Seattle nivU ersity ScholarWorks @ SeattleU The peS ctator 4-14-1960 Spectator 1960-04-14 Editors of The pS ectator Follow this and additional works at: http://scholarworks.seattleu.edu/spectator Recommended Citation Editors of The peS ctator, "Spectator 1960-04-14" (1960). The Spectator. 672. http://scholarworks.seattleu.edu/spectator/672 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. We Adore Because Thee, jMjHB .jJhH^ By Thy O Christ, B s^"< Holy Cross and *%* Thou Hast We Bless X%sl 'JR* Redeemed Thee... the World. Good Friday — 1960— Seattle University Sodality to Sponsor High School Meeting University Our Lady's Sodality will sponsor a conference for high school sodalists on the campus April 29, 30 and May 1, accord- SeattleVolume XXVII Seattle, Washington, Thursday, April14, 1960 «tgfr»i° No. 23 ing to general chairman Mary Ann Hoare. About 200 delegates and 20 moderators from high schools in Washington, Oregon, Idaho, Montana and BritishColumbia are expected to attendthe conference. Ramey's Marketing Class Surveys The purpose of the meeting is "to increase the Sodalist's re- alization of his membership in Ch'rist's Mystical Body, and to help him to discover how he can fulfill his rollas a member of Central Workers' Shopping Habits the Mystical Body." the Marketing shopping are and change the back FR. JAMES J.McQUADE, S.J., National Sodality Director, Mr. W. J. Ramey, head of habits trend will be a guest moderator some special sessions Department, will present the findings of a re- to thecentraldistrict. at for the dis- cussionleaderson Saturday,April 30. cent shoppingsurvey next Tuesday at a dinner Some of the categories into which the col- will be led by delegates from Immaculate, meeting of ttoe Puget Sound chapter of the lected information was grouped were sex, DISCUSSIONS income, Seattle Prep, Holy Names, Forest Ridge of Seattle, Bellarmine American Marketing Association. marital status, method of transporta- Tacoma, tion, frequency place purchase of of St. Ann's Academies in New Westminster and Vic- RAMEY, and and of toria, B.C. College PROFFESSOR assisted by nine of family clothing. and Vancouver of BritishColumbia. his students, made the survey during winter POLLSTERS, The topics are: Recruiting Members for Sodality, the Pro- quarter to discover the shopping trends of em- EACH OF THE junior and Period, Life, ployees multi-milliondollar Ramey's re- bation the Interior the Active Apostolate, and the in Seattle's down- senior members of Mr. market Ecumenical Council. town business area. The facts derived from 400 search class, personallyquestionedforty people questionnairessent tovarious workers will pro- who werefirst notifiedbymail. Other chairman of the conference are Dorothy Suter, Fran vide information necessary to determine the AnnUrbano,a junior marketingmajor,con- Shanley, MarilynWalter, PeterRude andBarry Wilcox. importance of the downtown area as a shop- tacted employees of banks, insurance compan- ping center. ies, and stock brokers. "The people were very The survey, the first of its type in the area, co-operative," Ann said. "They made us feel was administered at the request of the Seattle like realexecutives." Central Association, an organization composed of business heads for the improvementof down- OTHER STUDENTS whoparticipatedin the | Holy Week Services | town Seattle. survey were Dennis Alley,Charlotte Belmont, Tom Bily, Dick Brown, Janie Drong, Jim Pur- BUSINESSMEN FEEL that the trend away vis, Mike Kirchoff and Norman Reed. The followingis a schedule of Holy Week ceremonies at St. from downntownshoppingis due in part to the The Wall Street Journal and Women's Wear James CathedralandImmaculate ConceptionChurch: changing habits of shoppers. The association, Daily will publish articles of the results of the HOLY THURSDAY: through the survey, hopes to find what present survey. Cathedral: LowMass— 5 p.m. 1 — 'Fragments Sale SolemnPontificalMass of Last Supper 6 p.m. Law Club Tells Of Essay Contest Confessions— following. The law firm of Wettrick, Flood, O'Brien, Toulouse andLir- Immaculate:LowMass 6p.m. Starts Tuesday SolemnHigh Mass— 8 p.m. chus donated $200 recently to the S.U. Law Club to sponsor an Fragments, the literary pub- — essay contest inobservationofLaw Day,U.S.A. Confessions 3 to 5:30p.m. law, lication of the Creative Writ- " "GOVERNMENT OF ing club, will be on sale April GOOD FRIDAY: g§7. , and not of men" will be the Eng- subject 19-22 in the Chieftainand — for essays. The contest Election Filings lish House. The cost will be Cathedral: Tre Ore Noon to 3 p.m. — is open to all S.U. studnets. 25 cents. SolemnLiturgicalService 6p.m. Papers must be turned in to The 32-page magazine will Confessions following. the Dean of Arts Open Wednesday — office of the feature the Max Shulman Immaculate: Passion and Way of the Cross 2 to 3 p.m. and Sciences, in care of Rose- Election board coordinator SolemnLiturgicalService— 6 p.m. Jellison, than 2 brand of humor in the short — mary no later Richard Quinn has set Wed- stories, serious and humorous Stations and veneration of the Cross 8 p.m. p.m., April 25. nesday, April 20 through Wed- poetry, Confessions— 3 5:30 p.m. papers and two fiction stories. to Judging the will nesday,April 27, as filing time Jack Wekell, Dennis Cant- be Nard Jones, chief editorial for class and Senate positions. well and Robert Smith edited HOLY SATURDAY: writer for the Seattle P.1.; the Filing in the ASSU office will theissue. Sister Melanie,C.S.J., Gathedral: Confessions— 11 a.m. to Noon; 2to 6 p.m.; Honorable F. A. Walterskir- close at 1:30 p.m., April 27. 7 chen, Jack Armstrong and Chet Her- to 10 p.m. King County Superior CANDIDATES will be qual- ald among the contribu- — Court Judge; and P. are Easter VigilServices 10:15 p.m. Charles ified for filing in accordance tors. John Vlahovich designed Solemn PontificalMass— 'Midnight Moriarty, U.S. District At- with ASSU Constitution the cover. — torney. the Immaculate: Confessions 3 to 5:30 p.m. and 7:30 to 9:30 which states "Each candidate p.m. First prizeof $150 and a $50 must be a third quarter mem- — second prize will presented at Pan Xenia to Hear Easter VigilServices 11p.m. ber of the class preceding the Solemn High Mass— Midnight. the Law Club annual banquet class for which he is a can- May Trade Fair Talk on 1. didate." Members of Pan Xenia, for- EASTER SUNDAY: A compulsory candidate INDEX eign trade fraternity, will hear 5:15, 6, 7, 8, 9:15 and 10:30 a.m., — _ meeting will be Thursday, a talk by Griffith Way at a Cathedral: Masses: Book Review Page \ 29, Noon and 5:30p.m. Page 4 April at 1p.m. in the con- dinner meetingWednesday.Mr. Editorial — ference room, according to Immaculate: Masses: 6:30, 8, 9, 10 and 11:30 a.m. Engineers at Work Pag* I Way will discuss the 9th an- Fashions - Pag« S ASSU first vice president nual Washington State Inter- - Larrry NOTE: Holy Communion may be received at Mass on Holy Father Busty Page 4 Donohoe. national Trade Fair. Thursday and at the Liturgical Service on GoodFriday, Hoffa and Monitors Page 3 PRIMARY elections will be The group will meet at 7:30 Holy Inside Lacrosse _ Page 7 but noton Saturday. _ Thursday, May 5, with finals p.m. at Ruby Chow's.Mr. Way, Johnny O'Brien Page 6 May attorney, Archbishop dispensed Page 2 Thursday, 12. a Seattle has traveled The has the faithful in the Seattle Junior Prom results will be inmany of Pacific Rim archdiocese from abstinence on Holy Saturday. How- Sounding Board Page 4 Final election the 14 Speculating _ - Page 6 announced in The Spectator countries which will exhibit at ever, Holy Saturday is stilla fast day for those obliged Week's Events Calendar Pag* Z May 13. the Trade Fair. to fast. 14, 2 THE SPECTATOR Thursday, April 1960 'Moonlight Serenade Set Wiatrak Given Junior Prom Theme — Week's Events $2600 Stipend For Today Winifred Wiatrak, senior so- "Moonlight Serenade," theme for the Junior Prom, " Women's Guild, 10 a.m., conference room " Seminar, p.m., room ciology major, has been as- May 6, will be carried out in the programs and decora- Sodality 7 conference signed aMental Healthstipend " I.R.E. meeting, 8 p.m., Chieftain lounge tions, according to Lee Eberhardt, publicity chairman. — from St. Louis University, ac- THE NON-CABARET DANCE from 9 p.m. to 1a.m. Tuesday - cording to word received this " Boeing speaker for graduating seniors, 10' a.m. noon, week from that school's direc- in the Grand Ballroom of the Olympic Hotel will feature Pigott 156 today." tor of the School of Social the music of Jerry Gray and his "band of " Meeting for prospective Homecoming committee mem- Service. T*he dorm girls have been given 3 a.m. leave for the event bers, 1p.m., conference room. The stipend is valued at according toMiss Agnes Reilly,dean of women. " Scabbard and Blademeeting,7:30 p.m., conference room $2,600, $800 of which is with- HONORED (iUESTS are the Very Rev. A. A. Lemieux, S.J.. " Contemporary Topics, Clarence Abello speaking on "A held at the outset to cover tui- Dr. Walter Moore, Fr. Robert Rebhahn, S.J., Miss Agnes Reilly, Growing Force in South America," 8:10 p.m., Pigott tion. The remainder is dis- Fr. William Gill, S.J., Lt. Col. and Mrs. Michael Dolan, Lt. Col. Auditorium. bursed during the ensuing and Mrs. Norman Homer,Capt.
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