John Carroll University Carroll Collected The aC rroll News Student 9-26-1975 The aC rroll News- Vol. 58, No. 3 John Carroll University Follow this and additional works at: http://collected.jcu.edu/carrollnews Recommended Citation John Carroll University, "The aC rroll News- Vol. 58, No. 3" (1975). The Carroll News. 542. http://collected.jcu.edu/carrollnews/542 This Newspaper is brought to you for free and open access by the Student at Carroll Collected. It has been accepted for inclusion in The aC rroll News by an authorized administrator of Carroll Collected. For more information, please contact [email protected]. ...-----Parents Weekend Has Bicentennial Theme K) 'Jar) .Jo '1inarik "Bicentennial" is the theme for the On Sunday the John.c;on ~f emorial dents. The opportunity for parents to see the wt'Ckcnd as a short holiday. l975 Parents Weekend. scheduled Oct. 18 Swimming Pool will be dedicated bv Bis· their children in the University environ­ Last year 1300 parents registered for and 19 on campus. hop James Hickey at l p.m. It is foliowed ~en t afforts greater rapport in the fam· the *:vents, an "excellent turnout," ac­ Organited hr ::\tary Jo Casserly and at 2 by "Slide for Life". a rapelling de­ 1ly, she says Another advantage is the cor.dmg to Mrs. :!\fary Kirkhope, ~ohn F1ckcs, the weekend will be high· monstration off Grasselli Tower by int~oduc l i?n of parents to the changes a!'Sistant dean of students. This figure is hghted hy a Bicentennial Cabaret var· members of ROTC. wh1ch the1r children experience during in addition to the parents of commuter iety show of student talent. Directed by Traditional events include an Open colle~e years. students, many of whom come after Terry Fergus. the show will play in the House on Sw1day at various depart men~ Student Union P res1dent Rob Cum· registration. O'Dea Room at 9::JO p.m Oct. 18. and organizations on campus, and a re­ mings believes that upperclassmen also The weekend is full of activities for ception on Sunday afternoon 'at Rodman look forward to parents weekend. be­ In past years registC':-cd families aver­ parents and students. On Saturday aL Hall. There w1ll be a Mass and f.'amily cause they are anxious to share with age 60 percent dorm students to 40 per· l :311 p.m. the Blue Streak football team Breakfast on Sunday morning. their parents the University experience cent rommuters. With the additi onal un· mt-ets Case Western Reserve at Wasmer Miss Casserly says the W<'Ckend is which has become an Integral part of registe:ed familie.. the proportion is f'ield most helpful to freshmen and new stu· their lives. He says many parents plan approximately equal. Student Union Announces Primary Election Results The Student Union announced president, Jack Schufreider and the results of primary elections Paul Giba, for treasurer, Bruce ror class offices last Tuesday, 14 Luecke. unapposed; for percent of the student population secretary, Cathy Monaco. voted. unapposed , for dormitory Candidates for president of the senator. Denise Love, Dan senior class are Mike Behm and Patalita and Mark Zaksheske; Pollution Effects Lake Erie Diane Coollchn; for vice for commuter senator. no can­ president, Joe Fox and Joe didate. Sullivan ; for treasurer Gail The freshman class will vote on Zornbor, · unapposed;' for .these candidates: for president, Faculty, Students Research secretary, Marilyn Disbrow, Tom .Jacob ~nd Keith Coljohn: unapposed; for dormitory for v1ce-pres1dent, Mike Allison R)' Pat Malilio and John Dolce; tor treasurer, One can go through four years must be viewed with more far· senator, Jack Donatelli, unap· Environmental Protection sightedness than in previous posed; for commuter senator Tom Helbling and Bill Trumbull; at John Carroll and not realize Agency contacted White to Steve Rath and Jim Saracco. ' for secretary. Tracy Coyne. that beyond the classroom and conduct research on Lake Erie years. Secondly, ~the research gives gri~duate students and The jWlior class candidates unapposed; for dormitory the campus, a great deal of and its rivers to determine the arc: for president Kathy Berry senator, Loren D'Amore, Dan important work is being con­ fish population. They also sur· undergraduates practical ex­ perience. and pays a total of and Ed Rybka ; for vice- Darnley and Christine Hess; for ducted b~· the Umvcrsity in field veyed the count prior to J 970, and $30.000 in students' salaries president, Stan Mambort commuter senator, Jacqueline research . Among the many in· in particular. what species of fish llc1rr is unapposcrl ~ • '"~• he rh.D ace·• tan t• unappose<l· ror treasurer B r ia1~ Rerike and John 9li an, fbr Final el ons · are Tueid8y. acu ty mem ers, graduate number and why White's fin· rate for t ose st\Jdenflf have students and undergraduates are been involved 1n this program is secretary, Kathy Baldoni, Sept. 30 and Wednesday, Oct. 1, dings show sharp declines in fish 100 percent. Among lhe .:;tudents unapposed. for dormitory !O:OOa.m. to4:00 p.m . in the SAC those of Prof. And rew White of population at lhe construction of senator, Bob Kenny, Demaris Annex lobby and Kulas the Biology Department. currently in\'olved are Mark the Ohio Canal and at the Caroots, Warren Hubbard. Levitt and Maura Shields, for AuditoriUm After three years at Hiram building of a sewer waste system Michele Sterling, Mike Coburn, commuter senator, Paul Dieter, The election committee ex­ College, two years of work with in Cleveland. Paul Catalano, and Larry :'lfike Picard, Bill Gagliano, pressed its thanks to Theta lhe Department of the fnterior, White contends that the Harry Rosenfeld and Tim damage in Lake Erie cannot be McGeehan . Kappa sorority, as well as Tim and the completion of his As a result of this work. White Donavan. Hourihan, Demaris Levitt and schooling .at Ohio State attributed to one single cause. RWlning for sophomore class Debbie Paugh, for their such as industrial pollution, and and his crew remain in the University, where he received his spgtlight as an integral part of offices are: for president, Kevin assistance with lbe voting pro­ B.S and his Doctorate in lists 15 interdependent causes Cleveland and its environment. Daley and Rob Herald; for vice· cedures. Zoology, White joined the John which affected the damage in the Carroll University Biology Staff lake. in 1970. In 1971, the United States Further findings indicate that during the past four decades, four major edible species of fish Buckley On have disappeared: the blue pike, the wall-eye, lhe cisco, and the white fish. The fish died from Honors lack of oxygen in lhe waters they inhabited. Among the other projects Alternative White and his crew have con­ B) ROUERTI\1,\HCZVNSKI ducted are those involving the Qualities instilled by life in a environmental feasibility of the small New England town are Lake Erie Jet-Port. His present readily noticeable in Prof study, funded by the Army Corps Joseph Buckley of the Philosophy of Engineers, focuses on off· Dept., recently appomted direc­ shore dumping of dredgings from tor of the Honors Alternative Cleveland Harbor. Program. White emphasized two major Buckely does indeed hail from reasons for im·olvement in these the small :--:ew England town of research programs. The first is Bridgewater, Mass. It is an that. from an environmental experience that obviously had a standpoint, the work is a deep impact on him. necessity. The effects of progress Buckley attended college on man and his environment during the Eisenhower era; an era wTought with serious over­ Kolesar D1scusses tones and a more pass1ve nature. He first attended Bates College in 'Alice' Maine and then moved on to Pro· Have your ever read Alice's vidence before completing his Adventures in Wonderland and post-graduate work at Notre Through the Looking Glass? Is Dame. The move from Bates to your mind boggled by the poly­ Providence proved a disappoint­ gonal paradox of life'? Then come ment. Buckley reflects that of the to the first lecture of the Lewis two, Bates was the superior Ca rrolllecture series, on Oct. 6 at school and he should have con­ 4 p.m. in SC 164. The talk is en­ Lake Erie environmental research is conducted by Dr. White and crew members tinued on there. One thing did titled "Paradoxes" and will be McGeehan and Kananan. They Ust 15 interdependent causes which affect the damage in Conliuued on page 8 given by Dr. R. Kolesar. the lake. Page 2 The Carroll News September 26, 1975 Mud, Rocks-and Soccer? There's a little something forms, that fit, and last but match the cost of suiting up two gndiron men. of everything at coU~~ to not least. a home field . accomodate the vanous However, what 1S most interests of students. And the One might suspect that soccer does not receive the irritating to the team is the littlest something, as JCU same consideration as do condition of the playing field. sports go, is soccer. other sports. especially those One quarter of il is soil and that provide the university rocks which bas forced the Seniority has its privileges, with a source of revenue. squad to play ·"home" con· but not as the booters are con· Every football player who tests at University School. cemed. Established nearly a takes the field dons appro­ There is something being decade before baseball and ximately $300 of equipment. done, though. Physical Plant swimming, the soccer team With a squad of 40 players, has promised to remove the performs without such trivia that's $12,000 of hardware rocks from the field.
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