Notre Dame Scholastic, Vol. 103, No. 12 -- 16 February 1962

Notre Dame Scholastic, Vol. 103, No. 12 -- 16 February 1962

he SCHOLASTIC FEBRUARY 16, 1962 y-^fl^^^^ THE CAMPUS SHOP QUALITY SALE Suits, Topcoats and Sport Coats 25% DISCOUNT Save one-fourth now on our fine quaHty topcoats, winter and year around weight suits and sport coats during the Campus Shop semi-an­ nual quality sale of men's clothing. Shop now for best selection. Campus Shop Qualify SPORT SHIRTS at savings of 1/2 Stock up on fine quality sport shirts at savings of one-half, sizes for all men in popular styles, colors and patterns. ^ILBEESrS 4^ampu.s§hop' On the Campus—Notre Dame CHARGE IT THE ' CAMPUS SHOP WAY NO CARRYING CHARGE Take advantage of the savings dur­ ing the Campus Shop Quality Sale and charge it the Campus Shop way . pay one-third in June . one-third in July . and one-third in August. There is never a carrying charge. So, shop soon while selec­ tions are good . save one-fourth now . pay next summer. ONE OF AMERICA'S FINEST UNIVERSITY SHOPS !ampu^&op^ On the Campus—Notre Dame GLANCES OIL Campus MaxMman J. J. Pottmyer reappears this week {Author of "Rally Round The Flag, Boys" 'The with that yearly question "Who's He" Many Loves of Dobie Gillis", etc.) . .. page 7. "News and Notes" presents what little is happening and has happened HOW TO BE A BWOC in our academic community . page 9. Ladies, let me be frank. The days of the evening falls and her date comes calling, college year dwindle down to a precious the BWOC is the very picture of chic The perennial moral question of few. And some of you—let's face it— femininity. She dresses in severe, simple the Bengal Bouts will soon raise its have not yet become BWOC's. Yes, I basic black, relieved only by a fourteen head again; article on . page 10. know, you've been busy what with going pound charm bracelet. Her hair is ex­ to class and walking your cheetah, but quisitely coiffed, with a fresh rubber band Recent activities of the debating really, ladies, becoming a BWOC is so around the pony tail. Her daytime team are discussed on . page 11.' easy if you'll only follow a few simple sneakers have been replaced by fashion­ Art Graham comments on the cur­ rules. able high-heeled pumps, and she does rent issues under consideration in the The first and most basic step on the not remove them until she gets to the road to being a BWOC is to attract at­ movies. Student Senate . page 12. tention. Get yourself noticed. But be After the movies, at the campus cafe, John McGuire describes the enter­ very, very careful not to do it the WTong the BWOC undergoes her severest test. tainment fare available "In Town and way. I mean, any old girl is bound to be The true BWOC will nercr, never, never, Around" . page 14. noticed if she goes around with a placard order the entire menu. This is gluttony that says, "HEY! LOOKIT ME!" Don't and can only cause one's date to blanch. Another article about that fascinat­ you make such a horrid gaffe. On your The true BWOC will pick six or seven ing new parlor game that's positively placard put: "ZUT! REGARDEZ good entrees and then have nothing more sweeping the nation ... page 14. MOI!" This, as you can see, lends a till dessert. This is class and is the hall­ The nature and objects of the whole new dimension of tone and dignity. mark of the true BWOC. Young Christian Students organiza­ Once you have been noticed, it is no Fmally, the BWOC, upon being asked longer necessary to carry the placard. It by the cigarette vendor which is the tion are put forth on . page 15. will suffice if, from time to time, you brand^^of her choice, will alwaj-s reply. Our critic's considered opinion of make distinctive noises. If, the University Theater production of for instance, every three or Arms and the Man is offered on . four minutes you cry, page 16. "Whippoorwill!" you can­ not but stay fresh in the Terry Wolkerstorfer looks at the minds of onlookers. basketball team's possibilities for We come now to clothes, coming successes, Carl Yastrzemski is a vital accessory to the interviewed on . .. page 21. BWOC—indeed, to any girl who wishes to remain out of The ND basketball team "As We jail. But to the BWOC See It" and a preview of the coming clothes are more than just a track meet are featured on . page decent cover; they are, it is 22. not too much to say, a way The "Voice in the Crowd" asks of life. MfyM Me ^^tlcUktri^l^ff^^ football coach Joe Kuharich a few This spring the "little boy look" is all "Marlboro, of course!" For any girl the rage on campus. Every coed, in a knows that a Marlboro in one's'hand questions . page 23. mad effort to look like a little boy, is stamps one instantly as a person of taste Senior pre-med student William wearing short pants, knee sox, and boy- and discernment, as the possessor of an Cashore comemnts on the controver­ shirts. But the BWOC is doing more. educated palate, as a connoisseur of the sial TIME article . page 26. She has gone the whole hog in achieving finer, loftier pleasures. This Marlboro, little boyhood. She has frogs in her pock­ this badge of savoir-faire, comes to you in ets, scabs on her knees, down on her up­ flip-top boxes that flip, or in soft packs The SCHOLASTIC ii entered u lecond clM mail ac Notre Dame, Indiana, at a ipecial per lip, and is followed everywhere by a that are soft, with a filter that filters and pottage rate authorized June 23, 1918. The magazine is a member of the Catholic School dog named Spot. a flavor that is flavorful, in all fifty states Press Association and the Associated Collegiate Press. It u represented (or National Advertising All this, of course, is only by day. WTien of the Union and Duluth. c nK«M..8h,dm., by National Advertising Service and by Don Spencer, College Magazmes Corp., 420 Madison Avenue, New York 17, N. Y. Published weekly during the school year, except during vacation and examination periods, the SCHOLASTIC is printed at the Ave Maria Press. The subscrip­ tion rate is ^.00 a year. Please address all manuscripts to the Editon, Box 183,_ Notre BMOC: Buy Marlboro On Campus. Bug them dotcntoirn, Dame, Indiana. All unsolicited material be­ too. Either place, you get a lot to like. comes the property of the SCHOLASTIC. The Scholastic REPERCUSSIONS ..'•^'^ t-JK „•**; ON CIVIL RIGHTS water, politics, and the world. This Editor: would be pertinent in an essay on §xii.»Mr?i^5ife Since so many students are con­ the author's personal political opin­ cerned with the protection and sur­ ions, but it is definitely extraneous in vival of individual rights as evidenced a report of Senator Goldwater's visit Vol, 103 No. 12 by the large turnout for Senator Gold- to our campus. Is it too much for us Feb. 16, 1962 water's talk on Tuesday night, it to expect an objective, unbiased de­ seems that they should also be con­ scription of an important event at cerned with an obvious infringement Notre Dame? of their rights on that very night. John T. Ryan HI Founded 1867 By whose authority can a large block 330 Stanford of seats be reserved for some privi­ editor-in-chief leged students while other students are being turned away at the door? COMMISSIONER REPLIES THOMAS WEISS Since Mr. Goldwater's appearance is Editor: sponsored by the student senate which In the past issue of the SCHOLASTIC, associate editor is financially supported by every stu­ a Mr. Rob Mier wrote a letter con­ MICHAEL ZWETTLER dent exactly for functions such as cerning the 1961-1962 Social Com­ this, it is questionable whether special mission. In this letter he made it reserved tickets are really sporting. sound as though the Social Commis­ news editor Bravo to the boys at the back door sion is made up of a group of under­ JOHN McCABE, who finally rallied to break the Blue ground thugs who thrive upon the Ken Arnold, Joe Caspar, Circle cordon and capture theu- right­ weaknesses of the individual, and who Pete Clark, Jim Wyrsch, ful seats! are constantly looking for angles to: news jloff—John Buclcley, Vince De Course/, Ed Butler 1) make money and more important­ Dick Maher, Ted Pinto, Steve Slopp, Steve ly, 2) to "monopolize as much praise Stuecheli, Don Whorlon. and admiration ... as possible." It al­ DISSENT so made the Social Commissioner into features editor Editor: a heartless individual who lacked TOM HOOBLER The article "The Visit" by Thomas "charity" because he "forced" other feoturei jfoff—Corl Wiedemonn, R. E." Mc- Weiss is a singular example of the organizations "into direct competi­ Gowan, Brian Bornes, Tom Cullen, John "art" of unadulterated bias. The very tion with the Commission." Pesto, Motf Cosgrove. first paragraph gives a warning of This year the Social Commission is what to expect in the article. After made up of 41 men, of which 18 are sports editor a few dogmatic references to the seniors, 6 juniors, 3 sophomores, and JOHN BECHTOLD "distant" right, the author mentions 14 freshmen. Only 13 of these men Bob Chlappinelli, "a few indistinct and impotent have been called "chairman" of a Terry Wolkerstorfer. rumblings like Young Americans for dance during the first semester.

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