Spectator 1974-05-10 Editors of the Ps Ectator

Spectator 1974-05-10 Editors of the Ps Ectator

Seattle nivU ersity ScholarWorks @ SeattleU The peS ctator 5-10-1974 Spectator 1974-05-10 Editors of The pS ectator Follow this and additional works at: http://scholarworks.seattleu.edu/spectator Recommended Citation Editors of The peS ctator, "Spectator 1974-05-10" (1974). The Spectator. 1423. http://scholarworks.seattleu.edu/spectator/1423 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. 'Small World'opens Vol. XL11, No. 44 here tomorrow Friday, May 10, 1974 "It's a Small World," will be which willinclude over20 inter- Seattle, Washington the theme for theSecond Annual national food items. UNIVERSITYSEATTLE International Night which begins The floor show will be at 6:30 p.m. tomorrow at Cam- highlighted byan authentic Ara- pion Tower. bian bellydancer, aSamoan fire dance, The event will feature foreign, aKungFudemonstration ethnic and national groups such and traditional folklore. as Africans, Arabians, Blacks, The dance originally Japanese, Chinese, Italians, scheduled to follow has been Hawaiians, Samoans, Russians, cancelled. Instead, the audience Guamanians and others. will be invited to participate in learning various national and On the agenda are a dinner cultural dances. from 6:30-8 p.m., a floor show Tickets are still onsale but are from 8-10 p.m. and music going fast. The price is $3 each and dancing starting at 10:30 and are available at Chieftain in p.m. the morning and Bellarmine in The dinner will be a buffet the evening. Nine faculty are top educators Nine members of the Univer- Dr. Richard T. Schwaegler, sity faculty have been named as associate professorand program Outstanding Educators of director of civil engineering. America and will appear in the 1974-75 annual awards volume bearing Fr. Michael Kelliher, S.J., that title. assistant professor of sociology, Nominatedearlier this year by and Fr. George O.Morris, S.J., various S.U. departmentheads, professor French, and administrators, they assistant of deans were named by Fr. James G. have been honoredfor their "ex- Powers, S.J.,deanof theCollege ceptipnal academic ac- of Arts and Sciences. complishments and civic con- tributions." — Fr. Roger Blanchette, S.J., photobyrickbressler professor theology, left, EUGENE CORR, chairman assistant of EDDIE Hernandez, and Eddie Caalim been sponsoring various fund raising ac- of the community services received his nomination from man the 'bean counting' stand, while Terry tivities to help support the Northwest Kidney department, was nominated by Frederic A. Cordova, former Ryan serves a hot dog to Eileen Ryan, this Center. The activities will conclude tonight the Very Rev. Louis Gaffney, University publicrelationsdirec- week the l.X.'sand the I.K.LittleSistershave with a dance. S.J., University president. tor. Dr. Hamida Bosmajian, English professor, and William Sister Rosaleen Trainor, Dore, chairman of the fine arts director of the honors program, Dance to end I.K. fund drive department, received their was nominated by Fr. James P. Good boogie music, ten kegs the 1974 Northwest Kidney be purchased today on the mall nominations from Fr. James J. Goodwin, S.J., chairman of the of free beer and Bellarmine's Association Fund Drive. until 2 p.m. and at the dance Cowgill, S.J., dean of the sociology department. dining hall set the scene for Some added enticements to prior to the drawing. Bean graduate school. tonight's— l.X.— and I.K. Little help students part from their guessescanbemade at thedance. Dr.Gary Zimmerman,deanof Sister sponsored dance. money are the keg of beer to be The Nation,aSeattle group,is the School of Science and Picnic planned The dance, which will beheld raffled at the dance and the last providing tonight's music. All Engineering, submitted the from 9p.m.until 1 a.m.and cost chance for prizesand fameinthe proceedsfrom the danceand this names of Harry Majors, Jr., for nurses a mere $1.50, will crown their bean counting contest. week's activities will go to the professor and program director week's effort of fund raisingfor Raffle tickets for the keg can Kidney Fund. of mechanical engineering, and next week The School of Nursing stu- dent council announced Healthy 'Living technology could be improved' Happenings,a care-free planfor with nurses' neurosis. This health by Ann Standaert much impact man has on his profusely, Dr. Schroeder said. die the problem but there is a programis scheduled for4 p.m.- Man will probably survive global environment. Added nutrients is the better way," headded. 7 p.m., May 17, and will be held with his destructive technology Many of the problems arise problem with phosphorus, he Probably the best thingin the at the Connolly P.E. Center. but it ,£ould be done a little when the natural solution added. case of DDT is to provide strict The program starts by better. Dr. David Schroeder, of mechanisms are overloaded, controls, he said. The chemical promoting optimal activity, thecivil engineeringdepartment, making it hard for nature to heal ANOTHER EXAMPLE of should only be used if nothing which includes baseball, told faculty and students itself, he explained. man's upsetting the balance of else can do the job and "if the volleyball, relay races and pool Wednesday during a School of nature can be seen in DDT, he thing to be saved has a higher activities. A special event will be Science and Engineering- AN EXAMPLE, he pointed said. The chemical was first used value than the risks involved." held in the pool between class sponsored noon seminar. out, is dumping sewage in the during the invasion of Naples in teams and faculty members. river. Under normal cir- 1940 to get rid of a typhus THEPROBLEM inair pollu- The second phase of the THE QUESTION of ecology cumstances, the bacteria in the epidemic. Because it worked so tion is often one of concentra- program includes promotion of andenvironment. Dr.Schroeder river should beable to break up well at getting rid of pestilence, tion, Dr.Schroeder said. Man is good interpersonal relations, a said, seemed to "erupt into the organic and inorganic the chemical was considered responsible for onlya littlemore good opportunity for freshmen prominence a few years ago." materials,leavingonlychemicals great. than one third of the total sul- to hear seniors boast of their Since then, two extreme which are taken out of thq water It soon became evident, phur in theair but too often that accomplishments. schools of thought haveevolved during the evaporation process. though, that some insects could one third is concentrated in only The program's last phase will concerning— solutions to the In the case of overloading, build uparesistance to DDTand. a few areas. promote adequatenutrition. All problem the old "let the old however, the oxygen is used up that other insects, which often Usingfiguresseveralyears old, nurses are asked to bring their smoke roll theory" and "the faster than it can be replaced, providednaturalpredators,were Dr. Schroeder pointed out that own sack dinner and beverage. Nature Nazis," he added. A producing chemicals which are wiped out instead, he said. the automobile is responsiblefor There are alsoinstructions for all rational personshouldfind some not good and also causing the In addition, DDT persists in 65 per cent of the man-made nurses tobringabathingsuit and between the two extremes, fish to die from lack of oxygen, the soil and goes up the food carbon monoxide. bring or wear tennis shoes and «ysaid. he explained. chain so that some birds and The simplest way to get rid of casual clothes. Dr.Schroeder then examined By treating the sewage, man animals have been threatened automobile pollution, he A dessert or snackis requested three areas normally— associated can still disrupt the environment with extinction, Dr. Schroeder believes, is to ration gas so that for admission. Nurses should with pollution— air, water and by adding too manynutrients to said. peopledrive less orto completely meet at the Connolly Center's energy to determine just how the water, causing algi to grow "There's no right way to han- change the engine. north court at 4 p.m. Italian studies set for fall sexuality A new program of studies in the program. Author will discuss Italian language and culture to The program is being Gene Kennedy, M.M., will has also written several articles said Americans' obsession with begin fall quarter, 1974, is being developed because "there are a speak on the "New Sexuality: for professional and general sexuality is "sexual tyranny atits developed by the foreign large number of people in- Myths, Fables and Hang-ups," publications. worst which obliterates the languagedepartment. terested inItalian culture,accor- at noon Wednesday in the The Maryknoll priest is a meaning of both romance and The program,directed by Fr. ding toGerald Ricard,chairman Library Auditorium. professor of psychology at what is healthily erotic. Ifsex is X. Bisciglia, S. J., willlead to a of the foreign languagedepart- Kennedy, a noted priest and Loyola University of Chicago. the only thing in a person's life, minor in Italian which may be ment. Previously, students in- psychologist, has traveled and He also acts as a consultant to that life needs some introspec- completedin twoyears or less. A terested in Italian courses tpok lectured inall parts of the world. religious orders anddioceses and tion." summer program in Rome, what is theequivalent of reading He is the author of "The Pain of supervisor of priest-counselors Kennedy sees his job as through which students can visit courses. "This new program is Being Human,""In theSpirit,in for the Archdiocese of Chicago. teaching and saying whatpriests various regionsand cities ofIta- our way of offering something the Flesh" and others.

View Full Text

Details

  • File Type
    pdf
  • Upload Time
    -
  • Content Languages
    English
  • Upload User
    Anonymous/Not logged-in
  • File Pages
    5 Page
  • File Size
    -

Download

Channel Download Status
Express Download Enable

Copyright

We respect the copyrights and intellectual property rights of all users. All uploaded documents are either original works of the uploader or authorized works of the rightful owners.

  • Not to be reproduced or distributed without explicit permission.
  • Not used for commercial purposes outside of approved use cases.
  • Not used to infringe on the rights of the original creators.
  • If you believe any content infringes your copyright, please contact us immediately.

Support

For help with questions, suggestions, or problems, please contact us