lite 1Jaice •···. , - University of Notre Dame · PDF...

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{. ·, . . ,)>- •• ".' " .. •, :nenny withers, the new Junior class P;esident, ·barely u01i out over Mike Minton and Lou· Zignatelli in a hotly contested... race. J ·,' ' . ··'1 . •"\C>' :cLAss· ELECTIO'NS . Nash, Withers-,-- Rem busch Win · When the late and anxiously class responsib111ty, isneverthe- class vice-presidency. In general ·awaited class. election returns :-less He stated;· "I · the classes responded well in the_ were finally posted, Notre_ Dame gratefully · accept the· trust and · voting, with roughly 69o/o of the class· governments had entirely. will .fulfill my obligations." .Un-· Freshman 63"/o of the Sophomores, new leadership. Pat Nash, Dennis fortunately Dennis Withers YJaS and 41"/o of. the Juniors par- Withers, and Rick Rembusch are unavailable for· comment as· the ticipating. · · · the new Senior, Junior, and riew Junior president. For candidates and elec- more class presidents respec:-. _The presidents ·aside, the elec- iorate both, the returns,, posted tively. ·When asked-to-comment, tions raised·many more new lead- nearly two hours late, marked the . those· new presidents contacted ers: Elected tovice-presidencies .. end of nearly of cam- expressed appreciation for their were Purcell, '67, Mentone, '68, paigning or seeming harangue, de-· ·class' support and confidence in and. Breen, '69. Incoming class pending u:Pon · whether:· you were the future.· Thanking his class treasures are Meade, '67, God- seeking a vote or. the possessor and· expressing · hope for·· bout, '68,. and Elia; '69. And fin- ·of one •. The elections demonstra- · special, more. personally mean-' ally, the newly chosen crass sec-:-.·. ted considerable student interest ingful ·senior year for. his class- retaries ·are Hughes,. '67, Hunt, in' their. future leaders,' and sub;.-·. · mates, Pat· Nash, said, "I'd like · ·. '68, and Witt, '69; · sequently in the·forthcomfng year. to thank "the class for the trust· ·These successful new inen; dis- So in all, Notre Dame has 12 new they had placed In myself and the. • appointed hopefuls,<-many suppor- leaders to guide_ the class gov-,. · other class· officers. .With the · ters and interested parties filled ernments in attempting to fulfill class's cooperation I feel that we the Student Center as. the cruCial .hopes, pr_omises, and · can have a very successful senior, election returns were made puoljc. · year •. I feel that there are many :Overall, the vot-ing for individual programs· in . which. each ·senior positions· "'as very close. A few ._ . cim take part and thereby express"' uncontested candidates polled, high his interest· in· the 'class:"· The.· returns which can be seen as Sophomore Class president--elect : . votes of confidence; there was Rick ' Rembusch, while .. :newly • really only one landslide however; christened .·arid untried ·.in total and. that involved the Sophomore Future Sophomore·-:. · Officer·s· N·D Given . \, .NASA Job Pres. .. Rembuscli · . 542 459 . ·.·· ---·· ImTl Breen· , .. 752 -· . Schoenberger 282 "• . . :TU34 lite 1Jaice •···. , \ " . · ·· of' NQTR{. bAME ..:', .. "';, '·. Treas: .'• ,•·,· Sec.·. Elika . · Eidietis ·Ryan .. ; Witt. · ·380 -332 .·" 263 .. -""975 953 •.. - •.. . 0 ff i . ' . . .. c\· .. ners:' Mintori · · Pignatelli : Vice- Pres." Mentone Guerin .. ·ReudY.. .348 ·.·.· ,: 319. ,279.- .. ·1J40 ·. 392". 332 200· ' "92!1 .. f . l ! i .{ 1 i l i l I l ' ,J : ! .· J 1 l j ... . ; J ) I ; " '" '.1._ . i .'i. . ·.· ·j . ·' ' \ i .; "' l •." .. _, "; .s ; .. ., :. ·_ .j j

Transcript of lite 1Jaice •···. , - University of Notre Dame · PDF...

Page 1: lite 1Jaice •···. , - University of Notre Dame · PDF file · 2015-06-24Thanking his class treasures are Meade, '67 ... state of exact and concentrated hour or so of music is

{.

·, . . ·~.'

,)>- ••

:~ ".'

" .. •,

:nenny withers, the new Junior class P;esident, ·barely u01i out over Mike Minton and Lou· Zignatelli in a hotly contested. .. race.

J ·,'

' .

··'1 i~l-

. •"\C>'

:cLAss· ELECTIO'NS .

Nash, Withers-,-- Rem busch Win · When the late and anxiously class responsib111ty, isneverthe- class vice-presidency. In general

·awaited class. election returns :-less determined~ He stated;· "I · the classes responded well in the_ were finally posted, Notre_ Dame gratefully · accept the· trust and · voting, with roughly 69o/o of the class· governments had entirely. will .fulfill my obligations." .Un-· Freshman 63"/o of the Sophomores, new leadership. Pat Nash, Dennis fortunately Dennis Withers YJaS and 41"/o of. the Juniors par-Withers, and Rick Rembusch are unavailable for· comment as· the ticipating. · · · the new Senior, Junior, and Sopho~ riew Junior president. For the~ candidates and elec­more class presidents respec:-. _The presidents ·aside, the elec- iorate both, the returns,, posted tively. ·When asked-to-comment, tions raised·many more new lead- nearly two hours late, marked the

. those· new presidents contacted ers: Elected tovice-presidencies .. end of nearly t~•o.weeks of cam­expressed appreciation for their were Purcell, '67, Mentone, '68, paigning or seeming harangue, de-·

·class' support and confidence in and. Breen, '69. Incoming class pending u:Pon · whether:· you were the future.· Thanking his class treasures are Meade, '67, God- seeking a vote or. the possessor and· expressing · hope for·· a· bout, '68,. and Elia; '69. And fin- ·of one •. The elections demonstra- · special, more. personally mean-' ally, the newly chosen crass sec-:-.·. ted considerable student interest ingful ·senior year for. his class- retaries ·are Hughes,. '67, Hunt, in' their. future leaders,' and sub;.-·.

· mates, Pat· Nash, said, "I'd like · ·. '68, and Witt, '69; · sequently in the·forthcomfng year. to thank "the class for the trust· ·These successful new inen; dis- So in all, Notre Dame has 12 new they had placed In myself and the. • appointed hopefuls,<-many suppor- leaders to guide_ the class gov-,. · other class· officers. .With the · ters and interested parties filled ernments in attempting to fulfill class's cooperation I feel that we the Student Center as. the cruCial . hopes, pr_omises, and ~xpectations: · can have a very successful senior, election returns were made puoljc. · year •. I feel that there are many :Overall, the vot-ing for individual programs· in . which. each ·senior positions· "'as very close. A few ._

. cim take part and thereby express"' uncontested candidates polled, high his interest· in· the 'class:"· The.· returns which can be seen as Sophomore Class president--elect : . votes of confidence; there was Rick ' Rembusch, while .. :newly • really only one landslide however; christened .·arid untried ·.in total and. that involved the Sophomore

Future Sophomore·-:. · Officer·s· "· N·D Given

~ ~ . \,

.NASA Job Pres. .. Rembuscli · . 542

Phelps·~- 459 . ·.·· ---·· ImTl

vice..!Pres~ Breen· , .. 752 -· . Schoenberger ~ 282 "• . . :TU34 lite 1Jaice •···. ,

\ " . · ·· of' NQTR{. bAME

..:',

.. "';, '·.

Treas: .'•

,•·,·

Sec.·.

Elika . · Eidietis ·Ryan

.. ; Witt.

· ·380 -332

.·" 263 .. -""975 953 .· •..

-•.. Futur~ J~n1ior··-• . 0 ff i ~ e'~s . ' .

. ..

c\· .. ners:' Mintori · · Pignatelli

: Vice-Pres." Mentone Guerin

.. ·ReudY..

.348 ·.·.· ,: 319.

,279.­.. ·1J40 ·. 392".

332 .· 200·

' "92!1

.. f . ~: l ! i

.{ 1 i l

i l I l

' ,J : !

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Page 2: lite 1Jaice •···. , - University of Notre Dame · PDF file · 2015-06-24Thanking his class treasures are Meade, '67 ... state of exact and concentrated hour or so of music is

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Page2 .. University of Notre. Dame Friday, April 29, 1966

It•s. too bad that I didn't write quietly over the enveloping rhy~ Letters to the Editor must·. You will note that the place where 'Who sho~ld'-care, the da~page ·is this Sunday afternoon; inspired by thmic beat of ."Good Lovin". "But carry the complete name· and . honor systems are most success- done, . . · . ~ . .

·passionate anger. But then, .the we have permission," explain the address of the writer. and· . ful are .. the _military academies rm in a hurry, I've go~:~o run. chances ·of· its being. a master- Shaggs to the campus guard. Alas, the date· tDritten. If possible ·where there is at least one goal to piece of illogical muddle would however; it appears that some they should be typeUTitten . uriite all• the students into a com-have been rather overpowering, seniors are studying for. the much and double.:.spaced. Pen 'names · nnmlty. . . 1 fear. So; of course, my present dreaded comprehensives, and an will be permitted or ·iwm·e·s . I too would question whether it state of exact and concentrated hour or so of music is apparently will be . withheld at the dis-. is the responsibillty cif the com­-logic is mucli more desirable when a rude and unnecessary intrusion cretion of the ·Editor. State- munity, especially this community, writing about Sunday's. events. Into their concentration. So the ments lacking in good taste and more especially such a select

1 had just returned from Mich- orgy ceases, and the crowd reluc- or fair play will be rejected, group as the· Honor Council, to

Now the Mall does-n't. wear. its green smile · · . · · .· . .

· Visitors just munible at its long, · brown file. · · · ·· · .

. Who's to say if this isn't the way; -To obtaln.a sidewalk over the clay.

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igan State, you see, and was feel- tautly disperses. The campus is and· all letters are subject to present honor to anybody •. If this. · I'm rio poet, but somewhat well lng keenly the .. contrast between silent and serene once more, free condensation ·and editing. responsibility belongs directly' to · . bred ·: ... · . · , ·· · · that school and st.- Mary's. (Think from · the raucus Interrupting contributions· should be ad- anyone it is our parents. Other- Be good fellows, use the' sidewalk oL it--a female student may wear noises of entertainment. ·dressed to The VOIQE, Box. wise it is the responsibility of our Instead; · · pants--without a'trenchcoat, even As a student of, St. Mary's, I- 11, Notre name; Ind._iana. religion to persuade and show us :.0..: Joseph Walker, 4~3 Walsh -.-and not feel any less a woman. would like to apologize to the musi..; · · · · what honor is.· Surely our religion· · · Oh the wonder. of it. alii) Ah, but' cal troupe for our inhospitality.· can offer us something better than ~li&!f!;ll~. rm straying ; • •. : What is. this maitia for :silence the Honor Concept; possibly the Dear Editor:

so· J ·returned, •and the weather that.· reigns supreme here? Of : Editor: Gospels? . Enlighten draftees of their con-was, for once,· a seasonal 70 · course, comprehensives· are not . At the risk of starting a tire- But ·on the other hand there can i i · gh c degrees. An added. treat:·' the to be ·taken .lightly; but surely, · some and probably rather useless be value in the Honor Council and st tut onal ri ts to li,e, liberty Shaggs, "an orgy -in sound by a SURELY, there were places on argument ·concerning the Honor it can re justified if it. can show and the pursuit of happiness·. Be­pack of a·nimals," werec livening campus where students could study Concept, .I would lil<e to. answer , one _person what honor is in an ~a rei· odf Lyndohn B. Hbitler' the up the· old· place with a bit (a lot) J amid quiet. · · . . · Mr. Perilli's .letter of. March 31, · overall context. The dange·r arises · ~~ s~ad'~e~""a:~.g~ ~gf~ }~: 'of ·loud and· lusty. music. An The seniors ofSMC are.invitlng regarding my' own letter of March when it isgivenpowerandisallow-· is DESTROYING lntelllgence-wil1

· appreciative audience was .in-. ·them "back, I have just been In- 22; First of all' I would like 'to ed to make judgements _concerning a bonfire of textbooks be next?_ creasiD.g, as the soimd of the formed,·· to make amends for the ·thank Mr. Perilli for acknow-. the degree of aperson'shonor. The h f free orgy . reverbera!ed across·.· unchivalrous behavior of sorrie on · Jedging that there might be some last thing I would crftize are the -~~~me~ :s. making a bon ire of

. camPUS. . . . Sunday afternoon. Ah, then it can truth in my first assertions, al- motives behin.d.those instituting an Viet Nam violates the following wait. A ,voice of protest;arises · be said-- all's well that ends well. though he makes this judgement ·. honor system, but I feel that we No legal declaration of war,

s?oner than) wp.uld myself. I, ~ve enough "codes" without a. UN Charter, . did not, however,, mtend to critize system or further elaboration, and · SE Asia Collective defense,

··._, U··· . t. . . the effectiveness of the honor sys- · what we. need now is more exam- . Geneva Agreements 1954, . tern. which I think is obvious, but ples of honor! ·Kellogg-Briand Pact-1928 •

. rather the valueofanhonorsystem Jay.Zenner. .. . BEWARE . • at all · .

. . . . . . .. '!.c . ,_ . . . So iong ago, bi my high school .~ No Signature 'Today' s guest .editorial comes from. I)r. Robert A.· Hassenger days, I too had been- active in

.of.the sociology Department •. Dr. Hassenger graduated from No- ·trying to establi~h an honor sys­tre Dame in 1959, before :re-ceiving his· doctoral aegree in Social ·tern. My experience with it con­

:....'Psychqlogy Jr9m\the University of Chicago. Having. centered . vinced me that·thai was the place . his. research :on the .problems; of catholic Higher Education, for honor systems: -i.e., in high 'lie is highly (zualified to~ SPEAK OU.T on ~'Education at Notre school.· Terms :like "academic·

. Dame.·~.·:.<. .' . • . · · · · · · ·. · • · · · · ·:integrity" .·and "academic com-by Rober(Ha.Ssenger, .PoSSible for . _Catholics . to sw. ing; munit)r:t sound. very nice but in . , - · . · :reality, !-think the aims, view-Last· SaturdaY' those attending the At the same time, the more percep- J)olnts, and relative valueS of us at

· Editor: . . On Complaint of Dirt

~ce upon the Mall so bright -and green . · . Strode a, man of culture and great . learn'in. . . · · · Be he of note or be he not, · Across the 'gras.s does he trot, ,

Let Us Send.

Each Issue.

Of The VOICE

Home·

Only$4;00 fmal • session of .the Academic dve.of_tho~eund~rthirty~a'!'e,bee:n Notre Dame.are divergent enough . Signs are plac~d both near and , Freedom Conference wP.re pro- .. alerted for some time t?,the hypoc:- . -at· this -poirit that we have nothing- .far .Per year · ~~~~m~~m~~~-~esb(~~~~~~- tm~m~-~ti~e~u~s~.i~n~m~·~o~~~hl~g~c~o~mm~~un~i~~!·~-~-~~~~~-~t~o~b~e~s~c~o~rn~e~d~a~n~d~s~e~t~a~i~a~r~.~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ freedom by Daniel Callahan. There · religion, .and have-determined to" - · · · · · ' ' · · · - · · · ·

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seems little.dciubt that the situation flake off from :their grade-:-~chool ~ople's· stei~~Wed .image or' the {ate ot all the etlmic groups;) nere f.nCiass on Monday; cir aiiuncli is-ripe for a considerable ·over~.·_"CatholiCfsm. Th~y FAout. R;eii:- .. Iiomosexual.as· girlish, Charac- The logistical problems associa- . onThursday, so youi:nustsnowher ha:UI of a nuinher of thip.'gs at Notre . ·gious: -questions,· in the classical teristics which have conventionally ted with 1) finding; 2) gettiilg fast (and she you, which usually:· · ,

, name;· and·::.: __ ·from .'wliat one can;. sense, simptyd~n·~ tnteres! them. been ~ssociated with :women--the through to:-a> meet~g: 4) having·.·. ends up in an' evening of charades, ·•. . -, t tell __ ,the P<>wers that.be are more They ._car~p,assiona;t,ely a.~out _such · .above . Interests, longer- hair, some place to take women around .··• since .neither cantake off his/her - -: }: · · .. than willlrig tO consider:. concrete_·. · functionaf. -·and· operational; ques-~ ·:clothe~ ~ ,·:S_tyles~: h_igher . heeled here . are_ admittedly enormOUS, / mark .long enough tO . find. OUt who J ~-/·~. ~ ·. ·r-o. o~a!S, i~ cit~n~e ihe Mnt: Wliat .. tions·,· as~ ·how ·poW..er"-can· b~· coq.;.·! >shoes," co19rs ~ s~~ "::~ pink . and- - This· must be doUbly_ frustrating, . the other really is)--fans-to a:uow _ _:;:~:;.._-! : ~e ~re. now faced .with is the' cte't- , trolled ~d ~sed r~sponsib~y. h~ · . yellow~,: perflllile, , 'beauty .treat- 'because of the myth o'f' Notre ·' thi{Domer any .'ways ·0i verlfyi~g- --; · ermination of what th.e Notre Dam.e . a 'ju5t social order!can be f~hion~ · ments, sun-tan lotions,, etc; -:- are Dame potency:· haVing been on the dor,: perhaps more importantly, , . _'.of thefuture·mi&htlook like: .what ed. PRAGMATIC questions grab now considbered ''signs • of homo- .campus: co~pleofb'"i!!~ yohlaghre_ -DISverifying) all this maryellous 1 ·· o ould"m""' -ToWARD-not .. orily ·'-meillfor-which,they_see)<;.SQluti<?n.~·~.se~_!l~ity _Y the ~!lor~ defensive,_. suppose to. ave a sor a - · masculinity.. Thus; when the (:. · .we_w ure • .. .. · · "" ·•·.c · · · · some of whom are·not allthatsure octane kind of:'sexual· adequacy, .... tmilero;raduate is notbitchingabout

. what.we want.to shuckoff.~erhaps _This:: is the. secular m~n- about <about their .OWN identities and either out of the woodwork, or the . · · - ·· . . .. . . this 'column can be' a: forum for ., which Harvey Cox ~":':~0 ~eaks tC?- 'seem to have. a'"'rieed to STAMP bed The Gipp'er might have slept how the administration ha~ emas­

discussion of. thes~ matters in the ·· morrow night_ in' Chicago) w,rites: ·OUT . the : perceived deviance in in, or perhaps in the milk (the · culated him. ·he ·is drowning his . . days ahead, .. .. . .. .. ; "Secular man relies on himself ·another;.butcuttinghishair, asking old 'debate as to.the whereabouts sorrows with the.boys •. And never . . Whe~her . one .• agr~ with 'ilie.' arid, his .. collea~e:> for answers. him~;if: he wea'rs ~ ac dress, and. the of the saltpeter having been decided finding out'about-himself. . . chargesilevelledat the University> He does' not.ask the .church, the like;·.· ,!'lad :.we spa<;e; we might ·tn favor of the cake--doyou.still .. Jf tli.e ;e'Oitl)r has not ·cut me off .

. by Ralph Martln;.andhisprescrip- priest, or God. This is not be-. consider the Bond phenomenon as, cut the top and bottom off?). But· about seven hundred words back, ·ti · · _:r . · ;·· ·--I··fln···. ··lt·· eausehe has.~ore,spect~or:_.reli-_ a·kln~ofbacklas~_totheappear- then 'thesocial:-structuralarran- let me end now •. !guess alll'm,

ons ,or re,orm d myse · , . - · . ·· , anc of Th St .and Bob Dyl gements m. aklnCT casual contacts .tryinCT to say is that the . Notre less di,s' treos'edwiththe_· "secular!- gion •. :He'is probably riot an antJ_:- ;;th. eid.. 1 e blone~~- ' .f s and.. 0 0 . .. .. ·· · · ·· H . im'l [I 1 ; h h . e · ent ty- urr ... 11g 0 onny an with· girls .so irifrequent-:-which Dame image of the past--com-

··-~·· -.~.· ... zatlon•• .. of Notre~·Dame, than Mr •. cle~ic .. _e s .. P Y. ee s~t ~t t e· ·'"Ch·· ·.th . · itivity d h ··only increase~ the_ frantic quality. Pounded of religiOus, sexUal,:.and · , . 'Ma_r~-:::-it.f.s. d!ff1:1llbo: J:e san:.:, lssu.es he is _c::on:e~e.~ .w_lth rel~te_. _of· ~bb/ L=~· Ther:"ar:~riy ~of the week-end hours: haVing to vocational factors--is In rather

·C · · ·. : · gulne ·about. some matte;.H of life •· · m a different field·· • (pp. 8P~81). aspects • of· Bond· which are really ' determine in the first ten minutes drastic . need of refurbishing. 1 · ' ' here. ~ of the prlnciparreasons . • But when students attempt to play. more symptomatic of homosexua- . if the .other is OK. with the dis- · don't know, really, what forms it: i,~· · · · · for student disenchantment is. the · the nragmatic _.Jllan with l'arents. ·_llty-;-particularly ·his Inability to proportionate a) despair, ·if she. should take. But some of. us ·are

-. reat·>dts~repancy between the. and ·rela~ives.--as some did In the love-~than. the targets usually isn't: another blind date wasi:ed, going to talk a bit about this on . ~otre Oa.me ofpublic image(wen~ _Chicago ·Woodlawn ~area · ~t sniped at. · · · ... • • · or: ·b) attempt to impress, ifshe, Tuesday; Those interested can : :·scrUbbed, apple .pie-eating Christ- . E!!ster-~they meet fantastic res is- . . . The lack of rituals "-:hich would . Is,. you can't count on seeing .contact Joe· Anibrosic; 120 Zahm.

·- thl. - )' d. the·. llty. · ·f.· tance, and often must deal with· affirm the identities pf young men · · ··.. · · ' · · ·' · · . ian a etes an . rea o . ch · ·. f. · d · h · · th 1 · · · · __ ...;... ___ .;......_---:-:...;... _ _;_---''-----.,..--__:..;._ __ .;._......;_ ·hau··llre ·desk.:..top messages.' a~ges 0 arrogance,commun- an. women--sue .as osetyp- .THE.·VOIC .. E .OF· NOTR.E--DAME I·

· · ' : . .- • • . ·. . . · ' ·.Ism, and homosexuality. cally found in simpler societies-- _ . ~ghted prefects, ·Inmbteranc_e for A. third· revolution we might ~on- make· it . an_ even greater psychic iriaividuality, gross ·. uddles, an ·/ side"r can· be called-- at the risk. necessity.- to prove one. is grown

• I · unbelievable social life, Indiana oLover-kill --:the sexual revolu- :up. · (Drivers'. licenses, _draft ·:weather .•• ; the whole bit. It isn't . tion. :: Some of. Us .-had occasion .cards, and glue-sniffing are only Editor, •••• : ·.~ .••••. • •• -~ ••••••••••• · ••••••• Steve feJdl-!ous . ·

REALLY·. the· food· or hours_. for . recently ·to visit about ihe "ideo- · pale replicas of the ritesofpassage Business Manager •• · • .- •••• • •••••• • • · .•••••• · •••••• ·.Keti·Socha · most. · · ti . 1 i ,. tNt· D AI' ... which-pUblicly confirm that one Associate E~ltors. •.• •••• •'• •••• · ••• · •••.. Bernie MeAra, Don Leis; . • ~~ meeoneentrateonttefinage, m~~~-r~: rn:Y_l>e0P~~tm:~~~the_~, · ~~pl~yr~~ve~~).b~~; tllia":ff~~~~ ... • ··: . : .. :' ' .. : . ·. ·.· ' . · · . ·. Dick Velt, BobMu'ndh;:k .. for now. It will scar .::Cly be news d ticall th is "' Coritrl butlng Edl_tors. • • • • • • • • •/ ~ • • • • • • ·.Ray Foery, Dennis .Kern · ·. to. most readers -to be told -that ; rama y,. ere_ some accur.,. familiar~ ~most campuses, sex Hews Editor., •. •.• • •. • • • .-•. • ~ ; • ~ ~:. • • ··•·•,• • ~ • • • • Denis McCusker

,. · . . . . . . . . acy in the·phrase. Thh:65 which ·serves. this purpose,. Or at least Assistant ~ews Edi!<Jr ~-! •:•. ~ •.••.••• _.·. •·•:• .~~. ~ ••. • .. Bill Clark L ··there are so~ revolutioi!S going··· were simply intolerable when I seems to. .A successful roll In s110rts Edlto~ , • · •.••••••••• · •• ·• • •• ~ .••• : • ! •••. • ''.Bob Scheuble t · on. · Incredible ·. changes· .. have ·was an undergraduate here In 1955- the hay is conceqed to be an affir- Layout Ed Ito!~ ••• : •• · ••••••.••• -~. ~ • •:• -~-. ; .~ • •••. • •. Steve Vogel t occutre~. within American society .1959 ·are .·npw commonplace. ·.·It·. mation of· adulthood •. One often· Aulstant f,cyout Editors • ~ • ~ •,. ··:. • •:• •• :. Edd Baker, Dave Griffin i _In our own lifetimes, and more are · is ~rt~t to reaiiz:e the Po'wer of' gets the feeling, as he .visits other. · Copy Editor •••••• •:. • •••••• • • • · ••• ,· •••• • ••• • Steve KJiolln F., on~ '!'_ay. _Needless msav. manv .social control: people don'tWANT -~campuses, partict!_larly in the Ivy Layout Staff • _ ••••••••.•••••.•. •, •• · ........ • •••• · Mark Smith t, '·, . in the. generation ahead of ours are . or· don't ~t:IOW _they 'mi.&ht.want: tO'" LefJigue, that the .most tragic part .. Headline Editor· • ', ••• • .•.•.• · •• ~ _.- ••.. ~ ~ ••. •. , ••• • .••.•. Bob Franken.· .. f" . . .ba_ffled by what they.see and hear: :·.do H.fn;..; th-. 1 · .... ,.... . : o all this is the ra_ ~er joyless d I I M • F-. ~. u' . . . . . ·. . . ' . . .. au_ ecu tureor,suu-culture: way people go about it. There is . A verts ng anager. • • •. •··• • • • • •• ~ • .•·• • • • .:. • ~ • •. •;. Don· Fortin-r · ._ Some~g is happening h~re, but _.deems.' inappropriate. : Somehow; a compulsive quality to so many ' Phot~graphy. • • •.• • • • • • •·• • .:. •·.~·•··•· • •.:• ·,·. • • .:. • •'• ··Tim Ford f':· . you don .t know what itls, do you Amer_Ican men have. a hang-up . of the shack-ups that orie .wonders Hews Staff • ·• • • ~ • • • ~ • ~ .• • • • Bruce · BO,.Jo, .. Tim Butl.;,;, . Bill Clark, f Mr. Jones?.. Depressi~n-co~- ' 'about homosexuality. There are., if anyone is really having much Fran C!"''!lb, Jim Fullln~ o'Riclc J~tfson,· f .: · · . sci~ parents who have· ~wavs ·a lot of· reasons for this. But the· ·fun. 'There seems to•be so niuch . Dav!d . K~nnedy,' ·• Carl· Littrell,-. Tom f ·· · · thought of. money as a goalln,llfe recent changesJn American soc- ·,coricentration on provlrig one can · . , Long; John Masley, Joh'ri Mulligan Bill t> · cannot mder~tand their kids'; con~ .iety ·and their reverhf!ratioris on ; "~e it" s~ally, a_nd, make . ' -, Hagle, Chuck.RI,Shell, Rick Schleef , . { th~pt.f~ _of ith~.~.:-mANtak,. S, ttheo J>ut_ this -- .campus _have caused pre- . 'fu:tsthparhtnelr b.itgeit .. thd ere '.i.·thtoo, .- .. ~:-~.· ~~. ·.·_,_ .. · ...... ···~. I; em •on w ee .... , _to . e m Viously latent conflicts to surface. · · e· .w ~.e. s / one w a ~ · }. . where the. · action is. · Born to Because., of a. vast confuSion as to _kind , of grimness and urg{:ncy that r affluence, they can:•afford. to be what constitutes homosexuality-- a .must often be something cf a drag; .Sports St~ff • • • •. ; •- • • •.• ,.:.~ Pa~r Cuihane ·w. Hud~on -Gile~·· f ·.' . ·-Ies! responsible, f .i .. nl. • .b.. db ... Moral considerations aside, it .is ·.. . .· '· ... · .• · .. ·_Bob ... ·. Huss' o·_n,·• .. 'J·o. hn·.··c·o-rrlg'an·, Bob,. ,. · . . cpn us on o Y·. exacer ate Y·- this drivenness which most con-tt·.,: . . ~-~~ second chailge we ought ·peersandprefectswho,whenaguy cernsme •. · ·. ·, ·. ·.: -Wal~>h,Ray·Zolnov,:skl, Toin Hene··

, '. ~iteflYconsid~r • .since we~~~ play-. -in their. hall is· _out _on a sexual : .The men ofNotre-Dame;unable · · · · · · ' ·· · ·· tl'~ . .. . ' ~ soci~l~t. is the s_econdRe- linib with some honest questions for a .v~dety of ;reasoris to avail . . . . - ..•.. ·.~.. ' . :l . • . . •

(:. , . fornutlon. ·For that is what the . a):>out · femlninity, · hand him up themselves of such affirmations, .. · · · · · · 1 •. · • • .r · ·:' . , : · ' · · . · ·, _ . J

· .', current religious revolution is, by ··.. . h ~ in . dibl i _ have recourse to the bottle. (The're .~econd Clasj railing Permit· Pending, University ·-of t:fot_re .. Dctllle,· t · .. ·any.criter.ion •. More has happened . saws-~t ere an . ere . e ump__ is. a marvellous irony ln'this, ·that otre Dame, . n l_ana 46556. Published "fwlce Weekl1 . by The Student• j. .·· .·.. t1i . . : .. , ·.· .. ,fng of things such as an interest th '"Figh ln ... I i h" .. 1 . hei .. Governmept, Unlverslty.of Notre Dal11e, Notre Dame, Indiana E;stab· L.· in the Ca olic Churcl,t since you .. . . · .. • , . .. " ,, e. , .. · t . g rs , '{a ue t r llshed March 1, 1963 •. _Subscrlptlon R!!tes: On Campus Students $}.00. f.. entered high sc.Jlool thani!lthefour _in art, mU;S~C, -and .the . w~ong .booze so highly:. IriSh~IIlenhave ._per ye~r,_Off Campus $4.00 per year. '· ,, .... , ,;.;,"centuries_ precediilg. tt"·fs now kind' of:.book~ and J?~ays· with long had the high~t alcoholism · · · · ···: '. ~~·. ,- ;;._· .,_ '.-, • - ' • • •, • . ,J ., •

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Page 3: lite 1Jaice •···. , - University of Notre Dame · PDF file · 2015-06-24Thanking his class treasures are Meade, '67 ... state of exact and concentrated hour or so of music is

--. -------......... ~----~-----~----·---. ~ ............... ,....___..,--~-~ ............

Friday, Apr~l 29, 1966

Professor Eugene · Brzenk lectured· informally Tuesday evening in the Memorial Library lounge on "-Arnold, nuxley ·and the Two Cultures." · ·

Lecturer Explores Art-Scie-nce· Rift Tuesday evening, Professor Eu:- ·people belie~~d it to be. These

gene :J. Brzenk of the Department two men could communicate in a of English delivered a lecture en- , gentlemanly way, exchange 'views, titled ·~Arnold, Huxley, Leavis; and and were willing to grant justice Snow." Due to the . poor turnout to the claim of the other. Pro-. on behalf of the students, the talk fessor.- Brzenk then analyzed the

, was. moved from the MemorialLi- relationship between Leavis and . brary Auditorium to the Student- Snow,' modern spokesmen for. the · F:ac.ulty Lounge. In this informal . "two cultures." Their main prob­

. atmosphere, · Professor Brzenk ·Iem, ' · according to Professor lectt.lred on the similarities and the Brzenk, is. their failure to com­

- ~ di(fererices between the Arnold and municate or "bridge the gap" Huxleyencounterof the 1880's and between their views, unlike Arnold

·_the· Leavis ?rid Snow clash of the and Huxley; who made better pro-1950's and 60's. ArnoldandLeavis gress. But Professor Brzenk was

• ·represent the humanist view of quick ·_to· point out that the big .. the "two cultures," and Huxley and difference ·betWeen the encounter · Snow are. the representatives for of the 1880's. and the clash of the

: _. 'the scientific .view. Professor · 1950's was that the humanities to­. . Brzenk pointed out that both pairs day no ·longer enjoy the place it,.·. :'.:of ·men are the acknowledged held in the Victorian'peribd •. ~. -

· .. · th is After the ·lecture, a group dis-. ·spokesmen 10r eir d · ciplines; cussion was held and PrOfessor

. ' .. -. :After' short; archecypal . back- Brzenk was asked for a solution · grounds of the four men were : to the problem of the~ ''two cul..-· given, Professor Brzenk explained. · tures," He seemed to agree with

'-. , :,.-the·· .. problem· of:hwnaniSt trends ·SnOW Who asked 'for more Scient!­-versus sCientific trends in society:··· fi_c: _. knowlec:lge . among. literary.· :-Professor.. Br~nk stressed the . people and more literai:y know­

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Unive-rsity of Notre Dame

·. V enezuelari Students Visit ND.-Elevn graduate students from symposi~m on· "Marx and the eau of COPE I,- .the youth group" or

Venezuela who· are leaders in the Western World," meet with cam- · the Venezuelan Christiim Demo-­Youth Wing of the Christian Demo- pus student leaders and attended cratic Party, the largest political cratic Party in their country lectures ·by Notre Dame faculty . group hi Venezuela, and have con"!' visited the· University· of .Notre members; Their visit to Notre cerned themselves with social and Dame April 24-28 under the · ·Dame is part of a series of visits economic reforms in the country. auspices of the u.s. State Depart- to American universities, in­ment's Bureau of Educational and. eluding the Universities of Chi-Cultural Affairs. cago, Louisville and California,

· . · . at Berkeley, - . . . While at Notre· Dame, the stu-· All of. the students have been

dents attended the international active in the National Youth Bur-

. point'that the split betw:en Arnold,._)edge among sCientific people. The · ·--~-and HuxJ~Y.- y:~~:I!9J~'Wl~~-~~El()~t ·• problem of speCialization ineduca- .. : ·

;-···· ·-····-----~·· '''··~- .•. •· ...... "··-~----·- '-:tion'was also~ raised, and a:com-' -~ ·: :~ ;--:~ . . ·. I • •• parison of 'me: British and Am- ... · ·' :

SUMMER JOBS IN ·ALASKA-. erican systems, of: education. . .

. -r:

. ·are profftable. Li stings.of com• followed. . , ._ . . · · .· ·d dd · · ·$·1 'oo , Those who attended- the lecture

_Panynames an a re_sses • · .. were givenbothsidesof.thebaJfling' . to· Denis · Rydjeski; %- .E.R. _problem·. by· an· acknowledged

Anuta; · · RR. 10;: Lafayette, authority of the. Victorian period. ·1 d' · · .... · -But no immed1ate ·answer was

,i. n lana. . : . . 'given to the "two cultures" con.:. . , At 5W*#W .. troversy,' . · • ·

. ·' ' . . . • I

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·-\WARNER'S: .. : '\. . I ~ • ~ -' • :, ~ • •· •

TRUCK AND ·TRAILER·· · · · REN:TAt_;-/

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Rentit in South Bend_ ... ...... • • .<:'

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-.... . . ' . ,.., Phon.e ~287~9.494.

Educat6rs \endors_.e ... '·'i['

·Professor-Jacques Barzun·. · · Columbia University: "In-.

mriabli· instructil-e. (till, 'and exiren;ely easy 'ro iise. The

;'definitions are flO/ on/y terse '.ami clear but also elegant.~ •

:· a pleasure to read."

. ProfessorCJeainh Brooks,· :' . Yale University: ''An able .

. 'ani/ e.\:p~rtlyedile~ ~·olume."

, . Professor Harry R. Warfel,. •· ·:University of Florida :"/1 is :.' · incomparabty:rhe biw desk ..~.dictionary now in existence,·~

::; Professor George E. Grauel, : · John Carroll University:·

.·"Its _superior quality has . · · . , , . proven a stimulus.to . .tfre·en-:--... , ...... ·· · '(!) .. . · ' :" rirefi· i?!d·or A_ merican 'lexi~ '·.··· ':_ .

. ·• ,., . w • TH·E. W. ORL.D. ·. ·. 'J· •

'. . . PUBLISHING COMPANY ': . ~o_grr::!'>':'' .. ''·:· :· .· S6.~5.; .... Cleveland, Ohio ~4102 · Withou~~h~lll.b index $5.95 ·

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·c~~n~ dealers are making this nohidden charges or· oblig~tion. · special . offer so that everyone · ' · · · · · · ·- ·

might'get to know' the fun expe- So. join the. fun! Clip_-this certif-rience ofpiloting a plane ... the free icate now • '; . and' pilot. a saucy feeling of a ·gentle bank left or -'·Ces5na150 i~: $5. · . : . .

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· : ·· - - -. · · · Dealers in the Yellow Pages, or . A licensed instructor at your ·.Cessna .dealer will explain.· the • from .participating Cessna 150- · . operation of the plane. After take.:.·. equipped flight' schools; Or ·write· •.

off, he·will·let you·takecontrol . Cessna· Aircraft Company; and fly the planeyourself::Wlien :.,Dep_t. CN; Wichita, Kansas:· .

· the. instructor. has landed, your · ; flight time will be entered in an

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Page 4: lite 1Jaice •···. , - University of Notre Dame · PDF file · 2015-06-24Thanking his class treasures are Meade, '67 ... state of exact and concentrated hour or so of music is

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F r .. -, X \: . L ·.

.. Page'4 University of Notre Dame

I NO Cut System: ·Pro and Con t T~ sleep • I~ :- in, . or not to change in' the c~t system and 6o/o lty of the teaChing .staff wh~n it :t~ · sleep • • • in· that isithe ques- opted for a continmince of the becomes apparentto the admmis-~ tion that plagu~ the majority of status quo. The well defined tration of the impact, or lack \ students every waking. morning in camps, pro and con, student ver- thereof, of a given· professor on ~~: -.almost every_ major· university in sus· .administration, have become the body of knowledge of the Nott:e

Friday, April 29, 1966

m .

' the land. Butthe question doesn't· . scattered skirmish lines withcon- ·Dame student. This could, on the ( ·arise here very frequ(mtly. What . servatives on both sides. . 'other hand, lead to a deleterious COLFAX •>tarting the 29th at•1;. ·aw~rd winning cartoon '"Dot on a. ~- does· rise up .. to overShadow in:.. .Regarding an: extended cut_sys- system in which professors com- 3, 5, 7, & 9. THE SPY WHO Line" is also_ being shown. This ~ .· depeitdenCdeliberation is that ogre tern as opposed to unlimited cuts; pete in some' sort of popularity' CAME IN FROM THE COLD.- Dir- is a love ~ory aboutan inhibited ~- of ·university rules, the "cut sys- . one Morriss.ey junior felt that, poll, at -least until. they had ac- . ector: Martin Ritt. Actors: Rich- line, a jazzy squiggle, and a cirCle r tern."" .· _, -:. :"Notre Dame :does not have the· quired tenure; . . ·.. . . . -ard Burton, Claire Bloom,:Oskar who's· just like ·any other circle. " "There are those who· propose· Intellectual atmosphere of a Har- Asked about their ·views con- Werner. · . · · · · · -~AVON continuing at 6:30 arid :; · ·· · abandoning: cuts · and giving· the _ vard or: a ,Yale !o bring ,,on a . cerning changes in their present· This film is exceptional· in its . 9:00. DARLING. Directors: John ~ : ~ -~ . student-the freedom· of responsi-' sys.tem · of _unlinuted cuts. · A . system, administration officials · ability to transcend· the recent · Schlesinger and' Frederic Raphael. 1 . ·: .... · bility lie deserves~ · ~ut thl~- is· .senior in Lyons felt that such a, :. ranged iri their opinions fromcau- quagmire of spy'movies. Its appeal. Actors: Julie Christie; Dirk :1 · - not · a clearcut struggle between system' would· be ·possible, ·"but · · tious concern ·to an unqualified does . not ·rely on ·.the utilization -· Bogar de, Laurenee Ha-rvey. ;111 ____ ·. · John Q. · Student .versus the .sys- only for- juniors. and seniors. ·I ffi t' · .Th · · · · ·arne fro. m. ·of the spy's "old underplaying of "Da.rling" _is the third of thr·e· e 1

•• · teni ,beCause ·the· studerit is the·· don't think that ·a ·rreshrit3.n :or a rma Ion. e.yes c .... the effects·. of· ail amoral code. · · th · Rev Charles Sheedy C.S C. Dean ·good filmspresentlyintown:'•I;Jarl-\\ _system·and·_ realistically the sys- .· sophomore· could handle e in- • · ·fA · du; · ·. prescribed·. by modern govern-· · k d

1 f

h ·-tern is very _much a part of the . creased responsibility." . . .. of the Co~~ege o rts an tter~: ments and seemingly necessitated ing''Uses the overwor e .P oto a ii. . student.· It is not possible to iso-:-, On this 'point Freshman Dean who_was definitely forachange, by modern soCiety._ Excellent young girl who becomes corrupted 'l · .. Dean Murphy felt the position of a . in her climb to success. However, '• · late. the· tw. o into. · separ.ate_.·camps· · Willlam Burke aired· a slinhtly · · . . _ · c·ame· ra work depicts the fantas_tic !t : in ~u • college Dean to be that of a rep the · directing, acting, and photo-·. ;f ·\· • and: thus amend the cut • system· more -pr1act~cthalth. yif~po t. H1s . ·. . · · · · proportions. of the netherland of -· graphy are all excellent. JuUe. !(: · · on the shaky ,foundation of simple concern s .w1 e 1rst semester resentative. of the faculty and stu-· . espionage. Burton's fine acting· Christie received the Oscar for ~~~L:1l._~--:·-··.·_._;·_. ·student responsibility. ·· _· -·: freshman. Separated from high. dents and that he would campaign · (which. should have won him an best- ·actress of. the year for. her

. . There are an.infinite.-number of ·:_·school by: only three. months, of actively for their wishes put added- Oscar) reflects themoralisolation part in this fiim. · · · 'l" . :_ alternatives to. the present sy's-.•. smpnier vacation is he .·ready for im important point, heretofore un- of contemporary man in a film that ; .: : < tern which can be. boiled down tci -·the'\; responsibility of unli~ted mentioned but ·necessary 'from a is .·exciting,: believable, and per- STATE continuing at undeter:... f •. - thr~e major choi~. Q.!e is· the ;_:·cuts? . J?elin Burke feels strong!~ purely pr~ctical 'point of view. -If tinent. . . . . - pUrled . times. THE .TROUBLE J · · , . Ultimate . freedom,. the unlimited · . ,responsib~ for the fres~men as _. a system is. be~ grossly negiec- GRANADA starting the 29th at . WITH . ANGELS~ Director: ·Ida . ~ .. .: . , cuts· pf_ the Ivy League: the second, :; they ·make a· ~ifficult adjustment ted, as . our system is . in many undetermined times. A PATCH , Lupino, Actors: Rosiland Russell,. \r.· .· · the 1pysterious f~rmu~~-; of pur_ to.college lifE;. and feels thatsome cases; it is practical,thentoretain. OF. BLUE. Director: Guy Green •. Hayley Mills. - ·. , ;; : . . "Big Ten" neighoors _such as the sort of regulation is _ _?bsolutely . it? Dean Murphy believes that if Actors:' Sidney .Poteier, Shelley . The trouble with "The Trouble_.: i; · · "3 :.x ·plus .2 cut'' (where x equals· .necessary. Failing out of Notre a htle has been establisped .it Winters, E~izabetnHartfuan.. · with Angels" i_s fairlywidespr~ad. · ;1 . .. _.the credityalue of the course); . Dame as a fr~shman may result. should be maintained; "A Patch of Blue" is reminis- Some of the .trouble is poor dir- · !:_. , and .finally -the. status quo, our · from a failing_on the part of the , · . . is~- d cent of Chaplin's ''City'Lights" ecting, poor casting, andaterrible H ,, " · · · · · · . · administration as well as on the Work on the cut system un er. in its story of a-blind girl, living : script. Hayley Mills takes time :,:[ · ~:Y~~·-oi the Coll~ge of· part of the student.: : · · -. way 1lS both studeonv~r- aintsdpf:~~~z,- in s·qualid surroundings. The film off from Mr London night club act:· ,; Busines-s Administration, Dr>Tho- .. Many students. felt that a· "3 x . express. _concern e - · is·, a melodrama but touchingly to play. a. young girl who rebels · H ·, :. mas-. Murphy, believes _thin ·:•me .• plus 2" system· would .at least: inequities. Change_ most likely · rendered. It effectively handles against Catholic authority; but not·~-F- · . ·. majori~. oCstuderiU;.would p_refer:.>:Ule~iate the, no· cut rule on th_e ·· will come.in the n~a.r fut~re,iras ·the social problem?f interracial· for long.~ One 'of the better parts: · l~~~-c:nt_'system·while the majority· <lay· before_ a vacation; ;Wi~ an. JD?St·s~dents and acuity. es e~ · .romance. The actmg in all the of the film has .Gypsy Rose· Lee· \: · .. ·. o~ld prefer abol~ .. ··increase oiri the nUmber of :.cuts~ . Rick Schlee f. main parts is vet.y good, Shelley .teaching the girls how. to dance: If l::: ; . iShing. the system." : The':dean : the student ~could .. take ~' doub~e . . Winters received an Academy you · . like' watching· the insane . p~.: --.. suggested a random s~pllllg of~: out' ori th~ _last class day be!ore; · The Father Tom Brennan Bowl- ·Award for her supporting role:· goings-'on: at a girts: school and ~ .. · . · - . stu~ent opinion on. the issue. Sut;h.: a holiday and thus . be penahzed " lrig Tournament will begin this;· The romantic story and its inherent. seeing nuns on bicycles this film . .· !>' .. _ ... · ·-:~"sample wa_s. -taken amon~ _one. wi~out J;leing cr:uci~ied:, _ , c. ·. ~ Monday' evening. 1AU students are positiv_e outlook should ~ake the__ shoul~ provide wonderful. entei:- •· (~; . . hundred.- of the. sop~omores, jun- · The proposed ~system. of- un- invited to participate: , · · · ··-~film very ·popular. ·The·academy_ :· .tainil1ent; · ~(:-':,; .Iors, and."seni()rs on the west . limited. cuts also poses a ,class;..· " · · ... · · · · '! : . · side of the campus. . The sample . · room. problem. What of the pro-· ' ;: . : · .. :-. proved Dean Murphy wrong but not, fess·or who firids mandatory atten­it. · ::.: -'- overw!telmingly. Of the hundred, dance· the only assjlrance of a full :, .~ ... students · questions, 57o/o _desired . class? Some students feel that . \ }~ .. . . '.'.:unlimited cuts, 47"/o wanted a' imlimited cuts may raise the quat-<> ;

F-~· · -.c. -.. • <.-:::',':~ .. _.:~H-.- :· : · <·· ·.,. · · · ·.:· · ;::_·;·/ :omposz.ng· · ymns ·-~,"~"Lfirot·>Ji#jy faik";. ,' · · .. .· . , . F :-:_ .. ~~e·.-_ait'have _problems -leariung:- ·disciplined: choir, but' an average 1\-~;_:·.:·~· .. ··, the.hymns·for the new liturgy, but'-·· parish assembly •. Yet'it rriust not i~:~"'-:_·' .·>J)erhaps the·worst'hea_daches.are~. be so.simple, hesaid,.as to insult • _ .• · · 11.' · ·. ·.those-of the modern composer· of.: -the:" average· ·man's :intelligence~<·-: .. ~~~- ·. .. ' · liturgical music. These difficulties .- Acco~ding to 'me Consiitutioii-on · ~.- ;~ • · ... 'L •. ,, were' discussed irian tinusual:lec- . the Sacred Liturgy; it is not only ' ' V .. <· .· titre Mondayafternoo~ by Anthony ~-the 'right, but the duty,. of every · ·< ;}~~.::. ::. MiJ.ner, · ,wel_l':: -~~n .. composer, man ·to actively,... participate in.the ·, : -r'· :~ :' from·the U!llvers1ty ofLondon, and ·liturgy,· and, ·adds~Milner, goo9 ·· . A Y. . : adv~or;~to ·~e~ English hierar~y- rmisic·w.illperstiade a congregation - >.. · .. [~·-:c·., ._on Cath<>l!c vernacular. music.· ..... ·. to-·iake' a ,"inore.•active '·part: I(-·.- · ·· 1 i: ·. . : . Mil_ner s,t,ated that.America,:·hn:· it~has'·!l· dignified put~not lifeless;; t :- _ . . done much~ in this fleld, and: cer . _beat . and is. properly fitted to the_ . · · . k= ,.--. _.taiD.:ly has ~othing to learn, f!oii1 ~- verriacular tr~msladon, the people :.:. . -:: •England.".:"ln-enumeratirig·th~.~ .. --, .. · . -.- .. · ...... · .. ··.:._. i.i _. . _norm$ set down .by the ·council, .. · wont mind singing it. H~.indlcated _.c.=. tU.· .. : . he cal_tedp1errimtich_moree,(pliCit_~. so~ -.of the· pro~!ems, · s~~h_. as: .. b '.-·-. than ever bef~re about jusqmw .. fittmg the ~ord 1 bap~~_II_l :to a · ... lL -. · · · ·music' should·- aid ·.worship ... The . natural rhythm. .. . . · .· , . : . · . ~::· -~·. : · ·.situation .will be further Clarified, .Mimef has written an Amerlcan '. :-.. ;~ :. : ~ ;_:. he.said,' when even-more S\'leeping : 'Mass, with no time sigitature, and ' ' .. j! . : .- ·:·-~_changes iri.the Mas~_·a,re effected '.had :Some~ success .with itin'ari_,. · jl :. -~ : •· within. five years;. . . -·. ," · ·, .->-_. : : aye_rage ·New Orleans pa~ish. But, · : J.;•. ·:-: ·.Tlie.modern liturgical composer·; he says,· only time and usage will, , _ w-:.:·:. ~must bear.in mind that his music separate the goodliturisicalmusic . W · - · .'will·not be performed solely-by a· from the baa.:·· . . . ·.· -;'. ·:.~,-~-

if':·:/:\;:~:A~i il.nitii· :_<d ~~-lis-~:f:lt e.p ate·_~_-.-~·':.,~~--!t"~ <YniYers~l ND Night .· ··•··· ·•· · h-;~ .:; _; .(On''one= wall .·of.AlurimiAsso-·~· observe -the occasion, nhich this

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. -- ·, };2:--'-:' · ·._;,elation"' field Se~retary:.J'ames;. year f~uses. b_n the,Role of the _. t[~:< . _Cooney's office h~ngs alar~ black. Cathollc University in the Modern ... .... ~ ·: _. : ·' . 1: .. ,·

It-;;: ·· : chart·.with355 httle tags ::::-.170 . Age! :. . .. . -.. _ . · . '· b~ . · little:blue·.tags·with:the names of ·. A liscof the speakers ~who·wnL.,,. ., t;:-·,· ·· · .. : the'160 ·Notre Dame. Clubs' in the :represent 'the Unh:ersity_[n such · · ·- .. . . :: w:·:· · '/ ;,; Uni~d States and 10 foreigri affi-( .· far~fltm.g: places· as Albuquerque,.:: . Jl! : , · liates, :and ·170·11ttle orange· tags '.-Seattle, a~d.Grand Bahamas ~eads. , 11.£:,:.: ;..:··With the addresses:of.allthe·local like ,th~ f1rst page of. the_Student · ., 1 {:<;: :~-.-/'·'club 'preslde!}ts~· .. ; !3tit it Js the l15 ·._ •. Directory •. : · Father·I:Iesburgli' has ik~ "·, · 'little~ white·: tags which· take on ' included·. :Detroit, · Washington _ ~t-~ :. spe-.:ial significance eve_ry;.year at D.C.-:.st.: .Louis, South Bend; Phi:-•. · {!;;:· ··> :;;thiS time. ··:•; · . - · . -:_: . : : ;·Iadelphia, <and: New York . in. his t\,; : ... : . ·. ; Ori. each of these.white cards is ·_ . perpetual ' itinerary for thts pur.,. .... f!.' ;-· :: --~ tfi;ed· the name• 'of .a member of-: PoSe;' . ·Vice;;.presidents :- Joyce, f-i;,::,;·,: ,. the faculty or·adrnirii~iration_who·: Walsh;· McCarragher;' Frick, and k?, : · .. will address the· club O!J Univer!?~l ·_.McGuire. are all on the. road-this j::·:· _,NotreDame_Night •. : .. :-· : . month,as~are.Mr;.Armstrongfor .. _·

. ·,

~~·- ;' ::··UND Night wasconcievedin1924. the Alumni Office, Dr •. Shuster;', . _. _ . , .. fl:-::/::· :· · ·.·.to:spotlight Notre. Dame's educa- .Dr •.. Stewart,. Dea,n. Burk~, . Mt:• ~- . · . ;1; ...

t\~:;",: 0:-. ,tional, research, and_ public ser: .,~orb_aci, and many. others. · • -. ; , .: , . . F ';;:~ .> :: :vfce: a~tivities around the co~ try_ , · Participan.ts from•the athletic , _· , :: .

,.·

·~

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. : ... ~ - .. ._ .t, ~.

tt"F·-:-;·.:.·:J_ while-:-- athletic publicity is. at low, department mcludeMessrs. Pa~-: _ - - ·. . . . - -- . . .. {t;X~i_:;-~·,. ebb. : Tra;ditionally, ·a·banquey;is .• 5egh_ian, Dee, Kra~se;an~Pagna, · ·· · • :;' .-_ . ·Anyt~irig go~s when you ~ear;';IT'S CRICKET'''... . .. ~~-· .... ..:. held. by each local club .• on, _the-; among others.. . . . .. _ . . _ ·- -~xc:e~h<;:nc:ll.Men_;s TC?ile!r!es/~rY. it c:md see. (Girls; ·give it enid find ~ut [) _ . (t';}:. :· ·:::·~:second Monday. after Easter;.OV~r > ~ Some; clubs -will'feature famous.. '· '· .. '· . . .. : • . . . After-shave 4 oz-- $3 50 C .. I . . . ,-4. . . S4··so . :. , . . . . , . . .· ... 1 · · · · · · · · .. · -- · 1 · i h · ·1 din fl ·.. .. • ·.. ·- .. · · · · ' · ., · ' o ogne oz · · . . · ·. l''· .. ·/ .·-:::the ·years; the·e_vent has -co~Jo ~a~ o_r. ot er; ea g gur~s. :. :_ :> . .. AvqiJa~l~ indrug stores cindcosmelic'C:iepartm.'e' ·n·

1 ··-f_d. · · '

1-. .- .

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t(::-:•;;.•::.-:be_th~_high~poirir_of allthe.Notre~··Inkeepirig with the_ Notre Dame_.~:" ·· , · . ... . . . . . . . so eparmen sores. i(:;':::::.:Dame .q_Iubs' ~c.tivitieso_ _Durlpg :man's. fabled ~bility tomix bust~ ·'.•. .·. . , ~ ' .· · . ·· · · · An~t~ertriie produ~·~·~-1 c-PKay~~-i:R~th:' . · ' (\::::, > .. >April or early M!lY. over one __ hun~.:· .. ness with· P,teasure, ~~st clubs · ·. " , .. · · - ·· .. ,. . . > . , -· .. ,_: · · _.. . c: . _ ... - , .. : .. , . !•;;;:·,· ··<dre~d~fifcy·'Iocal·.club·s·.wm·each .. willfetetheir,speaker •. ;.·. · , '~-·::.. _,.·. ,. :.:::·· · .. .

li.:_:~.~_:_::: . - ·' .. - . : ' ' ....... ' ' - •//. ; < / •, • .' • •• :. .-~ :·.· ·_ {: ' • ,. "-'". ·:· ;· ':.

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Page 5: lite 1Jaice •···. , - University of Notre Dame · PDF file · 2015-06-24Thanking his class treasures are Meade, '67 ... state of exact and concentrated hour or so of music is

Friday, April 29, 1966 University of Notre Dame

NewsBriefs~ewsBr~efsNews.BriefsNe The Freshmen-SophomoreCotil- Professor Gaston Fessard, S.J. Whether your likes run to folk

lion kicks. off the Notre Dame one of France's leading political music, jazz, classics, or Broad­Prom season ihls weekend;- The theorists, 'will speak Friday at way there may be a place for you Cotillion; featuring Bob Christian 8 p,m. in the Architecture on the staff of WSND-FM. Audi­and his Orchestra, runs from 9 to Auditorium on ,-,Le Mouvement du tions will be held this Sunday after-1 Friday evening in the Stepan Concept chez Hegel, Marx, et Kier- noon. For further information

·Center. kegaard." The lecture is being call 7342, Saturday the activities move to presented by the Department of -ou

the Dunes, with busses leaving the Philosophy in conjunction with the "The Bash International" a date circle from noon to 12:55, As an International Marx Symposium. · party sponsored by the ISO,- the

·added attraction, the Scott Paper "'"'"' Pan-Am Club, and the India Asso- · Company has provided cloth tex- Professor L, G. A.. Schlichting, elation will take place Friday even-tured paper dresses, currently one from the University of Nijinegen ing in the Knights of Columbus Hall of the ·most popular spring ' in the Netherlands, w111 deliver from 8 to 12 p.m. Coats and ties fashions, as party favors to be dis- lectures· Monday and Tuesday are required, Cost for members tributed at the-Dunes. Busses re- · both a; 8 p.m. in -the Arch!- is $1.00, others $1.50.

· turn to Notre. Dame between 5 and tecture Auditorium. His topic Mon- ' , "'"'"' 6 p.m. ·A party at the Plck-:-Ollver day evening will be "Politics and The Department of English 1966 at 8:30 will feature both theShaggs Religion in the Nethertands·" and· Ward-Phillips Lecture Series will and the Shamrocks. . - on - Tuesday he will speak on present Professor Frederick J.

Festivities come· to a close "mass Communications and Hu- Hoffman, Professor of EngliSh at with the Sunday morning Com- man Relations:" the University of Wisconsin, · muniqn breaksfast immediately """"' speaking on .. The Imagination's after the 9:00·Mass in theKe'Eman- In the P.C •. Re11ly Lecture Ser- New Beginning: Modern Litera-Stanford chapel. ies, Dr. Gerhard Hesberg of the ture and Theology;" Professor

National ' Research -Council of Hoffman's four lectures will be.

I S 0 P I Canada will speak Monday and held in the Libr~ry_ Auditorium at · ans Wednesday at 4:10 p.m. in the/ 4:15 p.m. on Monday, Tues-. - . • ·Nieuwland Science Hall. Check _day, Thursday, . and Friday, Ann 0 u I) c e ·d ~~~~~in boards for the proper -- Fri~ay,

Four chines'e SMC students "'"'"' · spoke to a large group of ISO Elections for next year's offi-members on "Red China Today" cers in the'Youn~Reoubllcanswilt' yesterday at the St. Mary's Club- be held Friday in the LaFortune house. . . ;::,tudent Center, Three candidates

This evening the International are running for the post of chair­Students ·organization and the Pan- . man: Bob Frank, Mike Baroody, American Club will co-host a dance and Mike Schaefer;. ·The new offi­·entitled "Bash· International" in cers will·be initiated at the annual the Knights of Columbus Hall. YR Banquet to be held pn May 17 Music is to be . provided by a and featuring Mr, Stanton Evans, .. Latin American band. editor of· the INDIANAPOLIS · ISO will feature a panel dis- NEWS. cuss ion on "The Apartheid Policy "'"'"' of South· Africa" in early May. The Poetry Series of the Student

. As of now, Dr. Lewis and Miss · Government Academic Com-Cassidy of the -Notre· Dame and· ·mission will present the noted poet

. · SMC History Departments; - r~- · ·Rev. ·Daniel Berrigan, s. J. in a _ · spectively,and Mr. Labius Lesibu, -reading <of his poems Wednesday a South African student, are slated at 8-p.rn. in the Library-Auditor-to· participate in the discussion. i ·

·,. :. ISO is presently revamplrig its. . urn, Fr.~ Berrigan who rec;:ently' 'constitution with two objectives in r~turned - from Viet N~m will ,mind. .The first . is to make> it an~er. Cluestions after his reading. -easier for interested-members to. : ·; ·

run for club office. The second is . to allow the presidents of the other · · ..

. ~ campus __ international.clubs, such/:..: as GILA and the- Pan-American··

·Club, to become . honorary mem-. bers of. the. - ISO . executive:~ committee, thereby facilitating t '\immES!ii:ia!Dmaaa-communications. , . - 111

._-- Say·it.iri·.--:_ .. ,· ~-·-, ___ -_- ._-·tfWl;no~pyc~i<H,.~:_kt ·. .· --~·(oi· ~7--other-language$).

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· ing pace· but chances are you'll for Spanish,.Japahese, G,erman,.' .. ' -:­be able 'to speak a -surprising ·· ltalian,Chineseandmanymore .. : . . number of words and phrases · .,_-_____ __;,~--.;.....,..-, in a few hours. . · . ·. · · ··

For only $::!.45 you can see if­a particular language appeals to

:·your interest and aptiiude. Or ·· ·. · Jearn· enough to make foreign . · 'travel more pleasar.t. At 'the very - · least, you'll be able to say-.~·No'.' · (or "Yes") in another language)- ·

Each album has 5 or more*. · · 11h"' flexible packable 33 1/J rec• ·

, ords plus a handy "How to Use . · t~e Language" Study.Guide.. . ,

Page 5

W·ork to ~~Start o·n New Structures. Rev. Edmund P. Joyce, c.s.C.,

univer~ity executive vice-presi­dent, announced plans Wednesday for construction of new buil_din~ on . campus. He said that the architect for the· Athletic and Convocation Center is presently trying to fin­ish the drawings so that construe.:. tion can begin by the first of 'June. The job is scheduled to last for at least two years with com­pletion· hopefully in September · 1968. >

· ·Fr. Joyce' said that construction­of. the new post office to be located across from the bus station and the faculty club to be southeas_t of the Center for Continuing Educa­tion has been let out for bids. Work on these two buildings is also expected to begin about the first of June.· No plans have yet been made· for the old post office, according' to Fr. Joyce.

He· also said that 'the road from

' '

the bus station· rtmn!ng east past· the stadium will be repaved, as. well as the road on the west end of the stadium. The tennis courts are scheduled to be removed and the parking lot will extend from the bus station to the road west of the stadium, .

Fr·. Joyce announced that the ~versity has received a$616,000 grant from the Nation~l Science Foundation to finance construction of a new Lobund Laboratory south of the Computer Center with work possibly to begin in late fall, Also he said that the university is pre­sently lookirig for funds for a new life science building.

According to Fr. Joyce,.under­graduate students will be living in· Dujarie Hall beginning this fall, The bulldinp; now occut~ied by brothers will be left vacant when they move into their new buildings ·across Dixie Highway.

. . - \ ' '

. -.Not that it's-on his-mind right now. Arid if needn~t b~. Those~ Lee:~ Prest Leesures cg.n't help but stay ·crisp and'neat. No matter what you i:n1nh~ni-n1rough_, They have. a new perm<3,nent pres·s.-So the crease ~tays -in .. The· wri~kles stay out.' Permanently:·. And that's without iro-ning~ No' ·touch~ ups, either. They're made from !,.ee's special blend o£.50/'o poly_ester and 50/'0 combed cotton. For wash and wear.· .. with conviction. -- · . · - . -,. Incidentally,- that permanent press ~s the only qhange we~ye made

.. in Leesures'.' They still~ have 'that lean, .'honest-' look' .. : smart, tailored fit.-·­-New Lee-Prest Leesures. ·Test. th~ir. p~rmanent press· yourself. It _isn't

- necessary,_buOt's a great way to spend an-evening. From $6.00 to $8.00. . ~ ' ' ', ~ . ~ - .... " ... ~ ' ~ ' . ~ -

' ' . ~ ~

-H. D. lee Comp>ny, lne., Ka,nsasp;ty, M~. 64141. AlSO AVAilABl~ IN CANADA.

•,

Page 6: lite 1Jaice •···. , - University of Notre Dame · PDF file · 2015-06-24Thanking his class treasures are Meade, '67 ... state of exact and concentrated hour or so of music is

\

i t I I (. ..

.-

P··~w. Space • edicine Fmd1ngs ·Revealed

As the national space program effect upon astronauts. Conse- ·. grows and becomes more sophis- quently, research and development tlcated,· the need for medical men in areas such a:S radiation, vib-.

· 'in .the Air Force increases sign!- ration, thermal protection, weight-. ficantly . according to Brigadier lessness, and ecological systems · General Thomas H. Crouch, USAF, account for seventy per cent of·

University ofNotre Dame

for physical requirements; and currently health hazards in South­east Asia are being.studled. Medi­cal education and therapy con-· stitute a large portion on.the-Dlv­·ision•s ·work •

ITEJ.U: Studies have shown that the teenage girl is the ·poorest fed member of the· family. Studies show that calcium, vitamin c and vitamin A are the nutrients most frequently missing. More serving' of dairy foods and fruits and vegetables will help provide the

.. missing nutrients •.

-I

Friday, April 29,' 1966

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Payment in adva_nce Send Copy and payme"nt

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· Commander oftheAerospaceMed- 'their mission. The entire concept leal Division ofthe Air Force. At of spacemedlcineisjustbeglnnlng, a lecture delivered . on campus ·accordiQ.& to General Crouch; and Tuesday· evening, April 26, Gen- future study in this field guaran­eral Crouch reviewed the oppor-. tees a challen"ging and- exciting t..:..:..-·.

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· personnel, ~.of whom five hundred . The Medical Division has other have advanced Doctorate . degrees responsibilities . besides . space in'medicine. · medicine, however. Men'injured ·

The aerospace Medical Division in combat are·evacuated and cared · works closely ·with NASA· in all for by the Division, ·threatening · _areas of manned space fllght to . epidemicS are studied and coq·ect­determine ~ physical and mental- ive.actlon taken, pilots are che_c~ed ·.

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Page 7: lite 1Jaice •···. , - University of Notre Dame · PDF file · 2015-06-24Thanking his class treasures are Meade, '67 ... state of exact and concentrated hour or so of music is

·Friday, April 29, 1966 . University of Notre Dame. . . Page 7 ·

Irish. En:ter·J7. In D_ra,~e R_e/ay$; C~apuf. Wins Two ·Events Against Army _ · In the Drake Relays this week-· pete in the 4-mile relay. . The rain-drenched track kept end, Notre Dame will be represent-:-. In individual events, Mike Coffey the . number of meet records ed by a seventeenman delegation •. and Bill Leahy will compete· in the set to three, two .by. Army Harold Spiro, Keith Small, Pete two-mile, as will Dean in the-mile and one. by Ed Dea!), who ran a Farrell; and Ed Dean are entered and Mike Chaput in the :long jump strong 4:07;2 in the IJ!ile, breaking

. in the two-mile relay, while Bob and hop, :step and jump; · the former record. of 4:09.1 set Tfmm (440), Farrell (880), Sp_iro - Lack---'of depth in. the sprints by the Cadets'. Straub in 1963. (3/4 milE<), and .Dean (mile) com- and fieldeventswereNotreDame's Mike Chaput was Notre Dame's ·

· 'prise the distance medley. . AI ·weak suits in Saturday's dual meet ·lone double winner, finishing first Widdifield, . Tom Rink, Brian against Army, which swept four of !n the lpn.! jl!mp (21'-9")andll!op,·. Kenny, and Keith Manville form these events along with the· ~le s_tep, and J~p (44'-1/2"-) in addi-: the_ shuttle hurdle.· relay, while and 440-'y_ard relays, as the Irish ~on to placing third in the .high Qon Bergan, Charles Vehorn,John lost their initial home meet, 97- JUmp. . . ·· . . 'Wholey, and Ken Howard will coin- 48. •. Soph Pete Farrell missed tying

lri.sh. Sailo·rs· Qualify> For Meet at Pu:r:due

the meet record of 1:53.6 iri the 880, 'yard run by one-tenth of a second, while Keith Manville, first in the 440-yard Intermediate hur­dles and second in the 120-yard high hurdles. and. Mike Coffey,

The Notre Dame sailing team in the ·university of· Cincinnati first in the two -mile, were the qualified for. -the nine-team Mid-.· Regatta Apdl 2 and 3, as the Irish remaining Irish winners. · ·. west Championships at Purdue next had the high point skippers in both · h . · ·f d · .. weekend by finishing third: five divisions, O'Con~or in A and Mik~ Iris De en . . .•. points .. o~~ of fi_rst place, m the .·Thiel in B; Then, in the GhioStaie · II ·

: Area . c Elimmati_o~s this past University Invitational the Irish . C· h· . a _e· n 9. e . ·c. up weekend. In the A d1v1sion, .Notre · ' . . . _ Dam •s A d O'C · h'gh finish.ed eighth of e.I.even schools, · · ·d

•. poin: skfpp~!. ·.. onnor was . 1

. before qualifying for the Midwest M a. y 14 .. an -75 Defens_ive Line 'cocuih John Ray gives Captain 'Jim Lynch a . The spring season has been a Championshins at Purdue. · The .second annual Irish Chal- · few poznters during Monday• s scrimmaae. . relatively suceessful one for the In preparation, Notre Dame lenge ·cup, sponsored by the Notre. . · · · · · · Irish sailors. After a mediocre competes in the WayneState(Det.:. . · gb b

, Continued from page·s . Jim Lynch has workecl w_ell at his performance in the Mardi Gras roit, Michigan) Invitationat this Dbeame Ru. by Foot ahll Cllub,'should.-· new miqdle linebacker~ spot and Regattit, Notre Dame tied for first even etter t an ast year.

of the spring. All Js not lost be- sophs DaveMartinandMike McGill · . , . , weekend. Rugby · powers representing all , hind Conjar, however,· as fresh- have picked up where they left off s s h' · .geographical sections and major man Ed ·kVuillemin showed well in last fall. At present soph John . . P-0 r· t s· . . ··o· r-t-s. aathdleCtic cdonfeirllences in thihs counStry last wee 's scrimmage and has Pergine is ,t)le other middle line- · . n ana a w compete ere at-.

·given the team some depth in the backer as last year's veteranJohn Monday, Head. urday, May 14, and Sunday, May15. offensive backfield. . Horney Is defensive:leader of the P. a.rseghian wiil a~~~ecshs ·Athrea A GOLF Saturday's games will be played.

Notre Dame's front line defense Whites. Injuries have really hit d . pril30th- Opponents: Purdue, on the rugby field behind Stepan· ranks with the best in the country, .the defensive backs. Sophs Mike stu ent body ·at 8 p.m. in Stepan ·Northwestern, Illinois,.Ohio State, Center: and·the championship game

1 · Center. The Senate-sponsore' d Indt'ana ·at West Lafayette Ind'a ill be h d th but the defensive backfield, hard Burgener; letterman Tom 0' . • 1 na. · w el 'in e Notr~ Dame hit· by injuries, is still vunerable. Leary, Dan Harshman, and Jim program ·wm include films of the May 6th and 7th:.. Northern Inter- _Stadium Sunday afternoon. · to air attack; that is, whenever· Smithberger have looked well, but spring football practice sessions collegiate Inyiiational · at Bloom-- Competfug ·besides ;the hosting the opposhig 'quarterback has were slowed some by injuries.· and a special guest speaker. ington, Indiana. ·. "' · . Irish will be ·the TorontoNormads,. enough time to ·get .the ball off; Kevin Rassas showed.promisebut Everyone is invited to "Wake Up TENNIS· ·i the Saint ·Louis ·Bombers, 'the . the Echoes I" . · · · Kevin· Hardy and Pete Duranko .he' too is injured; fresh Bob Southern .California. RF.C.:,. West .are· the tackles while Tom Rhoads Gladieux played well at safety and .. ·. LACROSSE .. May 2 MICHIGAN STATE Point, Dartmouth, .Wisconsin, and·

·and Allen Sack man the ends while. · flankerback, but is-out with a dis-. April '30- at Kenyon May 4 kAiAMAZuU Virginia. LaSt year'Notre Dame· Al Pag~ Is still sidelined. Captain Iocated.tliumb. . · 1 • May 8 - at Chif!ago May 7 · at MARQUETTE .edged out the .TorontoNomads for

R .. 5. h. . - I . . . . . . - _the . championship , on._ Jamie:

. _-Ow. er_· 5 . . .. 0._·. W_ mpr_.Ove·· ... m. en.t~ April2r._s~~~~~TATE .· .. ~~~~e~~~e7ti{i~h~c~i;i0'-Th~~: . . April 30 -KENT STATE' . . . tWo, plus Saint'Louis and Southern

,. ' . Improvement is the'word witn . . I -defending Mid-West Sprint and May 2 -NORTHWESTERN California,· loom as the top con-' the Notre Dame rowing team, as the Eastern Small College champions. Howard last weekend. ; In fact, the May 3 -DETROIT .' 'tenders to separate-the Irish from

. · Irish, though losing all four meets , . The main reason fo~ the losing Irish shell arrived at the end of . May 5 - at Detroit . : · .. · their Challenge Cup; . · .. , . · . so far this spring, are looking record is lack. of practice and ex-: March and the team could get into ... ··. . May _6.- at Bowling Green . , Tickets will be sold by the mem-

::_ __ beiter,-as.:evidenced in the match· ~~~-!_~-~=~r.clln_a. ~~.~~t~~~~ ~: atgi~~. __ thir:ie1.t:i.wa1atmeereotn.-~y-:six_d~.YS,bef~re.JJ:l~.-:~··:-May._}.~·-.~::~~~!~g_(Jr~~---:..._;.' ,_ber~ofct.lie.NotreD, anieRugbY.Cl_l!-1:>_.;;., -. -; 1 against Howard University on the · · •

~o~~rii~~~Ji,~ 1~t~~~~~az;veral- ------ What you ·.notice is-~ .. ~ ·

·'

' . . ,. regulars, the Irish started· off fast · - · ·· ·

· · fu~us~~~em:t;~~~t~u~~!~ :~:~~~ · ···. / . ' . V. · -I ··~-~-·_· .-' . ,· •

,,

· thing happened" in the Irish scull. . · ' , - · · Howard stormed· ahead ·at · this .

, point, later held off a furious Notre· Dame comeback, and then surged . to the finish eight seconds ahead of. .the Irish. , . · · · . ,.

, On April 9, Notre Dame opened · its season with its first Invitational Regatta mi ·its new Mishawaka course, hailed by the NEW :YORK TIMES· as a "Jour-lane straight­away •• expected to be the major rowing center· in the midwest." The Irish fiiJ.ished tied withMichi­gan State for third, three lengths behind first place Fp~dham.'

Improvement was}.thetrend in the next two races. Against St.John~s. -of New York, Notre Dame finished two lengths behfild, ·and then _lost : ~}' a length to ~ariewi ~allege, ·

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Page 8: lite 1Jaice •···. , - University of Notre Dame · PDF file · 2015-06-24Thanking his class treasures are Meade, '67 ... state of exact and concentrated hour or so of music is

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·Friday, April 29,- 1966

~-RUggers--· .. Compete .. This Weekend

·The Nc>tre Dame RugbyCiubwill- The previous weekend, Notre be at full strength. this weekend for. Dame finished second in the Com.; the first time since before Easter, -· monwealth Cup Tourriamerit at· when it travels-to Chicago to com- Charlottesville. Vindnia. losing pete in the sixteen team Chicago. !Q. Brown in the finals, 17-3, after Invitational Tournament this week- beating Princeton in the first end. In this two-day test of . rotindl 1p-5_. endurance, the Irish face the Uni- The .Princeton game was an ex­versity of. Chicago Saturday morn- ceptionally rough one, weakening ing, Notre Dame is shooting for a : the Irish in the next day•s game,· crack at Indiana, which upset the · · as almost-the entire backfield was

- Irish April 19 •. But the only way-' injured. Notre Dame scored first for this to happen is for both .Wberi John Reding blocked a Tiger

.. teams to reach Sunday afternoon•s ·.-punt and Mike Conroy carted. the· finals,. as both are in· opposite··. ball in 10 yards for the try. Later bracke!s.. · . · · · Conroy scored on a 70 yard try.

~:- ·' . ~Last weekend. at Wisconsin, the Serum Jim Purcell almost had ;; . .-· .. Insh evened the1r springrecordat two more tries .except for .a bit. ~ •, . 3-:3 (7-3 for. the whole year) by of erratic passing. In the final 1 , • • .· tripping the Badgers, 5-3. Jack Brown jumped off to a 6-0 leaO. \c.; · . Larry c·onjar (32) bursts through a gaping hole in the .white -line,· opened lJy _rom R_egner (76) St~tz sc~red all ~e points for .the ·After Mike Conroy.scored a try, :. · · :and George Geoddeke (number ·partially obscured). · inJury-.nddled I~lSh by converting : injuries . ·took their toll· as the • ,. _ - - - ... _ . . .. , · ·· after he picked up an. errant pass . Bruins scored late to win the cup •.

L> l ___ n_:_ .. j·u_·._ri_es _PlagUe F_ .. ighting· : l~ish · ND'o'Tennhf Team· ! .. _·- .. - · -- · - · -- · " '- Wilts ~·sth· In Ro·w v·:· .. · __ ~_c··_.·o._.le __ y·~· ·o. ~b··.·_r····len-·. T_ a··k,._e· _s· Ov.e''r·~· .··_a.'t·_·-: o·a Coach1'omFallon•sNotreDame .. Boile~makers. were"abie to win, ' · -~ ·tennis team continued its winning· only one set while losing 18. In t. : . ways Tuesday,_

9. r0outi~g .Piurdufef:~ fact, . againsdt the top five Irish

•· · · racqueteers · ~ .or ts i u• netters, Pur ue could win only ten ;-.: . - Viet Nam isn•t the only place after he 'recovers from a pullea. ·Co~jar however has been equally' straight victory of the"'-seasori. games while losing sixty •. Toni t .. , ·.th hfn"h I - li muscle.' One of the. bl'""est sur- dynami'c. ·and is in'-midseason form.· Wednesday~s, meet with Ball State Murphy and Pedro_Rosello (both . ( · . Wl a ~·persona casua ty rate. """" · (8.;.1), a small 'collecre p. ower, was . 5-0 in ·singles) and Bill Brown· •.. f; : . ._ .. In the. past. two weeks General Par- · p·rises of the spring· has been Conjar. scored twice Monday, once· . · , "' I . segh.J.an•s !!!i!ID' ~is~ £Iew "e"tf!n . the' . fine pass catching ab1Uty an a thirty yard sca~per. At the "cancelled. Yesi:erdaytheirishtook Gary' Rieser, and Vincent Chinn .. t · . . lcinger,.lricluding some . of .the :shown by frosh Jim Seymour and other halfback slot; sophBob Blier .. on ·a··strong Wisconsin team (8-4)· · (a11 4- 1)won easily in the singles, · I :. . · · · ... most-·promising.:.· newcomers~· Ih Curt H_eneghan. Though h_emissed .- had a good scririunage as running . on the Dalton ·(llt) indoor, courts. ~s did Ken Capps, fill1ng inJorin- · .. · t; ' ;_. -~'-betweeri trips to~ the" hospital and Monday•s scrimmage because of a ·. was. the Irish strong poJntMonday. Next week the Irish face Michigan ·. JUred Jasjit Singh, who is rec.ov- :. • . . . . . . . . . hi int S has be a Th d n d i , . State on ·Monday and Kalamazoo on ering from. a. pulled abdomma.l . L:·· -.: .. ·.,-· ·' .. ·the. infirmary, however, ·Ara•s P po , er, eymour en . e squa su ere a serous loss ·wednesday· be'"ore leavin·" '"or Mil-. muscle. In dou~les competition, !:";.. .. : >: · ; troops have gone through compre-· -!~eque~t. _- target. on - successful last week when it was announced '' ., '' B d R1 i d th i ~- hensive manuevers . climaxed by . bomb · attempts: Henegan should . that number·: two·:· fullback Paul _.- waukee· to challenge Marquette next : rown an . es~r ·. mprove e r . . I· · · .. - ' 1 1 t f ti 1 the· M h d .. d · kn · -Saturday. ·, . · · season record . to 4-1, while · . t · ~ Mongay•s · · rain~_delayed _ ·scrf;m-. -a so· see a o o ac on n· . ;. . ay a un ergone ee sur11;ery; · . . . . . . . . Rosello-Capps and Murphy-Frank .... l , --- ._ ~~e:.whic~·w~ Ina:rked by~nal- fa~l. although Monda!.:was not one sidel_i~n.g hi~ fo:· the r~~ain~er · ~ To give an -lnd~~atio_n .of. the. Honerkamp, added tWo more ·vic·- __ .. <. • :ties 1nd m1ssed assignments that of his better _days.•.1 Mike'KJ111Z ·· . Continued'on page 7 :; mismatch against. Purdue, the.· tories . . . . ·. . · · ·.· ~ ::.-· . a tliree-day layoff produces. ··- . (6'-5 ... 2~5) looked good. at tight - · · .. · · · -. · · .- . - . ·- . · . , . . ' . . .

!L'~<-o:_:> ~· s~~!~~epo~:t~: ~rtt l-J~~-g:= :9~0n·:eth~er:f~~u~u!~c~~grp~~-- ~Home: A-ction For.N v· · 9· "This~ We·ekend· · .· (. c; · ;> -·.;: .iniiirovement _ of' aerial attacke.rs· . · · e o .ensive line; junior PauL · · · · · · · . · · · · . · . ' , . - · · i': .. : .. ·· · . • Tom Schoen, Terry Hanrauy, and c Seller and- soph Rudy Konieczny . · . Coach' J.ik~ Kifue•s Notre Dam~· ·Sophomores Dave · Cl~~r (1-o; · si<rp Bl~the ~are ilie RBI; leaders~ · .... · . Coley:o•Brien and the 'devastating- are. progressing well at tackle. Jr. baseball. nine ·commences ·~four 2.09 EBA) and Geor~e Restovich · with seven each •.. In· fact, tliree r .. _, ·· ,running 'of the ground forces Larry Tom· Regner Sa""f· ~}is first ac!ion game home stand today and torilor-:- · (0-1, 3,46 E~ :in 13 innings) are of the top five. hurler hitters are

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;, .. ·: ·:: . : .·· : .Conjar, Nick"·Eddy,: and, Rocky of the_spring at guard and looks: .row againSt Kent State University,; slated to··s~e their initial action hurlers, with.; Ray Zolnowski bat- . t._-;·-: . - : ;·. Blier • .'.In. fact,- Cartier. has'not • a,s. tough_ as ever. Juniors Dick . with games -again.Si: .Northwestern . of the northern season as starters, . ting ,500 (3 for .6), followed by . . i·· . ' · ~ .··. seen· stich goingi-on in the spring . Sw.atland . and Joe. Marsico have_ · Monday and' Detroit ·Tuesday. the.· while • Bob Bentley (0-3)"will be, Gerry Goetz (.364,· 4 for 11) arid ; ·. ~;~· ~:,- since- a·:guy·named· Huar'te·maae·a·. been. working at guard, aiongwith ·.Irfsh•s last horiie appearance until ready for.e11rly next week. • · ,. Cuggino (.273, 3-11); · ~ ·-. -·~-_···.:··· :.:· ~~:::· L: -· · . - . '~- btlef injury-shortenedappeararice . promising Bill Dairiton, ·_Georg~ . May 13. ' · ·· · -For :the Irish to _improve their . This lack. of punch was evident ·.' -'(. · · · · · · two.years ago •. _Thespliteridoffen- Goeddeke, who missed Tuesday•s · . . . . .4-6.. record, . there must be a ;. Monday·in Wisconsin as the Irish :··> .. · · · se has rettirnedruidi:alented fresh- drill-after being shaken up Mon- 'With yesterday•s rainoutagainsi . marked rise in the team!s .227. ~-could· manage· 5 'singles cas the L~ · ·man ~and sophomores are the· spe.-: ~ d~y! ~ ~ing of-the hill at center. Michigan, staff ace T~m Cuggino ~ batting average.-· Tom Tencza and·. --Ba.dgeiS ~:Won. _ 4-0, In fact, pit~·· ¥.:"(_~0> .. cblists ·making both ends go Ac:..- -In -the backfield, c. Nick Eddy, ·who (3-0,.1,33 ERA in 271nnings) should, Dick Sauget are the only regulars·. · cher Bob Bentley, helped by three". ~; . ,·. :· .:· : '· tuating ,'the ·phenomena have ~been .. scored in . .a' 16-y,arq. run Monday, · start today•s · game' against Kent · over •. ~oo,: batting .• 309. an_d .3o4, ·1 double ·-plays, has seen only' two. f'",_,· : . :·returnee ·Tom Schoen and freshman :. is running every bit-like ·the All-. State . and . may respectively. MarkGonr!!J.gis next -Irish. runne·rs s~ore during "!tis : l . , ·- · .- Terry -Hanratty for. thef3lues with _• Americ_a he: is- .. called. · ~arry. against· Detroit. ~~t~~.2SO, 'w1il!e· _Pat _Topolski· and·;~_ three losses •. f · -Jrosh_ Coley- O'Brien. (Whites) a · · E . . step 'ahead. As: a preview of what.-" ·. · · · · <·may come~ Schoen, the top ball.·. ·-~; :. . -handler, took; a turn at defensive ... L. · ·· J .. ,safety .on. Tuesd:iy and looked im--_

.. pressive..-·' Mike Franger; another -·' freshman_ still awaits a solid try ·

.· ·~/ - • f;i. P.M. :oinrier ~t· YMcA Hotel ; . _--:Visit Old Town.:'.>· ( • . •. -_; .. Rod'm at Y Hotel -· .:· ·

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