
(,'l PALH BEACH HAS COMFORTABLE THE o Select your handsome, comfortable Palm Beach suit, sport coat and slacks now at the Campus Shop' ... be ready to enjoy hot weatherj when it comes. You'll find a large and varied selection by the world's largest and most famous maker of sunmier fashions for men. ' .1 C§ PALM BEACH WASH AND PALM BEACH SPORT COATS, PALM BEACH SLACKS . CHARGE IT THE CAMPUS SHOP WAY . PAY 1/3 IN JUNE 1/3 IN JULY 1/3 IN AUGUST No Carrying Charge - THE COOL SUIT FOR YOU AT CAMPUS SHOP! • So, drop in soon while all sizes, styles, patterns and colors are in stock. You'll find easy-to-live-with wash and wear fashions . hand­ somely tailored summer formals . the best in warm-weather and most- of-the-year clothes. Get it now . charge it the Campus Shop way. WEAR SUITS, from . 39.95 from 29.95 9.95 to 14.95 GILBERT'S ammis On the Campus—Notre Dame QaCanopis viiAi {Author of "I Was a Teen-age Dwarf, "The Many Loves of Dobie Gillis", etc.) OLD GRADS NEVER DIE BEHER CAUSES? In just a matter of weeks many of you who always held hands in Econ II? Well, Editor: will be graduating—especially seniors. they're married now and Uving in Clovis, The Committee on Race Relations is You are of course eager to go out in New Mexico, where Harry rents spear­ way out of bounds. Nothing worth­ the great world where opportunities are fishing equipment and Mildred has just while can possible result from their at­ limitless and deans nonexistent. At the given birth to a lovely 28-pound daughter, tacks on discriminating taverns; they're stirring up a lot of unnecessary trouble. same time your hearts are hea^'y at the her second in four months. Nice going, If the members are looking for a thought of losing touch with so many class­ Mildred and Harry! CAUSE, I've got a dozen better ones mates you have come to know and love. Remember Jethro Brie, the man we in my back pocket. 1 It is my pleasant task today to assure voted most likely to succeed? Well, old I'm sure that if they were to check you that graduation need not mean los­ Jethro is still gathering laurels! Last on the number of colored Catholics in the South Bend area, they would be ing touch with classmates; all you have week he was voted "Motorman of the aghast. (It's something like 400.) Their to do is join the Alumni Association and Year" by his fellow workers in the Du- absence on the parish roll calls surely every year you will receive a bright, luth streetcar system. "I owe it all to indicates a real need for missionary newsy, chattj' bulletin, chock full of in­ my brakeman," said Jethro in a charac­ work downtown. Here's a CAUSE that formation about all your old buddies. teristically modest acceptance speech. can make a real contribution to Catholic Action but the path the Committee is Oh, what a red-letter day it is at my Same old Jethro! attempting to clear now will only be a house, the day the Alumni Bulletin ar­ Probably the most glamorous time of all blind alley. C% rives ! I cancel all my engagements, take us alums was had by Francis Macomber Thomas P. Hobaii the phone off the hook, dismiss my chiro­ last year. He went on a big game hunt­ i practor, put the ocelot outside, and settle ing safari all the way to Africa! We re­ Editor: down for an evening of pure pleasure ceived many interesting post cards from To call Mr. Keegan's boycott address with the Bulletin and (need I add?) a the most impressive action of his adi Francis until he was, alas, accidentally ministration must be a most subtle con­ good supply of Marlboro Cigarettes. shot and killed by his wife and white demnation of his work this past year. Wlienever I am ha^^ng He succeeded in his efforts on the Senate fun, a Marlboro makes the floor April 1 by using the age-old ap­ fun even more fun. That fil­ proach "Only a fool would vote against this proposal." ^ ter, that flavor, that pack or Despite the opinion of the SCHOLASTIC), box never fails to heighten editors, the question involved was most \| my pleasure whether I am debatable. That very evening it was watching the tele\nsion or defeated twice, and despite Mr. Keegan's plajnng buck euchre or knit­ speech its eventual passage was far ting an afghan or reading from unanimous. The very idea of the Student Senate Mad or enjojnng any other telling the student body to boycott any fun-filled pursuit 5'^ou might institution for any reason is repugnanj; name—except, of course, to the philosophy of student governmei^ spearfishing. But then, how held by some sincere individuals. Tm much spearfishing does one decision to pass the resolution before do in Clo\'is, New Mejdco, Iffs kricmcfitt^iirMi. again approaching Thilman's proprietor was certainly arbitrary, especially since where I live? hunter. Tough luck, Francis! three other tavern owners did relent But I digress. Let us return to my Wilma "Deadeye" Macomber, widow when given a second chance before thie Alumni Bulletin and let me quote for of the late beloved Francis Macomber, resolution was passed. And the Senate, you the interesting tidings about all my was married yesterday to Fred "Sure- if the students choose to ignore its resolution, could well lose what prestige old friends and classmates: shot" Quimby, white hunter, in a simple (Continued on page 24) \ Well, fellow alums, it certainly has double-ring ceremony in Nairobi. Good been a wing-dinger of a year for all us luck, Wilma and Fred! The SCHOLASTIC b entered as second dasjr mail at Notre Dame, Indiana, at a special old grads! Remember Mildred Cheddar Well, alums, that just about wraps it postage rate authorized June 23, 1918. The, and Harry Camembert, those crazy kids up for this year. Keep 'em flying! magazine is a member of the Catholic School Press Association and the Associated Collefriate Press. It is represented for National Advertisinx © 1961 Max Shulman by National Advertising Service and by Don Spencer, College Magazines Corp., 420 Madison Avenue, New York 17, N. Y. Publuhed weekly during the school y^, except during wMation' amd examination periods, the SCHOLASTIC b) printed at die Ave Maria Press. The subscTi|>>s Old grads, new grads, undergrads, all agree: The best new tion rate b $3.00 a year. Please address alll manuscripts to the Editors, Box 185, Notic| nonHlter cigarette in many a long year is the king-size Dame, bidiana. All unsolicited matoial be-f Philip Morris Commander. Welcome aboard! die property of the SCHOLASTIC.i The ScholasiI ^^mmmmi^ mmm^Vol . 102 No. 231 I May 12, 1961 '» • £ •^:->X-m : news'.; editbtc'-',,:-.: \;:,j:-n-'' ';Mm :M<^abe m fMfuiesVecliter " --•?^-^''^'-*th6in<i^iHfl«,Sl^^ "'" ap 'S&i Why are some girls prouder fc^i^JiOAESlMi^ ^ SP^SM of their rings than others ? ^^^ti You see it in her eyes—but the reasons aren't all roman­ ^iM tic ones. Her diamond ring is an Artcar\'ed. This means ®iMlT«PM*St»M^RaNtiMCi it meets rigid standards of excellence in cut, carat weight, color and clarity. Nor is this simply a verbal promise. Artcarved's written m^- um. guarantee explains how the exclusive Permanent Value t-i&t«S»i Plan lets you apply the full current retail price toward the purchase of a larger Artcarved anytime, at any Artcarved jeweler throughout the country. YoU will be ms proud, too, of Artcarved's award-winning styling, Lke Tmi the Evening Star shown here. To be sure it's an Art­ carved: Look for the name inside the ring, and ask for m your written Artcarved guarantee. '«4NiGAI Of course, being engaged is wonderful, but sealing the engagement with an Artcarved ring makes it more HggJ wonderful than ever—forever! ,. m^s#J^AMKgHlCIC©lg Arte a rved DIAMOND AND WEDDINO RINGS LAST CALL for candidates llimis Oliver » Scheuring Slapp Steve StuedieK' $5,000 IN PRIZES Regional and National Winners. Coronation Pageant Robert QiiappinelK to be held in New York. See your Artcarved Jeweler Tbomof Wabh' \ : , * today for free application blank. Contest closes Terry Wolkerstorfiiir May 20. Please act promptly. ' JiaMK - Windl.'-. •^U^> .^^&^^IVrV1^ 1- ^jnrwtMi % mi notredame art gallery c* Fcimous Harry James Band Plays for Seniors; Improved 1961 'Dome' -Somefhing Elegant' in Navy DrHI Hdl Tonight Arrives Next Tuesday Improvements in layout, design and Elegant music and elegant surround­ photography are the distrngoisbing fea­ Bemie Craig, business manager; Dick tures of the 1961 Dome which will lie ings will set the mood for a capacity Lochner, entertainment; Don Veckerelli, distributed at the Audio-Visual Center crowd of 600 couples at the Senior Ball, assistant entertainment chairman; Tom next Tuesday. Students must first obtam "Something Elegant," tonight at the Regan, decorations; Bob Brown, tickets; IBM cards in the Fieldhouse today or Ijprill Hall. The record crowd will dance and Pat Hickey, in charge of the Com­ next Monday and Tuesday. from 10 to 2 under a French mansard munion brunch. Editor-in-chief John Flanigan, an roof, accented by chandeliers and a re­ These events will be the last class English major from Fort Lauderdale, flecting pool. Red, white and gold Fla., has incorporated a number of sig­ tapestries will highlight the decor. activity undertaken by the seniors prior to the Commencement Exercises on nificant changes in this year's book to Harry James and his twenty-piece or­ June 4.
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