimension indicates The evaluation contains the that the Soviets are deadly serious stUdent ratings of the quality of about the Chinese nuclear develop­ courses and professors last fall. ment program. The Soviets have to "It can be very helpful in come to a decision within the very deciding which courses to 'take near future whether to castrate the next fall," according to John' Chinese nuclear capability or not. V~~'i Goldenring (ColI. '73), a spoke's­ Columnist Joseph Alsop spoke at a graduate dean's seminar March 27. man for the academic group. "If matters are allowed to continue it will be too late as the "Unlike previous course criti­ Chinese will be strong enough to ques, this year's evaluation for take a tremendous toll on Russia in S.G. Backs Down' the first time contains all retaliation for such an attack," he University undergrad diviSions, said. A successful Soviet attack on including languages, nursing and China would seriously upset the Deal Made on Parietals business courses," Goldering power balance in this tripolar world by Barry Wiegand administration has never recognized had no alternative but to take said. and would have very serious conse­ A compromise agreement on this policy, however, and maintains administrative action," Ms. Y okie quences for the U.S. The booklet will be sold at 50 student self-determination .and tilat final decision-making authority wrote to the Board. . cents because of its increased The Graduate Dean's Seminar is freshman parietals has been reached has never been ceded "in. any Director of Adjudications Jack size and printing costs, Golden­ funded by the Center for Strategic by Student Government officials matter to a student group." Leslie (SFS'76) took issue with ring said. "Otherwise, we cannot and International Studies to bring and the University administratIon. The StUdent Senate, which con­ Dean Yokie, however, replying, afford the publication," he said. distinguished authorities and high As a result of the agreement and firms all 12 members and alternates "Your concurrent jurisdiction with Goldenring asked students to level policy makeJ:s in contact with other recent developments, several of the Residential Violations Board the R.V.B. over alleged violations support the Evaluation." It costs Georgetown graduate faculty and student officials have expressed (R.V.B.), made agreement with of residence hall regulations does less than a beer at the Tombs graduate students in the ,area of optimism that the University's self-determination one of the not permit you to take administra­ and is much more useful," he their expertise. Previous parti- Board of Directors may vote to grounds for approving the nomi­ tive action after a decision of the said. "If the S.A.B. sustains a cipants have been Martin Hillen- reduce or abolish parietals for next nees. Board. large monetary loss we simply brand, . Assistant Secretary of State year's freshmen. .,. Quad Rejects Parietals "It should also be pointed out cannot countinue to publish for European Affairs, Harold. S~udent self-determmatlOn IS. an that your action was not consistent student course critiques in Passer Assistant Secretary of Com- offiCial Student Government polIcy Earlier this year, the Quadrangle with the adjudication system's out­ , h' h . taO th t tud ts h House Council voted to allow each semesters to come." merce and Hobart Rowan the w IC mam InS a s en. ave. . . lined procedure for administrative . I . t f th W' h the right through dormitory house floor In the Quad to

An administrative action by Dean of Students Valerie B. Yokie is being challenged in the parietals fight. Page Four THE HOYA Friday, April 6, 1~73 Editorials Weekends . This weekend is the College's second Par­ ities" of the weekend, a Dean's reception, a ents' Weekend, and the UniverSity will be party and a talk describing the various extra­ rolling out the carpet to make our parents feel curricular activities available to students are welcome at Georgetown. the extent of the "planned" schedule of Though none of the myriads of scheduled events. activities are mandatory for parents to attend, . While that sounds like it could be time it's clear that the planning committees involv­ consuming it really isn't. For the remainder of ed have attempted to provide something for our prospective freshman's time, it is recom­ everyone: sporting events, sight-seeing tours mended that he attend as many (or as few) (with bus transportation provided from Healy classes as he wants or see the sights (on his Circle), panel discussions and speeches, and a own). full list of cultural events are among the In effect, what happens is that the twenty­ schedule of events. five or so high school seniors are left to their The weekend should be quite a success, own devices in an unfamiliar environment too. From a prototype experiment it has and, because they are scattered in the dorms progressed a long way. . with anyone who happened to have a spare But Parents' Weekend isn't the only ~ype of bed, even have difficulties in huddling to- _------_ weekend Georgetown sponsors. The Student gether to keep themselves occupied. Admissions Committee, as one of their efforts It seems a bit ironic that we're willing to to influence prospective freshmen to attend' 'provide all sorts of services to our parents to Rostrum the University, have hosted a series of Admis­ present an impressive image of Georgetown, 1------1 sions Weekends. Interested high school se­ but will present such a shoddy image to Tomorrow's school will have no rejects: it must niors, before they have heard from the Office people we hope will attend the University. guarantee every child a high minimum of accomplishment of Admissions, are entertained for a few days Perhaps the Student Admissions Com- in fundamental skills. by living in a dorm and supposedly sharing mittee would do well to review their program, We no longer can talk of "dumb" or "lazy" children. other experiences of a college student. and if they lack the personnel to give first Almost every child learns, by age three or four, basic skills In actu~ity, however, "entertained" is class treatment to these high school seniors, that are infinitely more complex and more difficult than hardly the word. they should ask other service agencies on anything we try to teach in school. Even the least-endowed A tour of the campus when they first campus, such as Alpha Phi Omega and the normal child learns the language, for example. We will arrive, a meeting to explain the other "activ- Collegiate Club, to help them. expect tomorrow's schools to help each child acquire other, lesser skills, just as we expect every family to enable a child to learn to speak and to walk. The schools must utilize the individual's own rhythm, Have You Heard? his own learning speed, his own pattern. This too we have Word of mouth has it that pre~registration of this semester and will avoid the lines at learned by watching the infant acquire his basic skills. No for the Fall semester begins Monday. McDonough Gym next fall. two children learn to speak the same way. One child This means that next week some 3,000 But whether you have to wait at the Gym experiments for hours with sounds 'and apparently does undergraduates will be frantically trying to or at White-Graven or the point is that regis­ not tire. The next child plays with sounds for 10 minutes, plan their schedules and find their advisors to tration is still a hassle, and perhaps a little then shifts to something else, then 10 minutes later comes secure both approval and a signature on their more cooperation between the Registrar and back to playing with sounds again, and so on. pre-registration forms; only to wait it out the Deans could straighten out some of the The traditional lock step of education once was a while their Dean's office gives it a final difficulties. necessity when the teacher had 30 or 50 children. He had perusal. Course information booklets should be to impose the same pattern on all of them- or thought he While it can be argued that students can made available prior to pre~registration-that did. Certainly with today's tools, this no longer is so---even avoid much of this grief simply by having way, students could meet earlier with their in large classes. already met with their advisors, it is also a advisors and work out suitable schedules The traditional school is labor-intensive; it has neither fact that the course information booklets will without the pressure of a hurried deadline tools nor capital equipment. We have invested little more not be available until Monday; we all know that now threatens. Examination schedules than $100 per student---except in medical schools, physics the difference between "talking" a schedule for the next semester should be published laboratories and such- as against the $30,000 or $40,000 and actually working it out on paper. concurrent with the information booklets, so or $50,000 the modem communications company invests The Registrar's Office and the various students could know what they're getting per employee. We have relied on labor; which meant ,that Deans' Offices are trying to make registration into. the teacher's convenience had to be imposed on the entire a much less harrowing experience than it can It shouldn't be too hard to set earlier class. Yet teachers were both underpaid and underused. be. Because of the opportunity to select printing deadlines so that earlier distribution American education tomorrrow will require a great deal alternate courses at pre-registration, most of' dates could be arranged for the necessary more by way of tools than we have had. us will have our schedules settled by the end information. Today's school is still the school of the scribes. We are beset by verbal arrogance, contemptuous of whatever is not reading, writing, or arithmetic. And yet one look should show us a world in which verbal skills are not the only productive ones. They are necessary-a foundation. But the purely verbal skills are not necessarily the central performance skill when electronic media carry the main information load. People are endowed differently in different areas, but Established January 14, 1920 today's school dismisses three quarters of human THE BOARD OF EDITORS endowments as irrelevant. This is inhuman and stupid. It is , also incompatible with the realities of our economy and Peter Morris, Editor·in-Chief Mark Speca, Production Manager our society. We need craftsmen 'in thousands of areas; everywhere we need people with excellence in one Andy Lang, News Editor Fred Kohun, Photography Editor Tim Brown, Business Manager area-and not necessarily a verbal one. We will expect the Mike Blatty, Arts Editor Krista Lane, Copy Editor Joe Cenoni, Adverti8ing Manager Ken Zemsky, Spans Editor Mark Von Hagen, A8sistant New8 Editor Allene Banks, Executive Secretary school to find the individual's real strength, challenge it, Barry Wiegand, Assistant News Editor and make it productive. The school of tomorrow will be neither behavioristic Bernadette Savard, A8sociate Editor Edward W. Bodnar, SJ.,Moderator nor cognitive, neither child-centered nor discipline­ Contributing Editors: centered. It will be all of these. Elaine Brousseau, Pat Early, Bob Hayes, Rick Horvath, Ken Koenig, Chuck Lloyd, Larry Peters These old controversies have been phonies all aiong. We The HOY A is published each week of the academic year (with the exception of hoUdays and examination period:,). need the behaviorist's triad of practice/reir~:rorcementl Subscription rate: $7.50 per year. Address all correspondence to The HOYA Georgetown University, WaShington, D.C. feedback to lodge learning in memory. We need purpose, 20007. Telephone (202) 625·4578. The HOY A i8 composed at Polygraphic Composition Corp., Washington, D.C., and printed at Journal New8paper~', Inc., Alexandria, Va. decision, values, understanding-the cognitive categories, lest learning be mere behavior, activity rather than action. The writing, articles, layout, pictures and format are the responsibility of the Board Of Editors and do not necessarily repre8ent the views of the Administration, Faculty and Student8 of the University unless 8pecifically stated. Signed Peter F. Drucker columns represent the opinions of the authors and do not necessarily reflect the editorial position of this newspaper. The University su bscribes to the principle of responsible freedom of expression for our student editors. School Around the Bend Friday, April 6, 197~ THE HtlYA Wheatsheaf: Reflections I Am ·the President by Ivan M Katz The President is claiming to hold revelations of Watergate and other The domestic presidency of down Federal spending. :tie is doing questionable activities. Connecticut has been nothing this through military spending that Senator Lowell Weicker, Jr_ an­ more or nothing less than a has shot higher and higher in nounced earlier this week that H.R_ catastrophe for this nation. If it monetary terms year after year, and Haldeman, the President's right: weren't for his successes in the by cutting back on social programs. most hand, knew about the Water­ international field (which are more What he doesn't like in a bill he gate matter when it was in the like non-failures), he could easily be impounds, and when he has to operational stage. John Mitchell, the worst President since Ulysses S. explain it, he hides behind the regardless of Martha's phone calls, Grant. As things stand now, he is in cloak of executive privilege. apparently had knowledge of it, as close running with Warren Harding. Richard Nixon has sold out the did John Dean III, the President's Richard Nixon has taken the entire civil rights movement. By lawyer. U.S. economy and made a multi­ taking formerly ear-marked funds Richard Nixon is a disaster for billion dollar hodgepodge of it. and putting them in the general America. Richard Nixon is the odds on favorite to be the Harding of First we had the heralded "revenue sharing" (which translates into letting the red necks' state this half of the century. Richard "Economic Game Plan". That was Nixon is an example of a President the perfect and unchangeable play capitals do what they what with the money) he has completely removed elected by a landslide who has until the President whizzed right forgotten there is an electorate out Richard Nixon is an example of a President elected by a landslide who around on August 15, 1971 and the wind from the sails of the has forgotten there is an electorate out there who needs and wants to Federal civil rights effort. Nixon there who needs and wants to know gave us Phase 1. Phase I worked what is truly happening. know what is truly happening. well; there was no reason a freeze has made people of liberal mind should not have worked well. But a scream for a period of "benign freeze is a cheap shot, a temporary neglect" feeling that it's the best Spice of Life measure that forestalls for 60, 90, they could get from him. His or 120 days the eventual realization neglect has not been benign in the that. your economy is in trouble. past; just neglect, and a con­ Phase II was that wonderful period temptuous neglect at that. of Wage and Price Commissions, The farmer has virtually been EducauonalGuuslaush which did a splendid job of making sold up the river. He is caught in by Dave Deye both psychological and sociological educational. However, these activ­ certain that prices shot up while between rising costs and a firm While preparing this week's principles. ities are usually done for them­ wages stayed fairly constant. desire on the part ~f the consumer grocery Jist, it struck me that I had Spending at least six hours a selves. Attending classes is not only In January of this year, the not to pay those rising costs. All learned quite a bit about "home" week burning tube steaks (hot done for its face value, but also for President announced Phase III, a the help he is getting from Washing­ economics over the past year. dogs) and hambangers, in addition securing an academic degree, which new plan which could be subtitled ton is irritating nostroms from the Employing primitive accounting to cleaning dirty dishes, doors, is necessarily structured-thus the "Nixon's plan to have all hell break Secretary of Agricultre which seem and economic policies, my room­ floors, the refrigerator, the oven credit system. loose in the American economy." to be aimed at turning this entire mate and I have furnished and kept and the bathroom is a broadening Essentially, internship programs Now the President has put a limit nation against the farmers. up our Rosslyn apartment. Living in experience. A weekly expedition to are designed to blend the theory of on meat prices. Too little and too The President has, through his a Northern Virginia neighborhood the local Safeway to watch the the classroom with that theory late say the economists. lackeys, scandalized the nation with demands creative application of prices change on bread, milk, eggs witnessed in concrete examples. and hamburger is surprisingly Generally, credits are given in 'All in the Family' educational. You would be aston­ proportion to work input which is ished at hamburger's versatility as a judged in,respect to hours worked, tool in the fine art of cooking. several meetings with an advisor Chili, spaghetti, chili-spaghetti, and an evaluation submitted by the Let Them Eat Cake meatloaf, lasagna, and my favor­ student. by Ken Koenig Surely you remember the Great Healy Food ite-Rosslyn Guuslaush-are created The internship programs' pop­ from this choice beef selection. ularity among faculty is mixed, but Contributing Editor Service. It was supposed to be operative at the Tuition, as evelYone knows, is going up Living in an apartment, away a significant number of undergrad beginning of the semester, then after spring from the country-club dorms, and grad students are involved in every year, with apparently no end in sight. break, etc., etc. Maybe, just maybe, it'll be in them. At least sixty SBA students Things at Georgetown are bad in this respect, ought to be rewarded with aca­ operation at the beginning of next year. Just demic credit I. thought. With under the guidance of Dr. Scharles but they are no as bad as they could be. For think, another chance to contract ptomaine pre-registration right around the are involved in the D.C. com­ instance, it costs $3200 in tuition alone to go poisoning! corner, I thought I would apply for munity. In the College, most to Harvard. Princeton's tuition is $3300 while an internship. departments are open to internship Yale's is $3250. Even Brown charges $3400 Speaking of, it is with tidings of I pleaded my case with the dean proposals. The Foreign Service great ... uh ... urn ... the Food Committee suggesting that my grade could be School too offers credit for creative per academic year. But these are Ivy League internships. is ... ah ... um ... Macke will be back next proportional to the degree of our schools, you say. Right you are. Other private With Washington's reserve of year, by unanimous vote of the Food apartment's neatness. Though he colleges and universities are higher, sometimes was impressed with my educational experimental-education resources by significant amounts, than Georgetown, Committee. Looking objectively at Macke, experiences and expressed a desire available and with the faculty eager however. For instance, it costs $2650 to go to one has to realize that they do offer the to sample my Rosslyn Guuslaush, to expand intern programs, it is University a good financial deal. Macke reps. he would not grant me academic now opportune for students to Boston College for a year. Alfred University credit for "Apartment Living." consider an independent I1roject to (don't look at me, I never heard of it, either) have assured members of the Food Committee that the board plan prices will be the same To expect academic credit for be submitted during pre-registration charges $2800 per year. DePauw of Indiana such a learning experience is surely or prior to next fall's registration. even costs more than Georgetown. Nearby next year. And the food is, well ... the food ridiculous. Apartment living, writ­ For the student with responsible Johns Hopkins University costs $3000 a year_ is there. I'm not apologizing for Macke food ing for the school's newspaper, and creativity and a little diplomacy, a great opportunity is at hand. So, perhaps Georgetown's $2500 a year looks service. On the otper hand the Food playing sports and friend-having are Committee is supposed to be representative of reasonable in comparison. If the Board of News Directors is sincere in their statement that the students' interests. The Food Committee Mike Basile. John Regis Coogan. Chuck Crimi. Therese Ettel failed to publicize the fact that the Macke Larry Guthrie. Jay Hatfield. Dan Hogan. Lori Kearns. Steve K~dziel they intend to hold the line. in tuition Sal Massaro. Jerry Mercuri. Cynthia Burns McDonald. increases in the future, and if the administra­ contract would be under consideration last Mike Roth. Marie Spagnoli. Ted Sweeney tion is sincere in its announced efforts to week. I doubt very much if the members of News Features Helene Cohen. Karl Freivalds. economize in the future, maybe Georgetown the Food Committee seriously consulted the Peter Fromuth. Mardy Schweitzer will seem to be a comparative bargain in years opinions of the students they represented. Arts Many members were not present at the Joe Coleman. Larry Gordon. to come. On the other hand, San Fr8ncisco Michael P. Malloy. Mark Sawtelle. University, a Jesuit school, charges less than meeting which ratified the Macke contract. I, Susan Volpe. Eric Zengota $2000 a year. "Go West, young man?" a non-voting member of the committee, was Sports Bill Corey. Mary Flannery. Kathy Flynn. Ken Glick. The administration is currently considering not there. The point of all this is that while the Anne Hargadel!' Greg Kenl!Y. Ned Hogan. Phil Margiasso. a proposal to conduct a contest to name the results of the meeting probably would not John McGowen. JIm Nagle. MIke Pasano. Mary Quinn. Bob Volk Copy bookstore when it 'is relocated in the have been different, the whole affair was handled in a manlJ,er that was not consistent Stuart Chessman. Mark Forster. Jerry Jung basement of Lauinger Library. Ordinarily, I'd PrOduction say that this is an idea destined for with the idea of student representation. In Diane Rogozinski immortality in the halls of inanity. But, as fairness to the committee, steps have been Business with many things the administration does, taken to rectify this matter before the Ed Bucciarelli. Bob Leonard there's a catch-and this catch is one that will contract is discussed next year. Additionally, Secretaries Martha Bauer. Sue Murphy. Joanne Slaboch work in the winning student's favor. The it should be noted that the Food Committee's decision is an advisory one only, leaving the Photography winner of the contest would be offered a gift Moses Albert, Chris Arndt. Thea C. Bruhn. Rick Delmar. certificate of substantial amount-probably in administration with the final decision on the Ann K. Ford. Stuart Garfinkle. Keith King. Glenn Moses food service contract. Nevertheless, I think the neighborhood of $50. At current prices, Art that would buy about 1/3 to 1/2 of a given the Food Committee as a whole has, at the Alice Babcock semester's books! very least, neglected its representative func- COlumnists The Great Healy Food Service took a giant tion. . Ivan Katz. Dave Kopech. Bruce Magid. H. J. Nora. Bill Spencer. Don Walsh leap forward at the beginning of this week This is Parents' Weekend for the College. Circulation when the equipment began to be installed. Watch your language, boys and girls. Jack Lahey. Dennis McCarthy Page Six THE HOYA. Friday, April 6, 1973

Letters. • •

spot in the University itself to . continue our trade, and we hope to Ridiculous Rumors continue serving the students, faculty and neighbors and residents To th Ed't r- of Georgetown as long as we can I a~ t~k~n'g this opportunity to' pos~i?ly do so: I h~pe this letter has stop the rumors regarding the clanf!ed the slt~atlOn and I hope to future of Angelo's Barber Shop remrun here with you .all through from getting ridiculous. As most of many more years of servlc~. M . k th I t f . oe aggz h~~e ~~~ ha~d ~or l~~eor~~~b~~i~; Angelo's Barber Shop profession. Nevertheless, we have managed to survive, as there are still WGTB's Noise those who appreciate a good haircut and who like to look swell To the Editor: and feel well. My father, Angelo, We are presently sitting in our started cutting hair in Georgetown appartment listening to WGTB's in 1921 and still does occasionally. noise - noise not unlike the sound Also I know that hairstyles will of a broken washing machine. At The Baltimore-Washington Union of Jewish Students staged a protest against Pepsi on Key Bridge last week. change and we will be busy again. almost any hour of the day or night Robert Zassler of the' Georgetown Chavurah and Georgetown theology professor Harold White are at Georgetown University has al. you can tune in to our. school's fine ,--c_e_n_te_r_. _(P_h_o_t_o_b_y_P_a_tr_i_ck_E_a_r_ly_>______--' ways patronized us. All the money radio station and .listen to the in the world could not gain us sound of L.S.D. brain waves, or better aquaintances and friends even, if you're lucky, that of than we have made here. fingernails sliding down a black· WGTB Claims F.C.C. Contrary to the belief of many, board. We would honestly prefer to this building is the only one in the hear the WE AM team to WGTB's whole block that is not owned by arcane sounds. Since we foot the the University. It is owned by my bill for the station, we ask if Investigating Obscenity father. Georgetown has made him a anything can be done to sway the most generous offer, as it stands in tastes of WGTB's "heavy" D.J.'s. Mike Petricig (Coil. '74) (Continued from Page 1) and every day there are a few the immediate path of future plans stations do what the F .C.C. wants Vincent Torna (Coll. '73) "They questioned him about what them to do." mistakes and we correct them as we for the expansion and betterment go along. The log they took was not of G.D. We have received three ,------. he had played during his last two O'Brien said the station imposes prog-rams. He explained he had completely correct." other offers better than G.D. has censorship on the music it selects. played O'Brien said the possibility the made, but as I said before my some cuts from the "Radio "We don't ever allow a record that SUMMER JOBS Dinner" . F.C.C. would fine the station for father is genuinely fond and grate· uses the word 'fuck' in a concrete obscenity was "remote." "They fur for the way Georgetown has Guys & Gals needed for summer The F.C.C. has been conducting sexual connotation," he said. "We a national investigation of obscen· could try to make us into a test treated him through the years. Also employment at National Parks, don't consider as obscene such case on the obscenity thing. The to put a really profitable business Private Camps, Dude Ranches ity on radio, O'Brien said. "They things as 'Up Against the Wall, and Resorts throughout the na· haven't taken any action on the fine is $100. We would either pay here, it would almost certainly be tion. Over 35,000 students aided Motherfuckers' in Jefferson Air· the fine or appeal the decision." in the food category. Not wishing "Radio Dinner" album. They have planes." last year. For Free information on made comments to other stations WGTB will buy a new antenna in to destroy the friendship of other student assistance program send which caused these stations to WGTB is making no changes in mid-summer that will be two miles persons on the block who are in self-addressed STAMPED enve­ remove certain from air programming, O'Brien said. "Now from the Georgetown campus. The . that business, we turned down all lope to Oppor.tunity Research, new location and a power increase of them, including Marriott, among Dept. SJO; 55 Flathead Drive, play because they're scared of F.C.C. could do two things. They Kalispell, MT 59901, getting hit on obscenity charges. could cite us for log violations. will give the station a broadcasting others. . ... YOU MUST APPLY EARLy ..... The term is 'harassment', to make Logs are very hard things to keep radius of 50 miles, O'Brien said. We are negotiating to secure a

ONCE. A KNIGHT DID VENTURE. At--tD Hi:. DID COME. UPON A FOR TH~ PRICE. "OF TWO -6-- PACKS A l.IF~ OF PEACE AND BEAUTY FORTH FROM THi:. RAUCOUS DRAGON WHO DID OFFER _•• OF SCHAEFE:R BEERE ••• AMONG THE BOUNTEOUS FRUITS KNIGHT'S HOSTELRY TO FIND OF NATURE. A MORE PEACf:FU/... ABODE..

AND SO THI:. KNIGHT DID ACCEPl TO EARTHLY VALHALLA_ AND THERI:. HE MADE. HIS CAMP. THE. DRAGON'S DIRECTION •••

SChaefer Breweries, New York, N.Y., Baltimore, Md., Lehigh Valley, Pa. Friday, April 6, 1973 THE HOYA. Page Seven Ethical. Perspectives on Strategy

by Larry Peters three areas of policy making: "Wha,t is the present policy of • Nuclear deterrence strategies, the United States government on • Wars intervention, and the targeting of Russian cities in • The fiscal and trade policies retaliation for a first strike by an of the United States, towards both opponent? its emerging trading partners in "Has the earlier (so-called 'assur­ Europe and Asia and the develop­ ed destruction'J policy of threat­ ing nations. ening to eliminate one quarter of According to the center's pro­ the opponent's population been posal paper, these questions have significantly altered during the only been partially answered today. present administration? "At present, strategic answers "Is such a policy of counter-city which are being proposed often warfare necessary for security?" lack the element of critical reflec­ These questions and others that tion on the more comprehensive deal with the security policy of the political purposes of deterrence," United States will be asked, ex­ the paper added. plored and possibly answered by "Ethical reaction to strategic /. the proposed Center for the Foun­ positions often fails to address itself .,/ ,'" . ./ ... , dation for the Study of Ethics and to the political and military factors /"" International Affairs. involved," according to the center's The Rev. Francis X. Winters, S-J. will head the Center for the Foundation for the Study of Ethics and The center will be located at organizers. International Affairs to be established under the auspices of the School of Foreign Service. (Photo by Rick Georgetown and will be headed by The center will "do research on Delmar) the Rev. Francis X. Winters, S.J., of the relation between ethics and the Department of Theology. foreign affairs," said Fr. Winters. things, nuclear strategy," he added. the alienation of young Americans foundations have been approached, "The center will examine alter­ "Policy-makers, political scientists, "We will also make our findings from the political process requires a but it is not likely that we will native poli tical strategies from an ethicians, academicians and the available to the public." re-examination of the appropriate receive any money until the begir::­ ethical perspective," Fr. Winters members of other influential The creation of the center stems sources of political' wisdom in ning of next year," said Fr. Winters. said. "The issue will be to see if our sectors of society will engage in in part from widespread disillusion­ America," the proposal stated. Yet part of the center's activities present security policies are morally continuous discussions in order to ment both in the government and The center will be established are already under way. Thorugh acceptable and' if other policies seek policy alternatives. the public at large over the evident under the auspices of the School of "Face-to-Face," a program spon­ would be more effective and "By involving policy-makers in miscalculations in United States Foreign Service, because of its sored by the SFS, the Carnegie moral." the center's programs, we hope to foreign policy during the sixties. "It location in the nation's capital and Endowment Program for Peace and Questions of ethics will focus on be able to influence, among other arises as well from a conviction that its "moral heritage". , the American Foreign Service Asso­ The ethics research program also ciation, seminars between the figures highly in the Foreign Service makers of foreign policy and School's "obligation to educate and ethicians have begun. help its students explore the moral • and ethical aspects of international "Face-to-Face" was originated affairs," said SFS Dean Peter F. to improve understanding of inter· Krough. national issues through direct com­ "Not until the development of munication between government the center and the hiring of Fr. officials and private citizens. IP At the first session held last Winters have we had the oppor­ tunity to offer a study of ethics in December, "Choices in Foreign foreign affairs," he added. Policy" were discussed. Participants "Besides taking courses taught examined new alternatives for by Fr. Winters based on his American foreign policy in the research, students will also act as 1970's, emphasizing the problem of urope. domestic support for foreign policy part-time research assistants in the center," said Dean Krogh. "They and the relationship of ethics to Ir------_ < ': :." :;; • ..... • : ...... : " also will be involved in the foreign policy. discussions between policy·makers The next meeting of "Face-to­ and academicians." Face" concerns the problems in­ ! STUDENT-RAILPASS :.;'~!' / .. ,,' volved in resigning from public Although plans for the center Thew.,. to see Europe without feeling like a tourist. .' ... have already been completed, it still service when one finds oneself in Student·Railpass is valid in Austria, Belgium, Denmark. .be opposition to governmental policy. France, Germany. Holland. Italy. luxembourg. Norway. remains to funded. "Individual Portugal. Spain. Sweden. Switzerland. Eurailpass. Box 90. Bohemia. New York 11716 Please send me your free Student·Railpass folder order LSAT REVIEW CLASSES form. 0 Or your free Eurailpass folder with railroad map. 0 The LAW BOARD REVIEW CENTER, offering professional Name ______preparation for the Law School Admission Test features:

Street ______--'- ____ 1. A faculty of practicing attorneys. 2. Extensive materials designed to duplicate LSAT questions. City ______3. A thorough analysis of the nature, structure and scoring of State ______.Zip ___.___ _ the LSAT, leading to higher scores because of an improved approach to the exam. 192A 4. Methods with proven success for quickly and accurately .------~ analyzing and answering the types of problems that appear So you plan to spend the and very comfortable. They have to on every LSA T. Summer in Europe this year. Great. be. So you'll meet us on our trains. It The Center has demonstrated its ability to enable students to really is the way to get to know maximize their scores within their abilities. Our follow-up Two things are mandatory. A ticket inquiries show that our average student increases his LSAT score to Europe. And a Student-Railpass. Europeans in Europe. by over 80 points,. with some achieving nearly a 200 point The first gets you over there, the But there's one catch. You increase. second gives you unlimited Second - must buy your Student-Railpass in SCHEDULE OF CLASSES Class rail travel for two months 10r a North America before you go. Exam Dates Course Dates Location modest $150 in Austria, Belgium, They're not on sale in Europe April 14 April 7-8 Marriott (Twin Denmark, France, Germany, because they are meant strictly for July 28 July 21·22 Bridges) Arlington, Va. Holland, Italy, Luxembourg, visitors to Europe-hence the Class sessions run from 9:30·5:30 with a brief lunch recess. The fee for the course, including all materials is $65.00. To incredibly low price. Of course if Norway, Portugal, Spain, Sweden, register, complete this form below and send it with your check in and Switzerland! All you need to you're loaded you can buy a regular the full amount to: qualify is to be a full-time student up Eurailpass meant for visitors of all LAW BOARD REVIEW CENTER to 25 years of age, registered at a ages. It gives you First Class travel if 927 Old Nepperhan Avenue North American school, college or that's what you want. Yonkers, New York 10703 You will receive a certificate of admission. university. Either way if you're going For additional information, call collect (914) 234·3702 or (914) And the trains of Europe are to zip off to Europe, see a Travel 939-2330. a sensational way to travel. Over Agent before you go, and in the Name ______Last school 100,000 miles of track links cities, meantime, rip off the coupon. It Attended towns and ports all over Europe. The can't hurt and it'll get you a better Address ______Check One: trains are fast (some over 100 mph), time in Europe than you ever thought April Course ------­ frequent, modern, clean, convenient possible. July Course------Friday; April 6, 1973, Film Rags to Riches

THE HARDER THEY COME. Ivan has been learning the ropes Directed by Perry Henzell. pretty well, and before too long he Much of the publicity accom­ has made his record (for which he is panying this movie centers on the forced to settle for a whopping fact that it is the first feature-length $20, same as every other mark in work to be entirely the work of the crooked record business) and native Jamaicans, but well­ gotten intricately entangled in the intentioned non-sequitur' recom­ local dope export market, which mendations such as this are not situation, (along with his growing necessary for this film; it is quite rage at the preacher, record pro­ able to stand on its own legs, even ducer and all others in cahoots to if it does not seem to herald the rise keep his kind in the dirt) precipi­ of a new power on the international tates the one-man vendetta he film-making scene. I.e., for what it initiates against them, to the is, it's a good flick. So... what is it? cheers of the island. The shoot-outs It's a rags-to riches story, but its are lively if not cinematically grand, setting and characters are of the and are modelled in Ivan's mind on - """- Will the real Louis Fantasia please stand up? sort that insure no lack of excite­ the climactic scene of an absolutely ment: Ivan. (pronounced Aye-vahn, killer Clint Eastwood flick he saw in the incredible local patois that on his first nigh t in town. Theatre becomes thick enough at times to The film survives any of the warrant the subtitles the producers usual deadliness associated with have provided), a hefty young stud high principles, if possibly only with big ambitions (to make a because of the exotic vigor of Paradise Opens Tonight record, and instantly become a Jamaican life itself, but would still millionaire), arrives from the be nothing special if it weren't for country to stay with his mother in by Larry Gordon senate has any great love for you. existential statement; it's exactly the music. Reggae, for several years Kingston. The first thing he does is the staple of skinheads and other Tonight is opening night. After Fantasia: Well, many of the the story of my life. The ending of get his luggage stolen by a local weeks of scripting, casting, re­ resources here are good for me. the show borrows heavily from the English teenies, is starting to make sharpie. After making contact, over it in this country, and well it hearsals, and aggravation, Paradise: Mask & Bauble is giving this show a book of Ecclesiastes: vanities of an intense game of dominoes Lost and Found gives its first good production. But furthermore- vanities, all is vanity. The only should. Ivan is in fact played by a (Jamaicans don't play this game popular reggae star, Jimmy Cliff, formal performance at 8:00 p.m. in -and this may sound corny-I do excuse for working is enjoying what like the boys at the firehouse), with Trinity Theater. Though many have a great love for this University. you're doing. _ and a born performer he certainly the local bloods, Ivan looks for a is. The title song which is about people contributed to Mask & !fit wants to be great, it has to have HOYA: You've enjoyed every- job to tide him over until his Bauble's Calliope XIV, the man a symphony and a theater. thing you've done, despite the how the Big Brothers are going to Top-40 ship comes in. Nobody get theirs ("The harder they comel most responsible for the original HOYA: Don't you feel some- hassles? wants him, least of all the rich musical's concept and production is times that you are hitting your head Fantasia: Oh, yes. It's really The harder they fall-one and all.") Jamaicans, who won't even let him is -a glorious example of this Louis Fantasia. against a wall? like the song "Applause": when touch their lawns. This is a bit of Monday afternoon, Mr. Fantasia Fantasia: I think the time is the audience loves you, there's sophisticated, eclectic and ex­ Significant Background, for this is a tremely infectious dance-music that sat in the empty theater on "0" rapidly approaching when my head nothing like it in the world. If they story with a Social Message, you Street, coaching actress Trish John­ is going to crack. I wish it were don't, it's death. is so much a part of the island's betcha. The message is simple soul -that the oppressors have son on a particular way to say otherwise, but its getting time to HOYA: The inevitable compari­ enough, and much more than that, "you." Having perfected her pro­ leave. I'm not a politician. I'm an son, I guess, is to last year's Senior learned how to keep things quiet by the real thing: if the upper class, manipulating the hit parade: soma nunciation of that one word, artist. And as an artist, my energies Prom. Do you have any Broadway white or native, doesn't give Ivan Fantasia went on to say a few are sapped because I have to go out ambitions a la Jack Hofsiss'? in the key of G. It may, in view of (and by extendEld identification the the truly earnest and sobering words himself. The topics he rounding up the money; I kept the Fantasia: Paradise is entirely whole suffering lower class) what touched on included Paradise of symphony going for a -year and different from Senior Prom. It's an he wants, or even what he desper­ nature of some aspects of the film, which he is author, lyricist, con­ never received one dollar. The old fashioned book musical with ately needs, then he's gonna just seem odd to class it as a musical, but ductor, and one third composer, politicos have a lot of nerve real acting, not just 1950's imita­ take it. the music is as much a part of the the state of the arts at Georgetown, screaming over a $3000 loss for a tions. I have sent copies of the His mother gets him a tinker's workas Ivan's blazing six-guns, much and most of all, Louis Fantasia. week long event which brought the show off to certain people. If they job at the place of business of the more so than in, say, Easy Rider, Boston Symphony to Georgetown, like it-fine; if not, that's also fine. local holy roller (there is a great which would - have profited by HOYA: To get the unpleasantries when they lose $10,000 in one HOYA: But everything's opti- silence. Those lucky enough to have done with first, what is your scene with a visiting evangelist that evening's rock concert_ mistic for tonigh t's opening? is the equal of anything in Marjoe), seen Godard's One Plus One will be response to the recent charge in The HOYA: I take it that you have Fantasia: Despite six ulcers, much edified by a comparison of HOYA that you wrote Paradise to who sees nothing but the Devil's more than enough interests outside everything's going to work out... instrument in this tough boy who many scenes in these two movies payoff your debf on the symphony the University? You have to apply faith to hard that are products of such stagger­ loan? " would rather read comic books, Fantasia: Yes, I've been guest work_ I suppose, next to Dan "fornicate" with his ward and sing ingly different environments, but Fantasia: My response to that is conducting both musicals and Altobello I am the biggest ego on have so much in common. this, and please get it down "boogie-woogie" than give praise to operas. I've been the musical this campus. But you have to the Lord. Mark Sawtelle correctly: the author of those director for the Folger Theater, believe in yourself! Who else will? charges can check with the Uni­ chainnan of musical events for the ------­ versity President, the Development Mayor's Office for Cultural Events Office and Student Activities as to in Boston and consultant to the Criminals the documents pertaining to the Bicentenial Commission. I have also loans. Everything on paper shows I been teaching at Prince George's have more than lived up to my part Community College. of the bargain. HOYA: How's this show coming? Furthermore, I have been con­ Fantasia: It's a good solid show. Edna Glitterhouse Seized nected with Georgetown for seven You find, however, that things that years. Three-quarters of all the worked on paper or on a small stage musical and dramatic events during don't always work on a large set. Its The poetical career of Mme. hoary poet-laureate of Southwest? Demonstrandum? those years have had my name been a lot of work, but we'll be Edna Glitterhouse, darling of the E.G.: Demonstrandum was a E.G.: Well, Q.E. thought he was connected with them either as ready. , demi-monde, was nipped, in the crummy poet and deserved to die. real hot stuff. I myself don't go in conductor, stage director, actor, It's not a comedy; it's a personal veritable bud last night, as she He really stank. But why should I much for that sort of stuff, and musician, author or critic_ Every statement. I hope it will make surrendered to a police cordon waste my time killing a jerk like besides, Q.E. reeked of Sen-Sen, one has been of the highest possible people think. surrounding her posh Rosslyn him? which makes me want to throw up. artistic standard. This one will be of HOYA: What is the general theme apartment complex. Not that he didn't try some real Repo: Your posh Rosslyn apart- no exception. of the show? . Sought in questioning in the . II kif D C fast moves, like nibbling my toes HOYA: Why have you stayed so Fantasia: I think Eve says it: "If death of rival poet, Q.E. Demon­ men~ IS a we - nown sa on or . . one time when he trapped me in many years? It Seems neither the we want to find a Paradise, we have strandum, Miss GIitterhouse was so~hlstos. and membe~ of the the kitchen. I jabbed him with my administration nor the student to make it our fashion." It's a very charged with police evasion, which HOI-PollOI. H?~ B1amlres, that cactus and he left me alone real is to say, hiding from the cops. avant-garde cntlC of the nouveau- quick BeSieged by eager reporters out­ nouveau, claims that Q.E. fre-· . . quented your apartment fre- . Repo:. Wh~t wIll y!;U do In side the luxurious Arlington Towers quently. What about this? pnson, MISS Ghtterhous~. apartments (located two blocks , E.G.: I'm gonna wnte a bunch Cervantes Talk west of the RCA and Xerox E.G:: He was a re?1 creep. He d of poems and maybe bone up on buildings, a block east of the come In here, c~rrymg ,a case ~f my Monopoly game. Also, my plant inspiring Iwo Jima monument, and Pabst, real tacky-lIke. He d read hiS Pete takes up a bunch of my time, on Thursday just across the street from. the crummy poems out loud a~d t~ey what with watering him and Rosslyn Metro construction site), really stank, except dummies like changing his pot tWice a week. The Library Lecture Series in the Humanities is the fey Miss Glitterhouse, sleek and Blamires thought his poems were presenting Professor Lowry Nelson of Yale University svelte in her panda-bear lounging really neat. After the time Q.E. Repo:. Well? thank you very on Thursday, April 12 at 8:30 p.m. in room 104, pajamas, graciously granted this borrowed my bicycle and smashed much, MISS Ghtterhouse. It was a Healy Building. Professor Nelson's topic will' be reporter an interview. The follow­ it on my rollaway bed, I threw him rare treat. ing is an edited transcription: out. E.G.: It WaS nothing. I mean, I Cervantes, Don Quixote, and the European Novel. Reporter: Did you kill Q.E. Repo: Was there ever any was real glad to do it, you know? Demonstrandum, the venerable and roman tical liasion between you and Reporter: Vicki Mag McKnoxer THE HOYA Page Nine Music Less Than Expected A splendid mixture of vocal and waves;" Mr. Aquino was barely was given over to a performance of orchestral sounds, of spoken and heard over 'the orchestra. On the the newly "recognized" Roberto sung words, highlighted this week's whole, the purely orchestral mo­ Gerhard. His text was provided by concert by the N~tional Symphony ments that Delius provided seemed Camus' The Plague. Gerhard con­ Orchestra. The program consisted to express the sense of the poem to structed a series of musical vignet­ of two pieces: Sea Drift for Bari­ a greater extent that the vocal tes that seemed to represent more tone, Chorus and Orchestra, by sections. Part of this problem could than adequately the progression of Frederick Delius,' and The Plague be attributed to Delius bimself. The Camus' tale. Maurice Evans, the for Narrator, Chorus and Orchestra, rhythms that he demanded of the Orchestra and chorus made this a by Roberto Gerhard. The ,second poem seemed at' times to be ex­ "performance piece" well worth piece will be repeated as part of the tremely forced and unnatural. remembering. National's Saturday concert at 3:00 The second part ot the program Michael P. Malloy p.m. Sea Drift is based on the text of Guest Editorial a Walt Whitman peom filled with reflections on love, solitude and death. I had some difficulty ap­ A Shalnefu/ Lady preciating this performance of Many years ago in the land of Rock & Roll there lived a Delius' work for several reasons. The Choral Arts Society of Wash­ young hero. He had many friends and fans and was ington provided a chorus for the welcome wherever he went. Today he is a villain, one so piece which, through exercising a bad we shun him from our country-a person with power fine tonal quality, lacked clarity to poison the virgin-minded youth of our nation. The hero and any sort of diction. Because of and the villain are one and the same: . In less this unfortunate circumstance, than sixty days, unless his most recent appeal is successful, most of the audience was more attentive to the text provided in this criminal will be deported, never again to return to their programs than to the per­ America.- formance. John Lennon, Ex-BeatIe leader, one of the most well Baritone Paul Aquino gave an known song writers in the world, has many fans-people interesting, though inadequate who said they would do anything to help him. But now performance of Delius. He gives the during his moment of need, his hour of crisis when he will lie to Whitman's line "High and be'forced to leave a country that he loves to live and work clear I shoot my voice over the Playwright Gorky with Tolstoy. in, where are these people who would help him? Where are his friends? Where are his fans? Theatre Petitions, letters and pleas would have helped him stay, but so many of you will say "too bad" or "so what" or maybe even "I didn't know," although you must have known or heard something. To those of you who helped The Rich as Second Best we thank you, to those who didn't, we're sorry for you. We talk of peace, freedom and love, but it seems that often it is ENEMIES By Maxim Gorky. At the takes the reins of the plant, reopens comes the obstacles of poor acting Arena Stage through April 22. the factory and, with the help of and ludicrous sets to reach oc· easy to talk about a problem but not so easy to do It is a blustery clear day. the secret police and troops, cap­ casional brilliance, for example at something about it. Like many species of animals in this January, 1905. Russian textile tures the murderer. For the mo­ the final scene·, in his direction. country, the great artist may soon become endangered to workers are marching peacefully ment, at least, a fleeting moment to In any event, it is impossible for the point of extinction. They deported Charlie Chap­ protesting the brutal labor practices be sure, any socialist uprising is the inadequacies of the production lin-now it's John Lennon; how many more must go of the factory owners. Suddenly quelled. to diminish Gorky's dramatic the police open fire. Several Yet, while the call for the achievement. There is only one before the people in this country do something about it? marchers fall dead. A trembling "workers of the world to unite" is fault with Enemies itself. Successful Give me your tired, your poor, your huttled masses Russia moved to the brink of still, human compassion for justice in presenting the bitterness of class yearning to breathe free, the retched refuse of your revolution, ignited by the killings of cannot be silenced. Nadya (Diane conflict, Gorky clumsily goes out teaming shore. Send these the homeless tempest-tost to "Bloody Sunday." Wiest) the young niece of the dead of his way, in his effort at comic me, I lift my lamp beside the golden door! Maxim Gorky, whose life is factory owner pleads with her relief, to break the highly effective reflected in his violent disturbing elders, "Can't you see soldiers can't tension of the plot. Pretty words on the base of a great lady of welcome. plays, was imprisoned after the protect us from stupidity?" Nadya In the tradition of Chekhov, an Once she stood and proclaimed these words proudly, but "Bloody Sunday" massacre for decides that she at least, is young, intimate of Gorky's, Enemies per­ today she must feel great shame. allowing his apartment to be used therefore she is a revolutionary. ceptively explores the inner tor­ Daryl Doman as a refuge by fugitive leaders of the The drama ends with fragmen­ ment of civil disruption. workers' movement. In December, tation. The aristocrats, frightened Suspenseful and revealing, and Vice-Chairman, 1905, Gorky, already a well-known and pathetic, huddle together while not irrelevant to contemporary Washington Committee for John and Yoko and influential figure in Russian outside the workers, imprisoned by America, Enemies is drama to be 305 Dorchester Street political circles, was forced into the police, defiantly chant "No, experienced. Oxon Hill, Md. 20021 exile. In 1906 he wrote Enemies. No, No." Robert Hayes Phone 567-2991 Ably revived at the Arena Gorky draws maximum mileage Theater, Enemies is the story of from a basically political play. He the social and political conflicts artfully transforms it into a social This Weekend simmering throughout Russia tragedy, expanding the conflict during the days preceeding the beyond a simple worker-owner or workers' revolt. Perhaps propa­ black-white struggle to a conflict of gandist theater in its time (it was basic human ideals. The playwright Dashing Your Dreams banned in Russia until 1932) examines the consciences of the Enemies focuses on the disinte­ rich, and juxtaposes the oppressed Tomorrow night, beginning at seen any day of the week until whoopee) which occurs the 13th, grating aristocratic structure which worker's lot against them. The 8 p.m., the Georgetown SEC will April 14 between the hours of 14th and 15th of this month. The oppressed the new working class. wealthy come out second best. present Paul Butterfield's Better 8:30 a.m. and midnight in Lauinger line is shorter before 8:30 a.m. The Bardin family owns a large Arena's production of Enemies Days, Bonnie Raitt and Little Feat Library for free. The exhibit is here Well, what were you expecting? estate where the peasants, freed is adequate, but little more. Dianne in concert at McDonough "Arena". on the occasion of the Cambodian The Rolling Stones, Picasso, and from serfdom 40 years previously, Wiest, as Nadya, the young girl who 'rickets for the concert are stilI New Year (anything for a little Mardi Gras, perhaps? continue to pay the family rent in should embody hope for an even­ available in the Student Activities exchange for tilling the land. To tual reconciliation between workers office -at a cost of $2.00 with an supplement the income from the and owners, is so inept in her part SES card and $4.00 without. tenants, the Bardins open a small that it is difficult to distinguish her Tickets just prior to show time sell factory in the corner of their from any whining, prattling for $4.00 only. They are free after property. . adolescent. the concert. The -family likes the peasants; The Fine Arts Department will they are "quiet, gentle people." Richard Bauer, as the sinister, present its second annual Art Sale Industrial workers, the Bardins hypocritical assistant public pro­ beginning this afternoon and con­ learn, hear a different drummer, secutor and brother of the mur­ tinuing through Saturday in Healy however. dered factory owner, is successful Basement. Works to be sold-a A labor dispute incites the in demonstrating the blind venom selection of oils, water colors, and hard·line, co-owner of the factory, of the privileged class. Howard silk screens "at low prices"-have Mikhail, to close down the plant. Witt is inconsistent as Zakhor. all been done by students. On "Concessions are bad for discipline, " Unfortunately, the set by Sunday at 3 p.m., Chairman of the he says. "Today they'll want me to Robert Taylor is below the Arena's Fine Arts Department Clifford sack a foreman, tomorrow they'll usual high standards. The trees Chieffo will auction other stUdent want my head on a plate." Indeed planted throughout the theater add work (or maybe what is left). his head is brought in; he is killed a tropical flair, inappropriately, to An exhibit of Khmer (Cam· by a worker's bullet. the Russian estate. bodian) objects including handi­ An ostensibly kinder owner Alan Schneider, however, over- crafts and traditional dresses can be This painting will not be sold in Healy Basement this weekend. Page Ten THE HOYA St. John's Educators Define Rom'e Statement Two Catholic priests and a Kelly, Professor of Contemporary The paper spelled out clearly teacher connected with St. John's Catholic Problems; the Rev. Joseph what the relationship of the bishop University,- Jamaica, N.Y., have 1. Dirvin, C.M., vice-president for is to the university, particularly released a statement which they University relations, and Dr. S. where "the truths of the Catholic hope will "correct imbalances de­ Thomas Greenburg, head of the St. faith are at stake," the priest said. rived" from press reports concern­ John-Related Institute of Catholic Fr. Dirvin also noted that ing the controversial. document Higher Education. Fr. Henle also sections of the document concern­ "The Catholic University in the attended the conference. ing the individual teacher's relation- Modern World." The educators charged that ship to the university community The three educators reacted to many press reports had lacked were "completely neglected" in reports of a statement made by perspective. They also emphasized press coverage to date. Georgetown University President that the document stresses "the Msgr. Kelly reacted to comments the Rev. R.J. Henle, S.J. Fr. Henle's institutional commitment" to the that the Rome document is not statement came in response to a Church's teaching authority of official, but rather "only morally" column by Frank Morriss which Catholic universities and colleges. binding by stating the Catholic appeared in the Feb. 22 edition of They also suggested that the university is founded on moral the Catholic Standard. paper could serve as the guideline allegiance to the Church. Morriss wrote that "this un­ for Catholic higher education for The educators agreed that "the Fr. Henle attended the world educational conference that produced the thinkable and unspeakable bill of the "next 100 years." Catholic University in the Modern controversial statement on Catholic higher education (Photo by Keith divorcement from Catholic loyalty Dr. Greenburg said that "institu- World" was a compromise between King) is firm evidence of what the Pope tional commitment underlies the the controversial ."Land O'Lakes" . .------, .------. recently pictured as a diabolical whole document, gives it continu- statement which emphasized aca-, Clerk. Immediate opening for tempo-

·ty. But thl'S pOI'nt fal'led to emerge demic freedom in. the university 'I rary positions. Start immediately for EARN invasion of the Church's domain, l 10-15 days. Will be doing telephone with Satan winning victories that in the press reports." and the hard-line Vatican position' interview surveys for a consulting $400.00 none could dare have predicted 25 Fr. Dirvin also pointed to the which advocates strong ties be- firm. Hours; 5:30-9 p.m. Monday- or t h · d Friday. Call Miss Diane Ruina years ago." inadequate coverage of the docu- ween t e umversity an the 223-9525 E"t. 333 for appointment. MORE The St. John's educators, who ment's statements on "institutional ;C~h~u::r~c:h!.:. ___.:... ______..!:::======, all attended the Rome congress that commitment" and noted two other THIS SEMESTER produced the unofficial but pre­ areas Which he felt had not received Models/Talent on Campus stigious paper, were Msgr. George "proper emphasis:" Excellent Income Potential Credit Card Program Washington's most progressive model agency is IT'S FUN-IT'S EASY ~.allledope'PJ'II looking for attractive individuals, professional and NO SELLING INVOLVED non-professional, of all ages and sexes, to do FLEXIBLE HOURS need for a Europe trip. photographic and fashion mo.deling as well as APPROXIMATELY 8 HOURS PER WEEK Pa~slheword SOFA can gel you 10 Europe-, Other services avadable hom SOFA include' hostessing and public relations work. Talented r - -M---N--ORE-S -H-TI-C-- 1 ~~~g~~r;~~~~~~~rE.stor.nYWh.re. ~~~rE~:;p.!~,;::~:n~.:!~'~:,.;,~~~:"". individuals able to sing, dance, act or work as I A ERICA F IG. N. I As the wholly owned Subsidiary of in holefs, hOliday vi'fages, and hosreb r 715 lancaster Ave., Bryn Mawr, I .leven non.prof't European Nat,on., All the dope I. In Ihe FJltt19730fflci., musicians are also desired. Free beauty culture I Pa.19010 I Student Travel Bureaus. SOFA can Student Travel Gulckt to ElJrope. ::;,~,~O~!,;;~~'~~':;~~s.:~:~to' _A-don'l s11 on II-Send for It NOW. classes available to everyone-introducing exclusive I Please send me further information I

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A. ALE XAND E R co. 98 Riversid. Dri ••, N.w York, N. Y. . -Jt 1------, I - Please rush me Dlrectory(s) ot 304 Free Malr.zlne' I I @ ,:!.OO plua IOc pOltalre. I Starring Yves Montand in a film by Costa-Gavra.s writte,n. by Franco S?linas f Enclosed ia ( ) ('heck or ( ) money order tor • I with Renato Salvatori and O. E. Hasse· musIc by Mlkls Theodorakls I (N. Y. residenundd 8 ... lea tax.) , A Cinema 10-Reggane Films Production I PRINT NAME I I ADDHESS I AT THE OUTER CIRCLE 1 AND 2 I CITY I from Cinema 5 Ii ______STAn: ZIP ~ ______~I Friday, April 6, 197.3 THE HOYA. Page Eleven Plague 'Health Service

by John Regis Coogan officers are "really still on foot," he sai d. "If Student complaints that the Student I were unable to walk I don't know that I'd Health Service is slow and inefficient have want to ride anywhere in anything down in been labeled "myths" by ,Dr. John Esswein, that motor pool." director of the service. Denying charges that The security police protest that their the health service performs little more than a vehicles are inadequate and that they can't referral service for the Georgetown Univer­ move across campus because of the traffic sity Hospital, Esswein said this week that the barriers set,!lP between dormitOries, the majority of cases are handled at the Studp,nt Health S~rvice and the hospital. infirmary. "In fact," he said, "the range of services May Take More Than Hour available is greater than at most health Students must call a private ambulance or services." Health Service physicians have the D.C. Fire Department for emergency hospital privileges, unlike doctors at many transportation to McDonough Gym or to the other student infinnaries. hospital. Depending on the availability of ambulances, such a trip may take more than News Analysis an hour. ' Once the patient arrives at the health The Student Health Service does not pro­ center or the emergency room, his troubles vide ,gynecological services, Esswein said. are far from over, however. Both facilities Most student medical problems can be have been criticized for long waiting lines handled by the staff at McDonough Gym. A and the "depersonalized" quality of medical Woman patient can be referred to the care. 7 Georgetown Hospital and can return to the Part of the difficulty stems from the Interns at the Georgetown Hospital Emergency Room. (Photo by Moses Albert) health service for additiona! care, he said. caseload of both centers: the Student Health ,Service handles between 1,000 and 1,500 However, staffing the Georgetown Hospi­ From 1955 to 1970, emergency room visits a month and the workload is increasing tal with emergency room specialists would visits soared from 15 million to 50 million steadily. Under these conditions, the health take them away from hospitals where there annually. The Georgetown Hospital felt the service staff often seems to be more is a greater need for this kind of doctor. increase, but the number of visits has been concerned with moving the line quickly than Dr. Charles Hufnagel, chairman of the stabilized at approximately 15,000 a year. with close personal attention to a patient's Surgery Department, is planning what Hyatt, Morrison attributes the relatively low problems. called the "imaginative, innovative ap­ number of emergency room visits to the Dr. Esswein said that too often a student proach" Georgetown is taking in training absence of major highways, heavy industry will walk in with a medical problem, receive do~tors for emergency care. and violent crime in the Georgetown area. perfunctory treatment and walk out without Ideally, doctors trained in emergency care knowing what was done for him or why. will be able to prescribe definitive treatment, The D.C. Hospital Council gave the George­ Esswein outlined possible solutions which conduct sophisticated cardio·pulmonary town Emergency Room service two years ago , he said still were in the "pipe dream" stage. resuscitation and calion the appropriate a "two" rating on a scale of five, behind the first place category that would indicate most A videotape system could explain to specialists after quick and accurate diagnOSis. comprehensive care. Since then, the Univer­ students the nature of their illness and the Personnel serving on ambulances also should receive careful training. Two-way radio sity has upgraded the quality of its reasons for the treatment. This system also equipment and facilities, according to communication between the hospital and a would make time spent in the waiting room Morrison. more palatable, Esswein said. well-trained ambulance crew would allow for The health service director was cool to more effective emergency treatment than is Not Enough Money the idea of supplying more manpower for available now. the center by rotating personnel, the system Hyatt said the increased public concern As a result, Georgetown's E.R. will con­ used to staff the hospital's emergency room. for emergency care would be helpful. Rescue tinue to be staffed with residents who are While waiting time would be reduced by a squads do not operate on sufficient budgets being trained in other hospital programs rotation system, Esswein said that problems (the D.C. Rescue Squad had only 10 until specialists become available. with reluctant personnel would offset the ambulances), despite the pressing need for Plans for a Concentrated Care Center, advantages. emergency help during automobile accidents originally scheduled for completion in and natural disasters. January, call for an 18·bed emergency care Faulty Diagnosis A total of 10 ambulances could serve the section, but the future of the complex is Documented cases of faulty diagnosis in Washington area adequately if their use were purely speCUlative. Ground has not been emergency rooms across the country have restricted to "real emergencies." However, broken for the complex and federal money led to serious medical complications and many patients use ambulances as a taxi for the project is not assured. malpractice suits. As a result, some hospitals service, and rescue squads respond to calls to Dr. Esswein's hopes for a videotape are experimenting with special training find one of their "regular customers" sitting service for patients, a well-designed student In cases where gynecologists have been programs for emergency medical care. on the curb, suitcase in hand, waiting to be health serivce facility and a shuttle bus to available at other university health centers, Dr. George Hyatt, the co-ordinator for driven to the hospital. transport incapacitated students to the they have "been pushed in the contraceptive emergency care at the Georgetown Univer­ Such "regular customers" tend to clog hospital, Dr. Hufnagel's training program for business to the extent that almost 100 sity Hospital, explained that a two·year the service, delaying treatment and limiting emergency care specialists and Morrison;s percent of the cases are of this nature," residency program in Emergency Medical the amount of time a doctor can spend with plans for an improved emergency room are Esswein said. Care is in the planning stages here. Hyatt and a patient. low in University budget priorities. Gynecological services are not p>:ovided at Morrison both stressed the increasingly "An emergency is, for the patient, more a Georgetown already has made strides in Catholic University and George Washington. apparent need for emergency room special­ state of mind than a state of fact," comprehensive Emergency Medical Tech­ A gynecologist is available only once a week ists, but said planning a comprehensive Morrison said. "Whatever's bothering him at nician training, but the University's efforts at American University and contraceptives training program in emergency care was the moment, no matter how remote a threat must be coordinated with stepped·up rescue are not prescribed at any of these univer­ difficult. ' to life, is an emergency." squad service throughout the D.C. area. sities. Improving the Student Health Service still Esswein warned that attempts to open ~~"';;I@ii't. is largely in the planning stage, with "slim gynecological care at Georgetown would run ,,:~,,~~~~:~~ possibility" of realization, according to into "hot water.'" "If I were the student ,~~;,,:,~<~ Esswein. He currently is studying the health government, I'd be very careful (lbout what I ~~. : ~ '.:v v services provided by other schools in the said about gynecological services," he said. District of Columbia, Virginia and Maryland. He hopes to have the study ready for Inadequate Ambulance Service distribution by September, but on the basis Students also have complained about the of his results so far he feels justified in giving Georgetown ambulance service and the himself generally high marks. difficulties faced by seriously ill or injured A Student Government Health Service students who cannot get to emergency Task Force, composed of Jay Hatfield treatment by themselves. Emergency Room (SFS'76) and Pam Doran (GUNS'76) has personnel may not leave the hospital to discussed instituting such a survey them­ assist a patient to the room unless he is selves, but the two have yet to come up with within sight of the building. any concrete recommendations. "If they grab the black bag and go Esswein suggests that the Student Gov­ rushing over to Darnall or Copley, then ernment look into the cost of health care at we're shorthanded when the ambulance Georgetown. Currently the Student Health comes in off Reservoir Road with a cardiac Service provides free care and pays for the arrest," said Robert Morrison, assistant first visit to another physician on referral, administrator for professional services at but rumors of a shift back to voluntary Georgetown. health service insurance alarm Esswein. "The fabled Georgetown ambulance no He has been considering a mandatory, longer exist~," Morrison said. The vehicle comprehensive Health Maintenance Organi­ was retired because of stringent D.C. zation, providing complete medical care. regulations on personnel and equipment. While costs currently are "fantastic," he feels Esswein admitted there were difficulties that a possible solution to the health service transporting patients to the health service of problems may lie somewhere in this field. In the Emergency Room (E.R.). At other the meantime, these problems, student schools the security police often provide the ",,~-- complaints and health service "mythology" service. The Georgetown Protective Service A nurse and patient at the Student Health Service. (Photo by Moses Albert) continue. Twelve ,THEHOYA

SUMMER REGISTRATION NOW UNTIL THE DAY YOUR CLASS BEGINS ON: MAY 21-JUNE 11-JUNE 18-JULV 16-AUGUST 27

REGISTRATION FORMS WHICH MUST HAVE YOUR ADVI,SOR'S. SIGNATURE ARE AVAI'LABLE IN YOUR DEAN'S OFFICE SSCE ROOM 156 NEVILS 6254353 1 Friday, April 6, 1973 THE HOYA Page Thirteen Gays May Invite Gerald Ford, Speakers to G.U. B. F. Skinner (Continued from page 1) other and realize there are healthy cognition of the. group and denied homosexuals." To Speak them permission to use the name The group has planned to show "Georgetown.", Appert said he films on the gay liberation move­ Republican House Minority conulsted with the group's lawyers ment and invite speakers to discuss Leader Gerald Ford will speak on and felt "we have, a perfect right to the subjects of homosexuality and "New Directions for the '70's" at 4 use the word Georgetown. Many sexuality in general~ They will ask p.m. Saturday in New South Facul· organizations and businesses use the the library to reinforce its collec­ ty Lounge, the Lecture Fund an­ name Georgetown without getting tion of literature on homosexuality nounced this week. formal recognition from the Univer­ and replace the "outdated, one­ The lecture group also an­ sityadministration." sided and blatantly unfair books nounced the following speakers for Fr. Ryan denied formal recogni­ presently available." April: tion because "the goals we want to "A lot of people think that such encourage by formal, recognition of a group as this would separate • Richard Scammon, co-author of The Real Majority, at 7 p.m. groups are the same goals for which homosexuals from the hetero­ ':::... the University was established. sexuals, but I hope to have straights April 11 in the Hall of Nations. These goals have been re-adapted and in-betweens as well," Appert Scammon's appearance will be co­ according to history and the evolu­ said. Appert, a coordinator of gay group: efrlhl'h" can have social sponsored by the government de­ tion of Christian thinking. Michael Garcia (SFS '75), a activities where gay people on campus can meet each other and realize partment. "The presence of speakers and former coordinator of the group, there are healthy homosexuals." (Photo by Fred Kohun) • Harold Lasswell, Yale Univer­ attendance at and participation in said "I think this straight campus sity political scientist, at 8 p.m. lectures and discussions can provide needs some gayness." April 12 in Gaston Hall. Lasswell you with other occasions for the "After our visit to our lawyers, will be the final speaker in the 'educational sessions and dispersal we thought of having a speaker on Board May Vote social sciences series, directed by of information' that you seek by campus, specifically somebody to Dr. Tom Beauchamp of the philos­ requesting official recognition of relate to people our ages from the ophy department and Dr. Jose Sor­ your group," Fr. Ryan said. Gay Activists' Alliance, D.C.," said To End Parietals zano of the government depart­ Appert hopes that the group will David McCaughey (SLL'74), been active in the fight to establish ment. "let people know that there are gay another group coordinator. (Continued from Page 3) Appert expressed concern that was fairly good," the freshman said. 24-hour intervisitation for fresh­ • Gennady Fedosov, first secre­ people on campus and that we're tary of the 'Soviet embassy, at 7: 30 concerned about the image homo­ "several students are afraid of being "However if 'the administration men, was optimistic about possible Board action. p.m. April 19 in the Hall of Na­ sexuals have. W~ can have speakers, tossed out of their dorms for being wanted to abolish the whole sys­ tem, there was no way we could "The subcommittee of the Stu­ tions, on "Internal Politics of the distribute printed information and gay. I think most people don't want Soviet Union." schedule social activities where gay to talk about it because they're win in court." dent Life Policy Committee on campus can meet each embarrassed," he said. A high official in Student (S.L.P.C.), which considered un­ • Alexandr Bessmertnyh, coun­ Government hinted that the Board limited intervisitation, made a sellor for the Soviet embassy, at of Directors would vote to end favorable report and the full com­ 7:30 p.m. April 26 in the Hall of freshman parietals at their May mittee voted nine to one to abolish Nations, on "Soviet Foreign Pol­ meeting, and speculated that this parietals for second semester fresh­ icy." Admission to this speech and might be related to the agreement men," Nerkle said at a house to Fedosov's presentation will be between the administration and the council meeting this week. open only to students with a adjudications board. "An extensive report was pre­ Georgetown I.D. "I have heard that the Board will pared, which included a poll of vote to end parietals from many Housemasters who were in favor of • Dr. B. F. Skinner and Dr. people, but a number of people getting rid of parietals. Most of the Fred Kellner, at 3:30 p.m. April 27 have also said that freshman pari­ administrators I have talked to in Gaston Hall, co·sponsored by the etals will never be abolished," agreed. The only opposition seems psychology department. Tickets for Leslie said. to have come from faculty mem­ the speech will be available in the Quadrangle House Council Presi­ bers who are the most removed psychology department office after dent Dave Nerkle (C'76), who has from the situation," Nerkle added. April 23.

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A NEWMU8CAL BY.' LOUIS FANTASIP\. ,

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~~~f&JndOY tirne: 8(])pm. trinftk' jheater Jj and 0 sts. n.w t&e~~~~ ~~~~. 0 .G1lLIOPE ZIIZ A GEORGETO"NN UNIVERSITY THIi4TER PRODUCTION Friday, April 6,1973 THE HOYA . Page Fifteen P.I.R.G. .Blasts D.C. Pharmacies by Andy Lang size next fall when we expect at A District of Columbia Public In­ least four or five D.C. universities terestResearchGroup (D.C.P.I.R.G.) to have this funding procedure study has revealed unethical practices approved," a spokesman for the and violations of federal standards by group said. pharmacies in the Washington area. The student study of area P.I.R.G. was organized last year pharmacies was released at a press \ . at George Washington University, conference Thursday morning. and is financed by voluntary con­ The survey was divided into two tributions collected from students parts: a city-wide survey of 40 by the G.W. university administra­ pharmacies and an in-depth study tion. The Georgetown administra­ of 11 pharmacies in the Foggy tion announced last week it will Bottom vicinity. allow a similar P.I.R.G. group to D.C. P.I.R.G. purchased 140 organize here and will act as a drugs and found that pharmacists collecting agent to finance its ac­ failed to meet profeSSional stan­ tivities. dards in 66 cases. The unprofes­ P.I.R.G. is a consumer re.search sional conduct included: packaging group and is funded and staffed by drugs in containers that did not students in the Washington area. meet federal standards for pro­ Universities that act as collecting tection of children, packaging drugs agents for the group allow students in containers that did not meet to contribute voluntarily $2 at re­ district and federal standards for gistration and turn the money over "light-resistance," substitution of to the student·elected P.I.R.G. brand name drugs with cheaper board. brands, misleading labeling of P.I.R.G. has used money col­ drugs and overpricing of some drug lected at G.W. registration last year brands. Robert Gaines at the P.I.R.G. press conference. To his left is Lisa Bramson, a co·director of the drugstore to hire two professional staff mem­ The study was co-ordinated by study. (Photo by Andy Lang) bers. "We hope to increase our staff Robert Gaines, 21, a senior at ed in light-resistant containers, as violation of D.C. and federal stan· can be harmful to children. Peoples George Washington University and prescribed by D.C. and federal law, dards, Lisa Bramson said. Of 11 and Dart drug stores in the survey Vice-President of the District can lose their potency after a period stores surveyed in the G.W. area, 62 were the only two stores that con­ P.I.R.G. board. Lisa Bramson and of time, Gaines said. Drugs packag· percent did not meet packaging sistently sold products with the Randy Swisher, both G.W. stu­ ed improperly also ca~ cause gas· standards. According to an area· special caps. dents, also were co-ordinators of tro-intestinal disorders, he said. - wide study, 50 percent of the drug The survey found seven cases of the study. Failure to package drugs in light stores investigated failed to package pharmacists substituting a cheaper Some drugs that are not packag- -resistant containers was the biggest certain drugs in light-resistant con­ drug for a prescribed product. Six tainers. of the violations took place at Only two major drug stores in Town House pharmacy, a store that the G.W. area sold products with P.I.R.G. has placed on its "Dirty caps designed to protect children. Dozen" list of the worst offenders These caps are required by federal against pharmaceutical law. law for products that potentially In only six of 40 drug purchases did the pharmacists offer expert HUGE FRAME SELECTION advice on drug reactions and proper ALL THE LATEST STYLES usage, Gaines said. A telephone survey showed that 50 percent of the pharmacists who were required EYES EXAMINED to prepare a simple skin ointment CONTACT LENSES • either refused to do so or said they PRESCRIPTIONS FILLED 10 did not have the necessary ingredi­ EMERGENCY SERVICE ents. AND SPECIAL STUDENT DISCOUNTS San Marino The students said they found A unique co-ed that there is a significant price Last year, in New York City difference between drug stores. A alone, 7 nursing nuns made ATLAJllTlI: summer experience series of 10 prescriptions cost $20 6.322 patient visits. Not in- hos­ more at Bialek's drug store than at pitals. but in the patients' own II~TIC'AI. Dart, Ms. Bramson said. homes. Fantastic? Not at all. As a result of the survey, the Not for the Dominican Sisters of research group has recommended the Sick Poor. Ever since they that the D.C. government move were founded in l876, the Sisters PENNSYLVANIA AVE., NW against three drug stores the study have been doing the impossible (Convenient to GUj singled out for massive violations of

daily. federal < standards and professional Long before there were relief DAILY 9-6; SAT. 9-3 ethics. The three stores were: Pet­ agencies or visiting nurses, the 466-2050 worth Pharmacy on Georgia A ve­ Dominican Sisters were dedicated nue, Save-Mor Drugs on G St., N.W. to nursing the poor in their own in "The ~)rkls Oklcsl Republic" and Town House Pharmacy on 19th homes thus keeping the families St., N.W. P.I.R.G. included the together. Dates: 2 4-wk sessions in three businesses on the "Dirty Today, the Dominican Sisters of July and August. Courses: Dozen" list and said the stores were the Sick Poor are still on the job. n~t Fall.eleCI Bregenz, Studio art, Renaissance and responsible for providing hundreds Although their primary work is Austria! Wagner College's medieval art history, Italian. of thousands of dollars of narcotic still in nursing, it has been ex­ Cost: $520-$1200. covers travel, rm and bd, tuition, 2- drugs to customers without proper panded to include social work, European Campus controls. physiotherapy, dietetics, and al­ 10 college credits. Qualifica­ tion: High school grad. Attrac­ P.I.R.G. also recommended: most all health related profes­ Apply now to experience one of the most • that D.C. pharmaciSts make sions. Each woman h'1S her own tions: Short distance from exciting 'year abroad' programs available, Florence, Ravenna, Rome, all efforts possible to adhere to skill, her own special ability to centrally located among Europe's finest offer. 1n this Order, which is Venice, beaches of Rimini. proper packaging standards. winter sports areas. small in size, there is both free­ Write: Admissions Office • that the City Council pass pharmacy regulations proposed by dom and flexibility. Live with an Austrian family. No language the Drug Traffic and Chemical Yet the Sisters arc not merely requirement for admission. Learn German by Finch College Control Division of the Department visiting nurses but religiOUS using it • Independent travel and organized 52 East 78th Street of Environmental Services. nurses wIlD thinkof their patients, excursions throughout Europe • Skiing and New York, N.Y. 10021 not as cases, but suffering mem­ ski instruction. Fully accredited- Call: (212) 288-8450 • that the Board of Pharmacy bers of the Mystical Body of devise legislation to update the Christ who need. even beyond District's Pharmacy Practices Act of material and physical help, the CURRICULUMS INCLUDE: 1906. healing unction of Christ's love. Art, Art History, Economics, Education, English, Languages, Histo'ry, MUSic, To learn bow you can serve as a Philosophy, Psychology, Sociology and BLOOD PLASMA DONORS NEEDED Dominican Sister of tbe Sick Poor Physical Education. -Fee Paid- I.D. Required. write to: Sister Marguerite Mitchell, Earn while you learn-bring your books J2~"ear Open to sophomores, juniors and seniors from all Vocation Director accredited colleges. For details write: UNIVERSITY PLASMA CENTER RoomHI4 9321 Hartwick Rd. WAGNER COLLEGE Choose a Mariandale.Ossiniog.N. Y.I0562 (Univ. Nat;'::",,1 Bank Bldg.) BREGENZ STUDY PROGRAM Convenient College Park, Md. DOMINICAN SISIIRS OF- Location Wagner College Open: 8:30 a.m. 927-8062 Staten Island. New Yprk 10301 ~WAGNER ANTIBODIES,INC. BETHESDA PLASMA CENTER 1IIE POOIL " COLLEGE (212) 390-3107 1712 Eye St .• N.W. 4715 Cordell Ave. sa Suite 210 (behind Little Tavern) Washington, D.C. Bethesda, Md. Open: 8:00 a.m. 298-6960 Open: 8:30 a.m. 657·2875 Page Sixteen THBHO.YA Friday, April 6, 1973 U.S.-Soviet Relations Better, Diplomat Says by Sal Massaro The 50th anniversary of the of war such as in Southeast Asia." "Not interference,- but under­ Soviet Union in December, 1972 Yevstafiev pointed to the cease-fire standing" of Soviet-American rela­ gave the Soviet people an oppor­ as a visible sign of improved tions was the theme of a speech tunity to evaluate their accomplish­ Soviet-American relations. He yesterday evening in the Hall of ments. "You are proud of your stated that the Moscow summit Nations by Soviet Embassy Press country; we are proud of ours," talks marked "great agreements" Counsellor Alexandr Yevstafiev. said the Soviet press counsellor. and "the promise" of the visit of a Yevstafiev was the first speaker Yevstafiev reminded the audience Soviet leader to this country , in a three-part series on th.e Soviet that in the 50 years of Soviet perhaps this year. 'Union sponsored by the Lecture history, the Soviet Union has Other relations are perhaps not Fund. He said there was a differ­ emerged from the destruction of as good. The press counsellor was ence between the Soviet and World War II as the second most plagued with questions on Jewish American mentalities. "The Soviet powerful nation in the world. emigration from the Soviet Union. people make a great distinction "We are carrying out our 'peace Yevstafiev replied that "resignation between labeling an issue in their offensive,'" said Yevstafiev. "One of Soviet citizenship is a major step; society as a' 'question' or a of the points of that program these people are almost considered 'problem.''' As one Soviet city includes the liquidation of hotbeds as traitors." ~ . official put it, in a story related by Alexandr Yevstafiev, press counsellor for the Soviet Emb.assy, said Yevstafiev, "We don't have many American public opinion of the Soviet Union improved' after the problems; we have many ques­ "bitterness" of the Czechoslovakia invasion. (Photo by Stuart Garfinkle) tions." "Life has changed in many ways since the revolution," Yevstafiev said. The standard of living has THE GEORGETOWN College to Sponsor increased four times since World War II. Apartment housing is easy UNIVERSITY CHORUS to obtain. The literacy rate among the Soviet people has increased Invites Everyone to its Free Annual Confab on Women since the revolution in 1917. The College of Arts and Sciences share our experiences with women will sponsor a "Conversations on considering similar choices. We also Life Planning" program that will would like to talk with men who bring women faculty members will be working with women Drinan SPRING CONCERT together with students to discuss professionals and may be loving (Continued from Page 1) professional careers for women. professional women." physicians in the sanctity of human The women faculty members Women faculty from several life? " SUNDAY APRil 15 8.30 PM will discuss full-time careers for College departments will be par­ Fr. Drinan suppor~s socialized women and the problems created ticipating in the sessions, including medicine as far as providing the by careers in married life. There professors from the French, Bio­ opportunity for the poor to get GASTON HALL was a session of the program for logy, History, Government and adequate medicine. He serves on_ women yesterday and a session will Sociology departments. the House Judiciary Committee and Selections from: Vaughan Williams, Mozart, be conducted April 12 for men_ "Self-knowledge and realistic supports amnesty for Americans planning may help integrate having who have exiled themselves rather Stravinsky and Fa~re "As women and faculty mem­ a: career with being a wife and than be drafted to fight in the bers we have experienced both the mother, or being a single wo~an," Vietnam war. Join us for a relaxing and entertaining evening. satisfaction and the problems that the faculty members said. "Explor­ Fr. Drinan ended his speech with come with trying to meet a double, ing expectations of your relation­ a quote from the late President and often conflicting, set of ex­ ship with a woman may enrich your John Kennedy _ "Those who make periences," the women faculty role as a husband and father, or a peaceful revolution impossible members said. "We would like to single man_" make violent revolution inevitable." SOPHOMORES. C·CN-33 An important announcement to every SPEND your Junior Year in student in the health professions: NEW YORK-at N.Y.U. NEW SCHOLARSHIPS EARN a great experience ARE AVAILABLE IMMEDIATELY.. AND degree credit. When you're in New York City, you're where it's at and where they are. Leonard Bernstein. Willie Mays. The THEY COVER TUITION AND splendid new Veliizquez at the Metropolitan. Margaret Mead. The Brooklyn Bridge. Clive Barnes. Washington' RELATED COSTS AND PROVIDE AN Square and The Village. Andy Warhol. Jones Beach. Eugene McCarthy. Joe Namath. Joan Sutherland. ANNUAL INCOME OF $5,300 AS WELL. Peoples, foods, cultures from all over this earth of ours. Washington Square College of Arts and Science at New York University invites you to experience the cosmo­ politan uniqueness of this great city. If the dean of your college approves, you can study and live here for your entire junior year. Whatever your field. Pre-med, pre­ dentistry, pre-law. Math. Journalism. Psych. The full liberal arts spectrum. Or education, business, and the arts. If a steady salary of $400 a on active duty (with extra hard, expensive training. After your year as a New Yorker, you'll return to your month and paid-up tui~ion pay) for 45 days. Naturally, Now we are in a position to own college to complete your degree-a degree with a will help you continue your if yOUl' academic schedule give you some help. Mail in year's enrichment that is now available here for you. professional training, the requires that you remain on the coupon at your earliest scholarships just made pos­ campus, you stay on campus conveniE!Dce for more detailed For details, mail the coupon below. sible by the Uniformed -and still receive. your active information. ----..------Services Health Professions duty pay. r;=~~~~:~~;------' Director, Junior Year in New York BuxA Revitalization Act of 1972 Active duty requirements Univenal City. Texas 78148 Washington Square College of Arts I de.ire information for the fonowin« and Science deserve your close attention. are fair. Basically, you serve pl"OfrTam: Because if you are now in a one year as a commissioned Army n N.vy 0 Ai. Force New York University Medical70.teopathic 0 Dental medical, osteopathic, dental, officer for each year you've Veterinary 0 Podiatry- 906 Main Building O~er (P~1lH I-p«l(y). _____ veterinary, podiatry, or op­ participated in the program, ~ Washington Square tometry schOOl, 01' are work­ with a two year minimum. N.m·--"7'(p-:-...- ....-p-rl:-n':-:-'---- New York, N.Y. 10003 ing toward a PhD in. Clinical . You may apply for a scholar­ Soc. Sec. ,, ______Addreu ______Please send me complete information about the Junior Psychology, you may' qU!llify- ship with either the Army, Year in New York program. We make it easy for you. to Navy or Air Force, and know City ______St______Zip- ____ complete your studies. You're that upon entering active Name__ ~ ______

commissioned as an officer as !iuty you'll have rank and Enrolled at---;;;(SoW:h=OO:O;n--- soon as you enter the pro­ duties in keeping with your Address______To gl'aduate in-o"f~Mo-n:-:-'h""')-;(-:;-Ye~.r:-:-) -;(-:::0...= ...-:, gram, but remain in student professional training. City______-State ___.LJZip ___ status until graduation. And, The life's work you've cho­ Date ot birth -0-:(M":""o-'n,-:-h ):---:-:(D:-.y-o",---:(-:-:Ye:-".r-:-, L ______~ during each year you will be sen for yourself requires long, ( ·Podiat.oy nut available In Air Force Prolirramo Telephone,______Friday, AprilS, 1973 THE HOYA Page Seventeen 'Academic"Elections Set For Four G. U. Schools (Continued from Page 1) Neal Feldman, Ray Cerreta and '74 Representative are Karen Don Guenther. The Executive Com- Zokoff and Janine Farhat; for Class creasing enrollment, and initiated mittee (EXCO) is the foreign of '75 Representative Jill Sagarin, other reforms. service governing body and includes and Thea Bruhn for Class of '76 There are 12 positions open in student, faculty and administration Connie Brown, Maria Hernandez the School of Foreign Service representatives. and Debbie Wolf. There are two Academic Council. Candidates for The S.F.S. Academic Council positions open for additional Class of '75 Representative are Jim has "provided the impetus for candidates in the '75 and '76 races. Schultz, Bruce Rosen, Michael curriculum reform, an investigation The language school academic Harrington and Hans Heinsen. Class of the grading system, and partici- of '74 Representative hopefuls are pation of the Rank and Tenure group is working on a proposal for Bob Lebrun, Nick Lamberti, Ray process," a spokesman for the a possible double major outside S.L.L. and has proposed curriculum Cerreta, Harvard McElwain' and S.A.B. said. h . th h I Elizabeth Krob. Class of '76 Re· Candidates are vying for three c anges III e sc 00. presentative candidates are Kath­ positions in the School of Business The S.A.B. convinced the ad­ leen Sullivan, Katherine Raben­ Administration. Candidates for ministration to iI).stitute a reading stein, Rhonda Johnson, David Representative in the Class of '76 period before exams and has Murphy, Paul Der Ohannesian, are Brendan O'Connell, Erryl prepared a Comprehensive Report Sarah Vieneey, Jayne Januzzi and Kendall and Marco Gomez. Class of on the Enrollment, which describes Scott Wendelin. '75 candidates are Joe Engler, the effect of increasing class quality Candidates for the At-Large Cathy Ganther, Lynn Kruger and of education at Georgetown. The Academic Representative are Dick Jack Denman. At-Large Academic S.A.B. also has published the course Ruebensaal, Steve Duffy and Dan Representative candidates are evaluation booklet that will be Guenther. Candidates for five Morgan McDonnell, Pete Karches distributed next week. positions on the S.F .S. Executive and Charles Ross. Council are Anthony Natale, Joe The business school academic BLOOD & PLASMA Farkas, Kevin Conry, John Rues­ council has sponsored educational DONORS NEEDED sman, Andrew Parish, Mary Anne forums and worked with the dean All Blood Types Cathopoulis, Elizabeth Krob, to develop a new curriculum. Fee Paid at time of Donation Thomas Merrick, David Luvara, There are nine pOSitions open in Antibodies Inc. Congressional Republican Leader Gerald Ford will speak at New 1712 EyeStreet,N.W. Suite210 South Faculty Lounge at 4 p.m. tomorrow. Karen Barry, Debbie Insly, Gigi the School of Languages and Coiton, Dave Hoyle, Mark Garvin, Linguistics. Candidates for Class of 1.0. Required

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I City State Zi p I I I I J I I A natIOnaI9l*Ieto apartments and rooms available for the SlI1'II11E!r. • L~~~-~~~~~~~~~~-~~~~~~--~~ Page Eighteen THE HOYA VVhich Sport Acts Like'·"l~~ Our National Pastime? Editor's note: The following editorial was the football season). But the poll also revealed published in the November, 1972 issue of Sport. It is football's preference for certain kinds of fans. First, used by permission of Sport Magazine, published by everyone under the age of 18 was excluded from the Macfadden-Bartell Corporation. poll, though obviously a substantial proportion of all For the sports fan, this is a glorious, if confusing, sports fans, and Americans, is under the age of 18. time of year. The World Series is being played, the The poll also broke down the answers according to hockey and basketball seasons are beginning and education and income, and concluded that "Football football is in full swing. Some of us have clear-cut is followed much more by the highest income, the preferences among the four major spectator sports. college educated and profeSSional people .... Baseball But most of us suffer the pleasant bewilderment of is followed more by the lower income, high school not knowing where to focus our attention or when to educated and skilled labor groups." Of course pro switch channels. That's why it's so difficult to answer football would prefer to be No.1 across the board, the old question: Which sport is really the national but it seems happy to concede the lower income and pastime? Instead, let's examine a related but education groups to baseball as long as it can have the _, significantly different question: Which of our major economic elite. sports acts like America's No.1 sport by fulfilling its Meanwhile baseball still gears itself for the average obligations to the American public? American. Ticket prices remain among the best Hockey, though it has millions of dedicated fans in entertainment buys anywhere, with $1 to $1.50 being this coun try, still belongs to Canada. Basketball is an enough for a seat in almost any major league park. American invention but, in the minds of the public as Instead of ignoring youth, baseball, with its many reflected in polls, it still suffers from the stigma of its promotions, actively caters to them. Since long original purpose-to keep athletes in shape between before women's lib, baseball has made great efforts to the football and baseball seasons. attract women fans. Through inner city clinics and That leaves the old argument: Baseball vs. football. other special efforts, baseball also pays more Both sports have the national scope to justify their attention to underprivileged children than does claims to being No. 1. Each originated in the United football. States; each is followed-and played at one time or Baseball's owners are hardly models of progres­ another-by a large percentage of the nation's siveness, but on the whole they act more enlightened population. But which sport acts ~s if it is, in fact, the than their counterparts in football. In New York r< '~. sport for all Americans? City, for example, while the Giants made plans to '--- -",' ", ~f~~''':'; ,.. ~ (} <;,..;': Take a look at football. The pro game, as a sport move to New Jersey to be closer to the affluent Whereas football is biased in favor of the at't'luent fan, baseball still most and business, hardly seems aimed at the average suburbs, the Yankees committed themselves to acts like the national pastime, gearing itself to the average American. American. Sure, you can always catch a game on TV, staying in a low-income area of the Bronx. (Photo by Pat Early) but the true fan wants to be able to attend his There is, of course, an economic reason for this favori te sporting event in person, at least occa­ difference between baseball and football-the diffi­ sionally. Today in almost all NFL cities that's damn culty of filling ballparks for baseball's long schedule. near impossible. Just about every seat in every But we also believe there are other reasons. Perhaps stadium is occupied by a season-ticket holder, who baseball acts like a truly national sport for all Rtiggers Resting pays anywhere from $40 to $100 and up. Few teams Americans because it has its roots deeper in American set aside any seats for single-game sales, the only kind democracy than does football. Baseball has been the average fan could afford. played and watched from the beginning by Americans Football's bias in favor of the affluent fan was of all classes, while football grew up on college With 4-1 Posting underlined during last year's Super Bowl festivities. campuses when only the elite were college educated. The NFL people proudly announced a privately Football may some day overtake baseball as the (Continued from Page 20) Americano's C team was only able commissioned Louis Harris poll that supported national pastime. But not, in our view, until it pays made a try and Jerry Pallotta added to kick a field goal, making the football's claim to being America's favorite sport (not more attention to fans who aren't among the eight points with his two trys. final score 8-3. surprising, since the poll was taken at the height of affluent. Second row-man Tom Coates con­ tributed seven points towards Georgetown's victory by success­ Sport Shorts fully booting in one penalty ]cick Baseball and two conversions. (Continued from Page 20) By the time the C game got Golf, Crew Open Seasons underway, the field looked like a to groove the ball. tropical swamp, minus the mos­ The Terps added four more runs by Ken Glick difficulty getting up for the race. son c:Jmmented that the crew quitoes. The Hoyas' C squad in the seventh inning to close out Despite their early season set­ Cortin added that the oarsmen would be lucky to win at the splashed their way to a muddy the scoring. backs at the Miami Invitational and really aren't in peak shape at this opener tomorrow against Marietta. victory over Sud Americano. Sud, The defeat levelled the Hoyas' against Princeton, the Hoya golfers stage in training but the races early Benson said that at this stage of according to Scott, is one of the mark at 1-1. Georgetown won its are trying to regain their form as in the season are valuable in that training, the Hoyas are rowing at 31 most skillful and experienced teams opener by tallying four runs in the they take on Catholic and Villanova they provide experience. When the strokes per minute whereas on the East Coast. bottom of the ninth to down today in a home triangular match. important races come up later in. Marietta is at 35. Georgetown will In the first half, Rich Clark Loyola, 5-4. Coach Steve Stage berg is looking the season, hopefully these meets stress speed work later, concen­ scored for Georgetown and Larry First-baseman John Lacci deli­ to Captain Tom Piscetta, sopho­ will allay any pre-race nervousness. trating mostly on physical condi- Donahue followed suit during the vered the winning hit, a two out more Peter Hill and freshman Mike Heavyweight coach Frank Ben· tioning now. second half of the game. Sud single that scored John Botti. Carroll to improve substantially on The Hoyas will attempt to round their game in the coming weeks. into shape this week if the rain "During the fall season, Tom subsides. Georgetown plays at Old and Mike were our most consistent Dominion tomorrow then travels to golfers. Tom ran into a few George Washington and Towson on problems with his form in Miami, Monday and Tuesday respectively. but seemed to straighten out a little The Hoyas return home on Wed­ at Princeton." nesday to play John Hopkins. Piscetta, a senior, is usually Ray O'Brien, Connelly, Mat­ capable of shooting in the 70's, as is tingly and Jarrowey will probably Hill, whose rounds of 75 and 80 at handle the Hoya pitching duties in Miami were impressive considering the upcoming games. the overall lack of practice time available to the team. Although the Hoyas face a rigorous schedule in April, aver­ GEORGETOWN aging 3-4 matches a week, Stage­ berg feels confident that the home RELAYS course advantage in most of the matches will compensate for the lack of available practice time. Georgetown hosts a major "Our players are capable of relay meet in the East beating every team on our schedule with the exception of Maryland and tomorrow on Kehoe Field. Penn State. As of now, I believe our prospects for a successful season Field Events start at 11 :00. seem excellent." Running Events begin at Notable notes: The lightweight crew squad opened its season noon. Saturday, placing fourth out of five teams at Penn. The team followed Come see the up with a loss to Columbia Sunday. According to coach John Cortin, action! the Sunday race was more evenly While lightweight rowers opened the spring schedule with a loss to Penn Saturday, the heavyweights debut matched, but the team, demor­ tomorrow against Marietta. The squad is not favored since speed work hasn't been stressed at this early stage Admission is Free! alized after Saturday's showing, had of training. (Photo by Pat Early) Friday, April 6, 1973 THE HOYA. Page Nineteen Play 8all, 1973

Batting 1.000/by Ken Zemsky

Sport clipping: Rienzo and Thompson swap lives. Of course that story in our April Fool's issue was a parody of the .Peterson-Kekich episode. Yet because of its serious implications the real-life story is not a laughing matter. After all, these two men are public figures and as such their conduct is placed upon a pedestal for all to see. One cannot play the moralist and decry the freedom of '.I.,", a man and a woman to fallout of love with each other and to seek happiness with another person. However, because of the public glare, couldn't Peterson and Kekich have been more subtle? They could have divorced and quietly remarried the other's wife. One must question the intelligence and possibly the sincerity of two couples who attended a party and afterwards decided (after a few drinks?) to switch mates for a while. The concern is that much greater when it is realized that the public eye fixed upon Peterson and Kekich is for the most part the eyes of American youth.

We remember the influence that our boyhood heroes t exerted. Ollf~ could not help but be affected as he watched I Senior Rae Hoffman placed first in three events as the Hoyettes swept five of seven events in quest of the D.C. in awe the courage of a Mickey Mantle, playing on Inter-Collegiate championships. (photo by Keith King) mutilated knees, Jim Bouton notwithstanding. On a lower level there was Bobby Richardson, who would have been just as comfortable wearing preacher black as he was in Gymnasts Springing Toward Yankee pinstripes. The kids of today have as their heroes players who make the news by their enormous greed at contract time. D.C. Collegiate Championship They often read of something as sordid as the Peterson-Kekich thing. Or of a Lance Rentzel, putting the by Mary Flannery Monday's preliminary meet. Coach Disario noted that she moves on a 12-year-old girl. "After seeing our competition, I Georgetown placed first in five out was "happy with Rae's showing, It is this which makes the loss of a decent young man expect to win the championship," a of seven events with Rae Hoffman a since last year she was sick and like Roberto Clemente so tragic. And it is why one can jubilant gymnastics coach triple winner in vaulting, free couldn't compete. Her perfor· only be repulsed by the antics of Fritz Peterson and Mike Madeleine Disario said after her exercise and tying for first in mance was good for hersel f person· team's outstanding performance in tumbling. ally, and for the team." Kekich. Eileen Kennedy and Suzanne Sport clipping: 1973 baseball season opens this week. Carr were also applauded for their And it opens without major league competition in D.C. first place efforts in the balance Of course there are those who maintain that even when the Bolshevik Revolt beam and trampoline competitions respectively. lowly Senators played in R.F.K. Stadium, major league The Hoyettes are prIming for the competition was still lacking. D.C. Inter·Collegiate meet which Certainly it is only fitting that the national pastime Succeeds Again Georgetown will host April 14 at exist in the nation's capital. George Washington, Georgetown And if the football Redskins can play to capacity by Bill Corey Medal tournament will also be next won the meet in 1970 and 1971 For the second year in a row the week during the same days. How­ and placed sec-ond last year. This crowds, can't baseball equal the performance of the junior Bolshevik Beach Club has taken the ever applications will only be competition determines the area's sport? With a decent team and a shrewd owner (Bob Short volleyball championship in the accepted between the hours of one outstanding gymMsts and Hilltop unfortunately had the financial dexterity of Cal independant league. The Beach and five p.m. There will be no hopes are high. Coolidge,i.e., none) baseball can make it in Washington. Club finished their undefeated entrance fee but participants will be The team can call on only The prospects for attracting a franchise are dim. First, season by defeating the surprisingly required to pay greens fees. three veterans-Hoffman, Kennedy tough Sparkletones. The competition must be limited and Carole Collins-and relies without financial backing and with the only spokesman Playing in their usual carefree to four foursomes. As a result heavily on the fourth and fifth being Congressman B.F. Sisk, a Californian who is closed manner the Beach Club took an participants will be selected on a place finishers of seven novices to to District opinion, the leaderless drive to regain a major early lead in games by beating the first come basis. The tourney will boost the overall score. Practicing league franchise is floundering. 'Tones 15·9. However in the second be played at Georgetown Prep's Tuesday and Thursday nights and The Orioles, with a sagg:ng attendance and trying to tap game the Sparkle tones bounced golf course, with the transportation Sunday mornings, the Hoyettes right back to win a squeaker 17·15. being supplied by the Intramural feel they are almost ready for the t Washington's baseball fount, will stave off any attempt to The Beach Club was then forced to Office. championship. f! bring back a team. abandon their light attitude toward , Finally it is questionable whether the Lords of Baseball the game, and easily won the are sufficiently dedicated to the black community to bring rubber match. back a franchise to a city that has a 70 percent black In the dormitory division, first New South easily man-handled population. fourth New North, winning in Sport clipping: Mets to win N.L. East. straight games, 15·5; 15·8. However, The Reds, Orioles and Chisox also appear ready to grab this impressive victory will do little ,,' their respective divisions. The Hoyas are another team with to change the overall dorm stand­ \ .~" -:." ~>. a better than even chance of capturing a title in its ings due to the fact that first New North seems to ~ave compiled an division, the D.C. League, if the pitching staff avoids last almost insurmountable lead in over­ fall's sore arm epidemic. all points. Yet the Hoyas muster only a few spectators, who are Next week begins the registra­ out for a tan, or an occasional stoned soul who falls out of tion for both the track and field competition and the Golf-Medal sixth Harbin, to discover that he is in right field. tournament. The track and field It's not that students are turned off by the sport registration period will go from (witness intramural softball activity). Monday the ninth until Thursday Perhaps the reason is that professional baseball does not the twelfth, during the hours of place too much emphasis on collegiate competition but 9:30 and 4:00 p.m. rather on its own farm system. Along with the drop in pro Entries will be accepted only in fIt;... l:'ii~"_!!9I person, and there will be a $.25 status from major to minor to collegiate leagues, fan entry fee. The track events, which interest declines sharply. With a highly developed major will include a 100 yd. dash, a 40 yd. league and its farm system (something football and dash, and a four-man 880 relay, will basketball lack), amateur baseball hasn't caught on. be held on Thursday, the twelfth at Despite its problems baseball in general is still the 5:00 p.m. The field events will be held on Towson (H) 1: 00 national pastime as Sport magazine claims, and it should the following day at 4:00 p.m. and Tuesday; Wednesday. be another exciting season, whether you're sitting in Big will include the high jump, the long Lacrosse: 3:00 Saturday; St. Shea, playing for second New North, or watching your jump and throwing the shot. All ------Mary's College rJ.I-~'-Af\-!P.... brother muddle through little league. events will be held on Kehoe field. Tennis: ViIlanQva (H) 1 (A) The registration for the Golf- 2:00 Tuesday; Del~ware (A) ·~

"::"J SPDRTS i Page Twenty GEORGETOWN UNIVERSITY, WASHINGTON, D.C. Friday, April 6, 1973 Maryland, Rain Bat Down G.U. by Jim Nagle Though the Hoyas were clearly Georgetown's traditional spring outplayed, it was three four-run baseball nemesis, rain and wet outbursts by the visiting Terrapins grounds, wreaked havoc on the that made the difference. Hoyas' early season slate and may Mike Mattingly' started for the have cost a promising team' its Hoyas and was ripped for four uns chance for a successful campaign. in the first frame. Mattingly was Coach Tom Nolan's squad high with several pitches and ~ waited patiently as four of its first Maryland's aggressive batsmen con· six games were postponed by rain nected for two triples. and wet grounds, but the damage After the first frame the gangling incurred by the lay-off may have Georgetown left·hander settled ,)!::'": washed out Hoya hopes for a down to retire the Terps in the .. ;L---­ posi tive record. second, third, and fourth stanzas. r~""",v _____ ~__ _ -...-:~ .~--- The lack of playing time, when Mattingly exited for a pinch After a rain delayed first of the'basebi1l1 season, the Hoyas were trounced by the University of Maryland, added to the Hoyas' scheduled late hitter in the fourth inning as the 12-1. (photo by Keith King) start, has placed the team at a Hoyas rallied to score their only comparative disadvantage to its run. Steve Connelly started the Next: Georgetown Relays rivals. Georgetown's hitters and inning with a walk, took second on pitchers have not had an oppor­ John Botti's bloop single to right­ • tunity to develop a rhythm while center, advance to third when Dave their opponents, who have bene­ Lowans walked and scored on Hoyas Sweep In No. Carolina fited by a half dozen ·or more pinch·hitter Tom McBride's infield games, are beginning to get into out. -, by Ned Hogan and the two fastest half miles of the The performances of the relays shape. Mattingly's replacement on the The Hoyas. come off a good meet, 'pacing the two mile relay to a were generally heartening for the The consequences of the Hoyas' mound, Pete Jarrowey, also performance at the Atlantic Coast victory and the sprint medley and coaching staff as the two mile relay inactivity were brought home by a suffered through a tough first Relays behind the heroics of the mile relays to second place sped to a 7:41.3 first place' finish. strong University of Maryland team inning as Maryland cinched the win Conrad Zink in preparation for the finishes. Zink was clocked in 1: 52.8 The mile relay placed second in that shellacked Georgetown with four additional runs. Jarrowej' j First Annual Georgetown Relays in the two mile relay, 1:51.9 in the 3:18.8, the sprint medley was pitching for 12 runs and belted four had control ~roubles and was forced CJ. tomorrow. The team will be look­ sprint medley and 48.6 on the mile second in 3: 27.2, the distance long triples en route to a 12-1 rout. (Continued on Page 18) ing to repeat its. Raleigh perfor­ relay anchor leg. medley relay was fourth in 10: 20.3 mance where Georgetown was the Also starring for the Hoyas were and the 440 relay was clocked in only team to place in every relay Bruce Groneveldt, Reg Brandveen, 43.2 for fourth. The distance event in the meet. Kevin Reilly and Justin Gubbins. medley was, the lone disappoint­ Conflicts' Threaten Zink, the outstanding performer Brandveen was on both second ment with Jim Freel, Mark Sickles, of the meet, ran the fastest quarter place relays. and anchored the Steve Caton and Rich Mull experi- ---______surpriSing 440 yard relay _ that encing trouble in the rainy con- Equity Donations finished fourth in the competition. ditions. Reilly was the second leg on the The Hoyas play host to several by Chuck Lloyd Though, the final entries have Rugby Club two mile relay and the third leg of East Coast teams tomorrow in the Despite a plethora of off-court not been placed in this year's the mile relay. First Annual Georgetown Relays on difficulties, the recently concluded ledger, early estimates by tourney Gubbins placed a respectable Kehoe Field. Admission is free and Equity Funding Tennis Tourna­ promoters place this year's net Splashes to ninth in a tough six-mile run that all are invited to watch the first ment seems to have stayed at least receipts at approximately the same featured Dan Rincon of Maryland. meet in seven years to be held at one step ahead of the bill col­ $37,500 figure recorded last year. Rincon set one of the two stadium the Hilltop. lectors. If this same figure is reached this Triple Win records that were eclipsed in the ;', time around, it will mean that the meet as he paced the field with a Equity has weathered a storm by Mary Quinn time of 29: 29.3. Gubbins finished brought on by a variety of dif­ After almost drowning in the ninth when he was outkicked by ficulties. swamp (lower Kehoe field) the two runners he had had a dogfight Shortly after Stan Smith swept Georgetown ruggers moved en with for nearly four miles. Gubs to victory in last year's tourney, l masse to Harbin Lounge where they finished the race in 30: 34.5 which many of the tpur's top d~a~s left~ proceeded to celebrate a highly was a personal best by nearly 1:30. the U.S.L.T.A. tour to Jom the., ."2 successful day by drowning them­ Groneveldt set the other stadium World Court Tour. k~,,- s e I v es vol un tarily - su bsti tu ting record in the high jump as he Smith himself headed a star- :; cleared 6'8" in the very slick alcohol for rainwater. studded list of defectors which also : conditions which prevailed in The A team now boasts a record included Cliff Richey, Tom Gor-, I Raleigh. Groneveldt had to adjust of four wins and one loss after man and Australian Colin Dibley. shutting out Johns Hopkins, 14-0. his approach because of the pouring rain and the slippery tartan surface. The W.C. T. provided more dif­ In what was described as a very ficulties for promoter William well-played game, Kirby Smith The Hoyas entered four other individuals in the meet and each Riordan and the U.S.L.T.A. with a made a try, worth four points. legal battle over sanctions for the Steve Gannon racked up eight had a respectable first meet perfor­ mance. Rich Butler, freshman Equity and W.e.T. tournaments points for the Hoyas with his two which was held 'simultaneously in tries. Chris Carter booted a con· surprise, eclipsed his personal best in the two mile run with a time of nearby Virginia. The battle ended version for the two remaining with a reduction in prize money in points. 9:41.7 in the downpour. Earl Johnson showed much promise in the Equity from a $30,00G purse to Coach .Tony Scott, a seven ye~r the 440 intermediate hurdles with a a paltry $12,500. veteran hImself, was very enthusl- ,time of 574 which is only three The promotional woes continu- J astic about the way all three teams seconds off the school record and' ed to mount with another battle. j played and expressed his hopes for this was the first time Johnson had This time the Washington Post took . a winning. season. He n~ted an run the intermediates since his high up arms against Riordian. Ap- ~ all·round Im~rovement. III the school days. . parently Riordan had Mark Asher, a 1 players and SaId that baSICally, all Garlef Schlieker continued to Post sportswriter, removed from a ,,' Ge,?rgetown lacks now is ex- show promise in the long jump, recent tourney in Salisbury, Mary- '(' penence. reaching the final. Schlieker jumped land, for' distrubing play with the I The Georgetown B's "tryed" 21'113/4" in the preliminary but annoying clatter of his' typewriter. their way to an overwhelming 31-0 was unable. to improve in the final Needless to say publicity and shutout over Hopkins. Ken Can- round and placed fifth in the event. promotional outlets were greatly cilia, the scrum's prop, and Rich Charlie Rousseau ran into some reduced by the loss of so influential Clifford and John Steeger, backs, tough competition in the'100 yard an ally. Consequently attendance each scored four points. dash and was eliminated in the dropped somewhat and endangered Larry" "Wild Man" Crevey also preliminaries, but mustered the Conrad tomorrow's Georgetown Relays after' the chances of matching last year's _ (Continued on Page 18) respectable time of 10.4. taklngfUst in the quarter and half mile, of the Atlantle eo"" Relays. gate. I