Copley House Council Good Conduct Brings Convenes First ...

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", t' ... I' 1 \ " Vol. XLIII, No. 18 GEORGETOWN UNIVERSITY, WASHINGTON, D. C. Thursday, March 8, 1962 Copley House Council Convenes First Meeting Top Honor Society May Open Chapter Here In Two Years Good Conduct Brings Abolition Of Checks The recently activated Copley House Council met for by Joe Fallon the first time on March 5. This first meeting served to ex- Georgetown has been se- plain the provisions of the new Copley constitution which lected for intensive inspection was ratified at a meeting with Fr. William Kelly, S.J., Master by the united chapters of Phi of Copley, and the lay prefects, on Tuesday, February 27, Beta Kappa. This prestigious by a unanimous vote. Changes made in the constitution national h 0 nor soc i e t y , DAVID .T. HARTIGAN Glee Club Sings RomeoSymphony With Girls' Choir by Nye & Overbeck An ambition which the Glee Club has cherished for many years will be realized next week. On Tues· day and Wednesday nights the club will appear on the regular SUbscription series of the National Symphony concerts in Constitution Hall at 8:30 in the Washington premier of Hector Berlioz' dra- matic symphony-Romeo et Juli· ette. This mammoth work (an hour and a half in length) will also en- list the forces of the girls' chorus from Mary Washington College, three vocal soloists, anll the Na- tional Symphony under the direc- tion of Dr. Howard Mitchell. The Glee Club has been rehears- ing the work since mid-October by themselves. In the past two weeks they have rehearsed twice with the Mary Washington chorus, most recently last Saturday in Consti- tution Hall with Dr. Mitchell, with gratifying results. Rehearsals of the combined chorus and orchestra, chorus and soloists, orchestra and soloists, and finally everybody to- gether will all take place in the next few days, so that by Tuesday night everything will be in perfect emphasized that the council is founded in 1776, admits a few a forum for initiating aca- new chapters every third year. And demic and social events in from among many applicants it has Copley. chosen ten schools for detailed con- Three Prefects The council contains three non-voting prefect members, who are Michael McCann, Paul Flask. and David Roxe. Joseph Bianco will act as the representa- tive of the Gopley SPO and Father Kelly. The election of Jim Mietus as secretary by the student repre- sentatives completes the council. The purpose of the council is to develop a positive spirit throughout Copley Hall. Dave Hartigan, pres- ident of the council, states: "The Copley house council is set up to pursue a positive course of action arrived at by improving the atmos- phere of dormitory living." Father Kelly, the person responsible for the council's establishment, adds that the council is not primarily a legislative or ex e cut i v e body. Rather it is a forum where students from each corridor come together. Dormitory problems will be dis- cussed, but academic and cultural events can also be planned. Up To The Students Joseph Bianco. the manager of the Copley Student Personnel Of- fice, stressed that it is up to the entire building to make the council a success through co-operation and total time put into events. He pointed out that three lay prefect members are non-voting members, since it is up to the students to make the council function effi- ciently. The council began its official ac- tivities at its initial meeting last Monday. A committee was estab- lished to investigate the possibility of redecorating Copley Recreation Room. A proposal was made that the order prohibiting the use of the north, doors in Copley be repealed and Father Kelly promised to take this into consideration. sideration in the next three years. Increasing Stature It is a measure of Georgetown's increasing stature as one of the country's top universities that it has been selected for this evalua- tion. Previous applications had not resulted in Georgetown's selection. However, as Dr. Franklin Williams, Chairman of the English Depart- ment and of the University's Phi Beta Kappa faculty committee stated in a letter requesting a chapter here, "It is our conviction that since our application in 1958, the College's claims have been sub- stantially strengthened by improve- ments in curriculum . . . adminis- tration, and intellectual interest. Notable is the increase in fellow- ships won by our graduating sen- iors." DOES THAT MEAN THAT? . _ . questions, and some answers, at last Thursday's senior meeting. "As a practical answer to questions, the prefects will not be checking you at midnight," Rev. Arthur Gordon, S.J., Director of Student Personnel, told members of the senior class at a meeting in Gaston Hall last Thursday. The elimination of checks, he said, came as a result of the sen- iors' mature conduct during the first half of the academic Few Catholic Members At present there are only three 5 d T H Catholic colleges in the country tu ents 0 ea r which have Phi Beta Kappa chap- Peace Co'rps Talk ters. They are Fordham, St. Catherine'S in Minnesota, and Cath- On I mport Of Role olic University. The evaluation will be made by by Ken Atchity two members of the Phi Beta In recognition of George- Kappa committee on qualifications town's new-found place in the who will visit the Campus some- time next year. However, prior Peace Cor p s, Mr. Richard to that the University must sub-' G r a ham, a representative mit a general report covering such from P.C. Headquarters, will areas as faculty Phi Beta Kappa address the student body on key holders (there are fifty eight), three occasions today: at the faculty-student ratio, mean col- Dean's Lecture, Gaston Hall, 11:15; lege board scores, percentage of at the Hall of Nations, 4:15; and, seniors going on to graduate at the Nursing School, 7:30. schools, requirements for a degree, Mr. Graham's career has made and the like. him singularly well-chosen as a The next date on which new publicity agent for the COl·PS. A graduate of Cornell University, and chapters wiII be admitted is some- former vice chairman of the Re- time in 1964. The final decision, publican Party in a Wisconsin therefore, and its announcement county, he also served the military are still a long way off. in Iran as an officer in the missile year. "This class as a group is truly remarkable," said Fa- ther Gordon. He credited the seniors with being a good in- fluence on underclassmen throughout the College. "I know that you were not asking for com- plete license," the disciplinarian - said. "I feel you were asking to be given a responsibility you know you can handle." The meeting was opened by Rev. Joseph A. Selliner, S.J., Dean of the College, with a reading of the now-famous article of James Res- ton from the New York Times of February 25. Referring to John Glenn, Reston wrote, "This was no insensitive robot who landed here from the heavens yesterday morn- ing, but a warm and thoughtful human being: natural, orderly, con- siderate and, at times, quietly amusing and even eloquent." --------------------------------- system. To devote his full atten- "My hope," said Father Sell- inger, "is that this is the way you feel about John Glenn and this is the kind of person you want to imitate-both now and, especially, after June." tion to his interest in the Peace Corps, Mr. Graham has left a grow- ing electronics company in Mil- waukee, of which he was a co- founder. r. form for the performance. Language Problems In conjunction wit h Sargent Shriver, Father George Dunne, S.J., announced this week Georgetown's coming role in training volunteers for the Corps. Rev. John F. Devine, S.J., Master of New South, also addressed the seniors at the meeting, adding his own praise of the class to Father Gordon's. He went on to discuss the technicalities of the new sys- tem. "It is not in any way taking away the authority of the lay pre- fects," Father Devine said. The prefects should be told whenever a student knows he will be out after midnight. "We still expect the Georgetown senior to be in at 12," he concluded. "Weare not going to check on it, but we ex- pect it." All this work has been necessi- tated by the problems of the com- position, which are enough to pre- vent most amateur groups from even attempting it. Perhaps the most outstanding problem of this performance is that the work is to be sung in French, and while it is true that many students have had at least two years of pronouncing j'aime, tu aimes, it is an entirely different matter when the language is sung. French has 'many sounds which are never pronounced in speaking, which are in singing. There is also of course the prob- lem of the score itself, which at . (Continued on page 9) ROMEOS AND JULIETTES under the direction of Howard Mitchell in Constitution Hall, in preparation for next week's sym- phony concert . A consortium of the seven area universities-Georgetown, . Catholic U., George Washington, American U., Johns Hopkins, University of Maryland, and Howard-has been organized for the purpose of pool- ing the resources of the individual campuses in a summer training program. The consortium is directed by a policy board, made up of a repre- sentative from each of the member schools. The board chairman is Dean Griffin, of American U. (where offices are located). Father Dunne represents Georgetown on the board. (Continued on page 9) In addition, Father Devine men- tioned that the "G-Book" regula- tions are still in effect, which means that rule 1.A., "Being absent over- night without the permission of the Student Personnel Director," will be enforced. In order to set a criterion for judgment of "over- (Continued on page 4)

Transcript of Copley House Council Good Conduct Brings Convenes First ...

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Vol. XLIII, No. 18 GEORGETOWN UNIVERSITY, WASHINGTON, D. C. Thursday, March 8, 1962

Copley House Council Convenes First Meeting

Top Honor Society May Open Chapter Here In Two Years

Good Conduct Brings Abolition Of Checks

The recently activated Copley House Council met for by Joe Fallon the first time on March 5. This first meeting served to ex- Georgetown has been se-plain the provisions of the new Copley constitution which lected for intensive inspection was ratified at a meeting with Fr. William Kelly, S.J., Master by the united chapters of Phi of Copley, and the lay prefects, on Tuesday, February 27, Beta Kappa. This prestigious by a unanimous vote. Changes made in the constitution national h 0 nor soc i e t y ,

DAVID .T. HARTIGAN

Glee Club Sings RomeoSymphony With Girls' Choir

by Nye & Overbeck An ambition which the Glee Club

has cherished for many years will be realized next week. On Tues· day and Wednesday nights the club will appear on the regular SUbscription series of the National Symphony concerts in Constitution Hall at 8:30 in the Washington premier of Hector Berlioz' dra­matic symphony-Romeo et Juli· ette. This mammoth work (an hour and a half in length) will also en­list the forces of the girls' chorus from Mary Washington College, three vocal soloists, anll the Na­tional Symphony under the direc­tion of Dr. Howard Mitchell.

The Glee Club has been rehears­ing the work since mid-October by themselves. In the past two weeks they have rehearsed twice with the Mary Washington chorus, most recently last Saturday in Consti­tution Hall with Dr. Mitchell, with gratifying results. Rehearsals of the combined chorus and orchestra, chorus and soloists, orchestra and soloists, and finally everybody to­gether will all take place in the next few days, so that by Tuesday night everything will be in perfect

emphasized that the council is founded in 1776, admits a few a forum for initiating aca- new chapters every third year. And demic and social events in from among many applicants it has Copley. chosen ten schools for detailed con-

Three Prefects

The council contains three non-voting prefect members, who are Michael McCann, Paul Flask. and David Roxe. Joseph Bianco will act as the representa­tive of the Gopley SPO and Father Kelly. The election of Jim Mietus as secretary by the student repre­sentatives completes the council.

The purpose of the council is to develop a positive spirit throughout Copley Hall. Dave Hartigan, pres­ident of the council, states: "The Copley house council is set up to pursue a positive course of action arrived at by improving the atmos­phere of dormitory living." Father Kelly, the person responsible for the council's establishment, adds that the council is not primarily a legislative or ex e cut i v e body. Rather it is a forum where students from each corridor come together. Dormitory problems will be dis­cussed, but academic and cultural events can also be planned.

Up To The Students Joseph Bianco. the manager of

the Copley Student Personnel Of­fice, stressed that it is up to the entire building to make the council a success through co-operation and total time put into events. He pointed out that three lay prefect members are non-voting members, since it is up to the students to make the council function effi­ciently.

The council began its official ac­tivities at its initial meeting last Monday. A committee was estab­lished to investigate the possibility of redecorating Copley Recreation Room. A proposal was made that the order prohibiting the use of the north, doors in Copley be repealed and Father Kelly promised to take this into consideration.

sideration in the next three years.

Increasing Stature It is a measure of Georgetown's

increasing stature as one of the country's top universities that it has been selected for this evalua­tion. Previous applications had not resulted in Georgetown's selection. However, as Dr. Franklin Williams, Chairman of the English Depart­ment and of the University's Phi Beta Kappa faculty committee stated in a letter requesting a chapter here, "It is our conviction that since our application in 1958, the College's claims have been sub­stantially strengthened by improve­ments in curriculum . . . adminis­tration, and intellectual interest. Notable is the increase in fellow­ships won by our graduating sen­iors."

DOES THAT MEAN THAT? . _ . questions, and some answers, at last Thursday's senior meeting.

"As a practical answer to your~ questions, the prefects will not be checking you at midnight," Rev. Arthur Gordon, S.J., Director of Student Personnel, told members of the senior class at a meeting in Gaston Hall last Thursday. The elimination of checks, he said, came as a result of the sen­iors' mature conduct during the first half of the academic

Few Catholic Members

At present there are only three 5 d T H Catholic colleges in the country tu ents 0 ea r which have Phi Beta Kappa chap- Peace Co'rps Talk ters. They are Fordham, St.

Catherine'S in Minnesota, and Cath- On I mport Of Role olic University.

The evaluation will be made by by Ken Atchity two members of the Phi Beta In recognition of George-Kappa committee on qualifications town's new-found place in the who will visit the Campus some-time next year. However, prior Peace Cor p s, Mr. Richard to that the University must sub-' G r a ham, a representative mit a general report covering such from P.C. Headquarters, will areas as faculty Phi Beta Kappa address the student body on key holders (there are fifty eight), three occasions today: at the faculty-student ratio, mean col- Dean's Lecture, Gaston Hall, 11:15; lege board scores, percentage of at the Hall of Nations, 4:15; and, seniors going on to graduate at the Nursing School, 7:30. schools, requirements for a degree, Mr. Graham's career has made and the like. him singularly well-chosen as a

The next date on which new publicity agent for the COl·PS. A graduate of Cornell University, and

chapters wiII be admitted is some- former vice chairman of the Re­time in 1964. The final decision, publican Party in a Wisconsin therefore, and its announcement county, he also served the military are still a long way off. in Iran as an officer in the missile

year. "This class as a group is

truly remarkable," said Fa­ther Gordon. He credited the seniors with being a good in­fluence on underclassmen throughout the College. "I know that you were not asking for com­plete license," the disciplinarian -said. "I feel you were asking to be given a responsibility you know you can handle."

The meeting was opened by Rev. Joseph A. Selliner, S.J., Dean of the College, with a reading of the now-famous article of James Res­ton from the New York Times of February 25. Referring to John Glenn, Reston wrote, "This was no insensitive robot who landed here from the heavens yesterday morn­ing, but a warm and thoughtful human being: natural, orderly, con­siderate and, at times, quietly amusing and even eloquent."

--------------------------------- system. To devote his full atten­

"My hope," said Father Sell­inger, "is that this is the way you feel about John Glenn and this is the kind of person you want to imitate-both now and, especially, after June."

tion to his interest in the Peace Corps, Mr. Graham has left a grow­ing electronics company in Mil­waukee, of which he was a co­founder.

r. form for the performance.

Language Problems

In conjunction wit h Sargent Shriver, Father George Dunne, S.J., announced this week Georgetown's coming role in training volunteers for the Corps.

Rev. John F. Devine, S.J., Master of New South, also addressed the seniors at the meeting, adding his own praise of the class to Father Gordon's. He went on to discuss the technicalities of the new sys­tem. "It is not in any way taking away the authority of the lay pre­fects," Father Devine said. The prefects should be told whenever a student knows he will be out after midnight. "We still expect the Georgetown senior to be in at 12," he concluded. "Weare not going to check on it, but we ex­pect it."

All this work has been necessi­tated by the problems of the com­position, which are enough to pre­vent most amateur groups from even attempting it. Perhaps the most outstanding problem of this performance is that the work is to be sung in French, and while it is true that many students have had at least two years of pronouncing j'aime, tu aimes, it is an entirely different matter when the language is sung. French has 'many sounds which are never pronounced in speaking, which are in singing.

There is also of course the prob­lem of the score itself, which at

. (Continued on page 9)

ROMEOS AND JULIETTES under the direction of Howard Mitchell in Constitution Hall, in preparation for next week's sym­phony concert .

A consortium of the seven area universities-Georgetown, . Catholic U., George Washington, American U., Johns Hopkins, University of Maryland, and Howard-has been organized for the purpose of pool­ing the resources of the individual campuses in a summer training program.

The consortium is directed by a policy board, made up of a repre­sentative from each of the member schools. The board chairman is Dean Griffin, of American U. (where offices are located). Father Dunne represents Georgetown on the board.

(Continued on page 9)

In addition, Father Devine men­tioned that the "G-Book" regula­tions are still in effect, which means that rule 1.A., "Being absent over­night without the permission of the Student Personnel Director," will be enforced. In order to set a criterion for judgment of "over-

(Continued on page 4)

Page Two

Editorials

CongratulatiQns The past week at Georgetown has seen the compilation

of two records which can only reflect credit on the school. One, of course, is the basketball team's. best record in a decade. We would simply add our congratulations to those that have already come the team's way and are reflected in today's sports pages.

But the men who compiled the other record, in an under­taking fully as demanding as athletic competition, have re­ceived little of the credit that is rightfully theirs. These are the Philodemic debaters, especially the four-man team that put in such an outstanding performance in last weekend's Cherry Blossom Tournament. This is the kind of work we have come to expect of the Philodemic, and the demonstrated depth of their squad augurs well for their success. in the national finals and again in next ye:;tr's competition. We wish them well.

Editorials Lately there has been some wondering over the question

of where editorials come from. The HOYA from time to time has car~ied a short statement on that question. It has been a good while since the last such statement, and this seems an opportune time for one.

Unless expressly indicated otherwise, all editorials are written by the Editor-in-Chief, who takes full personal re­sponsibility for whatever is said in them. Other members of the Editorial Board ought not to be held responsible for any statements that get too far off the ground or statements that never manage to get off the ground at all; nor for frac­tured syntax and other sundry outrages on the English language.

That is not to say that these editorials are one man's private viewpoint; by and large, they are written only after hearing the views of a number of responsible individuals. As the only regular written expression of student opinion, we consider that we have a serious obligation in writing them. Student opinion, if it is to mean anything, must be both upright and forthright. Whenever we fail in either of those respects, we are ready to hear of it. The letters column is always open. Readers ought to avail themselves of it more freely. There are few things so worthy of respect as honest opinion honestly expressed. Let us hear from you. This is your paper.

&11~ Editor-ill-Chic! ____________________________________________________________________ JOSEPH E_ CROFT Associate Editor ______________________________________________________________ R_ GREGORY SACHS Ma/1aging Editor ______________________________________________________ ---- __ JOHN B_ OVERBECK Busim!ss Manager ________________________________ .. ____________________________ RICHARD BARONE News Editor ________________________________________________________________________________ PETER STARR Sports Editor ________________________________________________________________ ST AN SAMORAJCZYK Featttre Editor ______________________________________________________________________ THOMAS SCHEYE Copy Editor ______________________________________________________________ ROBER T A. FREDERICK Make-ttp Editor ______________________________________________________________________ JAMES MELBERT Rewrite Editor _______________ . _____ . ____ . ________ ._. ____ .... ____ .. ___ . ____ .. _. ________ BILL HODGMAN Photography Editors __________________________________ TOM ROPER, HANK ZAMENSKI Advertising Manager __________________________________________________________ THOMAS DUNGAN Circulation Ma/1ager __________________________________________________________ MICHAEL LERNER Head/i/1e Editor ________________________________________________________________ c ___________ BILL BlEGEN Executive Secretary ______________________________________________________ EDWARD RAFFETTO Moderator __________________________________________________________________ FR_ JOHN JACKL.IN, S.J.

News Staff: Assistants to the News Editor: Joe Frederick, Frank Gun/1ip James Adler, Ken Atchity, Mark Aultman, Jim Birdsall, Frank Brocato,

Dan Brocki, Brian Cassidy, Robert Desmond, Dan Duff, Ed Fallon, Joe Fallon, Randy Huston, John Kelley, Paul Kennerson, Mike Lerner, Jim Masterson, Dan Moriarty, Dan O'Leary, Mark Pisano, Dale Silva, Tom Simonet, Bill Singer, Pete Smith, George Taber.

Sports Staff: Perry Butler, Joe Derrico, John Feldmann, Larry Hauser, Michael Maher,

Mark Pisano, Rory Quirk, Matt Sekella, Dan Slattery, Frank Stanton, Tony Thomas, John Vinter, Dick Williams.

Feature Staff: Assistaltt to the Feature Editor: John J. Glavht Michael English, Tag Gallagher, Peter Handal, John Hayes, Nick Kilmer,

Frank Nestor, Joseph Pater, Phil Quinn, James Robinson, James E. Scanlon, Lambert Spronck, Anthony Thomas. Copy Staff:

William C. Sullivan.

Photography Staff: Anthony Fernandes, Karl Kamper, Steve Montanus, Joseph Ricciardi.

Headline Staff: Jim Robertson.

Circulation Staff: J. David Adler, Jerry Dempsey, Joe Linnemann, Bruce Pfeffer, James

Salvin, Alex Talbot_

Rewrite Staff: Thomas A_ Gallagher, John Glavin_

Vol. XLIII, No. 18 Thursday, March 8, 1962

"First class Postage paid at Washington, D. C." Published by the students of Georgetown College every Thursday during

·the college year except for vacation and examination periods. Subscription rate, $6.50 per year. .

'rHE HOYA

1_. Round-up] Dr. Louis Dupre, of the Philos­

ophy Department, will give a re­peat lecture on "Marx's View on Man: Its Challenge to Us" in Cop­ley Lounge Tuesday, March 13 at 7:30 p.m. The affair is being given by the arts and sciences committee of the junior class.

The publicity director of WGTB informs us that 8 :00 p.m. is "Spot­light Time" FM, and listeners will be entertained by broadcasts deal­ing with miscellaneous topics, all of which, however, involve George­town students and faculty. This is, apparently, something of an experi­ment on their part, and is part of a policy of complete cove·rage of Campus and world goings-on.

Anyone interested in applying for the Philippine Foreign Service may contact this office for particulars. (The strangest things come in the mails these days.)

Letters- We-Should -Have- Writ­ten-To-The-Editor Dept. It cer­tainly was a fine time to spread that stuff on Copley lawn and on the sidewalk in front of Healy. The girls from Mary Washington and the 400 debaters must have been impressed by our rural odor. It certainly was a fine time.

Letters To The Editor

Our Money: Where? To The Editor:

The recent letter sent to the parents of all undergraduates by Fr. Edward Bunn, S.J., prompts me to make a few observations.

Father Bunn notes that, while the cost of living has increased significantly over the past ten years, Georgetown's charge for room and board has remained at $1000 per year. He then states that a three year quarter million dollar operating deficit leaves the Uni­versity with no alternative but to raise the cost of room and board.

Undoubtedly this matter has been thought upon and deliberated with due accord for its serious financial implications, both with re­spect to the University, which is undergoing a critical development stage in which every penny counts, and with respect to the parents and students who must eventually absorb the deficit. The increase is probably unavoidable.

And yet it would be interesting to know where $1100 a year, $4400 for the time spent at Georgetown, goes. A breakdown of total ex­penses would reassure me that the increase is inevitable. For example, how much money is spent in pro­viding daily maid service? Perhaps the Gentleman of Georgetown would not be too averse to the idea of making his own bed three more days a week, and let the maids change linen one day, and mop that day and one other, especially if it might give him $100 per year to spend that he will not otherwise . have.

Do funds for maintenance of the grounds come from the operating budget? It seems to me that ef­ficiency of operation might reduce the multitudinous army of leaf rakers and grass mowers and fer­tilizer spreaders and sidewalk sweepers without in any way de­tracting from the beauty of our campus. Another facet of Uni­versity life that never ceases to amaze me is our well-staffed gen­darmarie. Do operating funds for it come from our room and board? And, anyway, do they really need such a large corps?

It would also be interesting to learn the -University's intent in requiring all boarders to dine on-

(Continued on page 5)

Thursday, March 8, 1962

i\ifn.· nub 1£rttrfn , by Don Colleton

What makes a university outstanding? Or better, what keeps a good university· from _ becoming outstanding? Educational facilities are not· expanding rapidly enough to accommodate the swollen lists of applicants, and as a result of highly selective admittance programs, our classrooms generally are occupied by talented students. If each of a score of universities had an equally gifted enrollment, it would seem that the university with the most responsible instructors and the wisest approach to the dissemination of knowledge would be recognized as outstanding.

It is knowledge that men seek, and men of the university seek it through the channels of ordered study. The word "men" is intended in its fullest sense. The intellectual approach of scholarly men acknowl­edges personal inadequacies and recognizes the necessity to strive con­stantly and earnestly· for understanding. The able educator assumes that the embryo of this disposition exists in his students.

There is today a certain psychology of instruction which is char­acteristic of those schools which never distinguish themselves, a psy· chology markedly absent in the schools which form the vanguard of higher education. Basically, this psychology will not admit that the college student is a man well on his way to intellectual maturity. Proceeding from this premise, it greatly discounts, to the serious detriment of the majority, the student's motivations for stUdying. Con­sequently, the policy of instruction settled upon only guarantees that assigned material has been "read" but not that it has been understood.

When a student determines to accomplish something well, he de­votes all his powers towards its achievement; but if there is a com­promise in this devotion, the end result is not fully realized. For ex· ample, he can read either for an understanding of ideas, in which case he is compelled to think deeply, or he can read for isolated facts, ex­ercising only memory and power of recall. In the first case, he will later retain the broad concept of the work that is read. In the second case, when memory fades, the unrecalled fact is as useless as the effort originally expended to memorize it. It is granted that a certain degree of correlated factual knowledge is basic to the comprehension of ideas, but only a certain degree.

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.. The forward-looking colleges and universities have long since # 1

dropped methods of teaching and testing that are geared to "catch" ..... the student who is seeking the easiest way to a passing grade. The fine school sets its own standard and holds to it knowing that the stu­dent who cannot contend successfully with their program, either be­cause of its academic rigors or because of a personal adolescent attitude, can be readily replaced by the thousands of young men waiting as stand-bys on the crowded steps of our colleges.

Thl liakldSt&ga L-________ by Glavin & Scheye ----------'

Misalliance

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Shaw's wit is on display at Arena Stage this month in their pro­duction of Misalliance-with very little else. The three-act comedy w­has some very funny scenes, but takes its time in building up to them. ..

The comedy depends on the particular eccentricities of the huge cast of characters assembled, but before the humor in these char- .. acters can be communicated, they have to become real to us. This ... period of acquaintanceship takes almost one act and finds Shaw at his slowest. If he had been content to write a comedy of manners or a ..

FORMER ALLIES .•• Bunny and Patsy in Shaw's Misalliance at Arena Stage.

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comedy of character, this lapse would not seem necessary. But Mis- .. alliance is a comedy of issues. There are a group of these advanced ... through the script, but all unhappily too passe to merit mention. On III

this point, a comparison can be drawn between Shaw's wit and Oscar '-r

Wilde's. Wilde is content to present funny people in ludicrous situ- ". ations without binding them up with a lot of argument. As a result, ... it seems, Wilde survives much more comfortably. -:-

But Shaw is Arena Stage's choice and they do as well by him i'l as can be done. While· the first act admittedly drags, the rest of the play commands your attention by the exciting lines and the marvelous-ly comic antics of the principals. * ~'

As· the overgrown spoiled brat, Bentley Summerhays, Steven ._1 Joyce is most ingratiating and, when he feigns a tantrum and falls c , .. ! on the floor kicking and screaming, there. is no doubt but that ~he comedy IS alive. Summerhays is betrothed to Hypatia, a sheltere~ WISp -l of a noble girl, dying for a misadventure with a man. She IS the . daughter of John Tarleton, played by Robert Pro sky, the self-made ,.

(Continued on page 9) •

Thursday. March 8, 1962

The Magic Lantern Murder She Said

Murder She Said, the current offeri~g at the MacArthur, is an extremely well done British comedy which employs mystery for its background. The mystery motif actually plays the part of scenery; the audience sees that it's there, realizes its purpose and then pre­cinds from it in order to concern itself with ~hat it considers more important. But unlike scenery, the mystery in Murder unfortunately must also serve as a plot and as such it is decidedly underdeveloped and designedly undisclosed.

The plot centers around a murder which is committed on a train. It is seen by no one but ,Jane Marple (Margaret Rutherford), sitting demurely in her compartment in a passing train. A lover of mys­tery, she begins to snoop and discovers that the murdered woman was thrown from the train near the ancestral home of the Acken­thorpe family-Ackenthorpe Hall. Enthralled by the prospect of in­volving herself in one of her beloved mysteries turned real, she as-

BEA UTY AND THE BEAST . . • But which one is the real movie star?

sumes the position of housekeeper and ex officio shamus at the Hall and lets her bloodhound instinct run wild. She discovers the body concealed in a mummy case in one of the outbuildings and a pall of suspicion is lowered upon every member of the rather large and far­flung family. After they are all assembled at the Hall, the audience finds that they are all equally suspect, but only Jane is able to rec­ognize and trap the real murderer.

The immature style of the mystery, the large number of as­sembled suspects, as well as the Jane ex capite revelation are pain­fully reminiscent of the Charlie Chan era in American mystery films. To cover up these inadequacies of his plot the director is forced to employ cheap fright tricks such as falling lights etc. to mislead his audience as to the mystery's vapidity.

It is the skillful, comic performance of Margaret Rutherford and James Robertson Justice, the brilliant cinematography, enchanting music and touching little effects which uphold the film. They both conceal what the mystery lacks, and in addition portray a situation which although gruesome is perfectly delightful and amusingly Eng­lish. The dry British wit, the swift conversational repartee, a love affair between octogenarians, the improbability of Margaret Ruther­ford as Jane Marple (Marple her name and marble her nature) all combine to make Murder a poignantly touching and highly amusing experience.-JOE DUNIGAN

(Continued on page 7)

Council Capers by Anon

We were shocked, because everything was awry. First off, it was the afternoon again and, as the Council dragged themselves to their chairs amidst the torn splendor of the Cherry Blossom, it was chaos meeting chaos. And if that were not enough, our star was missing. The freshman class was represented only by its Council rep and this week, its vice president-because our star had to study. This is more than a little galling to Us who are roused from our afternoon recre­ation by a whim of the freshman class. The evenings were not good enough for them so they uttered their first suggestion in five months, and we got afternoon meetings. And if that were not enough of a nuisance, one half of their team can't even attend the meeting. Abuse is heaped upon abuse! The frosh were supported in this silliness by the sophomores, whose president is said to have spent his afternoon "bicycle hiking." He does not let the work of 'government conflict with the beauties of a, spring day, but we must forsake the sun for Copley lounge. May we make so bold as to suggest that instead of running away from the problem, he and his freshman compatriot try to restore the meeting hour to the saner one which has served so well so long.

We cringed when the Calendar Committee rose for his report

(Continued on page 7)

THE HOYA

Calliope Production Of 'Greek' Comedy Heralded By Muse

by Dan Duff A bicycle-riding muse has

lately shown his face on a number of posters which have been thoroughly s cat t ere d across the GeorgetQwn Uni­versity Campus. For the un­informed, the muse is a trademark of the Mask and Bauble's annual Calliope, a free-for-all play which manages to SUbmit everything to the level of comedy. This year's production, entitled "Show Me the Way to Go, Homer," will run ,for four performances from March 29-31.

The play, written and produced by Tony Hope, has a plot com­parable to every Greek play rolled into one. Agathon, played by Tom Callahan, is a slave-type slave who escapes from his slave ship and heads for Athens to become a singer (like Homer). Unfortunate­ly Agathon is captured by three thieves (one of whom is played by Dan Slattery) who make him im­personate Prince Radimar. In the meantime, however, the real Prince Radimar, played by Scott Clen­daniel, masquerades as a gardener at the court of Lavinia (Wanda) Loch) and falls in love with her. Agathon, impersonating Prince Radimar, falls in love with La­vinia's handmaid, Angi, as played by "Boo" McTague. By the end of the show the complications have been worked out in true Shake­spearean fashion.

One of the scenes is laid in the Spearmint Lounge where "the Lunge", a classical dance form created by the Vandals, is the rage. In another scene, John Paradine plays a physical cu1turist, Sunny Tanny, who runs his own gym with the motto "think slim with Sunny Tanny."

Wanda Loch, who played the leading female role in 'last year's "Down the Hatch," takes the lead role again this year. Scott Clen­daniel, a singer with the Washing­ton Opera Society, plays the male lead role. The female comic lead this year is played by "Boo" Mc­Tague, who played comic lead in last year's production. The male comic lead is played by freshman Tom Callahan, winner of the fresh­man talent show.

Mr. Donn Murphy is the di­rector of the play. Bob Fre­mont wrote the lyrics, while mu­sical matters will be directed by Mr. Donald W. Griffith, director of the Georgetown University Band. Costumes are by Sheila Hickey of the Nursing School and Frank Hef­feren of the Foreign Service School. Jerry O'Berski is technical director in charge of sets and Ed Broyles, a member of the Hexagon Club and currently a leading player with the American Light Opera's Kiss Me, Kate, will choreograph this year's Calliope.

Reservations on tickets at $1.50 and $2.00 can be made by con­tacting the Mask and Bauble office in the Annex.

Page Three

Debate Tou rney Prize Taken By Ohio State

AND THE WINNAH IS ••. trophy time with Chairman Pete Handal (seated, right) at the Cherry Blossom Tournament last Saturday.

by Dan O'Leary The final round of debate in the annual Cherry Blossom

Tournament was held in Gaston Hall last Saturday after­noon at 4 :00 p.m. It seemed to be a repetition of last year's finals in which Wayne State defeated Ohio State in the finals. This time the same two teams met, but the Ohioans won the honors and secured the prestigious trophy for the best two-

Law School Club Hears Goldwater On Red Menace

Barry Goldwater, Republi­can Senator from Arizona, addressed the Phi Delta Phi Society, a Law School club, in Gaston Hall last Thursday night. Senator Goldwater, as the author of Conscience oj a Con­servative and the articulate leader of the "sane right" movement, is a leading object of speculation re­garding the Republican Presiden­tial nomination in 1964.

In his speech Senator Goldwater divided his attention between the communist threat and the resur-gence of conservatism on campuses throughout the country. He con­tended that the major controversies of contemporary political thought could be traced to the bombing of Hiroshima in 1945, when two schools of thought concerning the arms race first emerged.

One element said, "We must pre­vent it (the atomic bomb) from being used again;" while the op­posing element stated that the United States "must develop it to defend our country." The former group, said Senator Goldwater, eventually degenerated into a phi­losophy of "better red than dead." He is thankful that the opposi-

(Continued on page 4)

man team. Georgetown's Phil­odemic Society won the four­man team trophy with a con­sistent showing throughout the tournament.

Of the fifty-five teams com­peting, eight two-man teams were chosen for the quarter-finals on the basis of their performance in eight preliminary rounds, many of which were "power-paired." The Philo­demic team of John Brough and John Hempelmann entered the quarter-finals as the second best team, with an overall record of 8-0 and a point score of 335, which was surpassed only by Redlands of California with 345 points.

The Georgetown team, however, was defeated in this round by the Wayne State team. Final honors in this two-man team competition went to the Ohio State team of -Dale Williams and Edward Mc­Glone. Georgetown's four-man en­try of Brough, Terry Goggin, Hempelmann, and Richard Hayes was the eventual winner in the over-all team competition with a record of 12-4 and a total point score of 680. In addition, each of Georgetown's deb ate r s placed among the 15 "best individual speakers," with Hempelmann ac­cumulating a total of 172 points and Brough 173.

Trophies were awarded to Red­lands and Eastern Nazarene as semi-finalists in the two-man com­petition, while the second place trophy was awarded to the Wayne State team of David Getto and Ray Wilkes. Trophies for "best speaker" were shared by Redland's Richard Strong and Ohio State's Williams, both of whom accumu­lated 182 points. Placing second to Georgetown's four-man team was Dartmouth, also with a record of 12-4, but second to Georgetown in point score: 680-663.

Georgetown's strong showing in the Cherry Blossom was the first of two major goals the Philodemic Society has set for itself. Ac­cording to Mike Lysaght, Philo­demic president, the team is al­ready preparing for the West Point Tournament, where the best teams from the entire country will com­pete.

MIRROR, MIRROR ... a futile question, for in Calliope III all are equally fair.

Cherry Blossom debaters stayed at the Marriott Motel. While they were in Washington they heard an address by the Hon. James Roose­velt, and many of them attended a Mardi Gras Ball put on by the sophomore class. The coaches of the various teams served as judges of the Cherry Blossom Tournament.

Page Four

HEREABOUTS by Nye and Thomas

With the basketball season over for another year and the excite· ment of Colonel Glenn on the wane, the happy Hoya returns to the entertainment offered by Washington. Presently this consists of Romeo et Juliette and the Academy Award nomination films.

Theater It's that time of year again when Hollywood pats herself on the

back and announces the Academy Award nominations. As happens every year, nobody seems to agree with the selections that have been made. Everybody, wants to know why this picture, that director, this actor, that song, was or was not included. The controversy wages fast and furious until the night when the winners are announced and the Oscars given. Then everything is fine, except that by universal agree· ment, the .presentation show on television was worse than last year's -and last year's was pretty bad.

Joining in the guessing game, we have chosen probable winners in some of the more important and interesting categories. The most important award, or at least the one that is always anounced last, is that of best picture. Its announcement is usually anti·climatic because the best director award usually is given to the director of the best picture. This arrangement, unlike most of the things Hollywood does, makes sense and only seems logicaL

However, choosing the director and the picture is not always logical. Judgement at Nuremberg and its director, Stanley Kramer, look like the winners this year. Kramer has had many outstanding films in the past (The Defiant Ones and On the Beaeh are two) and he can't be ignored again. His picture is newly released and is still basking in the fresh publicity. A little controversy never hurt either. The picture will help the director, and the director will help the picture.

It would seem that the best actor would also be in the best pic· ture. This is not true in Hollywood. Spencer Tracy has been nominated for Judgement, but so has Maximillian Schell, who won the New York Film Critic's Award. If Tracy wins, how do you explain Schell? Schell himself has already lost, as it is a fact that the Critic Award winners never win Oscars. This leaves only Paul Newman among the remaining three nominees as a dark·horse winner.

Again this year, the field for the best actress award is the strongest and the hardest from which to pick a winner. Audrey Hep­burn is the popular favorite, but acting in a comedy, such as Break· fast at Tiffany's was, is slow to bring honors. The winner should be Natalie Wood, who, besides recent heavy publicity, has West Side Story as well as the picture she was nominated for, Splendor in the Grass, to collect votes.

In the supporting roles it looks like Jackie Gleason and Judy Garland. Gleason has strong competition from Montgomery Clift and George C. Scott, but 1961 was the year of the "Great One," and he is too popular to lose. 1961 was also the year of the return of Judy Garland. She, like Gleason, has too much popularity to lose. Good though they both are, they may not be the best, but they will win.

"Moon River" from Breakfast at Tiffany's is the best song. The others are not even worth mentioning.

Music Aside from Romeo et Juliette, which is obviously the main at·

traction in Washington this month, there are other impressive en· gagements that should be noted. The Robert Shaw Chorale will per· form The St. John's Passion by J. S. Bach this Sunday in Constitution Hall at 3 :00. We feel that this would be a fine opportunity to hear this seldom played work, since the chorus will never be of any greater quality.

And on March 25, Leon Fleisher, whom Pierre Monteux described as the "pianistic find of the Century," will present a recital of works by Bach, Mozart, Liszt, Ravel and Kirchner. Fleisher has already made several appearances with top orchestras of the United States and abroad, and if we can take the success of these concerts as any indication of his solo work, we can expect a performance of unsur· passed value.

(Continued on page 6)

Senior Hearing (Continued from page 1)

night," seniors seen coming in after 2:00 a.m. will be subject to dis­ciplinary action. The Campus Po­lice have been informed of the new regUlations.

rHE SOYA Goldwater

(Continued from page 3)

tion stood firm, realizing that, "If we throw everything away, we can't wage war, and the enemy will attack us."

Senator Goldwater, asserted that this controversy travelled from the scientific to the academic sphere and finally was debated on college

SENATOR BARRY GOLDWATER

campuses. As a consequence, col­lege students have become more conscious of world conditions and their effects on the United States.

Goldwater paraphrased one argu­ment for banning nuclear bombs as: "Man shouldn't feel that de-

ONE MILLION JOBLESS TEEN·AGERS: OUR NATIONAL

DIS-GRACE This year, more than one million teen·agers will have nothing to do. They're not ambitious enough to stay in school. And not skilled enough to hold down jobs. In this week's Post, you'll learn why many employers won't take a chance on a teen·ager. And what we can do to put these boys to work.

The Saturday Evening

PC>ST MARCH 10 ISSUE NOW ON SALE

The elimination of checks on fourth-year men was first proposed in 1960 by Rev. John L. Ryan, S.J., then Director of Student Person­neL This autumn the possible abo­lition of checks was again sub­mitted to the seniors, contingent on their behavior during the first semester.

A great deal of the credit for the attainment of the new per­missions, Father Sellinger said, should go to the student officers who negotiated with the Admin­istration in this matter. In par­ticular he cited the Yard Officers and the senior class president. "All of the things you have gotten this year in the way of rule changes," the Dean said, "have come as a result of the reasoned presenta­tions of your complaints and your requests by members of the Stu­dent Council."

ERASE WITHOUT A TRACE ON EATON'S CORRASABLE BOND

Father Sellinger ended the meet­ing with a few suggestions to the seniors on graduation arrange­ments and a commentary on the place of athletics at Georgetown. "Our athletes must first of all be students." Georgetown gives its athletes no scholastic "breaks."

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fending his family and institutions lends some nobility to his name, be­cause with the bomb there will be no posterity to worry about." In answer to this, the Senator stated quite simply: "We would ignore human nature to disarm unilater­ally; we would be at the mercy of the communists."

Concerning U.S. foreign policy he said, "We should declare that we are going to win over com­munism, not in a material war ex­cept in small peripheral battles

Thursday, March 8, 1962

around the world, but in war of ideologies. We, furthermore, are against only those governments in­fested with communism when the people of a country want to get rid of it."

Senator Goldwater chided people who have thought of communism as something that must be fought with money: "We should show peo­ple that we have become a great material nation by being a great spiritual nation."

(Author of "I Was a Teen-age Dwarf", "The Many Loves of Dobie Gillis", etc.) ,

THE GRASS IS ALWAYS GOLDER The academic world, as we all know, is loaded with dignity and ethics, with lofty means and exalted ends, with truth and beauty. In such a world a heinous thing like faculty raiding-colleges en­ticing teachers away from other colleges-is not even thinkable.

However, if the dean of one college happens-purely by chance, mind you-to run into a professor from another college, and the professor happens to remark-just in passing, mind you -that he is discontented with his present position, why, what's wrong with the dean making the professor an offer? Like the other afternoon, for instance, Dean Sigafoos of Gransmire Polytech, finding himself in need of a refreshing cup of oolong, dropped in quite by chance at the Discontented Professors Exchange where he discovered Professor Stuneros from the English Department of Kroveny A and M sitting over a pot of lapsang soochong and shrieking "I Hate Kroveny A-and M!" Surely there was nothing improper in the dean saying to the professor, "Leander, perhaps you'd like to come over to us. I think you'll find our shop A-OK."

(It should be noted here that all English professors are named Leander, just as all psychics professors are named Fred. All sociology professors are, of course, named Myron, all veterinary medicine professors are named Rover, and all German professors are named Hansel and Gretel. All deans, are, of course, named Attila.)

But I digress. Leander, the professor, has just been offered a job by Attila, the dean, and he replies, "Thank you, but I don't think so."

"And I don't blame you," says Attila, stoutly. "I under­stand Kroveny has a fine little library."

"Well, it's not too bad," says Leander. "We have 28 volumes in all, including a mint copy of Nancy Drew, Girl Detective."

"Very impressive," says Attlia. "Us now, we have 36 million volumes, including all of Shakespeare's first folios and the Dead Sea Scrolls."

"Golly whiskers," says Leander. "But of course," says Attila, "you don't want to leave

Kroveny where, I am told, working conditions are tickety-boo." "Oh, they're not too bad," says Leander. "I teach 18 hours

of English, 11 hours of optometry, 6 hours of forestry, coach the fencing team, and walk Prexy's cat twice a day."

"A full, rich life," says Attila. "At our school you'd be some­what less active. You'd teach one class a week, limited to four A students. As to salary, you'd start at $50,000 a year, with retirement at full pay upon reaching age 29."

~ I VIill frexy~ C41lfwtct!1 ddt, I "Sir," says Leander, "your offer is most fair but you must

understand that lowe a certain loyalty to Kroveny." "I not only understand, I applaud," says Attila. "But before

you make a final decision, let me tell you one thing more. We supply Marlboro cigarettes to our faculty-all you want at all times."

"Gloryosky!" cries Leander, bounding to his feet. "You mean Marlboro, the filter cigarette with the unfiltered taste­Marlboro, the cigarette with better makin's-Marlboro that comes to you in pack or box-Marlboro that gives you such a lot to like?"

"Yep," says Attila, "that's the Marlboro I mean." "I am yours," cries Leander, wringing the Dean's hand.

"Where do I sign?" "At the quarry," replies Attila. "Frankly, we don't ·trust

paper contracts any more. We chisel them in marble."

* * * © 1962 Max Shulman

Stonecutters cut it in stone, woodcutters cut it in wood, seamstresses embroider it in doilies: you get a lot to like in a Marlboro--filter. flavor, pack or box.

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Thursday, March 8, 1962

l\rtn att~ 11lrttrrn by Bob Nye

Romeo et Juliette Hector Berlioz, the great French Romantic composer, in 1838

composed of Romeo et Juliette, which is presently experiencing a wide­spread revival. Charles Munch came out with a superb recording of it a few years back, and since then, many orchestras and choral so'cieties have been resurrecting it with varying degrees of success.

Berlioz has considerably shortened Shakespeare's work; it has been pruned to the bare essentials of dramatic action. His libretto by Emile Deschamps commences with the chorus and contralto singing a rather kaleidoscopic view of the action.

Since the work is symphonic, it was logical to begin with an orchestral (fugued) introduction in the middle of which there is a solo for tenor trombones which is marked with the character of a recitative, a type of declamatory singing, free in rhythm and tempo. We are thus prepared for the Prologue, the first vocal section, in which the contralto and chorus sing the subject of the drama-the feud of the two families and the star-crossed love of their offspring. The very brief quasi-recitative leads to the instrumental statement of several of the later themes-sadness, revelry, and finally, to the love theme. The solo voice then sings of young love in strophe and anti­strophe. The small chorus resumes with a few words on Romeo, Mercutio and Queen Mab, who forms the subject of the scherzetto: it is Mab who lends the comic-fantastic element to the tragedy.

From this point, we can go on to speak of music and drama as one, in keeping with Berlioz' interviewing of their formal require­ments. The symphonic Part Two takes Romeo through the contrasting

(Continued on page 6)

Sign up for Advanced Army ROTC ...

Cameroons' Envoy Speaks For AAAS On African Nations

Mr. Rostand Mvie, Charge d' Affaires at the Cameroonian Embassy to the United States, delivered an address entitled "New Nations of Africa" last Thursday evening in the Multi-Lingual Room of the S<.:hool of Foreign Service. The program, presented by the Association of American and African Students, was comprised of a lecture, a ques­tion-and-answer session, and a brief film.

Mr. Mvie's lecture was delivered in French and simultaneously translated into English by Miss Cornelia Proctor, a student in the inter.preting program of the School of Language and Linguistics. The equipment of the Multi-Lingual Room, which includes microphones, earphones, and tune dials, and utilized in a fashion similar to facilities used in the General As­sembly of the United Nations.

Mr. Mvie who came to the United States only two months ago, has a long list of diplomatic achieve­ments to his credit. He was a stu-

(Continued on page 8)

And right away, you'll feel better about your Military Obligation ...

Because you know, as an officer,

Letters (Continued from page 2)

Campus. For it seems to me that, in the present state of affairs, a reduction in the number of diners could actually result in a significant saving. Even if only one hundred students elected to eat off-Campus, $44,800 (to quote the given figures) for just lunch and dinner, five days a week, would be saved. While this represents a loss of income, there is also the reduced outgo, and I wonder if the reduction might not overbalance the loss.

In closing, I would like to add that, while the charge for room and board at Georgetown has remained steady for ten years, actual room and board services have changed. For instance, tables are no longer waited on, as I seem to recall from earlier brochures on Campus life. These changes have not been for the worse, and I think other changes need not be reflected in a lessening of esential services, but could very well lead to a reduction in the cost of room and board from $1100, or at least hold it static at this amount for some time into the future.

In any case, might we find out where our money is going?

PIERCE S. CORDEN College, '63

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your military service can payoff handsomely in later life. For example, ROTC can be tremendously helpful when a man starts his climb up the civilian ladder. Success in the executive areas of business and industry comes earlier and more substantially to the man who can lead. Few are born leaders; but leadership can be learned. And Advanced ROTC is a great place to learn it ...

you will be contributing to the limit of your potentialities in one of the biggest jobs we face today ... you can help keep America so strong the war the whole world dreads need never happen.

During your 2-year Advanced Army ROTC course, there will be a subsistence allowance of $535. Uniforms and military textbooks are paid for. There is a $117 allowance for your six-week summer camp training, plus travel allowance. And when you're commissioned, a $300 uniform allowance.

And then, of course, there is the warm sense of accomplishment you will feel in June 1963 when the gold bars of a Second Lieutenant are pinned on your Army uniform.

Page Five

Ireland's Patron· Topic Of Lecture By Fr. McNally

REV. ROBERT E. McNALLY, S.J.

Rev. Robert E. McNally, S.J., Professor of Church His­tory at Woodstock College, and currently Guest Professor of the History of Christianity at George Washington Uni­versity will lecture on "St. Patrick and some problems in Early Irish Culture," on Thursday, March 15, at 7 o'clock in New South Lounge.

Father McNally will take up the problem of the historical character of St. Patrick, the emergence of his personality in the historical records of old Ireland, his place in fifth century Christianity, and the concept of St. Patrick in the old Irish legends. "Apart from the sanctity of the man himself," said Father McNally, "the greatest sin­gle tribute to this ancient saint is his courage in opening a new, fruitful frontier to the Church at the very moment that the Roman Empire was retreating from the British Isles and northern Europe. He was truly a pioneer, a fron­tiersman of culture."

(Continued on page 7)

O .. alExallls At a faculty meeting last Thurs­

day, Fr. Joseph A. Sellinger, S.J., Dean of the College, announced a new ruling revising Georgetown's program of oral examinations.

The new requirements on philos­ophy orals shape up as follows:

1) The new ruling applies only -to juniors and seniors; no sopho­mores take oral examinations, ex­cept those in the Honors Program.

2) All Honors Program students and philosophy majors take orals in their junior and senior years.

3) Students with an average of B or better are required to take orals.

4) Students with an average be­tween Band C may request to take an oral.

5) Students with a C or D aver­age may not take an oral.

The Dean anticipates that any ambiguities in the ruling will have been cleared up in the course of this week, and that these clarifica­tions will be posted on the bulletin board in White-Graven or.

While philosophy 0 r a 1 s will be thus restricted, Father Sellinger reported in an interview that "In order to .preserve the tradition of oral examinations ... we will re­quire that every department out­side the Philosophy Department have oral examinations for their majors."

The new ruling on philosophy orals is the result of proposals made and passed by the Philosophy Department on February 28, 1961, passed by the Executive Faculty of the College in November, and ap­proved with some modification by the Board of Directors.

The Dean added that the thesis method would definitely remain in effect this year, and that any change in the length of the exami­nation would be posted on his bul­letin board. The form which oral examinations will take in the other departments, for majoring stu-

. dents, will be determined by the respective departments.

Page Six

by Lambe1·t Sp1'onclc The junior Senator from South Carolina took a long, hard look

at the Under Secretary of State, George W. Ball. "You've known for some time that you would appear here," Senator Strom Thurmond said, losing for an instant his Southern composure. "Why didn't you prepare yourself to give us answers?"

The Under Secretary had not gotten around to doing his home­work. He could find "only twenty-four hours in a day." For this rea­son he refused to offer the Senate Special Preparedness Subcommittee explanations for the censorship of a number of speeches made by military personnel. The spectators in Room 318 of the Old Senate Building could sense the Senator's satisfaction with Mr. Ball's lame reply. Senator Thurmond ended his alloted time of questioning by remarking casually, "I see no use in wasting time."

Under Secretary Ball had scored his most telling points in his prepared statement. He questioned whether such terminology as "no win" foreign policy reflected a mature appraisal of the realities of today's world. Heads nodded when he declared, "The cold war is not an adult game of cops and robbers."

The deeper issue raised by the Thurmond-Ball exchange is this: "To what extent must freedom of speech sub serve the broader designs of free-world strategists? Mr. Ball argues from complexity. The com­plexity of our military, political, economic, cultural, moral, and ideo­logical struggle with communism necessitates censorship. Military leaders, he maintains, are trained in but one area of leadership. When they step outside their area of competence and talk foreign policy, they may subvert the best laid plans of John Kennedy, Dean Rusk, and Adlai Stevenson.

Senator Thurmond argues from simplicity. The Senator from South Carolina sees us pitted in a struggle which can only result in either total victory or total defeat. He reminds us of Nikolai Lenin's pronouncement that communism and democracy cannot exist side by side. "Inevitably," argues Lenin, "one must perish." This is the harsh reality of the cold war which, Senator Thurmond maintains, censors in the Kennedy administration are blurring for the American people. By "gagging" the military, who live this struggle everyday, these censors take the teeth out of our defense posture and undercut mil­itary morale.

Senator J. William Fulbright (D-Ark.) takes sharp issue with his Southern colleague. He characterizes extremists on the right as " 'soft,' not on communism, but 'soft' in judgment and 'soft' in their pre­scriptions for what we must do to meet the communist challenge." Senator Fulbright, Chairman of the Foreign Relations Committee, en­visions along with President Kennedy a "long twilight struggle ahead." He recognizes the "great mass appeal" of simple solutions during such a period. He calls for their rejection. He speaks of "patience, discipline, and sustained effort."

Senator Fulbright scores certain military officers for diverting the people's attention from the complexities of the struggle abroad and encouraging them instead to hunt traitors at home. This convic­tion prompted him last July to write his famous memorandum "On Propaganda Activities of Military Personnel," which triggered the Senate Special Preparedness hearing now under way in Room 318 of the Old Senate Office Building.

As finally published in the Congressional Record of August 2, (Continued on page 8)

Arts and Letters (Continued from page 5) moods of lonely sadness and of indifference to the gaiety of the concert and ball, which the "chef des Capulets" is giving. Berlioz next pro­vides a brief choral interlude which introduces the adagio love scene: the male Capulets sing as they leave the festive dance.

The "scene d'amour" unfolds its tragic passion instrumentally "because this is a symphony and not an opera." It is also proof that Berlioz could pour out his heart and use his skill more intensely, more completely with only the orchestra. The instrumental idiom is a much less limited language, and is by its unliteralness infinitely more powerful.

Likewise, the ensuing scherzo which stands for Queen Mab sug­gests lightness and free fancy without in the least following Mercutio's speech, which is full of concrete images. We now pass to Juliette's funeral, which is scored for orchestra with a psalmody (single re­peated note) in the chorus (Jettez aes fleurs pour La vierge expiree!) and continues until the midpoint, at which time the orchestra plays the psalmody and the chorus of Capulets sings the dirge.

After the funeral march comes a short instrumental scena which recalls earlier motives, and marks, with the end of purely instru­mental music, the end of the tragedy itself. Berlioz' sense of symmetry makes him introduce here the songlike invocation for woodwinds which balance the trombone recitative in the very first section of the score. The scena ends pianissimo on the disintegrated fragments of the love theme.

The vocal finale of the Capulets and Montagues thus stands outside the main action, again in balance with the Introduction and Prologue. Its design is that of a gradual crescendo, which incidentally served as the model for Wagner's practice in Tannhause1·. First we hear a recall of the feud theme: the outraged families wrangle vocally over the corpses of the lovers. But soon the voice of Friar Laurance re­cites what has happened and entreats the clans to make peace. He proposes the oath of reconciliation in the "Air" which follows his recitative, and as he pleads, first the Montagues and then the Capu­lets join in majestic phrases that slowly cause the vengeful hearts to expand; a threatening figure in the lower strings keeps taunting them with tragedy until their voices overwhelm it in a song expressive of the gladdened will at peace with men. The music drama is con­cluded.

It seems correct that such a great work as Romeo et Juliette should not be subjected only to an objective discussion as it is in the body of the article_ For example, from the title of the score, one might quite naturally expect that Romeo and Juliette would have vocal'parts. And yet it seems perfectly obvious that Berlioz intended that there be no vocal setting for them. Since Romeo is the most important figure in both the drama and symphony, Berlioz did not want to be tied down by the weight of describing him in purely vocal terms. The orchestra sings the roles of Romeo and Juliette. And by describing them in this way, the -imagination of the listener is left relatively free and can draw its own impressions. And Berlioz realized the ef­fectiveness of such action because he left the love scene entirely free of vocal impedimenta. Love cannot be drawn concretely in music; if it is, it is destroyed.

rHE HOYA

Hereabouts (Continued from page 4)

Et. Cet. Satan Never Sleeps opens tomorrow at the Palace ... The Mir­

acle Worker at the National ... Nazis on trial three times daily at the Warner. _ . La Dolce Vita has returned, now to the Playhouse ... Friday and Saturday, A Streetcar Named Desire and The Fugi­t-ive Kind at the Circle ... Academy Award nominee West Side Story at the Uptown ... The KB theaters have gone international: Murder She Said (British); La Belle Americaine (French); Light in the Piazza (made in Italy) ... For those who like to go to Town, Lover Come Back is still there . . . A different kind of Berlin prob­lem at the Dupont ... Sergeants 8 at Keith's . . . Tony Curtis, play­ing a corporal, in The Outsider ... A trip to the Trans-Lux is Walk (ing) on the Wild Side . .. Saturday night at Lisner Audito­rium, Judith Anderson in Medea '62 and Lady MacBeth.

And on the following Sunday at the same time and place, Artur Rubenstein, one of the greatest living pianists, will present an all Chopin recital. Rubenstein has already demonstrated to us that Chopin is his forte, for he has recorded with regular success almost everything that Chopin ever wrote.

The House and Senate are in session, probably the funniest show in town (outside of the Student Council, that is) . . . March 17, the Harlem Globetrotters at the Washington Coliseum .... The new Unique-corn at the Captain's Table ... The same old group at the Shadows ... Connoisseurs of French humor, particularly that of Rob­ert Dhery of La Belle Americaine, should be advised that his La Plume de Ma Tante opens at the National on March 19.

Thursday, March 8, 1962

CAROL BURlm -FROM HAT-CHECK GIRL TO TV STAR A few years ago, Carol Burnett was checking hats for $30 a week. To· day she's TV's hottest new come· dienne. Says Carol: "I've been sue· cessful far beyond anything I've deserved." In this week's Post, she tells how a "mystery man" financed her career. How she gets along with Garry Moore. And why success jinxed her marriage.

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Thursday, March 8, 1962

Magic Lantern (Continued from page 3)

The Outsider In The Outsider it seems that Tony Curtis is priming himself for

the Big Part, wherever it may be. The story of Ira Hayes, the Indian who helped raise the flag at Iwo Jima, is a natural proving ground for individual performance, which seems to be just what Curtis wants. The hero is more or less alone in his story, distinguished only by the events which conspired to make his life notable. His uninteresting background brings forth no other characters to steal the spotlight. Thus, all attention is on the central characto.lr, and Curtis can try himself to his heart's content.

As Ira Hayes, he plays a Pima Indian boy from a reservation in Arizona, who joins the Marines and has a difficult time being accepted by his fellow soldiers. His only friend is killed at Iwo Jima, just as Hayes is recalled to Washington to campaign for a war bond issue. Sorrow and feelings of undeserved fame drive him to drink, until, disgraced before the Marines and his own people, he dies in drunken exposure on a mountaintop near his home.

The script allows Curtis to try his hand at emoting in every way he can think of. Although he goes through his exercises with promising facility, it is hard to avoid the thought that he wanted to try each one just once more for the record. As a result, his total performance is overdone. There is never a letup in his dogged pursuance of goose­pimples_

It is conceivable that, given an outstanding script and a good di­rector, Tony Curtis could come up with an exceptional portrayal. As far as The Outsider is concerned, it is an outside possibility. Too much of its effect depends on melodrama, and the little vignettes of life on an Indian reservation are almost unbearable. It is, as well, a cheaply made film, which makes no effort to cover up little necessities like stunt men and stand-ins. The main concern is with Ira Hayes, and one is inclined to agree with the poor fellow that it isn't really worth all the trouble.-BILL SINGER

THE HOYA

Council Capers (Continued from page 3)

but we were shortly relieved. It was a dull show in comparison to last week's catastrophe, but things livened up when the chairman informed us in outraged and no uncertain terms, that we HOY A people were egregiously in error in our column last week, and that he had, in fact, consistently and repeatedly told the sophomores that they were remiss in their form filing. We were duly chastised, but, somewhat blushingly, we can only say that we reported what we saw at the meeting.

We were apprised, by an unusually brisk treasurer, that our (or is is?) always going, never flowing, vaguely showing bulletin board has been finally, completely, and forever and ever approved. It cannot be built by cheap student labor, since the carpenter's shop would not be opened to him, and consequently the Council must pay a seller's price. This did not faze our boys who were told that "price is no object-"

We were saddened to learn that the IRC can apparently not af­ford to have gone to Montreal four weeks ago since outstanding bills from this excursion find no one to pay them. This added to political problems on the home front proved too much for the IRC, as he too was missing.

As we were about to run from the chamber with mixed emotions of rage and despair, what should appear but a moment of sanity­and from the freshmen at that. The villain who started the ball rolling on afternoon meetings withdrew his motion and left it up to the Yard to make the final decision. In turn the President promised to take an informal poll-then took it-we voted-then promised to take another poll at the close of the meeting-then closed the meeting.

We have, you may note, been indulging in personalities. This is necessitated by the total lack of issues, which is the result of a lack of persons, which, it is our impression, results again from the hour. Afternoons may be conducive to polo games, siestas, teas, and if all else fails, study, but certainly not to Student Council meetings. If proof be needed for this assertion, we offer for your consideration the last two meetings of the body in question. We refuse to have any­thing more to do with them (the afternoon meetings that is).

IJlfu~Ifu.y @.. y(Q)\\!1Ifu~ Ib>n~cdk~ n(Q)~li

Jk\u~ lJiJ\1®lttO® A good sword nowadays is hard to find-and in olden times, too. Many a feudal lord saw it pointless to joust with a faulty halberd, and for worthy steel alone the Visigoths sacked Rome.

Today, centuries later, the search for stronger steels goes on. And among those making most dramatic strides in advancing the state of the metallurgical art are the research teams at Ford's Scientific Laboratory in De?lrborn, Michigan.

In exploring the "world of microstructure," these scientists, using methods of extreme sophistication, have been able to look at iron and steel on a near­atomic scale. They have discovered secrets of nature leading to new processing techniques which yield steels of ultra-high strength unknown a decade ago.

The promise of such techniques seems limitless. As man develops the needs and means to travel more swiftly on earth and over interplanetary reaches­wherever economy of weight and space is required-strength of physical materials will become paramount. This is another example of how Ford is gaining leadership through scientific research and engineering.

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Page Seven

Council Coffers Spread Largesse To Campus Poor

The Student Council announced toward the beginning of the year that they had a surplus of money which would be available for clubs and organizations of the College that could not get money from the University for specific projects. To date, $175 has been given to the Band for a trip to New York, and $25 to the Bridge Club for the expenses of a tournament at Mary­land University. The total amount of money available is somewhere in the area of $1000 to $1500.

Dave Meeker, Treasurer of the Yard, emphasized that there must be evidence of need, of the worth of the project for which the money is required, as well as the assurance that the money is to be used in the best interest of the student body as a whole. The procedure for obtaining funds is to have an officer of the organization present his plea before the Student Council, which will then discuss the matter and vote on it, considering the three criteria listed above.

Only two requests for money have been entered so far, and both have been granted. Several other organizations have made it known informally to one or another Stu­dent Council member that they are eager to secure such aid, but no money is to be awarded without a formal request by the organiza­tion to the Student Council con­vened.

McNally (Continued from page 5)

Father McNally, who holds an AB ('42) from Georgetown and a STL ('50) from Woodstock Col­lege, also attended the famous me­dieval seminary at Munich Univer­sity, where he received his doc­torate in 1955. He is author of various studies on the history of the Bible and biblical commentaries of the Middle Ages, which have appeared in Traditio, Medieval Studies, Theological Studies, and elsewhere.

Father McNally is currently en­gaged on a vast research project, supported by The American Coun­cil of Learned Societies, which is to encompass the history of me­dieval biblical exegesis. He is also co-editor of Traditio, the well­known American journal of medi­eval studies, secretary of the Pa­tristic Academy of America, and a member of the Executive Council of the Catholic Historical Associa­tion.

Father McNally has lectured on Irish art, history and literature at the Medieval Club of New York (Columbia Univ_), Loyola College (Baltimore, Md.), Providence Col­lege, Fordham University, and be­fore various learned societies.

The lecture next Thursday night will be open to the public, and is being sponsored by the sophomore class. At present, Father McNally is also conducting a sophomore seminar course in moral theology here at Georgetown.

SENIOR MOVIE l1Sh " ane

Sunday, March 11 Gaston Hall-6:45 P.M.

"INSTEAD OF negotiating with the Com· man Market, we sent Chester BowleI on a five-day visit to Cairo, presltmably 10

arrange IIITther giltI 10 Nauer in thanks for his anti- Western denttnciation 0/ the Com1non Markt;t: and we J(!ml i'vf.onsiettr Robert Kennedy on a six-day visit /0

S,tkarno, ostensibly to tell him we love the Dlllch. WhOlll he's attacking. but most

probably to tell him From the current issue there', /re,h ca,h of NATIONAL REVIEW available. if he lay, Write for free copy.

l.o.ff.N.eW.G.,.".·n.ea.." .. l50 E. 3S St •• New York

16.N. Y.

Page Eight

Navy For Spring

rHE HOYA

Crossfire (Continued from· page 6)

1961, the memorandum recommends: 1) re-examination of the mil­itary's role in propaganda activities; 2) the formulation of directives which bring such military activities under civilian control; 3) in­creased civilian control over the National War College; and 4) elimi­nation of certain "particularly aggressive" views of the National War College.

Senator Thurmond feels that we can never be "too aggressive" in our struggle with the Soviet Union. He assails Senator Fulbright's memorandum for giving "the general impression that the people could not be trusted to determine properly the country's course in the cold war."

Senator Fulbright feels that the American people "have never really been tested" in the type of struggle we confront today. He cau­tions the American people against "a single-factor approach to world politics," whether that single factor be tough talk by military leaders or Congressional investigation of traitors at home. Neither, he feels, will defeat communism.

Caught somewhere in the crossfire between Senator Thurmond and Senator Fulbright is· the American Public. It must determine where freedom of speech for the military ends and responsibility for the global designs of the State Department begins.

DOING IT THE HARD WAY by h~ (6ETTING RID OF DANDRUFF, THA TIS!)

,,~~~~*~~~Sf" "'-'llu.oo<l.:.illll:

Thursday, March 8, 1962

Cameroons (Continued from page 5)

dent at the American missionary schools and later graduated from the Ecole Superior in the Came­roons. He studied for a time in France, while performing diplo­matic functions in both France and Germany. Upon his return to the Cameroons, he spent five years as director of foreign affairs and some time as a judge. Mr. Mvie organ­ized the Department of Foreign Affairs of Cameroons after its in­dependence in 1960.

Mr. Mvie lecture was mainly a description of the politico-economic status of the Cameroons as an in­dividual nation. He explained that agricultural products and raw ma­terials provided the main exports of the Cameroons, and although incipient industry was promising, it now played no vital role in the nation. In foreign affairs, he stress­ed the controversy between Ni­geria and Cameroons over some one-time territory of his nation. The program concluded ·with a ten­minute movie describing the in­dependence of the Cameroons.

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Last year, 16,000 U.S firms 7 went out of business. But, says Commerce Secretary Luther Hodges, many could • have pulled through if their owners had known the ABC's of economics. In "Speaking Out" in this week's Post, he gives the two main rea· sons for business failure. Says most Americans are "economic boobs." And outlines a 3·part plan for cop· ing with economic problems.

The Saturday Evening

~T MARCH 10 ISSUE NOW ON SALE.

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.I I I I I I I I I I !

550 ke (CAMPUS LIMITED) A M WGTB-FM 90.1 me FM I TIME TYPE (p.m.) SUNDAY MONDAY

3:59

4:00

Woman's Woman's Popular World World

Music 4:05 Kathleen Michele Mayes Metrinko

Evening News News 5:00

Lynn Fritz Paul Feine

The + Commentary 5:15 James Fendell

Sacred Steve Bell

~ Heart

Sports 5:20 Hour Gene Cicatelli

Great Aspects Of Educational 5:30 DeciSions .. Mental

1962 Health

6:00

Jazz Encounters Jazz Corner Of Jazz 6:05 The World

Folk Music Alec Bastos Tom McDonald

7:00

Popular Album 7:05 Swinging Music Music

(Full-length WGTB's Opera on Sun.) Bob Griffin

r---Educational, OPERA Georgetown

Discussion, 8:00 Speaks Lectures HOUSE

r---8:30 ~

Music Of The Classical 8:35 Masters

Music Walter Ward William O'Toole

10:00

Music Out or Music Out Of Instrumental 10:05 The Night The Night

Music Jim Walsh Jim Fendell

News 11:00 The Last Word The Last Word Randy Huston John Nugent

11:15

Nightly Pro-gram Bill Clark Peter Murray Director

Nightly Technical Pat Welsh Mike 0' Malley Director

TUESDAY WEDNESDAY

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NEWS SUMMARY

Woman's Woman's World World

Marsha Carole Scoe Metrinko

EVENING NEWS

I Casey Brown I Bill Dobak

PERSPECTIVE

I Ed Skender

Matt SekeUa

I Hans Ziegler

Paul Ritacco

SPORTS DESK

Al Hibbert Gene Clcatelli

France Special or Was The Week

There

NEWS SUMMARY

Expression P.M. Georgetown

Hank Berger Peter Murray

NEWS SUMMARY

Broadway Record Rack Panorama

Bill Weber Phil Lacovara

The Best Of The Georgetown Georgetown Speaks

Fqrum

NEWS SUMMARY

Polyhymnia A Treasury Of Piano MUSic

John Pfordresher Robert Nye

NEWS SUMMARY

Music Out Of Music Out Of The Night The Night

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The Last Word The Last Word Ed Skender Chris Wallace

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Jerry Rzasa

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Thursday, March 8, 1962 rBE BOYA Page Nine

GOOD NEWS! NOW YOU CAN STAY AT THE PALACE·ON-PARK-AVENUE!

Wicked Stage (Continued from page 2)

millionaire proprietor of Tarleton's Underwear. Tarleton has read a bit of everything, and is wont to quote it when an analogical occasion presents itself. The play shows his gradual disillusionment with the naivete of his daughter. When he is trying to impress Lord Summer­hays (Kendall Clark), Bentley's father, he scores a comic triumph with the flamboyant: "The only truth is paradox, read Chesterton." When he discovers that nothing is as it appears with his daughter, he shout's "I'll read King Lear."

Glee Club (Continued from page 1)

times is phenomenal in its diffi­culty and speed. But perhaps the most demanding is the co-ordina­tion of all the disparate elements (orchestra, soloists, and chorus) into that unity which will give a performance meaning, and this last obstacle can only be overcome by many, many practices.

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Hypatia's only too proximate occasion of sin, is Joey Percival, (Robert Quarry), who, rather improbably but nevertheless delight­fully, manages to crash his aeroplane into the Tarleton's summer­house at the end of Act 1. The crash also produces Lina (Jean Le­Boivier), a Polish lady with an unpronounceable last name and a foresworn duty to do something dangerous every day of her life. What could possibly be more dangerous than marching blindly into the first act of a Shavian comedy?

The three soloists for this per­formance will be Lili Chookasian, contralto, John McCollum, tenor, and Donald Gramm, bass, as the Nurse, Mercutio, and Friar Lau­rence, respectively. Miss Chooka­sian is a singer of .great promise who will make her Metropolitan Opera Debut later this month. Mr. McCollum and Mr. Gramm have considerable experience in their as­signments, having performed and recorded the work with Charles Munch and the Boston Symphony, and Mr. Gramm is also familiar to Washington audiences from per­formances with the Opera Society here. Later this month the Mary Washington Chorus under their director, Mr. George Luntz, will also appear on the Sunday night concerts at the National Gallery of Art on March 25.

Another uninvited guest is a mysterious gunman (Alan Oppen­heimer) who turns up, quite literally, in a Turkish bath, armed and determined to kill off the play's under-bred, over-read hero. His motive is a deep dark wrong committed against the gunner's mother by Tarle­ton. Through a superabundance of quotes and a generous helping of pound notes, Tarleton manages to forestall his would-be assailant only to discover that the man knows much, too much about Patsy, Joey and a certain field of heather.

It would be cruel to give away the climax, except to say that, as has been probably guessed, it aU comes off well, with a great deal of fortitude shown by all of the women. If Shaw's men are generally a passle of fools, in this play his women can not be too highly appre­ciated.

The whole play is beautifully set in the Tarleton conservatory, a perfect replica of blowsy Edwardian elegance. The director, Warren Enters, always maintains a strict control of his people. Some seemed to have responded better than others, probably because it is inevitable with Shaw that the only skill required of some of his characters is rhetorical and their deepest problems merely concern Women's Rights, Anti-vivisectionism, or the extent of mismanagement in Indja.

UPARENTS' WEEKEND"

As for the Glee Club, this is certainly the high point of a sea­son which has seen the club and its director, Mr. Paul Chandler Hume, music critic for the Washington Post, in more extensive activity than ever before. "One of the most enjoyable features of this year," said Glee Cluj:> president Bill Joos, "is our renewed contact, for Romeo et Juliette, with the Mary Wash­ington Chorus, with whom we sang two years ago, and with whom we have always had a most pleasant and pro~ductive working relation­ship."

Peace Corps (Continued from page 1)

The administrative organization of the consortium will be complete when the policy board's selection committee has made its choice for a Director, who, with the as­sistance of a secretarial staff and administrative assistant, will serve as co-ordinator and programmer for the summer courses.

Various Projects The Director wiII contact each

member school, through its board member, to notify it of the nature of projects assigned to the con­sortium. Presently the Corps is planning to submit nine .projects to the consortium, including training 35 nurses for Tanganyika; 45 teachers, agriculturists, and me­chanics for Ceylon; and 300 as­sorted workers for Ethiopia.

GU Med. Courses Each university will inform the

Director of what it can contribute to the program-for example, for the Ethiopia project, Georgetown would offer m e d i c a I courses, Howard would offer Swahili, U. of Maryland agriculture and athletics, American would give courses in American studies, etc. And the trainees will be housed on the var­ious campuses.

BREAKING THE ICE FOR DAD. When Dad comes to visit, help him bridge the years with questions like this: "These old ivy-covered buildings never change, do they?" "Say, aren't those girls the cat's meow?" "Dad, do you remember how great Cigarettes used to taste?" Then inform your Dad that college students still smoke more Luckies than any other regular_ He will realize that times haven't really changed. He'll be in such good, youthful spirits that he'll buy you a carton.

The new program is unique, not only for Peace Corps officials, who see great hope in its results, but also for the nation's educators, as there are very few instances of several universities pooling their educational resources. In both cir­cles, the summer's consortium will be observed with interest, and if found successful here, the Corps plans to extend it to other parts of the country.

No Profit As for the consortium's prospects

of success, in the opinion of Father Dunne "There is no reason why the un i ve r sit i e s can't cooperate smoothly, since we're not profiting financially by the experiment, and since we're all interested in the same thing-helping, as far as we can, underdeveloped countries, and projecting the image of the ideal­istic American."

CHANGE TO LUCKIES and get some taste for a change! ©,I.T.Cu. Product oj k~Y~-'~~isourmiddlename"

Page Ten THE HOYA Thursday; March 8, 1962

~--~;;------;;;-----:;;-=--~--=-:--;--~----;;~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;~" . Hoyas Topple St. Pet¢r's; Fall Short Against LaSalle

by Michael Maher Last Saturday night in Mc­

Donough Memorial Gymnasi­um, the Georgetown basket­ball team proudly brought the curtain down on the most suc­cessful Hoya basketball sea­son since 1953 by routing St. Peter's of Jersey City, 100-68.

After a shaky start, the Hoyas came on strong midway through the first half to erase a 5 point St. Peter's lead. Jim Carrino, Bob Sharpenter, Paul Tagliabue, and Vince Wolfington scored repeatedly on outside jump shots over the St. Pete's zone defense to give the Blue and Gray a 7 point halftime lead over the scrappy visitors from Jersey.

Seniors Retire The second half then proved to

be a mere formality as far as the outcome of the game was con­cerned. By midway through the fourth quarter, all the departing seniors had played their final min­utes in the Georgetown uniform and were now watching their soph­omore and junior understudies be­gin to take their place.

Jim Carrino, the game's high scorer with 25 points, became the fifth highest scorer in Georgetown basketball history with his 21st point of the evening. Jay Force came back for one final taste in the last minute when he replaced the injured Jim Christy and, at the same time, satisfied the howling Hoya fans by dropping in the evening's 99th and 100th points for Georgetown. John Kraljic once again loosened up the defense with several hard driving layups and two uncanny passes. Tom "Terry" O'Dea, definitely the sleeper of the evening, contributed 13 quick points, mostly on the "Judge Spe­cial", a long jumper.

TWO MORE ... as retiring captian Paul Tagliabue sends the ball through the cords against St. Peter's.

Explorers Slip By GU In rinal rive Seconds

by Bill Hodgman Last Wednesday night La Salle snatched a 78-76 vic­

tory over Georgetown on the last-second heroics of Bob Mc­Ateer. The six-foot senior, who scored almost at will throughout the game, made a driving lay-up over three Hoya players with two seconds left in the contest.

Georgetown led at halftime 41-40, as Jim Christy scored

Misses Record Bob Sharp enter fouled out short­

ly before he probably would have become the fourth highest single season scorer in Georgetown's his­tory; he missed this mark by a single point. Dan Slattery did not suit up for the finale due to ill­ness, but his value to Hoya basket­ball was determined quite a while ago. Paul Tagliabue, the team cap­tain, played a typical Tag game, always aggressive and accurate more often than not. Last alpha­betically, but certainly not last in value, is Vince Wolfington, who came on magnificently in the last three games and, as the only non­scholarship member of the squad, perhaps deserves more credit than anyone.

So, farewell to the seniors of the 1962 basketball squad. They have left a legacy at Georgetown, both on and off the court, which won't be equalled for quite some time.

16 points, including six jump shots in a row. McAteer and his Explorer teammates were stone cold in the unfamiliar surroundings of McDonough Gymnasium, but their re­bounding strength and a lax Hoya defense allowed them to stay close.

Georgetown switched to a zone defense to start the second half, but LaSalle solved it immediately. 6'8" Walt Samson dominated the backboards 'and McAteer made three buckets in a row as the Ex­plorers led 59-54. But Christy, Jim Carrino, and Vince W olfington led a Georgetown resurgence which tied the score at 72-all with four minutes left to play. Then the Hoyas missed good opportunities :for one-and-one free throws and tip-ins, and when McAteer had the ball at mid-court with twenty-five seconds to play and the score dead­locked at 76-all, the crowd sensed that it was all over. It was.

McAteer finished with 33 points

Final Varsity Statistics G FG Pct. FT Pct. TP Avg~

Sharpenter 23 150 .466 115 287 415 18.0 Carrino 23 146 .482 78 122 370 16.1 Tagliabue 21 92 .368 53 205 237 11.3 Christy 23 103 .479 39 54 245 10.7 Slattery 21 61 .439 21 118 143 6.8 Wolfington 20 41 .387 23 83 105 5.3 Kraljic 17 24 .387 21 40 69 4.1 Mazelin 16 20 .435 20 14 58 3.6 O'Dea 14 20 .417 3 10 43 3.1 Force 18 12 .308 26 13 50 2.8 Devlin 8 9 .563 4 14 22 2.8

and Samson with 18 and 14 re­bounds. For Dudey Moore's team it was their fifteenth win in twenty­three games. Christy finished with 22 points for Georgetown, W olfing­ton with 16, and Carrino with 13. It was the ninth loss of the season for the Hoyas against thirteen victories.

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~~\SPORTS

At this time we feel that it is fitting to take one last· look at basketbalL A quick glance at the 14-9 record reveals that the Hoyas haven't been better since 1953. The opponents __ were tough this year but, as Coach O'Keefe promised, next .. year's schedule will make this season's seem mild.

The work done by the '61-'62 Hoyas has laid the founda­tion for what we hope will be the brightest year in Hilltop basket- r ball. The frosh give every indication of providing excellent support • for the returning lettermen.

The features of next year's schedule are simple: length and • strength. Three teams were dropped while six were added to bring the total to 26 games, 13 on the road and 13 at home. Fairleigh-Dickenson, Mount St. Marys, and St. Peters are gone, and they have been replaced ~ by Army, Holy Cross, Lafayette (old friends), Loyola of New Orleans, Rutgers, and Syracuse. Need we say that the Hoyas will be quite a • bit busier next year? •

By the way, if you should happen to be roaming around the Midwest over the Christmas vacation you might stop in Detroit for • the Motor City Tournament, one of the top Holiday tourneys in the nation. You're sure to see familiar faces, because the boys in the· trading department have swapped the Richmond Invitational for this • one.

This schedule also includes the finest selection of home games that the Hilltop has seen in quite a while. There is no doubt that Hoya • fans will witness many good games next year, and that the players will have their work cut out for them.

* The spring recruiting drive is on and we see that assistant i

soccer coach Jack Galloway has announced that tryouts and practice ~ ~ will be held on the Lower Field beginning Monday, March 12. All can· didates, especially those with big feet and agile heads, should report at 3 :30 p.m. on the appointed day. The only requirements are a • sweat suit, sneakers, and a burning desire to run and kick (or kick and run, whichever is more advantageous).

Mr. Galloway was heard to say, "I encourage any interested freshman, sophomore, or junior, even if he has no previous soccer experience, to come out for these workouts." He is trying to build • up a better intercollegiate program through a wider undergraduate participation in the sport. For those who like a "man's game," we point out that soccer is one of the few contact sports on Campus.

Basic Strategy, New Faces, Ready For Diamond Debut

With a break in the weather, he • expects to start outdoor workouts within a week or ten days. <1

~~

With pre-season instructional clinics Georgetown's baseball coach, Tom Nolan, is setting the founda­tion for what he hopes will be a successful 1962 diamond campaign. The past few afternoons, Nolan has been meeting with his varsity prospects to discuss various fun­damentals and plays before actual practice begins, which the veteran coach hopes will be very soon.

The outlook is one of optimism'" ~ and, with twenty sophomores up ~ from last year's fine freshman e;:; squad to go with eleven lettermen, • Hoya baseball fortunes should show an upward trend for the next few seasons. Catcher Jim Schwab leads , the returning veterans and Mike Marchetti and Cliff Theiss were ... cited for their importance. Mar­chetti, an outfielder, was praised for his hard work and fine attitude in past seasons and is counted on this year for his fine defensive play. • Theiss was hampered by injuries last season, but is expected to re­bound for the Hoya nine this ' spring.

Sophomores will play an impor-tant part in future plans and N olan ~ is especially pleased with talented switch-hitting first baseman John Brogan and other newcomers George Martin, Al Pratka, and Bill Solomon. These boys will bolster ~ the young team and, along with ~ classmate Marty Vickers and in-

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field letterman Bob Dunn, give Georgetown one of its speediest teams in years. Frank Bartos, J ohn ~ .... McCarthy, Al Merritt, and George '­mound corps and are counted on to aid the pitching situation, which ~ Nolan calls "seventy-five percent of the game".

Lopata 12 7 .241 5 O'Donnell 10 6 .316 4

21 19 10 16

1.6 1.6

GOING DOWN •.• .Joe Mazelin follows through as the ball pauses in its trip through the hoop as .Jim Christy and Bob Sharpenter look on.

The 17-game schedule will be in­augurated with a home opener against Howard University on April 2, and will conclude with a ,. test at the Naval Academy on May 10. Coach Nolan is well satisfied " with the schedule, which includes most of the area schools, along with always rugged Delaware, Randolph-Macon, and several east-ern nines.

" Thursday, March 8, 1962

CHICANE by Matt Sekella ,

The model' year of 1962 will be remembered for a number of reasons. It will be fondly recalled as the year of the sports car influence in Detroit. The year that the horsepower race resumed in full swing. And, most of all, 1962 will be remembered as the year Americans. started

, building a little common sense into their cars. The addition of dual-brake systems by two manufacturers is a milestone in safety. Seat belt brackets (unfortunately not belts themselves) are now re­quired on all production cars, which is a step in the right direction. Then there is the matter of the four-speed transmission, optional on almost everybody's cars, which has been in need for years. Of course, all of the above advances have been standard on European cars since the War. Perhaps this signifies the beginning of adoption of proven features by Detroit. We have our hopes up on this one. Adding safety and reasonable performance to our cars need not add two cents to their price. If u. S. manufacturers wish to recapture their lost market, they will have to offer better competition. They are on the right track, let's hope they stay with it.

The Volatile Volvo The little Swedish "bomb" called Volvo and its amazing com­

petition record has always fascinated us, so last Saturday we visited Stewart Motors and took a close look.

The model designation, PV-544, is the only unexciting part of the car. Bearing a body style resembling a cross between a '47 Ford and an XK-E, the 544 is the best example of superb automotive engi­neering on the road today. The finish (both inside and out), solidness of construction, and mechanical perfection, are almost unbelieveable. For example, every Volvo is dipped in rustproofing, and given seven coats of enamel. The Gothenburg firm goes so far as to use hub caps of a brass-steel construction to preserve their finish.

But the proof of any car is on the road and the 544 is a delight to drive. Everything is within easy reach from the comfortable front seat. Even the rear seat is roomy. The power-plant, now up to a full 90 HP with plenty of torque, sends the Volvo to 50 MPH in 10 seconds. The four-speed transmission is as smooth as silk and a joy to use. Handling and brakes are up to competition standards so they should be more than adequate in normal use. The best part of the ride, though, was the price: $2300 delivered. Say what you like, for the money, Volvo is the best performance and quality package on the market today.

From Here & There · .. Veteran driver "Fireball" Roberts picked up a hard fought win at the Daytona Tri-Oval in a '62 Pontiac. Roberts' car was powered by the brand new 421 cu.in. V -8. Thirty-five seconds behind came Bob Petty in his 413 cu.in. Plymouth, finishing better than any other Plymouth in our memory. · .. For the second year in a row, Dan Gurney took first place in the Nassau Trophy Race. A team driver for Porsche in the warmer months, the racing Californian also drove a Ford' at the Daytona. · . . Chevrolet Division has just released plans to fit a Corvette V-8 in the Chevy II compact. Although a little nose-heavy, it blasts 0 to 60 in 6.8 seconds and handles well. · . . Pontiac engineering has a new experimental car running around the proving ground. Called the Tempest Monte Carlo, the roadster is powered with a 250 HP engine. Very sharp looking. · .. Participating in the Compact race at Daytona Beach this year was a Tempest Le Mans with a huge 421 cu.in. V -8 under the hood. After giving the Jaguar sedans the surprise of their lives, unfortu­nately, the car succumbe!l to the frequent Tempest competition trouble: the transmission broke. However the potential of this car is endless.

So, on this final note we leave until next month: Remember, all it takes is one mistake to cause an accident. Don't you make that mistake.

Varsity Trackmen Finish Fourth In New York's K of C Relays

by Rory Quirk Georgetown's indoor track

team returned from the K of C Meet at Madison Square Gar­den last Saturday with fourth places in both the mile and two-mile relays.

In the mile relay, GU was placed in the fastest heat against the finest teams in the country. The Hoya contingent of Jack Ubhaus, Leo Chausse, Roger Caruso and John Butler finished in 3 :21.8 be­hind NYU, Villanova, and Holy Cross. The Violets' winning time was 3:18.4.

GU and Fordham represented the United States in the International Two-Mile Relay against entries from Canada and Ireland. Fordham took the event in a blistering 7 :34.0, with Canada a close second. Georgetown, with Jim Tucker, Charlie McGovern, Ed Schmitt and John Reilly running, pressed the Irish team all the way, before los­ing by a step at the tape. George­town's time was a slow 7:40.0. The Hoyas were not at full strength, however, as both McGovern and Reilly had been sick prior to the meet and their times suffered as a result.

Coach Steve Benedek is now in the process of priming his runners for the season-ending IC4A meet in New York this Saturday. Bene­

'dek plans to enter John Reilly and Jay Van Brunt in the mile run and

hopes to pick up points in this event. The same mile relay team that ran in the K of C Meet will be entered and Dick Camuso will re­place Reilly on the two-mile team. GU will also enter a freshman medley relay team of Dick Mc­Cahon (880), Charlie Accettola (440), John DeCourcey (220) and Joe Lynch (mile). Benedek sees Villanova as the winner with the Hoyas either fourth or fifth.

In evaluating the season, Bene­dek noted that, in comparing this year's times with those of 1960-61, it has been a most successful one, and he feels track is rising rapidly here on the Hilltop.

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Frosh T()p~'tags In Tough Contest As Barry Stars

Georgetown's baby Hoyas (16-2) downed District leader DeMath~'

High (1,7-2) in a 78-77 squeake,r, Wednesday, February 28. John Austin, DeMatha's, b~ckcourt ace and District scoring leader, scored' 32 points to share 'game scoring honors with Georgetown's Jim Barry.

Page Eleven

In a close first half, DeMatha scored first and held a slim lead un­til Barry's jumper gave the frosh a 24-23 edge. Three drives by John Prendergast and a tap-in by Tom Cradock made it 32-23, but the visitors rallied to tie at 35 and again at 37. Joe Franz's jumper at the buzzer made it 40-40.

DRIVE-IN ..• Jim Barry tries for two points, going through the tight DeMatha defense.

Tight Finish The frosh grabbed a quick 46-42

second half advantage on drives by Prendergast and George Keenan, but DeMatha ripped off eight straight to take a 50-46 lead. The frosh pulled even on a Franz lay­up at 62. Two quick goals by Prendergast gave the frosh a 66-62 lead, but, Austin tied it at 72 and his three point play made it 75-72 with 1 :54 left. After Franz hit a lay-up, DeMatha started a freeze. Then, Austin lost the ball on a drive and Barry tapped in Tim McNamara's lay-up attempt to make it 76-75 with 0:21 remaining. Franz sank two foul shots seconds later to ice it and a DeMatha lay­up at the buzzer was meaningless.

The frosh played this contest without the services of forward Ron Duncan, who had been hos­pitalized due to his collapse fol­lowing the St. John's game.

Departing Se!1iors Honored by WGTB

• -

WGTB sports director Gene Ci­catelli has announced that the Cam­pus radio station has reintroduced its weekly selection of an "Athlete of the Week." These selections had been a regular feature of the sports coverage of WGTB before their discontinnance last semester.

Here's deodorant ~rotection This week WGTB has 'recognized

the graduating members of the Georgetown basketball team for their contributions to the Univer­sity in four years of competition. They are Jim Carrino, Jay Force, John Kraljic, Tom O'Dea, Bob Sharpenter, Dan Slattery, Paul Tagliabue, and Vince Wolfington.

YOU CAN TRUST

Cicatelli pointed out that these men have had to make sacrifices to achieve successful seasons. He said that they have advanced the reputation of Georgetown by their efforts both on and off the court. They have provided Georgetown with its first two consecutive win­ning seasons in more than a decade, WGTB congratulates these eight athletes and expresses its best wishes for whatever they might un­dertake in the future.

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Page Twelve

Frosh. End Season. On Winning Note

The Georgetown frosh· ended their campaign on a winning note as they topped Gonzaga High School 77-65, on Saturday night. The baby Hoyas, under coach Tom Coleman, completed their season with an impressive 17-2 record.

The first half proved to be a see­saw struggle, for neither team was able to hold more than a four point lead as Coleman started his second club and played them throughout the entire period. Pat Hogan's fifteen points on fine shooting, coupled with his aggressive I'e­bounding, kept the Blue and Gray' in the I'ace. At the intermission, the baby Hoyas trailed 31-30.

Regulars Provide Spark As the second half opened the

regulars took over and Gonzaga stretched its lead to seven points. " The Hoyas, sparked by Jim Barry's 15 points, rallied and managed to tie the score at 56 all. Tim Mc­N amara then sparked the team to a ten point surge to put the con­test out of reach of Gonzaga.

The game ended one of the finest seasons in Georgetown's freshman basketball history. Among the team's seventeen victories were im­pressive performances against the Navy plebes, DeMatha High, and the Maryland frosh, Their two de­feats came at the hands of the George Washington frosh.

In his first year of coaching, Tom Coleman has· succeeded, as the record shows, in combining individ­ual talent into a well-knit unit which should provide a good deal of potential for next year's varsity squad.

IS AN ANGEL-SAYS CAROL BURNETT Garry Moore and Carol Burnett have a mutual admiration society. Says Carol: "He's the kindest man I've ever met." Says Garry: "She could be a great serious actress." In this week's Post, Carol tells why Garry "rations" her TV spots. How she and Durward Kirby laugh it up offstage. And why success put a jinx on her marriage,

The Sa'urday EWlening

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CRAMMING •.• frosh fore ward Jim Barry goes over the top in the final game against Gonzaga. (photo by Zamenski)

Thursday, March 8, 1962:-1

Mermen- Third at Maryland;'''1 Shatter Four GU· Records

Georgetown's varsity mermen shattered four school recOl'ds while competing in the District AAU Swim Meet at Maryland's Cole Field House on February 26, and these records were instrumental in spurring the Hoyas to a third place finish.

GU, with fifty points, finished behind Maryland (89); and Amer­ican (59). Howard (40), Gallaudet (26), and Catholic U_ (23) also participated in the meet, which was captured by the Terps for the third consecutive year_

Georgetown's medley relay team consisting of Larry Hauser, Allen Weldon, Tom Gilmartin and Lynn Fritz set a school record of 4:11.3 in the 400 yard event, while finishing third. Hauser, the sophomore back­stroke ace, was the only swimmer of the other five competing schools

to win a first place. He set a school ,. record of 2:15.1 in the 200 yard backstroke. Lynn Fritz, another' sophomore, set a school recoI'd of. 5:11 in the 440.yard freestyle event and finished second. Georgetown's' other relay team consisting of Pat. Templeton, Peter Fisher, Lynn Fritz, and Dave Stephens set a·'" school record of 3:56 while finishing thh'd in the 400 yard freestyle re- ' lay.

Stephens took a second place in the 220 yard freestyle. Allen >

Weldon finished third in the 200. yard individual medley and Tom ~ Gilmartin took a third in the 200 r I yard breaststroke event. r

The bulk of this year's George-' l town team will be returning next· I year and they hope to be in good . position to break the Terrapins" I, domination of the Metropolitan, !,~ Washington Collegiate Champion- j ships.

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