Spectator 1967-04-07 Editors of the Ps Ectator

Spectator 1967-04-07 Editors of the Ps Ectator

Seattle nivU ersity ScholarWorks @ SeattleU The peS ctator 4-7-1967 Spectator 1967-04-07 Editors of The pS ectator Follow this and additional works at: http://scholarworks.seattleu.edu/spectator Recommended Citation Editors of The peS ctator, "Spectator 1967-04-07" (1967). The Spectator. 1038. http://scholarworks.seattleu.edu/spectator/1038 This Newspaper is brought to you for free and open access by ScholarWorks @ SeattleU. It has been accepted for inclusion in The peS ctator by an authorized administrator of ScholarWorks @ SeattleU. ASSU, AWS Officers Three Speakers to Visit April 29 Sworn in on Monday To Discuss Vietnam in Year 1967 ■ The student senate will vote concern the executive office. on seven bills at 7 p.m. Sunday Sophomore Senator Judy Mac- in the Chieftain Conference Quarrie introduced two bills at room. the last meeting calling for the The 1967-68 ASSU and AWS formation of an executive steer- officers will be officially sworn ing committee and for a student in at 12 noon Monday in the appointments committee. A Chieftain Lounge. All students third bill, if passed, would re- may attend. pealthe recentlypassed student Three bills before the senate initiative, by granting ASSU of- ficers activity passes. The other bills include a $200 Return Polls allotment to the P.E. complex, Students who have received compiling senate agendas for questionnaires from Fr.John senators; enforcement Fearon, 0.P., thatexplorethe new of college student's view of his standingrule four and the chart- religion returned ingof S.U.s PoliticalUnion as a mustbe this memberof the Puget Sound Po- week. liticalUnion. Fr. R.J. De JAEGHER Dr. ANTHONY BOUSCAREN Fr. DANIEL LYONS, S.J. By HILLARD GRIFFIN partment selected him as one of The Young Republicans and our newsmen to make a special the New Conservatives will tour of Vietnam. And, in 1966, sponsor a tri-speaker panel at the Federal government sent 1 p.m. on April 29, in Barman him back to Vietnam to report SEATTLE UNIVERSITY Auditorium. on the refugee problem. The speakers include Dr. An- In August of 1966, when he thony Bouscaren, Fr. Daniel returned to Vietnam for the Spectator Lyons, S.J., and Fr. R. J. De third time within a year, the Jaegher. They will center their Republic of China decorated Fr. XXXV. Seattle, Washington, Friday, April 7, 1967 No. 41 talks around the topic, "1967: Lyons for distinguished service Crucial Year in Vietnam." on behalf of the free world. Fr. Lyons is chairman of the Dr. Bouscaren, a Political Free Pacific Association, Inc., Science professor at Le Moyne associate director of the East College, Syracuse, N.Y., re- Asian Research Institute, and a ceived his M.A. from Yale and Saga Schedules Food Poll member of the strategy staff of his Ph.D. from the University this, the American Security Council. of California at Berkeley. By SHARON FERGUSON ty of service. Inadditionto opinionwouldhave been hard to a professorof He is a former professor make Heis former soci- at The home office of Saga food students were asked to establish under the pressure of ology, director of forensics and the University of San Francisco, service will be conducting a personal regarding stu- comments tests. The student-run survey dean of students at Gonzaga Marquette University, the Na- dent attitude survey on campus the mealson campus. was eliminatedthis quarter be- University. tional War College and the De- this month, according to Garji Christofferson noted the com- cause of the "psychological ef- FR. LYONS contributes week- fense Strategy Seminar. Christofferson, manager of the ment section is one of the most fect of running two food polls ly columns to Our Sunday Vis- DR. BOUSCAREN directs the campus food service. valuable to the campus man- simultaneously." The results of tor, the Houston Tribune and Institute on Communism and Administratorsof the poll will agers as this gives them a re- the Saga poll will serve as stu- the Chen Hsin Daily News in Constitutional Democracy, is a be the central office representa- flection of which specific points dent expression of opinion ac- Taiwan. member of the American Secur- tives. The exact date and time are satisfactory or unsatisfac- cording to Burns. In 1965, the U.S. Defense De- ity Council, a former consultant of the random survey is un- tory to the students. to the House Committee on Un- known to the food managers.Ap- The results of the poll will be American Activities and an edi- proximately 10 per cent of the tabulated at the main area of- torial consultant to the Free students will be handed ques- fice of the organization and or Marian World Seminar. tionnairesas they enter the food results will be sent to the school Bellarmine He acts as a hoard member line on the designated day and and be made available to stu- for the Young Americans for will be requestedto return them dents. Freedom, the Americans for as they leave. Due to the forthcoming Saga Senior Coed Home? Constitutional Action and the poll thesenatelast Sunday with- "Unless we have the promise mer at Bellarmine Hall and Sorietv of Individualists. drew that would have al- QUESTIONS will follow much a bill of at least a 70 per cent capac- Campion Tower on June 18. A He has authored ten books on the pattern lowed group to poll for full quarter is $156 affairs, including biog- same as those asked a student ity in Marian Hall, it will room the world a students in the fall quarter poll. the acceptability of the food filled and board and room for the raphy of next fallquarter," the late President At that time respondents were service. not be opened quarter is $252. All of the rooms Dif»m. asked to check very good, Senior Senator Chuck Burns, Miss Agnes Reilly, dean of will be private. Hp mpmher pdi- as women, is a of the good, fair, pooror very poor the proponentof the bill, had origi- announced. "In that a staff of several publica- event, womenwouldhave In meeting last night at Mirial followingquestions: Overall rat- nally planned to conduct a sur- senior BellarmineHall,Miss Reilly ex- tions, and contributes freonentlv ing; food; veyduring winter quarter.How- on-campus housing on the sev- magazines newspa- varietyof cleanliness hall," plained the housing for next to national of dishes, silverware, ever, by the time plans had enth floor of Bellarmine proposed T>rq and «;c t>olarlv journals. tables and Reilly year and the contract kitchen; quality, temperature been formulated for the polling, Miss added. for Marian Hall for 1967-68, Fr. De Jaegher, author of and freshness of food; quantity finals were under way and an On-campus housing for stu- which would be ineffect if the "The Enemy Within," received of food, flavorof food and quali- adequate expression of student dents will be available this sum- hall can be opened. The apart- his M.A. from the University of ments would be under both a Louvain. Assemblies Proposed: room and board plan and a He lived under the Com- room-only plan. munists in China from 1937 to Studio private apartments 1943 was in a Japanese concen- would cost $450 for room only tration camp from 1943 to 1945, Plans for Future and $909 for room andboard for and worked against the Com- Hamilton Lists three quarters. Studio shared munists in Cnina until 1949. By MAGGIE KENNEDY apartments would be $375 for HE ACTED as Regent to the The week before his formal inagura- room only and $834 for room Institute of Far Eastern Studies tion as ASSU president, Tom Hamilton and board. Shared one-bedroom at Seton Hall University from plans year. apartments would be $402 for 1950 to 1953. further outlined his for next only $861 program develop projects begun room and for room In addition to directing a 30- His will and board. Two-bedroom apart- approaches emolovee news agency that sup- this year as well as offer new ments would be $351 for room nlied the world press with daily to old problems. only and $810 for room and information on Communist Presently, Hamilton is taking applications board. Each figure is the total China, he established the Free for cabinet and other appointive positions. A for the three quartersnext year. Pacific Association in Saigon committee to assist him in making the appoint- Miss Reilly added that women and edited a daily paper and a ments is before the Senate. Hamilton plans to can live off campus if they are magazine in Chinpse. a maea- have an executive steering committee of five over 21 or if they have sufficient zinp in French and a magazine members, similar to, but smaller than, President credits for senior standing. in English. Gary Meisenburg's advisory council this year. On the committee would be the executive assist- to the president, a senator and threestudents. $200 I;"THE COMMITTEE will work on carrying Donation Kicks Off : my platform, representthe voice of the stu- TOM HAMILTON to academic and dents the University's council tors and does not require much expense in equip- P.E. Building take the views of the council back to the stu- Fund Drive ment. The new sport still must be approved by The A Phi O's kicked off their ate general fund money into the dents," Hamilton said. with a new P.E. complex, the athletic board but P.E. Complex Fund Drive this P.E. fund. The bill To further communicationsbetween students, we will have all of the facilities to play inter- week by donating the $200 will be administration, first voted on this Sunday.

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