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John Carroll University Carroll Collected

The aC rroll News Student

12-15-1961 The aC rroll News- Vol. 44, No. 6 John Carroll University

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new committees Road report Weather conditions appear To establish or not to establish, that was the question to be favorable for westbound NEWS confronting the Student Union at it last two meetings with Representing John Ca,oll University vacationists. The roads to Chi· regard to new committees on pre-registration, publicity, and cago and all points ~'est are University Heights 18, Ohio Alumni introduction. clear. However, snow flurries will probably cover the roads Vol. XLIV, No. 6 Friday, December IS, 1961 :Michael Fegen, Union vice-pres- One other committee was set up to the east with a slippery lay. ident, proposed three constitutional by the Union to assist the faculty er especially in the Rochester amendments advanced from the in planning a pre-registration Union Review ComrnittM, of which system. Charles Salem proposed and Syracuse area. Most roads only one waor; accepted by the nee- this motion which was supported to t he south will be clearing in JCU loses $500,000 the afternoon. essary margin of t wo-thirds of all (Turn to Page 5, Col 1) voting membeJ"S of the Uniort. The,.--_::..:_::._:::_~~~~::.:_~~-.:_::======:=::! first amendment., the successful through will verdict one, sets up a Union committee to A minor legal point may cost John Carroll University introduce Carroll seniors to t he New freshman officers Alumni Association and its llctivi­ $500,000. Akron Probate Judge Vincent Zurz handed a de­ ties. cision thi!'l week which voided the will of Mr. Charles His second amendment attempt­ McDermott. ed to relieve the vice-president of ask class cooperation lltcDermolt's will lefL 50 per­ manufacturer of playground equip. the responsib11ity of 'Gnion public By KEVIN STROH cent of one million doUars LO Car­ ment. relat;ons. Fegen claimed that he The race for freshman class officers came right down roll; hut since the will was drawn b'lcDermott was given an honor­ was ah·eady bogged down with to a photo-finish this week as two of the class offices were up less than one year before his other investigations. This amend­ aJ·y doctor of laws degree in 1960 ment failed to receive a majority. decided by the slim margin of 11 votes or less. Sixty-three death, it wa!\ voided. 'l'he Ohio law ft•om John Carroll. His third amendment was to percent of the total class voted as compared to 59 percent in pertains only to charitable and edu­ Final court determination wilJ be give a ll activities to the Review the primaries. · cational bequests. held later; but in the event that Committee which are not assign­ Richard Cermak is leading the while the president is an off-cam~ A wealthy Akron industrialist, the decision sLands, the money will ed by the Union president t<1 any freshman foursome as president, pus sturent. McDermott died on Thurday, Dec. f.!O to his two adopted sons, Richard other special committee. It was assisted by Douglas Palmenter as Cermak who is going to major in McDe1•mott and Robert :McDermott. opposed mainly on the basis that government administration lives 7. The will was drawn up on Jan. sons of his previouly deceased vice-president; William Goyette, G of this year. He was pre$idcnt of Fegen had already said that he brother. McDermott, himself, was a could not handle t he publicity job, Blazon Inc., the wot·ld's la1•gest bachelor. · and therefore most U nion mem­ bers felt that he should not be forced to shoulder any other re­ sponsibilities. After confusion t·esulted over an amendment to Lhe amendment by Fegen, he withdrew his mo­ tion.

NEW FRESHMAN OFFlCERS dtscuss future p .ans ror tr1e c.u.. :. ur 1965. They are Cleft to right) Bamabei, treasurer; Palmenter, vice-president; Cermak, president; and Goyette, secretary. secretary; and Fredrick Barnabei, in Erie, Pa. At Cathedral Prep, treasurer. he took part jn the student council, Dolan }{all was represented at the the school newspaper, and the de­ polls with 88.4 percent of its resi- bate club, aU of which primed him dents casting their votes. Three of for his activities at Carroll on The the new officers reside in Dolan, (Tum to Page 5, Col. 5) Page 2 THE CARROLL NEWS Friday, December 15, 1961 If we win, it must be by a nanow margin late in the game. or else we have to go all Checkpoint Sportsmanship out and double the score. But if the game You don't have to believe it if you don't should be dull. the team m1ght just as well want to, but a college editorial writer really forget about any support from the stands. The political mean does find it difficult to criticize his class­ If we arc to belie,·e each other, apparent­ mates or slap their hand:; for booing at ly the only alternatives are to either follow by James Wagner games, or for not supporting university edu­ tradition or become coeducational. An edi­ cational or cultural programs. torial can't do it, so for those who object to Conservative right-wing political groups are multiplying both alternati\'es, it's time to break a tra­ all across the country today wherever Lwo conservatives But this time we think we have a bone dition. gather together. Left-wing extremists have sometimes found to chew-sportsmanship. The altitude of the themselves on the defensive Can·oll student nt athletic contests has been in the of the growing op­ ity, the illogic of the extreme right traditionally very poor. We are speaking position from the right, but and left, is the path of the mean, specifically of the real disre::;pect shown to­ It could be you they too have lately been at­ the middle-of-road. When he is ward our opponents' teams, coaches, and fans As this day slowly passes and you are tracting a greater following. faced with a particular political at football nnd basketball contests. counting the hours until the end of your last issue. the man who moves above We Aeem to have become alarmingly ac­ The ascend- class, tension m1d anxiety begin to mount. ancy o£ the poli­ the cxll·emes of party politics stud­ customed to the type of behavior which Everyone is in a hurry to get away from tical extremists :cs all that is involved in bot.h the civilized Mcieties have never tolerated. This the campus as soon as possible t.o begin t he on either s i d e problem ilself and in eV'ery possible has been accom­ has been so much the ca!'le that. when aston­ holiday festivities. solution which can be devised for ished members of the faculty or our guests panied by t h e But will you arrive home at all? If you flock of support­ it. He makes use of what is best question the catcall~. name-calling, and boo­ are traveling by car you will probably shrug ing newspapers in th<• philosophies of the right anJ ing of injured players or losing teams we your shoulders and say that accidents always and news letters Lhc left. generally excuse ourselves by replying, "Oh, happen to "the othe1· guy." However, "the which have been H<•re lies the importance of the the Canoll guys h:we always done that," or, other guy" is today saying the same thing; stuffed in t b e duty of every man who concerns nation's m a i !­ h:mself with politics to be familiar "It'~'~ a boys' school; what else can you ex­ but to him, "the other guy" is you! boxes. T h e s e with its problems and the possible pect?" But don't let dO\\ n on .\our guard against rad;cal groups Wagner :;olutions. Lacking thh> familiarity, Sure, we'll HUpporl the team-if we're accidents even after you ha\·e arrived home have become more mfluential and he is incapable of actinK rationally. winning. Rut when we do win, it's not so safely. Don't mar the holidays for yourself have increased their numbers at :\Ian's duty in regard to the b n s ; c constitution of the state .rouch the team or the school which wins, and for your family think (student membe1·s as well) no one man's whole nature does not lend thing to do with obtaining speak­ political ideals. ~hal thev are bein~ coerced into propo!:ed the name of )lr. Buckley itself to easy solution:; or to in­ erg for m:my organizations on cam­ Who is ril!ht? What, then, is the certnm ~pmion s :md patterns of as a possible speaker on campus. differcm·e on the part of the pus in the past two years, I know most corred political idea? There thought nol only on religious mat­ )1r. Llndn was approached but he cit:zen. Both apathy and ideology thut controversial, authoritative tt>rs but in other field!! as well. has no authority personally to ap­ is no one correct political ideology are out of place in suc:h a state, This point Clime out dearly in prove or disapprove of a speaker. "peakers were never turned down whic:h could exclude all others. Cor­ Mr. Buckley and Mr. Galbraith to the recent Blll'kley case which you )fr. )1arkey was also asked. But he because they might kick up a bit rect political thinkin!." cannot be the contrary. O\'erprominently pictured nnd CO\'et­ is not authorized to approve speak­ of scholastic.- dust. the boast of any single partisan view. There is litllc historical • .. . ed. In an at"t·ompanying article titled ers personally. Herman S. Hughes, S.J. "Hot Potatoes" you poi ntedly and The pseudo-ironic remarks in f:clitur's nol•,--1-'r. Hughes points bas;s for party label.: prior to the Our leading educators complain rather forcefully indica ted that the article "Hot Potatoes" about nut that ndthrr ,ll>-. LtLl!llt nor French Revolution. The idea thn.t loudly that we are indifferent to University officiuls rcCuscrl to thi::; being a "sterile university" .llr. .llnrkry httll the authoritu to one must have some particular the dangers which threaten our have Mr. Buckll•y un campus. of the conclusion that John Car­ scht•dule a 11pcakrr from ottlttide the label in order to pnr!icipate in civilization. Here they have to as­ politics is a relatively modern No one mnde the rcquc!lt through roll "could only play safe by in­ Unircrsity. Sinco this is the C"ase, sume thut civilization is a perman­ the o:·dinary University c.-h:mnels viting personalities no more con­ •llr. Markqt or .\!1·. Lat•itt sh·>uld invention. ent. good. and any opinion given conc'crning tro\•crsiul than Wnlt Disney, Caro­ htrt•c infonlwd llr. llaa:> of the lfore than one polit.cal system But for three generations many ~Ir. Buckler wns ubsolutely per­ line Kennedy or M.rs. Babe Ruth pr<>Jwr /ll'<>rctlure and should have can be described as fulfilling the of those same educators have sonnl. The procedure which was is utter nonsense. t•m·ricd thr 1·cqucst to the C01nmit­ duty of the state. And yet men taught in our secular schools that used by Mr. Hnas was inept und Consider the fact that we have at tec. insist upon the singular validity of lherc is no distinction between their own con('epts of gove1·nmcnt. good and evil. These concepts have been giv('n 'l'hl!n which dogma are we to labels and the labels have been hold? Are we to uphold the civili­ used as an excuse for reason and zation, or the educational system logic. and an encouragement :for whi<'h tells us that our society emotion and ir.tolerance. cannot be good. Perhaps they The alternath•e to the irrational- would like us to hold both. The Carroll News Publi•hed bi-w~kl ~ except duri~g examination and holiday JM

JAMES WAGNER · · • ••• . ••• • . . • • • • • • • • • • • • . • • • • • . . . • • • • . • • . EDITOR·IN·CHIEF Allyn Adams .•• • ..• • ••••..••••• , •..•••• •• •.• , • • • • • . • • . • . . • News Editor Paul Dunn, Kevin Stroh . • . • . .. Aut. News Edito" REPORTERS: John K•rnuta, Atthur Muciere, Thomas McOonnough, John McHale, AI Rutledge, Dnid Sw•nn, James Tighe, Ellwood Wachter, Charles Warfield P•ul Dunn Richard Smith, Thomas Fornes, Carl Heintel, Robert Mucci. Clifford B•e~hle. • MaH Macfadden • . • • • . • • • . • • . . . • • . . • • • • • . . • • . • • Feature Editor R~PORTERS : Phil Canepari, Chris Gentile, Bill Humes, James Murray, Chuck Thom•s. R1

LTS reveals play .Leon J. Marinello, director of The L1ttle Theatre Society announced that the . Little Theat~e Society's Pr.ese~lation this spring will be l~1~dnck Duerrenmatt's "T h e Y1s1t.'' Copies of the play wiJI be put on thl' re~erve shelf in the Library. Friday, December 15, 1961 THE CA RROll NEWS Page 5 Leaders Retreat Saga questionnaires Tht> onnual Uader!lhip Re­ 'Editor gives paper treat ''ill be held at the Sacred Heart Uetreat House in Youn~ts­ town, Ohio, on Tue<;day, Jan. tell of pros and cons 23, to Sunda), Jan. 2,. The Sodality plans tran.'!port­ at PAT convention (Continued £rom Page 1) satisfied with the meals they are ntion to t.he retreat house and On Satm·day, Dec. 9, Phi Alpha Theta, the honomry up, studen•s suggested that more getting. Some nQte.d the poor condi­ absorbs hal£ of the expenses of history fraternity. held an Ohio Fall Regional Conference at control be exercised o v e r t h e tions in other colleges around the the retreat. Paul Dunn, chair­ Heidelberg College in Tiffin, Ohio. Eta Alpha Chapter of man of this year's Leadership crowds in line by sta~Sterin~t the country wi:lere the cafeteria is run John Carroll University was among four schools selected to different classes ior the evening by the school itself. Retreat. "ill be happy to an­ swer an) questions concerning read a paper at the conference. meal and by letting only so many Christmas Dinner :n at one time for lunch. Putting the Ret rent. James Wa~:ncr, editor-in-chief ''as well received by the delegate:;. a milk dispenser out:Jidc.. the serv­ An elaborate Chr:stmas dinner of The Carroll ~cws, presented The paper disc-ussed the abandon­ ing area for the evening meal, mov­ put on by Saga last Wednesday a paper entitled "The Negotiations mcnt o:C the slave trade by mutual ing the seconds aw!\y from t.he night brought many favorable com­ Skit brings laughs Preceding the Anglo- American con~cnt of the British and the firsts, and repositiomng t.he rolls ments from the students. Mr. Wil­ Slave Trade Treaty of 1862." It Americans. The treaty set up a were suggested to cut down on the liam Western, Cafeteria manager, Dale Leonard liternlly brought )lf'riea of unprecedomt.!d joint in­ pushing within the se1 ving area. told the News that he was well­ down the house at t.nt; Iota Chi ternational courts to try o:Uend­ pleased with the wuy in whith The layout of the serv:ng at·ea is Upsilon sponsored Cht·istmas Dance Committees cr~. cvorything was handled. fOJ" The purpose of the conference the basic difficulty. the benefit of the Sodality (Continued from Pnge 1) "The problems at lhe Carroll Christmas pt·ojcct. He put on a wus to ncquaint other $Chools with About the 011ly course that ap­ Cafeteria arl! of such a nllture that skit in which he po1·trayed Santa by Dr. Richard J. Spath, the Union what cun be done to promote the peared warm enough IS the veget­ they can usua!ly be cleared up with Claus and read letters that he moderator, after u few of the "tudy of history on campus. Rep­ ables. Someone suggested that the better commumcat:ons between my­ received. members had tried to discourage resenting .John Carroll at the con­ pots could be kept in the kitchen self, the students, and the Union Record nlbum:~ were awarded to t.he establishment o! any more ference were James Carnago, Da­ until they were rendy to be used Cafeteria Committee," stated :Mr. the girls who participated in the committees. Salem's motion wa:; vid Hack, John Olenik, Donald Mc­ instead of having them nll out at Western. All of the completed .stunt with Leonard. They were passed and the committee was I'S­ once. Cabe, Edmund Thoma$, Thomas questionnaires will be turned over Dorothy Hayes as Mrs. Santa tablished. Szcndrey, and Wagner. Desserts brought concern from to him through the Lnion Cafeter­ Claus and ~farie :\forelli, Evelyn It was also announced at the Phi Alpha Theta is rated sec­ many. Most students feel that too ia committee after results are com­ Urban, and lllary Kay Welch as meeting that the admini!.lration ts ond only to Phi Betta Kappa in much jello is offerC(!. This is piled for the article on the Snack Christmas gifts to letter writers. now seriously cons:dering the adop­ academic qualifications. It cur­ particularly true for the freshmen Bar which will appear in the next Over $250 \v;ll be turned over to tion of some form of ur.limited-ab- rently has 200 chaptel'S through­ who eat after the other upperclass­ issue of the News. the Sodality. sence system. out the country. men have had first choice. Other comments will not be mentioned here because the whole pastry and dessert section has been revamped in the past two weeks. Both quantity and quality of sec­ onds drew cr:licism from just about everyone. The portions are too small to waste time returning for them, and t.heir quality leaves much to be desired. Lt mu.• WlnH<>C\·I<•I•m ••~.C. "The new freshman team a~:>ks for the support of the entire class to achieve its goal~ of unity and 'lta­ bility. With this support we will Friday, December 15, 1961 Page 6 THE C ARR O L L NEWS r;~~- ~ ~Mr.BPickslJCU nips Tee~, ...... It~ AKno~.o.-Thoughtl'dgetto 88-83 for th1rd ~~ the ~cene of action a littl" early this I by -,,- ~ wcl'k to give m~· followers a c~m-1 By r.tJKE DiSANT O Mel. plete report on the clash upcommg "Next year" has at·ri\·ed. John Carroll's basketball squad Tom Brazaitis f~":.:..~ f~ tomorrow eve, ptttmg Carroll • U · 't ~· ..;t.... aga n't the Akron Zips. seems determined to return .the PAC crown .to mYersl Y Standing nonchalantly at the cor- Heights after a year sa~bat1ca l at Case Inslltute. Joe,· Phann is not such an unusual chap. In fact, he is ner of Main and ~farket Streets, Proof of this intention is evtdent was hitting the target as though the ma~ who makes the sporting world go round. He is the 1 sp1ed Synthetic Ribber of Akron, from the most recent fray, for Lhe sphere were guided from a sine qua non of all spectator ~porls. Who are we to question who gh·e!\ the morning line to the which the Streaks jour neyed to control tower. · t f •})1 t' t d t' · t 8 ? Cleveland Plain Dealer. Syn had Carnegie Tech and retur ned from his practiced J udgmen 8 0 a~. e lC even s an par lClpan · the latest odds on Saturday night's the foothills of Pittsburgh with an It was a different tale when the There have been various them a Happy Xew Year. S ure tussle. "Akron, 9-5," said he. 88·83 victory and a 3-1 over-all Thiel College aggregation visited articles over the year~ at- you do. Heservin~ my own opinion. l record. the Belvoir Hall. All fifteen of the Carroll stalwarts pierced the There is no questioning the posi- stopped at the local dllJlce haU Although Carroll was outre­ tempting lo instJ•uct the aver- sco1·ing column as the hardwood­ lion of teamwork. But teamwork is where J<'reddic Firestone and his bounded and outshot f rom the age bleacherile in the precis- ers streaked to a 119-56 mauling ioned art of walchmanship at like the inside of a watch. It is con- Rubber !land were twistin' their field they copped the contest at of the Tomcats, tying a school an athletic contest. Some have stantly at work, but no one stops way to paradise . .Freddie liked the the ~ h ar ity line with center Ray record set in 1954 against Fenn. to study it when he wants to know Zips, !l-2. J. Lang ( 1 promised I :\'!aria plunking 13 out of 16 at­ advocated that busebull Cans study the time. wouldn"t menlion her !ir.st name tempts to lead the charge. J oe ln all f our conflicts there have been at le a~t four cagers notching the outfield aliJmmcnb, the posi- It has always been my contention was Judy) stopped tw1sltn!!' long Perella, who has been chucking double fi gures. Maria with a 21.5 tioning of the infield, the W:J.Y the that a great football team need!! enough to take Akron "by a cool them in from the of the. koy, average and Don Gacey with 18 catcher wears his mask, and other great men at all positions, but it five." and Jim Corrigan, who regained a game have consistently been at of the IC$S obvious occurences on a needs one shining star to show the But lifter hvo successful picks in the groove on his zone busting the top in points and rebounds. way. The principle sometimes works as many tries a fortnight ago, Mr. two-banders, were the spar ks in Jim (Dunker ) Murphy, a rugged hnseball diamond. oppositely in basketball and baseball. B. takes no credence in the idle the touch-and-go encounter. 6·4 soph hns nudged fellow Irish­ Basketball watchen! sometime" But a football season is too short ramblings of This week, The Streaks worked up to the Akl'onite~. man Corrigan from the starting argue tbllt the e;;scnce of the round for a team of warriors, no matter :\lr. B picks: Carnegie contest by overcoming five \\;th a sizzling .586 percent.. ba!l game lies how bold, to win without a Henry The biggest surprise since the Western Reserve, 8!>-71, in the a11:e from the floor. Another pleas­ in studying the the F'ifth leading the charge. Indians caught Custer in his un· ribbon cutter. But the Streaks ant prospect for Coach Keshock forlllD.tion~ uti- Remember wh?n . the 91evel~nd I aware.-. Carroll w~ll mnke Ch~ist- stubbed their toe!\ on F redd.Y has been his bench strength, as lized by th& op- Browns were wmnmg t1tles hke mas comL cnl'ly In Akron, 8:.1-86 Prime. Sean Whalen and the1r .Jim Boland, John D'Angelo, Lou posing five:~ and Napoleon won bat::les? CJeyeJand's m·er the Zips. Wayne State mates. The Detroit ;\fastrian, and Corrigan have been jo~·ing in the ex- Napoleon for that long string of If I'm wrong, ~J erry Christmas duo flicked in 56 markers to spark shuttling in and out with no ap­ ecution of a pal- championship seasons was a not- anyway. 1 an 87-i5 win. Coach J ohn Kes- preciable slow-down in the attack. tern. soon-to-beforgotten quarterback, with the hot Tartar quintet who Then there :IIar ia canned 25 to lead the scor­ Otto Graham. '\nen "Otts" retired h Ak hock's crew was unable to cope ing parade. are coun t I c s s after the 1955 season, Cleveland had Toug ron football follow­ surrendered its championship habit ~t~~ ••••• •• •• • ••••a• •••••• • • • • •• ••••••••••••••••••,... ers who would without a Waterloo. Since Otto left, f f :ARKO BARKS . . . : h:we the man in 1• Bra t a itis Cleveland has seen its title games IVe nex or : : the stands pay from Row X of the bleachers. a especial attention to the line piny F • t h • Aslluredly the Browns had a on the ~ridiron, which he in-i:x point!:. 'fhe qunrlerbnrk fades that if he is not operating correct~ newspaper thunder, but only occa- tending .the .final to 88-4?. buck and plncc!\ thl' pigskin in the mar~in w~c; fe~~work ly, the machine (unit) will break sionally. Other v1ctor1es came over Amen- . b bl the !u bat'k's gut, you think. So doe~ down." Another says: " . . . take Let me assUie any of you who can University and Heidelberg. 15 ptr~ a Y•hnt the l'liUC' cameraman, and he fol­ . mos 1mpor.... , pride in your achievements and lO\\ he supposed hall carrier with after long years of watching Leading the Zippers' attack lS will be discussed above all be a good team member." hb ll•ll!l. football still waited for the break· G-2 forward Bobby Greene. A~ a here). Teamwork can bring a team from You are trt'nted to a mn'!fl'r· away r un.'! or the long scoring sophomore Greene scored 417 potnts Jn watching the depths of mediocrity to the 2 6 7 ful dllllh or lin(' ognim;t line. palls and have not been emotional- in ;; games for ~ ~ · a vel'age. only the b a II heighl!i of greatness. The sports fan Greene also hauled 1n 218 rebounds. carrier zig and Arko should be aware of every player and .:\lennwhill' our ~> l i tlpe r y quarter. ly uplifted by a scoreless duel, Biggest man in lhe starling line- zag down the field, we have to r e­ or. the job he is doing. Ignor ing any hafk has launched tL !lt'O r in ~r 1wrinl thnt [ am of your numbers. Event- I up is 6-G .Frank Szarnicki, a sopho- member that it is because of lhc part of a team lessens one's knowl­ ltl nn end who made n J~pech\cu l a r unlly. it is the backfield corp!' more. Ohio Conference rules permit efforts of ten other men, t.hat he is edge of how the di!ierent plays grab on the goal lint> nnd muHrll>d that wins (or loses) the day. freshmen to compete in varsity able to do so. A bone-crunching work. Holes do not just appear in Football is best left to the :fans. sports, nnd Szarnicki averaged 7 block in front of the runner may his war into the cnd-.tont'. The a defense, they have to be made. Of all fandom, no group of rooters point!! u game and pulled down li7 have sprung him loose, but a half bt•fuddlro camera mnn n·rm·crs stands out like the infamous crowds rebounds in pnrt-timc service last dozen other blocks at the line k?pt Watch 'em all in time to f01.·u>4 on lht' end as his that once graced Ebbets Field to year. him from being swamped behmd Coach Ray suggests that every third ploy should be spent watch­ teammate-. o;urround him in joy- root for ''dem Bums,'' the Dodgers. The Z1p~' backcourt features Bill scrimmage. ing the line, or e\•en one side of the ou, rt-lehration. Uut ~ou. )OU .-a" Onl' Brooklynite put the f:J.n's whole HehlE>mnn and Wyatt Webb. Hc:ide- :\lut ual aid line. He believes that this 'lvill add l'Oncept of sports into one cryptic man spent most of the season with Coach John Ra" of our side con- ,.0me of the finc"t line ~ork or • d • 1 · h"l • to Joe F:m's enjoym~nt of the bat­ - •entence. "You pays yer money an the junlor var~lt.V a::>t wmter, w I e tends linemen and backs cannot be the ) ear. lW ) ou 'Hit.- n lcttt·r you takes yer cherce.'' he philo- Webb canned nine pointll a game compared because their jobs are tle. Every player is important, and should command some attention to :-i BC them for their ::.ophized. for the parent club. Ed Wilson, a obviously different, but teamwork thankin~t from the spectators. l''-<"cllenl co' l'rn~t' nnd "io;hing Honest, that's what he said. 210 pound fon' ard, complete.q the is necessary. One would be useles:; -;;;;;;;~=~~-:::.;.:;;;~;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~ startin~ crew. Bill Stevens, up from ,,;thout th~ other. Of course, I'm not implying that ~ thl• junior var::>ity, is the number "Intelligent discipline is needed every third play mus t be focused on the line play. F:J.ns should use one re~erve. to achieve success," Ray stated. • SIX BARBERS, SHOESHINE, MANICURE their discr etion. If an impor tant Th~ Stre.'lks. on a two-,l!:ame vic- ''Everyone is treated as an indi­ series of downs it' being run, then • SPECIALIZING IN ALL STYLES tory surge, must counteract Akron's vidual. They have their rights and full court man-to-man defen~e. By are 1·eminded that others have by all means wntch the man with haw~:.ing the foe !rom base line rights, too. They all have to have the ball. The last series of downs to base line. the :/.ips hope to force goals. by a team who is one touchdO\Yn the "stupid .nke," a bad pass ''When boys go out for line, they behind naturally turns attention Bodnar's or l.'rrnnt dribble. realize that they cannot expect on one person, the ball carrier. This year's Zippers will be minus glory. The fun of playing is their Check? Alex Adams and Clinton Lee, who reward. We here at Carroll !eel Ray concluded, "Someone once Barber Shop with Crccne paced the attack a that linemen should get more recog­ look a poll of a .football team and year ap:o. Carroll is much improved nition, so we instituted two Most asked who was more important, 13893 CEDAR RD. FA 1-9574 and getting bett('r by the game. It Valuable trophies, one for the line· linemen or. backs. The linemen won, should be an interesting contest. men and one for the backs." In 7-4." Friday, December 15, 1961 THE CARROLL NEWS Page 7 PAUL KANTZ SAYS . . De-emphasis on defensive Ip ere IIa I Gracey 'come late,' • • • • play IS ru1n1ng basketball spur cagers early games There was a time when a guy could go to a basketball game, settle back, and absorb a stiff defensive as well as Cathedral Latin High came campus, are the ex·Lntineerl\ now l\em~ter with the Falcons freshmnn brisk scoring duel. Now he has to be content with seeing close to winning a state bas­ wearing the Blue and Gold. team, he 1ound stron~er interests only half the game as it was originally intended--the high­ ketball championship in 1957. Gat>ey and his G-5 frame ·were a at home and enrolled at Carroll. octane, point-pouring half. The game is no longer basketball. The Century Club, as they dream .come true for Keshock who That stronger interest is his were tabbed by local scribes wearied of players six inches his jun- wift•, the former Joan Marino, and it's goonosphere or astrotally and the public doesn't like the ior last year. With Gacey and G-3 his t.wo sons, .loe .Jr., and Johnny. trend. for their penchant for run­ to a back seat. so iar back in fact Ray ~faria and Jim ~lurphy the Joe has adapted him~eii well to The chief source of erosion un­ ning scores into the hundreds. the double role or papa and piny­ that it's hardly noticed. reached the Ohio semi-finals Streaks have an impres:.oive front maker, well enough, in :fact, to doubtedly stems from professional It seems to me that a reverse quarters where the sharp emphasis trend in thinking is necessary, at before suffering its first de­ court. 4.'arn a startin~ job on a team on scoring has made a mockery o! lease to the point where a pluyer feat. Despite Gacey's height, he is a stacked with veterans. defensive play, and as a result, takes as much pride in blocking Two juniors alternated as the smooth operator with the basket- Joe opened the season at a Ior- the game as a whole has sulfered. a shot or filching a pass as in wnrd ll_lot, them moved to gu11rd The perfected techniques of offen­ "fifth man" for that best of Latin scoring two points. It will be the teams. Today the same pah· has when .hm Murphy showed promise sive specialists have almost re­ a~ u rcbounder. Starting with ei~ht only thing that saves the profes­ been instrumental in . Coach John duced scoring to a matter of sional game-and maybe, in the point:~ in the opener ::tgainst He­ drawing within 1·ange of a shot. lonSt run, the college game, which Keshock's revitalized Blue Str eak ~terv_e, Joe has come steadily up the The shot its!!lf is J>rnclically uuto­ squad. Don Gnccy and Joe Perella, scormg ladder. meshing 10 against matic. is cunently taking its cues !rom the play-for-pay men. l wo come-latclies to the Carroll Wayne, 12 in the Thiel game, nnd Prohibition of zone offenses in ------!lourishing for 18 at Carnegie Te<.'h. professional ranks has only added lt wns Perella's 10 point:1 in the to the many conditions which final period against Carnegie that make for ludicrously high scores Streaklets stopped by Kent spu1 red Carroll to vic-tory. and increa~ed defensive negli­ Not a Care gence. frosh after opening victories Carefree is the word for Joe Pe­ 78 for Wilt ridiculous rella. lie is n "loose goose" on or When one player - no matter By BILL GOYETTI>~ off the court, looking as c<10l as n bow superbly gifted-can score 78 "I feel badly about the game, IJut we can't expect to beat Dt.'<'emhcr morning at the foul line points in one game, us the Phila- a team like Kent when we haYe such a cold night.'' So spoke or as de:1dpan as a Vegas delphia Warrior,; ' Wilt Chamber - frosh basketball coach Dave Hurd after the Streaklet in­ when playing poker with his ncigh­ horhoorl buddies. It is Joe's talent lain did not so long a~o. you're vasion of Kent State Dec. 7 resulted in a 76-64 defeat. The no longer within the confines of with the ('ard~ that prompted his ba!<.ketball. And when a pro team is loss was their fil·st of the season after two victories. lMmrnates to tab him "LitUe Joe." considered hopelel;s}y anemic be- 1 The Streaklets. started the cam­ Tlw only thing- thut penetr3te;; his Cl!!veland's East High. canned 27 composur,• to any noticeable de~rcc cause it consistently fails to reach pa1gn by trouncmg Western Re- Joe Perella 100 points per outing, the game ser~e's Little Red Cats, 91-61. Four markers against Reserve and 16 i>~ his philosophy cour!'le. • is not the same days later they played host to Wayne against Kt•nt.. He also le:tds the team ball. He can sweep the bom·rls and Like Gacey, "Little Joe" is n · Slate's frosh five and walked away, in rebounds, averaging 17 per game. dribble the lenglh of the floor him- master· Ht hone dry humor. Dl'liglll­ The pros aren't the only ones 99-G4 victors. "The o~fc.m:se has ?een terrific, self if need be. Tn foul' games thi::; ing in playing the role or a naive turning lhe sp011. top~y-turvy. But the Kent State j!ame was a but my blgge!lt surprise has come season, Don has sco1·ed 7:! point!(, or underclassmen. Joe dupe~:~ his sopho­ Collegians nre al!lo making u trav- complete reversal of the fit·s~ two from the defense," Hurd said. "1 18.3 a game. more r:ohorts whenever tfre occa­ esty of it, although somewhat contests. Coach Hurd's squad con­ c:ouldn't ask for bette1· hustle than "G ce" t c 11 · T 1 sion present.:; itself. slower and in secluded snatches. nected on only 29'/.- of its field I'm "''Lt' I . K F. d I a c:•mc o .un·o VIII o e- ,.,< mg rom enny .sper an do t:niversitv where as u fre:;hnl'ln Take, for example, .John Carroll's goals compared to 44% by the win- I.ike Gucc.v, Joe is a l>aliketball Gary .Franko, and :\Iodestas and he meshed 20 points a 119-56 peppering of Thiel here a ners. n~~rly p;a~e . bug. He is always one of the fiut Danal,~~ak ha:·e .~'lken care of the Yearning for home soil, he returned few weeks back. Even with a token Ct-aig Leonard, classy guard from player:: on the l'Ourt beforo prac­ defensl\ e boatds. to Cle\•elnnd and entered Curroll a tice, and leaves only when the defense, a team should be able to Chicago's Loyola Academy, has Esper, 5-10 guard from Vermi- year later. hold another to less than 100 points been the standout. thus far. "Craig lion, Ohio, has been the playmaker \Viener in 40 minutes. Carroll averaged ha>< been consistently good and of the team. "lie's the type ·who nearly three points per minute in should prove to be a fine addition would rather set up the play than Gacey, nicknamed ''Wiener" by registering its ll!l total. to the varsity,'' Hurd commented. shoot. and thi~ make~ him a big his teammates, is a laconic lad who Shot in t he arm Leonard has averaged 18 points a nssct to out· offense," s:tid Hurd. does most of his talking on the game to tie 6-4 center Ed Modes- The Streaklets travel to Akron court. He reminds you of the typi­ Offcn,e i" exciting. but it's not tas far the team lead with 54. tomorrow ni~ht to face the Zips in cal Indiana youngster, born and bred everything us football and base- ::\l d . with a basketball in his hunds, ball have keenly perceived. Wide- • 0 estas, who ~et;er played a the preliminary to the \'arsity con­ open attacks. featuring "shot- , game of basketball m four years at test. who would rather make a jump "hot than read Aristotle's Ethi('s. gun" offenses and lonely ends, J In his own quiet wny, Gacey sup­ have provided pro football with a plies a m~;asure of wry and dry shot in the arm, both at the box­ humor to the Streak.;' locker room office and on the TV screen. But chatter. It was he who nicknaml'd the pros haven't forgotten de­ Ross Tisci the "Ross,'' and encour­ f ense. Goal-line stands, clever pass aged him to "work clenn Ross," a defenses, and blitzing linebackers phrase that has become a standard still play a big part. whenever Tisci works his way into In baseball, there is always room the open for a 11hot. for the Clctis Boyet·-type glove For a big man "Wiener" is amaz­ man, who can't hit the size of his ingly adept from the outside. ln hat, but. makes the game-saving fact, his most potent. scoring wea­ defensive plays. pon is a long jump shot !rom either And in these sports you don't corner. Receiving a pass from one need three-digit scoreboards to of the guards, he tosses a head Don Gacey keep an accurate account of the fake or two then leaps high to let conch orders him off. The long jump proceedings. The scores are low fly with the jumper. l! any fault shot is "Little Joe's" favorite wea­ enough for the man without a Phi can be leveled at the crew-cut ace, pon, but he can drive well, too. He Beta Kappa key to tabulate. I it is his hesitancy to drive with is always especially happy when a Defensive t ussle the basketball. Uttle man guards him liO he cl!n One of the finest. basketball School Chums move into the pivot and maneuver games I saw occurred in the early Gacey's school chum at Latin, for a hook shot. '50's in New York. It was the tra­ Joe Perella, also took an indirect lt took a year or two for Perella ditional baltle between Fordham route to Univer~ity Heights. Joe and Gacey to travel the less than and Seton Hall. In an effort to traipsed off to Bowling Green aft­ ten mile~ from Latin to Carroll, but stop the scoring show of Ford­ er graduating from Latin. After a it was worth the wait. ham's Ed Conlin, Seton Hall fre­ ------quently froze the ball and pressed defensively throughout. lhe first All-American and AII-PAC accolades half. At the int.ermission, t.he score was something like 13-10 Ford­ go to seven outstanding '6 1 foot ballers ham, but lhe game had been a Seven outstanding Carroll g r iddcrs received pfuce~ on thriller and the Rams' Rose Hill the Small College Catholic All-American and the All-PAC Gym 11hook with excitement. Ford­ ham won wit.h a second half rush, teams. scoring about 30 points. A II-American honor::~ went to PAC post-season nccolude~ were ,John Kovach, sophomore ta('kle, ~·slowed upon :;enior end, Ttld Not many other defensive strug­ Uritus, and sophr>mores John Ko­ gles have been played in the last who made the first offen~ive FLYI NG BY NI GHT. Streaks' Coptain Tom Bra zaitis drives in for learn, and to senior Dick Kobulin­ vach, <:ordnn Priemer, Gene decade because of lhe shift of Smith, nnd Ron Timpanaro. strategy. Defen"e is relegated la yup a gainst Wayne. Carroll's Don Gacey watc:hes intently. sky nnd sophomore Jim Hcuvey. Page 8 friday, December 15, 1961 Red China lecture IAlumni bring 0 ~ Fr. Gardiner ends Institute series On Sunday. Jan. 7, in the O'Dea Room of the SAG, the The Institute for Soviet and East European Studies will third lecture in the Alumni continue its series concerning the "Communist Challenge to ' Lecture Series will be pre­ America" on Monday Jan. 8, with Dr. Stanley Shou-Eng Koo sented by the John Canon speaking on "Domestic Problems of Red China." Alumni Association. Dr. Koo, assistant proiessor of M A t Columbia University. l'he speaker at. this lecture will economies .and . stat~stics at Jobn ·F ~ra the next five years, Dr. be the R~v. Harold C. Gardiner, Carroll Umvers1ty, 1s an educated Koo served as advisor and alter­ obse~vet: of the con~mporary eco- nate delegate for the Food and S.J., whose topic will be "American nom1c 1t1stot-y of _China; . Agriculture Organization of the Cunure and ArL." He. was born m . Chma_ m 1921 United Nations which was located Fr. Gnrrliner. a nat;ve of Wnsh­ and hved there unttl ~94t>. He ~e- in Washington, D.C. When the or­ in~ton, D.C., entered th~ Society 1 ceived a B.A.. degree ~ eco~omt~s ganization moved to Rome, Italy, of Je:Sus in 1922. Be:Stdes attending at the Umverstty 1.n in 1951, he decided to work for N~t10nal. and teaching nt many universities 1941; and m 1946, he earned bJS his Ph.D. at Columbia. Receiving and colle~es in the United States, his doctorate in economics in the IN ANTI CAPTIO N of the new trophy case, debaters (left to summer of 1960, Dr. Koo joined he has also studied in JlelP::um, our Business School faculty this right) Thomas Vi nce; Jerry Murray; Dr. Austin Freely, moder­ nt Downing Collf'ge, and at Cam­ Letters class bridge UniYersity. In 1!)40 Father year. ator; Hal Bochin; and Robert Jablonski display their latest 1 trophy. Gardiner was at>Pointed litel'ary conducts poll The primary objective oi the In­ editor of America, the national stitute, sponsor of these bi-weekly Calholie weekly. f lectures, is to offer secondary He is the aulhor of ")1ysteries Many streamel'S 0 f · our school and college teachers a well- Debaters win trophy cent stamps, 1000 letterheads, balanced preparation for the End,'' a study of lhe me1lieval reli­ teaching of subjects related to the gious drnma, and "Tenets for Read­ over 2000 questionnaires and ers and Redewers," a work on the envelopes later, the members Communist controlled empire in of the Business Letters and the :fields of geography, philoso- at Pittsburgh meet phy, modern languages, culture, Reports classes had two mail and literature. While John Can·oll's basketball team was starting a bags fuU of letters ready to The rnstitute also collects and string of victories on the hardwood, our less publicized var- go. disseminates information about sity debate team was compiling an impressive 5-l win-loss Participating in one of the Russian colonial practices, de- record and a first place trophy at Allegheny College in Mead­ largest college sponsored polls, the scribes methods o£ Sovietization and ·n p conquest, and studies the aspira- Vl e, a. were undefeated in three debates, members of the Business Letters tions of the nations that are striv- For the second straight year, while Robert Jablonski and Hal and Reports classes of the School ing to regain freedom and indi- Carroll walked away with first Bochin won two of their three en­ o! Business are sampling con- pendence from the Communist rule. honors, winning five out of six counters. Daniel Shaughnessy join­ sumer opinion in Cuyahoga Coun- A discussion pel'iod will follow debates, and edging Western Re- ed Murray, Vince, and Bochin in ty concerning discount stores and Dr. Koo's talk, to allow the audi- serve by 10 quality points to cap- the two-day lnternational Cross­ the merchandise that is carried by ence to question him. Admission ture the trophy. Teammates Jerry Examination Tournament in Pitts- discount establishments. The in- is 75 cents per session. B. Murray and Thomas L. Vince burgh. formation received from the re- ..-----·__::.______:::.______, Meanwhile, the novice debate tur.ned questionnthairesl will used squad of Lawrence Edwards, Dan- by members of e c asses ~em pre- Cont~over.sz·es arz·se iel Sullivan, Richard Cermak, and paring theil.' formal reports for the Arthur Schneider took first place semester. ' in the Northeastern Ohio Debate OveT 1000 consumers will be o~ .r Conference Tournamer.t at \Vest- poUed in the Cuyahoga County over 'use 'J vz•olence ern Reserve and won all six d~ area. The mailing coverage has bates. Other participants include been arranged so that every com- On Sunday, Dec. 3, a seminar for coope1·ation in inter- James Kulig, Felix Strater, Dennis munity in the county will be rep- national development was held in the O'Dea Room of the Kelly, and James Kline. Fr. Harold C. Gardiner resented in the polling. The con- SAC. Over 300 students from all over the world attended. sumers who received question- judgement of literature familiar to The seminar opened with a wel- Carroll freshmen. He is also the naires were asked to indicate tbeir come !rom the Rev. Joseph F. stated, "Violence must be met with opinion of various discount store author of "Edmund Campion: Hero Downey, S.J., dean of the College violence." ASN convo o! God's Underground".'' features and mail the question­ (Contintted from Page 1) naire back in an addressed stamp­ of Arts and Sciences. He expressed Mary Hrabik, an American citi­ ing, has received wide acclaim. The Fr. Gardiner is chairman of the ed envelope. tbe hope that the discussions would zen who was born in Czechoslavakia Richmond News Lea.Jer, in a series editor:al ooard of the Catholic be "truthful and forceful." Henry and is a seni01· at Notre D::~me Col­ Book Club and lecture~ extensively Each of the 40 students in the of four edito1:ials concerning the B. Ol!endorff discussed the image lege, developed the same theme that work, calls the book ''so stunning on the current literary scene. classes mailed out 25 question­ that the United States must pro- Escribano did. She stressed the An average of 200 people have nau·es and marked the return en­ in its impact upon public opinion ject to have an influence in inter- need of both guns and ideas in the that it becomes a key factor in in­ attended each of the two previous velopes with their names. Thus national affairs. fight for freedom. Iectu1·es. when returns are received, each fluencing a major b·end in public "The United States was conceived Dr. Joseph T. English, moderator affairs. This i!> an angry book for student will tally the number of in revolution, and we should not al- of the seminar from Washington, responses received from his mail­ angry young men." It. has been low ourselves to appea1· as reaction- D. C., injected a note of humor into reviewed and editorial;zed in most Evening College ing list. Tllis tallying also serves aries to revolutions that attempt the seminar with his frequent ex­ to double check the effectiveness of the countries majvr newspapers. to bring about social justice,'' he hortations to the speakers to remain In explaining the situation of and mail coverage of the poll over said. within the time assigned for the greets New Year the county area. American education as desclibed in In refe~·ence to the tactics used by speeches. The speakers began each his book, Dr. Trace says, ''the aim The Evening Colle$re closes out Mr. Frank J. Devlin, assistant the Communists to gain their goals, talk with a plea to Dr. English not of intellectual training has become the social events of 1961 and wel­ dean of the School of Business and Sampat Iyengar, a student at Case to cut them off. lost in other aims more social in comes in a new year on Sunday, instructor of the Letters classes, Institute o£ Technology from Ban- A.fter hearing the introductory nature." Dr. Trace spent three Dec. 31, when they will sponsor a believes that such a project is im­ galore, India, said, "we shouldn't speeches, those attending the semi­ years learning- Russian in prepara­ dance at the Lake Shore Country portant in helping students put fight violence with violence." nar participated in round-table dis- tion for his analysis, and says he Club. classroom theory to work in a Julio Escribano, a Cuban refu- cussions. Since almost half of the was motivated to write such a book Festivities will begin at 9 p.m. "live" situation. gee, diliered with this opinion and participants "\•ere from foreign because of the poor quality of with the price of admission o! $5 ~~ii~i~~~ii~~~~iiii~~~~~~~~~~ countries, there was an excellent American textbooks. per couple. Music will be provided ~~ .u. """' opportunity for an interchange of Dr. Trace received ilic; A.B. from by Lou Elgart who has played for •;:I ideas. the Un:versity of Denver, his M.A. several other Carroll dances. The The seminar ended with a report from Columbia, and his PhD. dance is open to all students. of the conclusions reached at each from Stanford University and Pur­ Students are reminded that Dec. table. Most of the conclusions cen­ due Uni~ersity. Dr. Trace has been 31 is a Sunday and that all Blue COMPLETE tered around United States foreign a professor of Enghsh at John laws will be in effect. However, policy and ajd. Carroll since 1956. ginger ale and ice will be sold.

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