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r---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------~ ~--~----- ------------------- . Class elections -p. 3 VOL. XIII, NO. 97 '. / an independent student newspaper serving notre dame and saint mary's TUESDAY, MARCH 6, 1979 SMCBoard discusses Hilda Morley delivers endorsements unscheduJedrea~g by Ma~ie Brassil . by Kathleen Connelly StaffReporter Senior StaffReporter Controversy arose last night . Poet ~ilda Morler g~ve an unscheduled. reading last night over the right of college organ­ m the Library Audttonum when due to an error in travel izations to endorse ca:mpai~n arran$ements, playwright David Mamet was unable to tickets at a meetin_g of the Satnt partictpate in the Sophomore Literary Festival. Mary's Board of Governance. Morley began wnting at the a~e of nine but her ftrst No policy exists at present volume of J?Oetry, A Blessing Outside Us, was just recently concerning the right of these published tn 1976. She attended the Walden School the groups to endorse candidates Haifa Realschul~, Hebrew Universtiy, University College in runnmg for Student Govern­ Londaon, and d1d post-graduate work at Wellesley Ohio ment President, Vice-President State and New York University. ' of Student Affairs and Vice­ It was while teahing at Black Mountain College that she President of Academic Affairs. worked with such poets as Rober Creeley, Denise- Levertov Gail Darra~h, Student Gov­ and Charles Olson, who later urged her to publish her poetry. ernment prestdent, announced Morley wrote a poem dedicated to Olson after traveling to at the meeting that she will be Gouster, Scotland to iment his funeral. She said that she had presenting the policy ~t the been at ~dds with Olson, but that they had,made peace welJ Student Assembly meetmg on Wednesday night to be voted before hts death. Te augmented· impact of his daeth is illustrated in the lines, "The night I heard that you'd died & I u~n. If established, the policy wdl stipulate that no represen­ just beginning to see you shale ... " · tative group on campus can The poem "C~arles Olson" is characteristic of the appeal officially endorse candtdates in to sensory expenence common to the poems read by Morley. the student government elec­ She paints a picture of cold winter using visual images and tions. worlds ~vocative o~ phys~cal sensation of being chilled, appropnate to the unmedtate experience of death in the While several individuals poem. raised opposing opinions, the majority of the Board that The concern with sensory experience, particularly visual responded decided that in such [continued on page 2] a small institution as Saint Mary's there was no need for individual groups to make en­ dorsements and that hall and class representatives might not KillingsUJorth speaks have the consensus of the bodies they represent. Those- who dissented, argued • Hilda Morley was the featured author at last night's on unetnploytnent rate [continued on page 5] Sophomore Literary Festival reading. [Photo by Ron Szot) by Ann Gales Killingsworth commented News Editor that the understanding of un­ employment prior to 19'0 was I Charles Killingsworth, pro­ summed up well when P•esi• I fessor of economics at Michtgan dent Calvtn Coolidge said, I Carter plans Mid-&st trip I State University, told an audi­ ''When a great many people I I ence of approxJmately 150 last are unable to ftnd jobs, unem­ I WASHINGTON (AP)-Presi- accompany him. · Begin then reported the night in Galvin Auditorium that ployment results." I dent Carter, in a drive to wrap Begm said he would fly home action to Carter at a 10-minute the national unemployment rate Unemployment policy, ac­ up a Mideast peace treaty, will on Wednesday to pre.pare for White House meeting. could be as high as ten to cording to klllingsworth, had its fly to Egypt and Israel this week ''the memorable visit.' Powell's announcement of the twelve percent a year from now, roots in the Keynesian Revolu­ to try and clear away remaining While expressin~ optimism, ·presidential trip followed. although he admitted this was tion of th .. mid-1930s. Classical roadblocks to a settlement. the Israeli prime mmister noted The recommendations were not a ! • flat erediction. " . economists of the time had Egyptilln Prime Minister in an appearance before mem­ not disclosed publicly. While th1s ftgure is much been· unable to reduce the Mustafa Khalil said in Cairo bers of the U.S. House of The Israeli cabinet vote of 9-3 higher than the Carter Admin­ estimated 25 percent unem­ that Caner's trip "will most Representatives that a Middle with four abstentions was a sign istration's prediction of appro.x­ ployment rate using the con­ likely lead to a si~ning." East peace seemed at hand of considerable opposition with­ imately 6.2 percent unemploy­ ventional method of cutting And Israeli Prune Minister several times previously but in the cabinet, indicating Israel ment by next year, Kilhngs­ wa_Bes, he said. Menachem Begin told members was not achieved. made some hard concessions in worth said that "the fact that John Maynard Keynes re­ of the U.S. Congress in Wash- "The world was happy and accepting the proposals. we are entering a recesiion with jectin' classical theory. ar sued ington, ''Now diere is a ray of then came the disappoint­ The principal sticking point a higher prosperity-level un­ that ' government expenditure hope." Noting that Israel has ment," Begin said. has been Sadat's demand, employment than ever before could be made the key to accepted U.S. proposals for He stressed that Israel's backed by the Carter admin­ renders a rate as high as twelve decreasing the unemployment wrapping up a treaty, he added: concern has been that it must istration, that -a timetable be percent possible." level." He added that while ''Let us hope Egypt will join be able to defend itself against included in the treaty package Killingsworth, who has Keynes was bitterly criticized the effort. Then if this hap- other Arab countries if the for establishing Palestinian worked as an economic arbitra­ by others in the economic fteld, pens in a short period of time, peace does not last. self-rule on the West Bank of tor and has also held posts on "there were some economists, we may have the ceremony of The White House announce- the Jordan River and in Gaza. - several $overnment economic particularly in Washington, signing." ment marked another upturn in An informed source in J eru­ boards, ts noted for his contri­ who were persuader.! by Khalil told the Associated peace prospects after a long salen said Israel made some butions in the fteld of structur­ Keynes." Press in a telephone interview: siege of gloom. movement on that demand. alist economic theory. In last ''Consequently, some •1f the ''When an American president Egypt and Israel have been Another problem which the night's lecture, entitled "The Keynesian viewpoint fillcred puts down all his stakes, it is stalemated since November U.S. proposals also reportedly Development of Employment into government policy in {he natural that it has to have a over future of the Palestinian dealt with was the clause saying policy m the U.S.over lhe past late 193Js." H wever, 1 positive result.'' . Arabs and otherissues surroun the treaty supercedes all pre­ 50 years, putting forth the Killingsworth contend("• , it was White House Press Secretary 1ding the treaty. vious conflicttng agreemen~s. proposal that "structural World War II, and not l"ynesi­ J ody Po~ell s~d ?_vfonday that Atter a senes of meetin$s Sadat, backed by the Untted change in our economy has an theory, that final: solved Carter wtll arnve m Egypt oil between Carter and Begm States, has insisted that the been an important factor in the unemploymert p•r' \em of Thursday afternoon for talks beginning last Thursday, the treaty not take precedence over raising unemployment in this the '30s. with President Anwar Sadat U.S. mediation effort appeared Egypt's commttment to assist country.'' Economists had pt :dieted a and then go on to Israel on to be headed toward defeat. other Arab countries in wars of ''For the ftrst 150 years of our return to mass unem loyment Saturday for talks with Begin. But late Sunday, after. their self-defense against Israel. nation's history, we did not after the war, but the anucipat­ At this point, Powell said, fourth session, there was a The impact of the new U.S. have an unemployment ed problem never mat("nalized, there are no plans for a three sudden reversal. proposals on these issues was policy,'' Killingsworth noted, Killingsworth said. [nste~d, way meeting among the lead- Carter gave Begin new U.S. not clear. However, American attributin~ tais fact to the belief the U.S. faced an ·mflatton ers. The spokesman said he did proposals for breaking the officials have stressed that not at that ume that "having an problem ''which was the num­ not know when Carter would deadlock. They were submitted all the remaining differences unemployment policy would ber one economic priority until return to the United States. to the Israeli cabinet, which are covered by the suggestions. make about as much sense as the 1950s." Carter's wife, Rosalynn, will voted yesterday to accept them. [continued on page 6] having a weather policy.'~ (continued on page 2J News in brief Tuesday, March 6, 1979 -page 2 Iranian oil flowing again; • • • Killingsworth executions continue (continued from page 1] TEHRAN, Iran (AP)- Iran st~ed ~upplying the world's Killinssworth pointed out workers, and 1n favor of Killingsworth will deliver an­ hungry oil market for the first tune m 10 weeks yesterday that durmg the 1950s and early workers with more extensive other lecture on ''Employment with a shipment of crude pil bound for Japan.
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