Poge THE 6, - digital.library.villanova.edu

7
"s"x Poge 8 THE VILLANOVAN DecembT 6, 1965 / The 1965-66 version of the Wildkitten is introduced to its fans at the Frosh- Vorsity Game. From left to right, they are: Richard Angowski, Paul Espel, Jim Feury, Frank Gillen, John Jones, George May, Frank McCall, Jim Mcintosh, Bob (Photo by Richard Bauer) Melchionni, Mike Ormond, John Price, and Edward Sculiin. Bill Horlacher was injured and unable to play. Managers of the Freshman team are Bill Kowalski and Tom Powlowski. v '4 VILLANOVA. December 2 > /, ' •. •;^«:'/'';^;v.v-:v*^Qx^;f'';-^ (8:15 p.m.) VILLANOVA. vs. Scranton '.**' VILLANOVA. vs. Providence VILLANOVA vs. Princeton VILLANOVA vs. Oregon State. VILLANOVA vs. Toledo VILLANOVA vs. Penn ECAC Holiday >: Field House December 4 (8:15 p.m.) ' '..' '" ''.'. ". ' Providence, R.j. December 7 (8 p.m.) Princeton, N.J. December 11 (8:45 p.m.) Palestra December 18 (8 p.m.) Toledo, Ohio December 22 (8:45 p.m.) Palestra December 27, 28, 30 ft ' Festival Tournoment Madison Square Garden VILLANOVA vs. Templ( Janupry 5 (P p.m.) Palestra St. John's VILLANOVA. ,:;•: :^::'> vs. MX": ^avier VILLANOVA. ;,••::: vs. .:/ * .,' . •* ('('« ' V ' St. Joseph's. VILLANOVA. - -.v vs. Detroit VILLANOVA. vs. Memphis State. VILLANOVA- vs. St. Peter's VILLANOVA. vs. Duquesne VILLANOVA vs. Fairfield . January 8 (2 p.m.) Jamaica, N.Y. January 12 (8 p.m.) Cincinnati, Ohio . January 16 (2:30 p.m.) Palestra January 19 (8 p.m.) Detroit, Mich. January 22 (8:30 p.m.) Memphis, Tenn. January 25 (8:15 p.m.) Field House February 2 (8:45 p.m.) Palestra February 5 (7 p.m.) Palestra VILLANOVA. vs. LaSalle _ VILLANOVA. VILLANOVA. vs. Canisius VILLANOVA. vs. Niagara VILLANOVA. vs. Memphis State. VILLANOVA- vs. Seton Hall February 12 (8:45 p.m.) Palestra February 16 (8:45 p.m.) Palestra February 19 (9:30 p.m.) Buffalo Memorial Auditorium February 21 (8 p.m.) Field House February 26 (8:45 p.m ) Palestra March 1 (8:15 p.m.) Field House < V r / I,* V / I .4 VILLANOVA

Transcript of Poge THE 6, - digital.library.villanova.edu

Page 1: Poge THE 6, - digital.library.villanova.edu

"s"x

Poge 8 • THE VILLANOVAN • DecembT 6, 1965

/

The 1965-66 version of the Wildkitten is introduced to its fans at the Frosh-

Vorsity Game. From left to right, they are: Richard Angowski, Paul Espel, Jim

Feury, Frank Gillen, John Jones, George May, Frank McCall, Jim Mcintosh, Bob

(Photo by Richard Bauer)Melchionni, Mike Ormond, John Price, and Edward Sculiin. Bill Horlacher wasinjured and unable to play. Managers of the Freshman team are Bill Kowalskiand Tom Powlowski.

v

'4

VILLANOVA. December 2

>/,

'.

•.

.

•;^«:'/'';^;v.v-:v*^Qx^;f'';-^ (8:15 p.m.)

VILLANOVA.

vs.

Scranton'.**'

I

VILLANOVA.

vs.

Providence

VILLANOVA

vs.

Princeton—

VILLANOVA

vs.

Oregon State.

VILLANOVA

vs.

Toledo

VILLANOVA

vs.

Penn

ECAC Holiday

>: Field House

December 4

(8:15 p.m.)

'

'..' '"''.'.

".'

Providence, R.j.

December 7

(8 p.m.)

Princeton, N.J.

December 11

(8:45 p.m.)

Palestra

December 18

(8 p.m.)

Toledo, Ohio

December 22

(8:45 p.m.)

Palestra

December 27, 28, 30

ft'

'

Festival Tournoment Madison Square Garden

VILLANOVA

vs.

Templ(

Janupry 5

(P p.m.)

Palestra

St. John's

VILLANOVA.

,:;•: :^::'> vs.

MX":

^avier

VILLANOVA.•

;,••::: vs. .:/'

*

.,'.

•* ('('« 'V

'

St. Joseph's.

VILLANOVA.

- -.v vs.

Detroit

VILLANOVA.

vs.

Memphis State.

VILLANOVA-

vs.

St. Peter's

VILLANOVA.

vs.

Duquesne

VILLANOVA

vs.

Fairfield .

January 8

(2 p.m.)

Jamaica, N.Y.

January 12

(8 p.m.)

Cincinnati, Ohio

. January 16

(2:30 p.m.)

Palestra

January 19

(8 p.m.)

Detroit, Mich.

January 22

(8:30 p.m.)

Memphis, Tenn.

January 25

(8:15 p.m.)

Field House

February 2

(8:45 p.m.)

Palestra

February 5

(7 p.m.)

Palestra

VILLANOVA.

vs.

LaSalle _

VILLANOVA.

VILLANOVA.

vs.

Canisius —

VILLANOVA.

vs.

Niagara

VILLANOVA.

vs.

Memphis State.

VILLANOVA-

vs.

Seton Hall

February 12

(8:45 p.m.)

Palestra

February 16

(8:45 p.m.)

Palestra

February 19

(9:30 p.m.)

Buffalo Memorial

Auditorium

February 21

(8 p.m.)

Field House

February 26

(8:45 p.m )

Palestra

March 1

(8:15 p.m.)

Field House

< V

r

/I,*

V

/

I

.4

VILLANOVA

Page 2: Poge THE 6, - digital.library.villanova.edu

Page 2 • THE VILLANOVAN t December 8, 1965

Larry Krupa Promoted

To Assistant Manager

Of WWVU Radio StationLarry Krupa, Junior Engineer-

ing major, has been promoted

to tiie post of Assistant Station

Manager of WWVU Radio.

In addition to this position,

Krupa will become Chief Engineer

of the station replacing Jim Brlgg-

man who resigned. Krupa wasBusiness Manager of the station

for over a year.

Sales Manager Paul E. Scannell

succeeds Krupa as Business Man-ager. Lew Traver l)ecomes Sales

Manager.In making the appointment.

Station Manager Bill McCloskeytold the VILLANOVAN, "I'm al-

ways proud to be able to dip into

the staff and promote people. There

is a wealth of talent on the WWVUstaff and every promotion is an

indication of the amount of talent

an individual has demonstrated."

"I'm sorry to lose Briggman,"McCloskey commented, "he spent

a great deal of his time helping

the station and has improved it

technically in many ways. At the

same time, I know I can dependon the new people to do a good

job, as a matter of fact Traverhas already sold one account.

Another opening will occur

shortly when Senior Phil Colombo,WWVU's Promotion Director

graduates, in January.

Just before Thanksgiving, there

was another change in the WWVUorganizational chart caused by the

resignation of Don Casey as

Campus News Director. He wasreplaced by Al Norcott, one of

the newsmen on the station.

HAVE FUN WORKING IN EUROPE

WORK INEUROPELuxembourg- All types ofsummer jobs, with wages to

.^400, are available in Europe.I'3ach applicant receives a tra-

vel grant of <:250. For a 36-page illustrated booklet con-taining all jobs and applicationforms send S2 (handling andairmail) to Dept. N, AmericanStudent Information Service,

22 Avenue de la Liberte,

Grand Duchy of Luxembourg.

f-r::•

'

k... -

mmOf course you can

get a cash loan!

• Our new LOANS I'O

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• Monthly lepaymenis will

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• Step in or 'phone . . . We'll

be glad to serve you.

Ritter Finance%'^9^90 00*^4

16 E. Lancaster Ave.

ARDMORE

phone Ml 9-1318

Hours: 9-5i30 Moiw thruThurs*, 9-8 P.M. Fris.

SGA Votes For Installment

Of Desks For Left-Hondersonly member of the SGA against

a policy of installing left-handed

desks in the classrooms of the

University.

He gave no reason for his op-

position.

The motion was presented by

Don Serafano and Richard Brandt.

Serafano said that after consulting

with members of the Education

Department and Psychological

services, it was determined that

the side of the chair on which the

desk is located is a factor to the

15 per cent of the student popula-

tion that Is left-handed. \

Serafano says he will ask the

Administration that these desks

be installed gradually as chairs

are repaired so as to get a good

distribution and not to overburden

the maintenance men.BUSY MEETING

There have been several other

motions passed in recent weeks

since the last SGA report In the

VILLANOVAN. These motions

provide that:

— Motions to be voted on by the

Senate be presented by noon

of the schoolday prior to the

meeting.—The SGA request an early

exam schedule posting fromnow on in t>oth semesters.—All Seniors be allowed stack

privileges at Falvey Library.

Father Ronglone Is quoted as

being favorably disposed to this

legislation.

{Continued from page 1)

—Judicial procedures be review-

ed and recommendations made.

This was accomplished by a

Ward Williams motion at the

November 29 meeting.

THREE EXAMS OUT

The SGA has also gone on record,

unanimously, as being against any

student being required to take three

final examinations In one day.

(There was no objection to three

exam periods daily.)

In a motion presented by BobDean, the Congress called on the

Administration to allow a student

to request a change of date for

one examination should he be

scheduled for three In one day.

As visualized by Dean, a student

would follow the same procedure

currently in order when a con-

flict develops.

One Biology Major pointed out

that some students In that course

have been scheduled for an examon Monday, three on Tuesday and

another on Wednesday.He pointed out that a student

"might as well start packing now"If his passing a course depended

on his mark on one of those finals.

NO EXAM EXEMPTIONSIn the course of the last two

meetings there have also been

several Important announcements

Including the report from FrankEck that the Administration had

turned down an SGA motion whichcalled for Seniors with an **A»'

Book Exchange Ready AgainTh'3 Student Activities Commit-

tee of the Student Government As-

sociation plans to undertake two

main tasks next semester. The re-

running of the Used Book Exchange

and the distribution of the Student

Telephone directories.

The Used Book Exchange will

be run similar to the way it wasconducted last semester. Notices

will be published on all bulletin

boards when the students return

in January. These notices will tell

the students where to bring the

second'Semester books that they

want the S.G. A. to sell.

The S.G.A. will then sell the

books during the first week of

school next semester. It is impor-tant that every student should checkthe bulletin boards and take advan-

tage of the S.G.A. service.

Also next semester the Student

Activities Committee will start

selling the student telephone direc-

tories on a campus wide basis.

These books contain the names,home and school addresses, the

telephone number, class and year

and college division of nearly everyundergraduate Villanovan.

n/rf^0t'

FOR YOUR GROUP

NOW-Yetr flATERNITY, SORORITY, OR ClUI

CO! schtdwlt privote winter w««k«id

•t CAMPTANALO in tht POCONOS

Facilities for skiing. all winter sports & recreation

10 minutes from both Camelback and Timber- hillN. ^ ji

call MR. SAMITZ - GR 3 3015

. for informationti^First "%

solo concert in ||

Philadelphia 1HAROLD LEVENTNAL W.

pretenti

JUDY

COLLINSFRI. DEC. 17,1965

AT 8:30 P.M.

ACADEMY OF MUSIC

Broad & Locust Streets

TICKETS: |3.50. 3.00, 2.S0, 2.00

on sale at box office'^^ Malt Orderf &,Checks payable to:

Academy of Music. Enclose stampedself-addressed return envelope

Elektra Records.

in a Spring Semester course to

not be required to take a final

exam in that subject.

There were 53 motions present-

ed in the first Semester of the

current SGA.

These will be included in the

Codification to be presented at

the next meeting of the SGA, next

semester.

DRIVE PART TIME

ONE OR T^VONIGHTS A ^VEEK

Yellow Cab Company of Philadel-

phia has openings for part-time

drivers. Here is an opportunity for

pleasant, interesting outdoor work

with good earnings.

Over the years thousands of college

students have driven Yellow Cabs

to aid their financial needs.

Apply

YELLOW CAB COMPANYEmployment Office

105 South 12th Str**t

Mcndoy threuah Thwr»d«y—* A.M. •• 9 fM.PrMay and S«lwrd«y—9 A.M. H S tM.

Are you worfcing more than

six hours o week doing menial

labor? You could be earning as

much OS $5 an hour and pre-

paring for a coreOr if you hove

leadership abilities. Contact

Miss Sorensen-GRonite 2-4987.

TOM PAXTON

momPoint

Stii4MilbtnTUE.WED.THU.«SUN.

ZSMOWSIilOTUES-lhiuSUN.Eitri Sal. ShM 11:30

l74Uocasier«M..BryiiM<«r|

UIS^3375

DS

CAREERSIN STEEL

Our representative

will be on campus

January 20

to interview undergraduate

and graduate candidates for

Bethlehem's 1966 LoopCourse training program.

OPPORTUNITIES areavailable for men interested

in steel plant operations,

sales, research, mining, ac-

counting, and other activi-

ties.

DEGREES required are

mechanical, metallurgical,

electrical, chemical, indus-

trial, civil, mining, andother engineering special-

ties; also chemistry, phy-sics, mathematics, business

administration, and liberal

arts.

If you would like to discuss

your career interest with a

Bethlehem representative,

see your placement officer

to arrange for an interview

appointment.

An EqucU OpportunityEmployer in the Plana for

Progress Program

BETHLEHEMSTEEL

%^qm cmTU•v

'.•Jl'*.'

THIS IS WHATYOU LOOK FOR

IN A SPORT JACKET

You want iiulividimlity . . .

something in color or pattern

that looks as though it t(K)k a

bit of .searching to find . . . yet

is in unquestioned good taste.

You will find it in the rich

heather tones of our imported

Irish Tweed sport jackets . . .

gold, blues, olive and ru.s.set

browns in medium and wide

herringlK)nes, crowsfoot pat-

terns and heather mixes in

hopsack weave. And you will

wear it comfortably in our ownnatural shoulder model with

welted edges. A superb sport

jacket, $52.0().

Other Jackets from $40

Sizes 35-44 inchtdinn extra hnfus

AT ALL ROGERS PEET STORES:

NEW YORK • BOSTON • HARTFORD • WASHINGTON

\

^Ji

^

tr

'•-.1

.«l

March 24 Is Tentative Date

For Annual Class Elections

December 8, 1965 • THE VILLANOVAN • Poge 3

This year's general class elec-

tions have tentatively been set

for March 24, 1966. Nominations

for the selections will take place

two weeks prior on March 10.

On March 24, the Class of 1969

will go to the polls to elect eight

people they deem l)est for the

prospective positions. These of-

fices include president, vice-

president, secretary, and treas-

urer of the class, while the other

positions are as representatives to

the Student Government Associa-

tion, Four people will be selected

for these seats, two day-hops and

two residents.

Retreat Dates Set

For Second Semester

With New Attendance

A new system of attendance

will be inaugurated this year in

connection with the schedule for

retreats. Instead of attendance by

class status only (i.e. Senior,

Junior, Sophomore and Freshman

class) the retreats this year will

be run on a combined system

of curricular as well as class

status.

The schedule is set up in the

following manner: on January 26

to 28, a retreat is held for Junior

and Senior Engineering and C&Fstudents, also included are all

women students. The Junior and

Senior Arts and Science students

will have their retreat held on

February 2, 3, 4, while all

Sophomores will have theirs from

March 2 to 4. And finally, the

Freshman retreat is going to be

held on April 20, 21, and 22.

i

specialty

of the

house

In our house it's service.

Financial programs require

planning and planning calls for

syvice. Not the occasional con-

tact, but the professional kind.

The men in our Campus Intern-

ship Program (for college stu-

dents interested in life insur-

ance careers) are trained to

offer this kmd of service. They're

given a solid grounding in the

professional approach to life

insurance programming.

Their training— as well as in-

come—starts while they're still

students, offering an excellent

opportunity to make a proper

career decision before gradua-

tion. f}% of those participating

in the program in the last 10

years are currently enjoying

successful careers with the

Company in sales, supervisory,

and management spots.

You might find our specialty

appetizing, too.

Contact:

Mr. Somual 6. Wurtzel

4601 Market St.

Phila., Pa. ?9?0?

OR

Phone GR 2-4987

PROVIDENTMUTUALHBH LIFEINSUKANCI COMPAMV or m^lLAOtLPMIA

a century of dedicated service

Anyone who has attained a 2.5

cumulative average and is in good

standing with the Dean of Menand Chaplain's Office is eligible

for nomination.

Normally at ViUanova the cam-paigning for the various positions

is quite spirited and the weelc

designated for campaigning (Mon-

day, March 21 through Thursday,

March 24) is often the most ex-

citing week of the school year.

There are del)ates between the

candidates, posters, signs and

much individual campaigning bythe candidates and their workers.This all culminates on election

day when over 85 percent of the

student body votes.

The voting turnout at ViUanovahas always t)een a proud tradition.

George Valva, chairman of the

Election Committee, urges all

members of the Class of 1969

to start thinking along these lines

and become an integral part of the

election tradition at ViUanova.

Ronald Javers Wins 'Lynx'

Award With 'Eliot's Vision'Editor Dennis O'Hara announced last week

that the winner of the LYNX*s twenty five

dollar cash prize for the best work appearingin this issue was awarded to Ronald A. Javers.The award was given for his poem entitled

**Eliot's Vision'* which is a combination of

(PHOTO BY HENRY BOHINICK)

LYNX Editor Dennis J. O'Hora hands a $25 award fo RonaldJavers for tho Best Work in the literary magazine in front of thoLiterary Society plaque in the library* Matt Roche, president ofthe society, will have Jovors' name engraved on the plaque for

the poem "Eliot's Vision."

the sound of Carl Sandburg with

a sense of T. S. Eliot, though still

original as the synthesis. Javers

is a junior majoring in sociology

and a regular contributor to the

LYNX. Upon l)eing awarded the

prize he expressed a modest and

sincere notion of acceptance and

promised more contributions for

the future LYNX issues.

The award was presented in

conjunction with this semester's

Uterary Society **LYNX Award,"

given every semester for the work,

which in the opinion of the Literary

Society represents the most

creative and accomplished student

authored article in the magazine.

Matthew Roche, president of the

society, made the presentation and

placed Ronald Javers' name on

the mahogany and brass plaque in

the Reserve Room of the Falvey

Memorial Library.

The selection of the winner wassimultaneously made by the LYNXeditorial board and the officers

of the Literary Society. Voted a

close second was Peter Vincent's

play entitled "Dangling," a highly

imaginative venture into the

theatre of the Absurd.

The LYNX will be on sale

for the remainder of this weekin the Pie Shoi^)e and at the

ramp leading to the resident's

dining hall. The price remains

at a quarter and, so far, sales

have topped all previous records.

Next semester the LYNX will

again offer twenty five dollars

for the l}est article published and

all creative literary endeavors

are eligible. Submissions may be

made at any time to 210 Saint

Rita's Hall or may be mailed to

THE LYNX in care of the

University.

BUSBOYS

WANTED!for

HORNtHARDART

VAl^Y FORGERt«202dr Schuylkill Expwy.& ValUlr Forge Intorchonge

Penno* TurnpikeAge 78 or ovor. ,5 PM> fo 9

P.M. and/or vor/ec/ hours on

Safurthy* and SundayM,

FREEMEALSIGOOD WAGESI

Apply to tho Monogor at the

Horn & Hordort Rostouront,

Valley Forg««

Belle Air Neors Completion

To Insure Early DistributionThe final touches arebeing added

to the 1966 Belle Air, preparing

it to meet the editor's December10 deadline. An earlier deadline

this year will bring the Belle Airout on April 23, earlier than anyprevious ViUanova yearbook. In-

novations to look for in the 1966

Belle Air will be a revitalized

Senior section, candid i4ioto-

graphy, and a student index, all of

which revolve around this year's

theme of "change."Editor-in-chief Roseanna Boy-

Ian gave a preview to the

VILLANOVAN "changes" to be

Rev. Joseph Costanzo

Delivers Dante Talk

Tonight In Bart ley

Rev. Jose{^ F. Costanzo, S.J.,

Associate Professor of Political

Philosophy and Historical Juris-

prudence, Graduate School of Ford-ham University, will speak on the

topic, *«Dante's De Monarchia,"

tonight at 7:30 p.m. in 110 Bartley

HalL .•!•::;•. --r'V^'."^-^

Fr. Costanzo wa^ ordain^] fn

1944, and has an A.B. degree fromGeorgetown University, an M.A.

from Fordham University, and a

PhJD. from Fordham University.

He has given numerous invita-

tion lectures and has an impressive

list of publications for the FORD-HAM LAW REVIEW, THE NEWSCHOLASTICISM, GREAT BOOKSERIES, THOUGHT, CATHOLICMIND, CATHOLIC \yORLD, JOUR-CONGRESSIONAL RECORD,among others. He also has pub-

lished a book in 1964 entitled

THIS NATION UNDfiR GOD.

Europe for $100Switzerland — A do-it-yourself

summer in Europe is now avail-

able. The new plan makes a trip

to Europe, including transpor-

tation, possible for less than $100.

A complete do-it-yourself pro-

spectus including instructions,

money saving tips and a large

selection of job opportunities

along with discount tours and

application forms may be obtain-

ed by writing to Dept. X. Inter-

national Travel Est., 68 Herren-

gasse, Vaduz, Liechtenstein

(Switzerland) enclosing $1 with

your Inquiry to cover the cost of

the material, overseas handling

and air mail postage.

covered by the 1966 theme. Thesechanges will cover the Univer-

sity's history from its beginning

to the present time.

College to University, increase

in numl)er and type of students,

increase in the diversity of facul-

ty, the physical growth of the

campus, presence and acceptance

of female undergraduates, com-mencement at Convention Hall, and

an attitude change in the students

are the seven changes covered. Thefemale change will be expressed by

the cheerleaders, and the attitude

change will be expressed by stu-

dent interest in political clubs.

Vamp, and so forth.

A revitalized Senior section is

planned. Candid pictures of seniors

on each page is the newest idea,

with condensed history forms tak-

ing the place of repetitious activity

listings found in previous addi-

tions. No activity will be repeated

if it can.be placed under abroader

activity listing.

New ideas in group shots will

have organizations over 30 people

photographed in candid scenes with

a similar background. Another newinnovation of Miss Boylan's is the

student index.

The Index will give the student's

name and the page or pages onwhich he appears. This would aid

not only ViUanova students, but

any outsider seeking a particu-

lar individual's picture. ^"

The staff working on the Belle

Air with Miss Boylan this year

are: Tom Sebastian, managing edi-

tor; Barry Burke, business

manager; Valerie Herbstritt and

Ken Hedges, Senior editors; FrankSamer, organizations editor; and

Theresa Wilson, nursing editor.

Miss Boylan. commentingon this

semester's work, said: "The staff

would like to thank all the students

and faculty meml^ers for their

whole-hearted cooperation."

Blood Drive Donation

Completed By SophsTom Conway, president of the

Sophomore Class, has announced

that the class of 1968 has recently

been associated with two events of

a charitable nature. The first wasthe sponsoring of the blood drive,

and second the donation of a racing

shell to the University Crew team.

The recent blood drive held for

the benefit of United States soldiers

fighting in Viet Nam was termed

*'a huge success." The drive,

held Monday, Noveml)er 29, col-

lected 165 pints of blood. This

was the maximum amount that could

be accepted by the Red Crossbecause of the limited equipment

available. Many would-be dmorswere turned away.

Jack Gardner, general chairman

of the blood drive, stated that the

effort received both local and na-

tional attention* WCAU-TV Phila-

delphia, sent its cameras to the

ViUanova campus, and portions of I

the drive were taped and televised

on news broadcasts that samenight.

''ISN'rTHeftE ANYONE WHO KNOWSWHAT CHRISTMAS IS ALL ABOUT?''

*I9CS ky UiMtd hatm ^ftntuuM. M hihtt mmmt.

CHARLES M. SCHULZ'Snewest cartoon book,

"A CHARUE BROWNCHRISTMAS."is a hevt-

warming, truly delightful

Christmas story, a perfea

gift for both youngsters

and oldsters. 48 pages,

full -color throughout.

|2.}0 at your bookstoie.

THE WORLD fUtUSHINO COMPANY« SUtSIDURY OF THt IIMft MIRROR COMHNV

Cleveland. Ohio 44102

Page 3: Poge THE 6, - digital.library.villanova.edu

Pag* 4 • THE VILLANOVAN • D*c«mb«r 8, 1965

Bermuda orBooksThis shortest of semesters raises many ques-

tions in the minds of students. The freshmenwho have a clean slate from their high school

careers will benefit most from the new schedule.

But those upperclassmen who are used to the

old schedule and also used to procrastinationsuddenly discover the semester is coming to a

rapid close. Probably the only thing that savesthem from insanity is the thought of that long,

long vacation.Taking a rather limited view — since in

these days of distant wars, orbiting spacecapsules, social upheaval, and complexity, anyview focused on one campus at one time hasto be limited -- it seems that an increasingconcern with academic excellence has been dis-

seminating on the University. This is a goodthing but one must remember that other thingsare going on in this world of illusions. Doesanyone ever sit down to read a book whichisn*t on one of their professors' reading lists?

The superficial James Bond thrillers may beread but where does one find the classics of

European and American literature t^ stuffed

away in a library somewhere, unread, gather-ing dust on a shelf.

Literature develops compassion and if thereis anything more sorely needed in the modernworld, then we would like to hear about it.

The university of today needs men and womenwho will involve themselves in the world oftomorrow, and this involvement can be develop-ed on the campus. This does not mean, however,that the university should be a stopping-offplace after a day at the protest factory. In-tellectual involvement should be the student'sfirst concern. He then can read about and par-ticipate in those aspects of the world to whichhis taste and ability direct him. As T,S. Eliottsaid, **Teach us to care, and not to care. Teachus to sit sill,"

But what does all this have to do with the

short semester and academic excellence? It

means simply that parochial concerns com-bined with a non-thinking outlook on life will

produce an intellectually vapid person. Thoseof us who walk around with blinders on through-out our college career will wake up to find the

world has passed us by. When the vacation perioddescends upon our eager arms, we must re-member to use it wisely,

: Vv ^

Editor*in-Chief ,«•••,•,•••••••• •• •Thomas J, KrauseManaging Editor ••••••••••••••••••••••• • Robert J« Fennal

Feature Editor ••••••.••«•••••••••••••• .James F. BrennonNews Editor •••••••••••••••••••• aRobert E, Elschner

Asst. News Editors Walter J. Baginsky« Stephen J. BuckSports Editor. •••• ••••• John DiGennoroAsst* Sports Editor. ,.. • .Joseph A. Moffongelli

Copy Editor • Carol EgonExchange Editor ••.•,••••••••• •• .Matthew RochePhoto Editor. •.,••••••*•••••••••• Thomas C. ThomasCirculation Manager •••••, » « » n^^ f ,«>, •>• « • j)^« • .Cornelius MurphyBusiness Manager. ........•• .'* • . ; . •"• • * .Anthony LampozziModerator •••..••... .Rev. Louis A. Rongione^ OSAAssociate Moderator . • •« • • ••••. .Eugene J. Ruone

In addition to the above named Editors^ the following ore also mem-bers of the Editorial Board:

Don Anderson^ John Borrow, Brenden Brett, Bob Dean, Bill Dolon,

Eugene Fitzmaurice, Bill McCloskey^ Denny O'Horq,' Prentiss Yancey*

Jeff Rodowich, Bill KeaneNews. Joe Nolbone, Bob Wall, Joe Sossoni, Tom Dobney,

Rick Berry, Jim Kleir^ Borry Evongelist, Dale Poppert, SamCucinottq, Mike Muhen, Toro Siegol, Tom Sproul Nancy Bonniwell

Features Neil Sheehon, Michael Soroko, Gory Posterius,

Woyne Hupfer, Bill Keone, Joe Linsolatc^ Greg Gingery, Stephen

Morrison, Frank Nisenfield^ Roymond Mattero«, Ron Jovers

Sports Gerry Bruderle, Ed Hogon, Chub Connors,

Tom Willson, Bob Mclntyrai, Jim Preudt L, Q. Eponymous, Aurel

Villori, Spence Jones, Jim Johnston^ Hoi Croft, Tony Macoluso,

Steve Kyne, Charlie Horysok, Don Compbell, Ken Coniglio, BemieSchoffer, Greg Peden, Joe Morsh, Terry Milled ronk Mil |«r

Copy Rosemorie Hall/ Jone Temosky« Betty Kelly

Business .•..•.».••••••.••••••. John O'Loughlin.Gene MehrCirculation. N. McGorry^George Moese^Chorles Sheq, Len Wiecsezyski

Cartoonist Kevin Gallon

The VILLANOVAN is published weekly by undergroduote students

of Villonova University, Opinions expressed herein do not necessorilyreflect the official views of the University^nor the entire Editorial Boord,' Second class postage paid at Villonova, Pa, Editorial and businessoffices located on the second floor of. Dougherty Hall, VillonovaUniversity.

This newspoper is dedicated to one of the finest mmn wfio everentered Villonovo: Scholar, Athlete, and Gentleman: LEO GOOOREAU*

Please Help

A smorgasboard and dance for

the benefit of Bill Atkinson,

younger brother of former Villa-

nova football All-American Allen

Atkinson, will be held Sunday, Jan-

uary 23, 1966 at theVFW Ballroomon Terminal Square near 69th

Street in Upper Darby,

The younger Atkinson wasparalyzed last winter inatobbogan

accident in upstate New York wherehe was in an Augustinian Seminary,

He has since returned to his homein Upper Darby where he is being

cared for by his family.

The reason for holding the af-

fair is to raise money for equip-

ment needed for rehabilitation.

Because Allen was so well-

known on campus, organizers of the

event are hopeful that friends will

help in the program by selling

chances or performing other need-ed functions.

It is suggested that interested

persons contact Mrs. Harry Car-reU at FL 2-3943.

Letters

To The Editor:

I am forced to take issue with

several comments made by Mike

Soroka in your November 17

edition.

FIRST, I doubt very seriously

that 1500 members of the

Sophomore Class are against the

TV experiment presently being

conducted on this campus. For

openers, the total enrollment in

the class is closer to 1200.

Second, the "little man on the

little screen" is not reading from

a cue card in most instances,

but from the same cards or notes

he would use if he were deliver-

ing the lecture in person.

The mere fact that a professor

is on a television screen or in

person does not effect the quality

of his voice. If he is monotone,

he is stuck with it. As a matter

of fact, television is actually an

aid to a student with a monotone

teacher since the set can be turned

up, thus increasing the volume of

the speakers voice in a way to

overcome its tonal qualities.

Some of the writer's sugges-

tions were in jest (in poor

taste in some instances) and others

were quite interesting. Students

such as Mr. Soroka are to be

commended for their interest in

the educational methods employed

at this University. However, as

a broadcaster, I must point out

the success with which televised

education has met at other Un-iversities after it has been in

use for a few years. I would hope

the student t)ody would give this

medium a chance. I'm sure there

was someone against language

laboratories when they were in

incubation, in fact someone wasprobably against blackboards and

chalk at one time.

Bill McCloskeyStotion ManagerWWVU Radio

To The Editor:

The purpose of this letter is

twofold:

We would first like to take

this opportunity to thank all the

Vlllanovans who contributed their

time, energy and donations to makethis year's Charity weekend the

most successlul in ViUanova's

hNtniv. In the one week concerted

drive to raise money for toys ana

a scholarship fund for the children

at St. John's Orphanage. The Mls-

|sing Link Contest was the main

LITTLEMAN ON CAMPUSDecember 8, 1965 • THE VILLANOVAN • Pdge 5

" All TVI66E T'e Aee coming iN ata f^szricais^LY m^ timefO(2 SOa KiqHT He«f AT THE PNC? OP TH' THI^M,"

contributor with over one thousand

dollars raised.

The winners inthls year's highly

emotional and tightly fought Con-

test was the Junior class entrant

Bill Fry. Bill received his trophy

at the Charity mixer on Friday

night which also was a financial

success. After the expenses weremet for the Orphans* outing onSaturday and toys and entertain-

ment for the Orphans* party on

Monday afternoon we were still

able to write a check fbr nearly

$1,003 for the Orphans* scholar-

ship fund.

Again we would like to thank

you in the nam*? of the Orphans

for making Charity Weekend so

meaningful to them.

Also, we would like to thank the

Junior class for their behavior

at the class party at Aquaramaon Saturday night. The compli-ments received from the Aquaramam?.aagemon^ can reasoaibly as-

sure us of an excellent location

for next year's Senior class party.

Brenden Brett

^^ .f •^ Rick Holwell

To The EdItAr:

The Villanova University CrewClub would like publicly to ex-press Its gratitude to the Classof 1968 and its officers for thefunds with which we purchaseda racing shell from PrincetonUniversity on Saturday, Novem-ber 20.

The acquisition of a substan-tial amount of equipment and an-other successful year should bethe keys toward gaining properrecognition and respect from therowing schools of America.

The Class of 1968 has a uniqueand special Interest In the Crewsince Its members formed aFreshman Crew for the 1965 sea-son, Villanova's first year of

competition, and have, throughtheir efforts, expanded Into a full

squad and acquired an additional

coach.

The Sophomore Class is notonly to be thanked for its gener-osity, but must also be congrat-ulated for having made one ofthe wisest Investments possibletowards Increasing the ever-ex-panding realm of sport at Villa-nova University.

H**"'*So"«ognl, Secretory

Villanovo Crew Club

EditorBy Bob Dean:

Editor's Note: The following letter

was written to Miss Pofricio Kelsh,a graduate student at Villonova, in

reply to her Christmas cord sent in

connection with Mail Coll VietNam:

Dear Patricia:

HI, my name Is Edwin Weed.I am stationed at Blen Hoa, Viet

Nam. Yesterday at mall call, usguys here received cards, and

letters from people there. I picked

up two myself. Not that I'm a hog,

or anything like that. But I feel

that each and every one of themshould be answered. Some won't,

which I feel should, but there

Isn't anything I can do. Wish there

was some way I could thank eachand every one that sent a card or

letter personally. Myself along

with the rest of the guys here arevery pleased with the thought of

having the people's support. It's

a great thing you're doing, and it

shouldn't go by with nothing said.

The note you wrote in the cardwas very nice. I will keep it for

remembrance. Don't be too

surprised if you receive aChristmas Card from me in the

near future.

I'd like to thank you for myself,and for the rest of the guys in

my unit.

Sp/4 Edwin Weedand the Guys FromB. Btry. 1st Bn. 7th Arty«

Editor's Note: Before you cost oni-modversions on his grammar,imagine what your writing would belike in enemy territory in the midstof war.

Merry Christmas And Happy

New Year From The Vil-

lanovan Staff; The Next Ed-

it! on Of The Paper Will Be

Published On January 26

If We Survive That Annual

Skirmish Known As Finals

Anyone Interested In Work-

ing For The Vlllonovan

Next Semester Can App!y

Now For These Prized

Journalistic Positions.

Leave Your Second Sem-

ester Address And PhoneNumber In The Villanovon

Office Before You GoHome.

^ i »

V

'-

'4<

•••••••••••••••******••••••••••••*•• :^

J Purple-Hearted Wildcat

:

^•••*•••••••••••*******************^*Marine Corps 2nd Lieutenant

Gene Donohue, Villanova Class

of 1964, visited the campus last

week In what was not altogether

a pleasure trip. A plaster cast

encased his entire left arm, he

walked with a distinct and dif-

ficult limp, and his eyes bore

some of the pain of his ex-

;)erience,

Donohue had at)out sixteen pieces

of metal — shrapnel and pel-

lets — Imbedded In him. He, along

with eight other meml)ers of a

60-man platoon that he was com-manding, was hit by a Viet Cong

. land mine not far fron^ Da NangNaval Air Base, Viet Nam. Fourof the men were killed.

"We were drawing back after

an engagement with a . band of

V. C," said Donohue, ''and ap-

parently a few of them got aroundbehind us to plant the mines."

Donohue was wounded on

Septeml)er 25, after being in Viet

Nam a little more than a month.

He subsequently received the

Purple Heart.

"Our group saw action the first

day we got there," he said. "Andit.didn't take long for the delusions

of 'war glory* to fade. It happens

when you first see what the re-

sults of combat do to some of the

men you know,"

V.U. NURSES HELPFollowing the explosion, Dono-

hue was taken to a Marinemedical center for Initial treat-

ment, then flown to the Philippines

for surgery and to Oakland Naval

Hospital, Oakland, California for

care. At Oakland he said he wastreated by several Villanova

nurses now in the Navy.' He is travelling on official

'sick-leave' — to his home in NewYork — and stopped off on the

way to speak to the Villanova

NROTC Marine "option" candi-

dates and several other groups,

including the student body of near-

by Valley Forge Military Academy.

During his visit to campus he

was commended by Father Ap-

picci, vice-president for student

affairs and acting SGA President

Frank Eck.

STUDENTS RAPPED

When questioned about the recent

rash of student demonstrations

against U.S. involvement in the

Viet Nam war, he said "I think

If they were sent over there to

see what is actually going on

and what the V.C. are doing,

they'd change their minds."

But he did point out that the

demonstrations are not happily

received by the troops over there.

"They hurt," he said. "Not in

the sense of hurting morale —morale is great — but it hurts

when guys your own age — who

could be over there instead of

you — complain at)Out defending

their country. A lot of them are

even raising money supposedly

for medical supplies for the V.C,when they know damn well that

it will be used for bullets that

could end up in our boys."

He indicated his pleasure alx>ut

Villanova' s 'Mail-Call' program.

"I read about it in the ArmedForces newspaper," he said.

Christmas

Humbug!

E. Scrooge '69

Farah Slacks have the neat,

distinctively styled good looks

college men prefer . .

.

permanently pressed in.

^y^x^^. ,^^^^V

FARAHSLACKS, WALK SHORTS, JEANS

with

STM

ThirtyBy Matt Roche

—I \ FARAH MANUFACTURING CO., INC. EL PASO, TEXAS

The long -quiet segment of

American college students are

getting angry at the demonstratorswho burn draft cards and marchin protest against this country's

involvement in the Vietnam war.

The quiet majority's publicity

has not l)een so wide as their

rivals, the outraged and protest-

ing marchers. Villanova has been

in the forefront of the new move-ment, first with the Christmas

card campaign, and now with the

blood drive and "Project Paper-back,"

The University of Scranton open-

end up its blood drive to the

people of the town who turned out

in record numl)ers. The result of

the two-day campaign, the "OpenVeins for Viet Nam" blood donor

program was a total of 1013 pints

of blood donated by approximately

1300 volunteer donors. The two

candidates for the post of mayorof the city showed up within half

an hour of each other.

Students at St. Louis University

have been circulating a petition

supporting United States policy

in Vietnam. Copies of the petition

are to be sent to President John-son, the United States delegation

to the United Nations, and several

senators. Students from Franklin

and Marshall College, Lancaster,presented a similar petition to

Secretary of State Dean Rusk.

MORALE BOOSTER

The list contained a total of

1080 signatures out of the en-rollment of 1600 students. A dif-

ferent version of a morale boosterwas tried at Marquette University

where students are signing atelegram to be sent to GeneralW. Westmoreland In Saigon.

In one day students collectedover 250 signatures in the "spon-taneous project" and were hopingfor at least 1,000 names by the

end of the week.

The Director of the Selective

Service at the University of Dela-

ware threatened to revoke student

deferments of young men who take

part in antiwar demonstrations.

Lt. Col. Clifford E. Hall reported

that his headquarters is "running

down these people as their namesappear in the papers. When they

belong to us, we make a note in

our files/',

, . ^

.

Student reaction to the "publish

or perish" scandal has been to ask

college administrations for a vote

in teacher retentions. Primarily,

this has taken the form of teacher

rating campaigns. The controversy

was initiated Xsy the ouster of Dr.

Woodrow Wilson Sayre from his

post for not publishing enough

quality material for Journals, etc.

SUPERIOR STUDENTS JUDGE

The next professor to "get the

axe" was Dr. Richard J. Bersteln

who was denied tenure, despite

general student opinion that he

was an excellent teacher. Yale's

president, Kingman Brewster, Jr.

is giving superior students achance to judge their teacher

before tenure is awarded.

The Associate Dean of Arts and

Sciences at Penn announced that

a committee currently is study-

ing proposals for student eval-

uation of teaching. Dr. Welch com-mented, "This is a delicate mat-ter, but if we ask the students

the right questions, they'll tell ushow well we're teaching."

The Academic affairs Com-mittee of the Villanova SGA cur-

rently is investigating a faculty

rating system for the campus. Thisis also a major objective of the

Student Council of Catholic U.

The City College of New York has

instituted a teacher evaluation

program recently.

CONFIDENTIAL GUIDE

Some schools accomplish the

teacher ratings by course guides

published by the newspaper of the

college or university, THE DAILYPENNSYLVANIAN has published acourse guide for the past nine

years. The Harvard CRIMSONpublished what It labels a "con-fidential guide." and Yale also

prints a guide each year.

Other miscellaneous reports

from colleges state that . . . THELORD OF THE RINGS replaced

LORD OF THE FLIES as popular

college reading at Catholic U. . .

,

a quotation by Milton overheadoutside of LaSalle's Cafeteria,

"The hungry sheep look up andare not fed." . . . a description read

of the University of Nevada foot-

ball team, "When the going gets

tough ... the tough get going."

Fordham College has plans to grant

the bachelor of arts degree to

students who are 19 years old,

after seven years in grammarschool and six in college and high

school . . . coeds will be auctioned

off to do services for men at the

University of Delaware on Slave

Day. The girls will wash and iron

shirts, type papers, shine shoesand mend - all this to raise

money for scholarships. Are there

any V.U. nurses willing to

volunteer their services?.., Well,that's all for now ...

Will you ||^Q THE KNACK over the HoliilaysP

"One of the funniest evenings in town."TAUBMAN. N. Y. TIMES

IHEKiOICKby ANN JELUCOE

^ Just published as^A DELTA BOOK... $1.75 II

DinC^iHylltlKEMICHOLSj

Now piMying Mt THE NEW THEATRE ]

154 E. 54th St. N.Y.C. PL 2-0440 j

SPECIAL NOLIDAV PCRFS. DEC. 24 AT 7:00 & 10KM

MAIL ONOERS acctpttd tlmi Fflfe. 27. liOO.Tmm. thru THurt. t:40, Shn. 3 ft 1:40. $2.M,3.10, 4.10. Fri. 1:40, Sit. 7 li 10. $1.40.4.40, 5.40. NEW YEAR'S EVE: fCSO, 9.90. 4.90.

A PiM Brm mm.THEMMCK

Page 4: Poge THE 6, - digital.library.villanova.edu

PQg« 6 • THE VILLANOVAN • December 8, 1965

College Training GroundsBy Bill McClosk*y

V

student Government meetings aslilled with parliamentary politics

as the last two have always broughtout criticism from those who object

to the Congress floor l)eing usedas a political spawning grounds.

This is a view with which I

must disagree,

Jeff Radowich's presentations of

the Presidential Disability motionduring the last month's Congressand Senate meetings have beennothing short of beautiful, becausethey have been well-thought-out.

Compounded with Brenden Brett's

well-planned counter motion it waseducational to the hilt.

While academic excellence is

pushed to the forefront year after

year, I cannot agree with those

who do not see extra-curriculars

as a meaningful extension to the

classroom. \-/.'r''y^";\:'fa^'

When employers hire, they look

at what you have done in the past.

If they are looking for a re-

searcher or someone to fill a

similar position they will look to

someone who has demonstratedexcellence in the academic world*

By the same token, when an

employer is seeking a technician

of some sort he will look morefavorably upon someone with ex-perience in whatever technique heneeds. This holds true for news-

men, radio announcers, and law-yers to name just a few.

"Experience is the best teach-*

er" runs the old adage, and whatbetter time to gain meaningfulexperience than while Ui college.

For most undergraduates, there

is little financial obligation beyondthe basic tuition, room and boardand for many this is taken careof by family or scholarship.

For those with little need to

make large sums of money, acti-

vities, be they curricular, extra-

curricular, or employment, shouldbe of such a nature that they will

be beneficial to the person's posi-

tion in the job market upon gradua-tion.

EXPERIENCE NEEDEDFor a student, one of the most

frustrating tasks is looking through

the employment opportunities

columns in trade journals or news-papers and seeing the ''experience

neccessary" line in so many of

them. J

Yet, what better and cheaper

experience Is there than partici-

pating in the extra-curriculars

which Villanova offers.

Journalists, broadcasters, and

even potential lawyers and poli-

ticians can make many of their

basic mistakes while attempting

to operate the VILLANOVAN,WWVU or the SGA. A slip here

means nowhere near as much as

it would on one's first job. Agreat deal can be learned fromone's mistakes.

There are many Villanova stu-

dents who have a head start ontheir class when they graduate

because they have taken advantage

of the entire integrated programof education here. It is (me that

recognizes the educational value

of extra-curricular activities.

TRAINING GROUNDSBeing the most important

activity on campus, the SGA should

therefore be the prime training

grounds. Through this organization

many future policy makers are'

learning techniques of management

It frugs, fishes, cha cha's^bossa nova's, monkeys,merengues, even twistswitlioiit a wi1ii)de«

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they will be abi* to apply in later

life.

Anyone who realizes this cannot

help but sit back and truly enjoy

a debate between Brenden Brett

and Jeff Radowich, knowing fUll

well that it is people like these,

with experiences such as this,

who will leave their peers far

behind in the world beyond Vil-

lanova, because they have taken full

advantage of ALL that Villanova

has offered them.

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(By the author of "Rally Round the Flag, Boys!",

"Dobie Gillis," etc.)

THE BLUEBIRD OF HAPPINESSHAS FLOWN THE COOP

Can education bring happiness?This is a question that in recent years has caused much

lively debate and several hundred stabbings among Ameri-can college professors. Some contend that if a student's in-

tellect is sufficiently aroused, happiness will automaticallyfollow. Others say that to concentrate on the intellect andignore the rest of the personality can only lead to misery.

I myself favor the second view, and I offer in evidencethe well-known case of Knut Fusco.

Knut, a forestry major, never got anything less than astraight "A," was awarded his B.T. (Bachelor of Trees) in

only two years, his M.S.B. (Master of Sap and Bark) in

only three, and his D.B.C. (Doctor of Blight and Cutworms)in only four.

Academic glory was bis. His intellect was the envy ofevery intellect fan on campus. But was he happy? The an-swer, alas, was.no. Knut—he knew not why—was miser-able; so miserable, in fact, that one day while walkingacross campus, he was suddenly so overcome with melan-choly that he flung himself, weeping, upon the statue of theFounder.By and by, a liberal arts coed named Nikki Sigafoos came

by with her Barby doll. She noted Knut's condition. "Howcome you're so unhappy, hey?" said Nikki.

"Suppose you tell me, you dumb old liberal arts major,"replied Knut peevishly.

"All right, I will," said Nikki. "You are unhappy for tworeasons. First, because you have been so busy stuffing yourintellect that you have gone and starved your psyche.I've got nothingagainst learning,mind you, but a per-son oughtn't to ne-glect the pleasantgentle amenities oflife—the fun things.

Have you, for in-stance, ever been toa dance?"Knut shook his

head.

"Have you everwatched a sunset?Written a poem? Shaved with a Personna Stainless SteelBlade?" ^y^Knut shook his head."Well, we'll fix that right now," said Nikki, and gave him

a razor, a Personna Stainless Steel Blade, and a can ofBurma Shave.Knut lathered with the Burma Shave and shaved with

the Personna and for the first time in many long years hesmiled. He smiled and then he laughed— peal after peal ofreverberating joy. "Wow-dow!" he cried. "What a shave!Does Personna come in injector style, too?"

;'It does," said Nikki."Gloriosky!" cried Knut. "And does Burma Shave comem menthol, too?"|;it does," said Nikki."Huzzah!" cried Knut. "Now that I have found Personna

*"?!„ ^jIJ?^*?*^® ^ ^*** "^v®*" *»ave another unhappy day."

Hold! said Nikki. "Personna and Burma Shave alonewill not solve your problem-only half of it. Remember Isaid there were two things making you unhappy?"

Oh, yeah." said Knut. "What's the other one?"

M x?y, . ^ "ave you had that bear trap on your foot?"said Nikki.

Ja^^^F^utT ^^ **"""« * ^«'<* ^"P »n ^y freshman year,"said Knut. I keep meaning to have it taken off."

Allow me," said Nikki and removed it.

K«,.rf" ^^f^'^'xT.^?^ * '«"«'•" said Knut, now totally

^^2' *"d,*pok Nikki's hand and led her to a Personnavendor and then to a justice of the peace.

u;il aJfJ""^ ^.* ^^^^^y fulfilled man, both intellect-

hnTJ^'^.fM^Jlf'^^^rr- ^^ "^«« »n a charming split-level

in ^T^*" ^'^^' *'*'* ^^^^ 1^ <^l»»ldren and he rSes steadily

Cnnlu"^^^ f"*5- ^"'y *^* '"onth, in fact, he becameConsultant on Sawdust to the American Butchers Guild.

s^^nTn?T^X7*" "°"«?!;y Sequoia by the park commis-

^Zh / iJ^ \1^' ^"i*'* published a best^^lling bookcalled I Was a Slippery Elmfor the FBI.

^ O IMM. Max Shulman

I«r.IIir w!;;!^'*'^*"'.'^*Sr«/n/«M Steel Blade, and

UTM .having, Ju^t trw Parmnna and Burma Shmva,

".. . and then to a justice of the peace"

"

*^

.

-W^-*A-*

t

*< ••

« *

k I *.

.f:

•*.<

t

>«'>

Statue of Buddhist

Deity Now Resides

In Phila. Art MuseumA statute of the Buddhist diety

Avalokltesvara, unique in the na-

tion, has been acquired by the

Philadelphia Museum of Art,

The 500-pound statue, standing

six feet, eight inches tall, wasfound in the Cambodian Jungle

north of the ancient ruins of the

great stone city of Angkor,

Jean Gordon Lee, Curator of

Far Eastern Art at the Museum,said the gray sandstone statue

was carved in the mid-seventh

century, some 200 years earlier

than the works uncovered by

archaeologists at Angkor.

Repared, it stands in the Mu-seum's Recent Acquisitions Gal-

lery. The galery is located to the

right of the west entrance to the

Museum.

Dr. Evan H. Turner, Director

of the Museum, said the figure is

"the only one of its kind and

quality in the United States.

'<It is unquestionably one of the

most important objects in the

Museum's large collection of Or-iental art and will contribute

significantly to Philadelphia's

fame as one of the leading cen-

ters for Oriental studies. Such

pre-Khmer art is virtually un-

known in the United States."

The Museum also has on dis-

play a head of Buddha found in

the Angkor ruins. It is In the

Far Eastern Wing on the secondfloor of the Museum.

The 63rd National Gold Medal

exhibitions of the building arts

will be an added January feature

at the Philadelphia Civic Center's

Commercial Museum, 34th Street

and Convention Ave. It is in con-

junction with the previously an-

nounced presentation of '*Archi-

(Continued on page 8)

Otcembtr 8, 1965 • THE VILLANOVAN • Poge 7

"^^A t'i»*>^M0»ftm^f»;^0tmm

(PHOTO BY DAVE FUDGE)

Some of the Junior Class hove lunch with the orphons at their annual outing on Saturday. TheVillonovans travelled to the 69th Street Area for o shopping feast, o lunch, and a movie for thekids*

Social, Cultural Affairs

Dot 2nd Semester SceneryThe major events of the com-

ing semester present an impres-sive aggregate of lectures, dinner

dances and concerts, and other

special events.

The semester opens up with Pi

Theta Chi sorority annual DinnerDance. The dance is open to all

the members of the Sorority andtheir respective dates on Satur-

day, February 5. This will be

followed on Monday, February 7,

by the "Reincarnated Marktwain," George-William Smith,

who assumes the author's charac-ter in his performance.

"COCA'COL*" ANO "COKI" AK( IICOIir(*CO TRAOC-MARHtWHICH lOtNTirv ONLY TH( PNOOUCT Of Tj4l COCA COLA COMMNV

February will be rounded out

with the Cleveland SymphonyOrchestra on February 11 con-ducted by George Szell, and the

Sixth Annual Intercollegiate JazzFestival to be held on February25 and 26 featuring the best andthe latest talent in the collegiate

jazz field. Both events will take

place in the Field House.

March opens with the annu?*

Shamokinaki Mission Dance, on

March 11, which in the last few

years has proved a success both

financially for the Augustinian

foreign missions and socially, for

the attp»'ding crowds.

The Singing City Choir, a

nationally prominent group, mak-ing its second appearance on the

campus will be accompanied by an

added attraction when they appear

March 12 . The wdrld renownedsoprano, Anna Moffa, will appearwith the group.

Also making a second ap-

pearance will be the well-known

economist and foreign affairs ex-pert, Barbara Ward speaking

March 24on«OrganizingtheWorldEconomy."Senior Weekend closes out the

month on March 25 and 26 with aconcert and Dinner Dance.April will feature the Villanova

Singers and Band in a Spring

Concert in the Field House on the

17th and 18th, Mother's Day. OnApril 22 and 23, the Navy ROTCwill present its annual Spring Re-view of the Battalion followed

Saturday by their Spring Dinnerdance.

Junior Weekend, April 22 and

23 will close out the social Cal-

endar for the 1965-66 scholastic

year. Senior Father's Day will

also take place on the 23. Final

Exams for seniors and juniors

will begin April 29 followed by

underclassmen exams starting

May 6. Senior Commencement will

take place on May 16, to officially

end the academic year.

Game goes oetter refreshed.

And Coca-Cola gives you that big, bold taste.

Always just right,

never too sweet . . . refreshes best.

thingsgQ

Cotee6(^fi^/

^/ Bottltd yndtr Iht authority of The Coca-CoH Company b^^.

flill«4alplii« Coco-Colo Bottling Compenr, Phllod«lplil«, P*

HE: I colled home lost night.

SHE: Yeoh?

HE: My father soys he misses me—con you believe it?

SHE: No.

f f f

We believe it—parents are funny that way. Phone

home often.

The Bell Telephone Company of Pennsyh^ania®

TV Moratorium(Continued J^om page 1)

tion took five years to becomeeffective at Temple University, but

that school is now fully commit-ted to Instructional Television.

FACULTY COMMENT

In a letter oftransmittal, FatherDriscoll called for "further ob-servations and comments on the

part of the faculty.'

»

In relation to the student, thereport states, "the student must... adjust his learning habits to

insure getting the learning pro-cess." The two-page report, pre-liminary in nature^ points out that

the use of inter-com systems, not

presently in use here, increasesstudent participation in the learn-

ing process.

The study also acknowledges thefact that increased preparation onthe part of the teacher is neces-sary for such teaching.

"The use of video tapes posessome problems with respect to the

rights of the institution and the

rights of the instructor in the sub-sequent use of these tapes," ac-cording to the findings.

The committee recommenda-tions include a call for a one yearstudy "to evaluate equipment, per-sonnel procedures and identtfica-^

tion of courses for future presen«>

tation on Educational Television.

There are five members on thecommittee, in addition to Dr.Ame-lotti. They are; Theresa Christian,Nursing Department; James J.

Coyle, Mechanical Engineering;

George Harris, Education; JamesJ. Kim, C&F, and William Langan,Biol(^y«

There has been no formal stu-

dent or SGA study of the tele-

vision system.

VISTA

In

Will

BeHere

Today

Dougherty Hall

The Problems of Finding aHome in a Segregated

NeighborhoodSee the Movie Presented by

the Sociology Club"To Find a Home"

Today 10:30, 207 Vosey

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The William Sloane

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rooms available to

nten, women and

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at $3.15-$4.50 single;

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Rates include YMCAmembership.

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Page 5: Poge THE 6, - digital.library.villanova.edu

Poge 8 » THE VILLANOVAN • December 8, 1965 December 8, 1965 • THE VILLANOVAN • Page 9

On Second Thought

Reviews I andIn the past, many of the

LYNX'S critics have felt that

the Literary Edition suffered from

the lack of a unifying theme. There

need he no such theme, for each

creation must stand on its own.

However, this issue has shownthat an attempt at a unifying theme

can seriously damage the pub-

lication.

A larger issue than most, it

.presents several short stories,

almost all of which seem con-

cerned only with telling us that

in our society, the victor does

indeed belong to the spoils. Char-

les Benore in the "Cloak of Neces-

sity" seems to be calling for

someone to understand the hope-

less screams of a society which

he never made, and must there-

fore accept as a norm, looking

only to futility and defeat as his

end reward. It will fall on deaf

ears.

Readers must, however, he

grateful to Fred Hetzler for tell-

ing us that life can he cruel.

Ronald Javers manages to break

the spell of frustration with a

highly amusing tale of Everymanfinding an emergency exit froma burning theatre. The only other

bright spot was Ralph Mattise's

Ode to a Villanovan.

Jeff Radowich appears three

times: once to comment on his

own reading habits; the secondto comment on another's writing

habits; the third in verse. With

regard to this selection, it is

suggested that being a witty man,he leave the grassy poesy to others.

E. Hindle and Matt Wartell pro-vided two stories on childhood

which gave promise of remem-bering what all of us seem to for-

get too soon, yet both stories

failed to provide any insights into

the most unique mind in the world.

The other work of criticism by

John Albright has seven early

draft pages on French Existential

writings and leads me to ask the

author what Sarte man he is. It

must be questioned as to whether

or not such material properly be-

longs in the LYNX.As does the hopefully humorous

"Notes on Contributor" section.

This serves no purpose except

to bring the aims of the magazinedown to its level of quality.

The works of P. J. Vincentwere seriously considered for the;

prize which eventually went to

Ron Javers' Eliot's Vision, the

most overrated piece in the edi-

tion.

The poetry of Louis Lembosought only to sneak past the cen-sor, while the poem on e.e. cum-raings stood alone for its humorand originality.

PLAYBOXNot all the bombs arein Sai-

gon. This was proven to me at

the Playbox last Friday night at

Uhe first on-campus production of

Pirandello's AS YOU DESIRE ME,I have always thought there was a

song title there.

The players completely missedthe philosophic overtones of the

play and acted as if they wereunaware of the audience, such a

good time was the troupe hav-

ing.

Elaine Alissandroni pouted her

way through the undemanding role

of Mop. Bernie de Koven failed

to arouse any sympathy in the

first act and thoroughly hammedhis way through the third as a

devil's advocate.

The major role, that of the

Strange Lady, went to Sandra Sal-

vana who covered the mile in

two hours, twelve minutes as she

constantly moved around the stage

in a performance that will live

for the ages (of five, six and

seven).

Tom Fennessey, awaiting the

remake of "Bernadine," did right

by his courtesy tux. Paul Nor-

By Gene FitzMouricei

ton looked embarrassed to be in

the production. He cannot he

blamed as his creation of a world

wise but not yet weary old manwas excellent (except for the fact

that he is the only Italian I know

with a Cambridge accent).

Carolyn Nicosia walked throigh

the role of Lena without stoi^ing

to act. This was compensated for

by Kenneth Resinski, dai^r in his

Sears Quadrot)e, who blew his

way through in preparation for

his next part, the lead in adrama-tic history of overacting.

Two words of praise: BrianMorgan was so outrageously badas the janitor that his comic re-

lief had the desired effect, while

Bonnie Lucas, as a madly smil-ing woman insane, made everyonewonder why women have never be-fore done Lon Chaney roles.

I will not be rasponsibi* for

anyone not having a MerryChristmas or a Happy New Year*

Eugene J« FitzMourice

Architecture Show(Continued from page 7)

tecture Without Architects" from

the Museum of Modem Art, NewYork.

Harry Ferleger, Civic Center

director, said the new exhibition

of contemporary architecture in-

cludes 23 award winners in the

1965 competiton sponsored by the

Architectural League ofNew York.

Conung here directly from its

first showing in New York at the

U. S. Weldwood Bldg., the Gold

Medal exhibition is circulated by

the American Federation of Arts.

The theme, "Architecture andthe Arts," pinpoints progressmade during the past three yearsIn the interrelated arts of archi-

tecture and interior design, en-

gineering, sculpture, landscape

architecture, mural painting and

crafts.

"Architecture Without Archi-

tects" documents folk architecture

and indigenous structural design in

60 countries, from ancient timesto present.

A recent survey of Icmg dis-

tance peak calling habits conducted

by the Bell Telephone Companyseems to Indicate that many tele-

phone users, including college

students, may not know when lower

calling rates go into effect.

The lowest rates on all long

distance station-to-station calls

are from 8 p.m. to 4:30 a,m.,

weekdays and all day Sunday, re-

ports the Bell Telephone Companyof Pennsylvania.

Time at the calling point

governs the application of these

rates.

For additional information Bell

Telephone suggests students con-sult Page 13 of the Main Line-

Delawarerectory.

County telephone di-

A representative from NEWYORK UNIVERSITY, Dr. HerbertB. Livesey, Assistant Directorof Admissions, will be on campustoday to interview those who mightbe interested in attending the

graduate school of N.Y.U.Interested students may make

an appointment with him in the

Postgraduate Office, 101 CorrHall.

* « *

Conal Joseph Bryne, AssociateProfessor in the School of Com-merce and Finance was elected

a member of the American Insti-

'•V ;^.

h'

IS '

r

CAREERSIN STEEL

Our representative

will be on campus

January 20

to interview undergraduateand graduate candidates for

Bethlehem's 1966 LoopCourse training program.

OPPORTUNITIES areavailable for men interested

in steel plant operations,

sales, research, mining, ac-

counting, and other activi-

ties.

DEGREES required aremechanical, metallurgical,

electrical, chemical, indus-

trial, civil, mining, andother engineering special-

ties; also chemistry, phy-sics, mathematics, business

administration, and liberal

arts.

If you would like to discuss

your career interest with a

Bethlehem representative,

see your placement officer

to arrange for an interview

appointment.

An Equal OpportunityEmployer in the Plans for

Progress Program

ETHLEHEMSTEEL

'" "Iknow

all about

General Electric.

StCThey maketoasters and irons

and things like

that"

v.:

» :.. >..

.

< \-

..*V':,'

1 V

%:•'•

';Right.Things

like the world's

most powerful jet

engines, the world's

largest turbine-

generator, the

world's first

Man-Made' diamonds.

Things like nuclear

power plants, ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^1

suitcase-sizeIp^^^^^^

computers and

a whole new family

of plastics/'

YOU CAN WIN TWICE AS MUCH in the Pool by Buy-ing a Christmas Gift When You Submit Your Entry.

This Purchase Will Enable You to Win Double the

Normal Amount - e.g. a $25 Certificate Becomes a $50Certificate, a $5 One Becomes a $10, etc.

A Gift During Christmas Is a Must Whether for Dad,Brother, Grandfather, Uncle, or Friend. Let Us MakeIt Easier for You to Buy Without Using All Your Cash.Charge This Gift With Your Automatic Charge Ac-

count - Pay for It by March 1.

Spritiler's M-fS W. Lancaster Ave., Ardmore

Open Every Night Till 9

HOWTD WIN TWICE AS MUCH SEE PAGE 12

tute of Certified Public Ac-countants. Mr. Byrne holds a CPAcertificate from the State of

Pennsylvania.

Mr. Byrne has taught at

ViUanova since 1958. He finished

his undergraduate studies at NotreDame. Later he received his

Master's Degree from Temple Un-iversity.

* * *

Temple University is offering

a Junior High School MathematicsInternship to graduates who are

interested in teaching modernmathematics this September andearning a master's degree.

A Bachelor's degree and nine

credits in mathematics are a pre-

requisite.

This program involves teach-

ing in culturally deprived areas

in Philadelphia for twelve weeksthis summer. Anyone that is In-

terested should contact/' Dr.

Jesse A. Rudnick, College of Ed-ucation, Temple University or call

787-8035.* * *

Effective Tuesday, December7 WWVU will air every Tuesdayat 7:30 p.m. a 60 minute inter-

view - discussion type programfeaturing Jim Griffin and FrankEck, with Bill McCloskey as

moderator.*! * *

Four undergraduate academicprograms to be offered in Europenext spring will remain open for

applications until Friday, Decem-ber 10.

Located in Freiburg, WestGermany, and in Madrid, Parisand Vienna, the programsemphasize liberal arts and social

science studies at the sophomore

and junior levels.

The 1966 Summer EmploymentGuides may be obtained by writing

B. J. Smith, Circulation Manager,

at 1750 Pennsylvania Avenue, N.W.

Payment must accompany in-

dividual orders, and institutional

orders of less than ten booklets.4i * *

Comprehensive fees for the

programs, including tuition, room,most meals, transatlantic trans-

portation and field trips, rangefrom $1,605 to $1,750 for springprograms, and from $2,405 to

$2,760 for full-year programs.

Further information can be

obtained from the institute, at

35 E. Wacker Drive, Chicago.

"Savemessage

your stubs" Is the

that greets UNCLEVANYA ticket buyers at the Thea-tre of the Living Arts.

The theatre's first productionthis season has met with tremen-dous acclaim. Andre Gregory,

Artistic Director, welcomescapacity audiences each night withan invitation to join the thousandsof Philadelphians who have alreadysubscribed to the season's five-

play series.

A printed card is enclosed withtickets to inform patrons that thesubscription offer, at a 10%discount, is beingextended throughthe run of VANYA, which laststhrough December 19.

Subscription information is

available at the Box Office, WA 2-

6010.

preferredspace

, r. •*.i

'. •

"Yeah, yeah. Things like that."

Onlysales

about one quarter of G.E.are in consumer goods. All

the rest are in industrial, aerospaceand defense products.

A variety of products (over200,000 in all). A variety of activi-

ties (everything from research anddevelopment to advertising andsales). A variety of challenges for

young men who want to be recog-nized for their talents and rewardedfor their work.

T^ress Is Our Mos^ Impor^nf Phx/vcf

Important responsibilities cometo you early at General Electric.

Talk to the man from G.E. aboutcoming to work for us.

This is where the young men arcimportant men.

GENERAL^ELECTRIC

. . . aerospace of course. The need for its investigation, exploration, utilization and control make it the

preferred space for any power determined to defend its position and interests.

At Grumman we are designing tactical, commercial and scientific vehicles whose Kfiissions range from

ASW to space stations. Our products Include:

• OV-1 Mohawk—f/ectron/cs surveillance aircraft for a variety of grourxl forces.

• S-2E Tracker—Carr/er based package of highly specialized ASW electror)ic systems.

• E-2A Hawkeye—5op/)/st/catec/ carrier or land base earlier warning aircraft

• A-6A Intruder—Locates, tracks and destroys targets obscured by weather or darkness.

. F-1 1 1 ^^Supersonic Airera ft of a revolutionary character.

• OAO—Orbrt/ng Astronomical Observatory

• LEM—Ltinar Excursion Module to land astronauts on the moon.

• Gulfstream & Gulfstream II—Turboprop and fanjet corporate transports.

• EA-6A-A// weather tactical electronics intelligence aircraft.

Grumman with its wide range of programs is virtually a continuous seminar in a technology as boundless

as space itself. Here then is the opportunity for graduate engineers who can accelerate their careers by

participating In some of the most advanced technical programs of our times.

Contact your placement office now to arrange an "on-campus" interview with our recruiters on

MONDAY, JANUARY 24

If an int«rvl«w at this

tint* it n<rt oonv«ni«nt••nd your rMum* to:

GENE C. N. WICKSCNQINCERINO EMPLOYIMENTDopt. 0R-2S1

GRUMMANI Op^oftmiiti CMptoyir

The Accounting Society honored

three of Its memt>ers In a special

meeting.

Hasklns and Sells presented

their award to Richard Bauer pf

ViUanova. He was selected on his

superiority in accounting, his

character, and his sense of respon-

sibility. The award was a check

for $500.

The two other members* werehonored l>y the National Associ-

ation of Accountants for their

achievements in the Manuscript

Contest. First prize was awardedto Tomas Quinones and third prize

went to Richard Collela. Thesemen were also honored at the

N.A.A. dinner in Philadelphia.

Larry Benzie will speak on the

need for college graduates towork

with the Church on Tuesday, De-cember 14. He will be visiting

ViUanova University to outline the

need for and the activities of 385

volunteers engaged in 160 local-

ities throughout the sout, west,

southwest and midwest of the

United States.

A graduate of Siena College,NewYork, Larry has spent the last

four years with IBM as a sales-

man in Albany, New York and then

as a special insurance account re-

presentative in Hartford, Conn.Vital changes have l)een made

to make the EXTENSION volunteer

more effective in his assignmentand the commitment moremeaningful to the volunteer. Theseinnovations include length of

service, testing, and extendedtraining period.

AU Interested persons are in-

vited to attend Mr. Benzie's talk.

Anyone desiring additional infor-

mation may see Reverend JohnO'Rourke, OSA, the campus re-presentative.

WALT BANTZ (E.E.)

of the '63 Bethlehem"Loop" Course is anengineer at our new,$50-million research

laboratories. He's typical

of young men on the moveat Bethlehem Steel.

Seniors and graduatestudents in engineering andnon-technical curricula will

soon be interviewed for

the 1966 Bethlehem LoopCourse. We offer splendid

career opportunities in steel

plant operations, research,

sales, mining, accounting,

and other activities.

For detailed information,

pick up a copy of ourbooklet, "Careers withBethlehem Steel and the

Loop Couruj," at yourPlacement Office.

An Equal OpportunityEmployer in the Plans for

Progress Program

BETHLEHEMSTEEL

nwwui—iiiiiiii I iiiiin J

t'^JK„.,ry,%. Mt. I ii trii'iMtMii

Page 6: Poge THE 6, - digital.library.villanova.edu

Page 10 • THE ViLLANOVAN • December 8, 1965

»,

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\

Frosh Trounce Scranton; 76-27

Villanova's much heralded

freshmen basketball team put on

a sparkling performance in the

Field House last Thursday by

trouncing Scranton 76-27 in the

opening game of the season.

Scranton was never in the gameas the ViUanova defense forced

the Purple Royals into numerousball-handling errors. Scranton had

planned to simply hold onto the

ball and not let the taller and

more talented Wildkittens run upthe score.

In fact, the Scranton coach told

his players before the game, "I

don't care if the score is only

four-nothing at halftime, we're

going to hold the ball." Actually

the game was hardly a minute old

before it was 4-0, and the gamequickly got out of hand.

Johnny Jones, a six-three pro-

duct of Pompano Beach, Florida,

was high man for ViUanova with

25 points — only two less than

the entire Scranton team. Mostof his shots were scored fromin close to the basket, and manyof them came on fast break passes

from guard Frank Gillen.

Gillen, although he scored only

seven points, really had the 'Cats

moving with his sharp playmaking

and numerous blind side passes.

And as the defense fell back on

his fast breaks expecting the

passes, Gillen was quick enough

to drive in and score the easy

layup. Gillen and Bob Melchionni

were constantly stealing the ball

from Scranton before the visitors

could set up their stall as they

planned. .vVv^vV;-:./

Scranton took too many bad

shots, many of which 6-7 Jim Mc-intosh either blocked or grabbed

off the backboard. At the other

end of the court Mcintosh stuffed

In stray ViUanova shots and fin-

ished with nine points.

In addition, Frank McCall,

George May and John Price all

• The Paulist Father is a modern

man in every sense of the word. He

is a man of this age, cognizant of

the needs of modern men. He is

free from stifling formalism, is a

pioneer in using contemporary

ways to work with, for and among

100 million non-Catholic Amer-

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people -the American people. He

utilizes modern techniques to ful-

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call upon his own innate talents to

help further his dedicated goal.

• If the vital spark of serving Godthrough man has been ignited in

you, why not pursue an investiga-

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aptitude test for the modern maninterested in devoting his life to

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NATIONAL VOCATIONS DIRECTOR

PAULIST FATHERS

415 WEST 59tli STREET

NEW YORK. N.Y. 10019

By Jerry Bruderle

showed flashes of brilliance as

Coach Jack Devine shuttled his

players in and out. Both McCall

and May rebounded well and scored

11 and six respectively. The six-

three Price tallied eight points

and displayed a fluid jump shot

in which he waits until the last

possible second before releasing

the ball. Melchionni, who played

in the corner most of the time,

chipped in with ten.

Jim Mcintosh snags a rebound In last Thursday's romp over thoScranton Frosh*

.,vj

;• i';v..v

-^^ • i'

Re-write the books!

*•••••••••••••• ••••••••*

; Beat the Clock :

*•••••••••••••• By John DiGennaro**

The big hand on the clock shows just 1:2 3

remaining in the ball game. Both teams arehuddled in front of their respective benchestoweling themselves as best they can. The twocoaches, true to the spirit of the moment, arefrantically gyrating, and trying to cram a weekof ideas into a thirty second impromptu.

The crowd of some 15,000 stirs restlessly,

then breaks into a thunderous roar as the

teams come back onto the court. ViUanova,after its last time out, sets up its inboundsplay. The ref hands the ball to Bill Melchionni,who in turn passes in to Joe Crews. FrankGaidjunas comes up to a high post, BernieSchaffer and Terry McGuire jockey for position

along the baseline. The big hand on the clockhas passed due north for the last time.

The scoreboard shows the *Cats down by a

point as Melchionni dribbles deliberately deep in

the back court. It's the little hand on the clocknow doing all the work, as it approaches the

20 second mark, Melchionni passes in, an out-stretched hand intercepts, the ball trickles outof bounds.

Inbounds ViUanova — to Schaffer, back out to

Melchionni behind Crew*s pick, he jumps, lets

fly, the ball starts its arc toward the basket.

To be contined Dec. 27, 28, and 30. Don*tmiss it.

r-'

r

^^

Li LI

<r i«

k"t..

m.

c<..<*^'^-;y>i-i^>>>:--^''^'^*'*°**'*'

There's a change in curriculum. Toronado's in! Front wheel drive with 385'hor8e

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sample the style and action of any of the Toronado'inspired Rocket Action Oldsmobiles.

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Swimmers Drop Opener to Maryland;

Good Year Still in the Making

Decembers, 1965 e THE VILLANOVAN e Page 11

After the three most successful

seasons in their history, Vil-

lanova's varsity and freshmenswimming teams give evidence of

maintaining the high standards of

their recent accomplishments andeven surpassing them in the future.

Head coach Ed Geisz and assis-

tant Jack Lumsden guided the Wild-cats to an 8-4 mark last seasonand a 17th place finish in the

NCAA championships. This year's

team should do much better.

Geisz is now in his 13th year at

ViUanova and was singularly

honored this past spring and sum-mer when he was selected by the

State Department to conduct a

swimming program in Bagdad, Iraq

from April through June.

During Geisz' reign as headcoach the Wildcats have becomea national power in swimming,finishing in the top 20 in the past

three NCAA championships. Geiszhas also developed more than a

dozen AU-Amcrlcans in the past

four years.

Lumsden is now In his ninth

jrear at ViUanova as assistant var-

sity coach. He is head coach of

the freshmen team and is also As-sistant Intramural Program Di-

rector under Ed Geisz.

The Assistant is a ma.^er at

By Bob Mclntyre

manipulating lineup and astrong advocate of interval-type

(stresses form and hard work)training.

Three of the main reasons for

the optimism are All-AmericansRay Donnelly and Joe Paaell andsoph Mike Fitzmaurice. Thistrio can hold its own in any com-petition.

Captain Donnelly is an outstand-ing leader and should have anothergreat year. Panell was a pleasant

Roy Dbnnelly

surprise last year, gaining All-American honors as a soph, andshould be even better this season.Fitzmaurice rewrote the froshrecord book. He has great naturalability and unlimited potential.

Behind that trio are other excel-lent swimmers that give the Wild-cats better balance and depth thanthey've had in recent years.

Bill Livingood is a top back-stroker, while Ken Herr is atalented breaststroker. JohnDoherty will back up Livingood,with John Hoffman behind Herr.The diving duo of Bob Beise

and Bill Bohrmonn can match anyin the East and figure tobe promi-nent in title meets.

Chip Friday is the top fly manon the squad and freestyler RichieLamb has l>een coming along well in

the sprint and distance events. PaulHoriislath shows promise in the in-

dividual medley, while Frank Mu-sico and Ed Ritta have the po-tential to come along to help in

the sprints and relays.

The schedule is the toughest in

ViUanova history and easily thefinest home slate ever with thelikes of Yale, Army. Princeton,Maryland, Rutgers and WestChester visiting the Main LinePool.

Despite this impressive array of

Ken Herr -Jim Frey ^ Bill Livingood

opponents, Geisz and Lumsden areconfident that ViUanova will

continue to climb the swimmingladder and, with another excellentcrop of frosh swimmers on hand,

look forward to a continuance ofswimming excellence on the MainLine.

MARYLAND MEETOn Friday afternoon, the terps of

Maryland invaded Vlllanova'sSwimming pool. The nationally ac-claimed team from College Parkwon the meet by an impressivebuf. deceiving 66-29 score.

Every race was hotly contestedand each winner won by a veryslim margin and had the judges ontheir toes all afternoon. ViUanovawon three out of the ten events andset two records in their drive to

We set out to ruinsome ball bearingsfailed successfully

and

/

upset the big M.iryla.id team.Mjke Fitzmaurice. broke the

pool record when he splaslied to

victory in the 200 yard freestyle in

the time of 1:45.8. He sou.^lly

beat th«^ old record of 1:47.8. setby last year's Captain and Ail-American, Rick Girdler. Mikealso won the 100 yard freestyle in.

48:.8.

The second record ofthe day wasturned in by Bill Livingood in the

difficult backstroke in the Schoolrecord time- of 2:03.6,

On Saturday, Vlllanova's de-jected mermen went to NYU to

comp'ate in the Eastern Collegiate

Swimming Association M«et. TheCats rebounded from their defeatof the diy before and finished

second to guess wlio?, Maryland.Rutgers was third, NYU fourth,

followed by the United States Mer-chant Marine Academy,

ViUanova set a new Associationrecord in the popular 400 yardmedley relay when they wereclocked in 3:46.2 The team wasmade up of Bill Livingood,Kei) Herr, Ray Donnelly (Captain),

and Uti^e Fitzmaurice.

On Wednesday, December 8, theWildcats host, Catholic Universityat 4:00 p.m. and the Freshmen goafter their first victory at 2:00p.m.

.^^%.

The Bell System has many small, automatic

telephone offices around the

country. The equipment in them

could operate unattended for

ten years or so, but for a problem.

. The many electric motors in those offices

needed lubrication at least once a year. Heat

from the motors dried up the bearing oils,

thus entailing costly annual maintenance.

To stamp out this problem, many tests

were conducted at Bell Telephone

Laboratories. Lubricant engi-

neer George H. Kitchen decided

to do a basic experiment that

would provide a motor with the

worst possible conditions. He deliberately set

out to ruin some ball bearings

by smearing them with an

icky guck called molybdenum

disulfide (M0S2).

Swock! This solid lubricant, used a certain

way, actually increased the life expectancy

of the ball bearings by a factor

of ten! Now the motors can run

for at least a decade without

lubrication.

We've learned from our

"failures." Our aim: investigate

everything.

The only experiment that can

really be said to "fail" is the

one that is never tried.

Bell System(^SAmerican Telephone A Telefraph and Associated Companies \^T*y

I

PETE TUCKER(Bus. Admin.) ofthe '62

Bethlehem 'Loop"Course enjoys selling steel

produfts in our ClevelandDistrict. He's typical ofyoung men on the moveat Bethlehem Steel.

Seniors and graduatestudents in engineering andnon-technical curricula will

soon be interviewed for

the 1966 Bethlehem LoopCourse. We offer splendidcareer opportunities in steel

plant operations, research,

sales, mining, accounting,and other activities.

For detailed information,pick up a copy of ourbooklet, "Careers withBethlehem Steel and theLoop Court.e," at yourPlacement Office.

An Equal OpportunityEmployer in thv Plans for

ProfitVHs Protiram

BETHLEHESTEEL

!

* tf-NlMMlUHlM |H'IM.«HWf

Page 7: Poge THE 6, - digital.library.villanova.edu

Poge 12 • THE VILLANOVAN • December 8, 1965

'Cats Take 1st From Scranton;

Lose to Providence 69-59The Wildcat basketballers open-

ed their season on £)ecember 2

with an impressive 93-55 victory

over Scranton University. Playing

before a near capacity crowd in

the Field House, the Cats made

good on 41 of 87 shots for a per-

centage of 47.2,

Scranton shot only 35.8 per-

cent. Senior captain, Bill Mel-

chionni, led all scorers with 36

points, a career high for the 6-1

AU-American candidate. -

Following a 76-27 victory for

Uie Villanova freshmen, the Var-

sity starting five of Melchionni,

Schaffer, McGuire, Livers, and

Crews controlled the tap-off and

were never headed. An aggressive

defense prevented Scranton from

scoring a field goal the first 8:33,

Bernie Schaffer tops off the 1665-

66 compoign against Scranton.

By Jock McGarv«y

and held them to only one bucket

in the first 14 minutes. By that

time it was 32-6 and the Wild-

cat eager s were on their way to

victory. Many times during the

game the Villanova defense forced

the Royals to throw the ball away,

and the numerous substitutions

for Scranton did not help their

situation any.

With Schaffer and Livers con-

trolling the boards and blocking

shots, and Melchionni shooting foi^

22 points, Villanova piled up a

49-21 point half-time lead over

the visiting Scranton team. Villa-

nova controlled the second half

tap and continued to outscore the

Royals, this time, however, by

only a 44-34 margin.

Once again rugged rebounding,

aggressive defense, and deadly

shooting paced the Wildcat attack.

Schaffer and McGuire each grabbed

nine ret)ounds to enable the Cats

to edge Scranton 53-42 in that

department. Joining Melchionni in

double figures were Crews with

11 points, Schaffer with 12, and

Livers with 13 points.

COHESION NOTEDEarly in the contest it looked

as though the V.U. offense wouldbog down and depend too much ontheir captain. However, as the

game progressed, the cohesionand patterns of the team becamemore and more noticeable.

Nevertheless, Melchionni show-

ed what it takes to be a real

All-American. In the first half

his 22 points were enough to out-

score the entire Scranton team.

His fine all-around play poweredthe Cat attack right up until he

left the game with 4:13 remain-

ing on the clock.

Short Shots: Sub Joe Turk was

CONTEST TIME

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clothes by offering on AUTOMATIC Chorge occount to

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isfy your ta:^*.

HOW TO WIN TWICE AS MUCHSee Poge 9

missing from the Wildcat t)ench.

In a practice session, he frac-

tured a bone in his wrist. CoachKraft replaced sophs Steve Krines

and Jim Stinger on the roster.

PROVIDENCEThe Wildcats travelled to Provi-

dence for their second game of the

season before a capacity crowd of

3400. Providence was held at bay

for 25 minutes before pentrating

a tough Villanova defense for a

69-59 victory.

The Wildcats put together a com-

bination zone defense that curbed

Providence's All-American guard

Jim Walker, but they were unable

to muster enough scoring punch to

give Bill Melchionni the offensive

help he needed.

Shooting a poor 23 for 62 for

37 percent while the Friars of

Providence were sinking 43

percent, the Cats were able to

make a game of it up until the

last 12 minutes when the Friars

went into a half-court zone press.

Here, Villanova managed to lose

the ball several times on steals

and were charged with numerousfouls.

Providence turned these mis-

cues into badly needed points to

gain an 11 point lead. Meanwhile,

Terry McGuire, a 15 point con-

tributor with 10 rebounds, wasthe only Wildcat to score for a

ten-minute period, hitting on 10

straight points.

Providence took control of the

boards from the outset and this

dominance gave them a 41 -26 edge

in rebounding. But for a Villa-

nova team considered outclassed,

it was a surprising performance.

Kevin Traynor, replacing sopho-

more Joe Crews early in the

Commodores Take Title;

Commuters 2nd, DPM 3rd

By Steve Kyne

The intramural football pro-

gram, which has been assessed

as one of the most successful in

recent years, came to a close

last week with the final four

games.In the finals. The Commuters

met The Commodores, captained

by Tim Coyle, in what was ex-

pcted to be a real battle for

the number one spot. The Com-muters' cause was seriously ham

-

pered when their quarterback, Jim

Johnston, was ejected for arguing

too vociferously on a controver-

sial call by the officials and The

Commodores went on to win by

two touchdowns.The stage had been set for

the finals during the previousweekwhen the last four teams met to

decide who should play for the

championship. On Wednesday,

DPM met The Yim Yams and

played to a tie. They met again

the following day and DPM pulled

out a real squeeker by scoring

in the last 20 seconds on a con-

troversial 40 yard pass play from

DiGennaro to Burns. This pitted

DPM against The Commuters for

the right to meet The Commo-dores who had been given a bye.

The contest the next afternoon

was a hard fought battle all the

way and it looked as if there

was another deadlock in the mak-ing as John DiGennaro skirted

around end to hit paydirt and even

the score at six all.

Unfortunately for DPM there

was a flag on the play and the

touchdown was nullified giving TheCommuters a six to nothing winand second place in the standings.

As the basketball season be-

gins, with a record number of

teams taking the court, praise

should be given to Jim Moranand his staff for their excellent

work In scheduling and offici-

ating.

Billy "Cyclops" Melchionni

drives for two in lost Thurs*

day's 93-55 victory over Scran*

ton*

game, took some of the pressure

off Melchionni and chipped in with

nine points before fouling out with

2:52 left to play.

Terry McGuire turned in the

best performance of his career,

and Bernie Schaffer played a

typical steady game, scoring 12

points to match his total from the

Scranton game.

However, Melchionni's cold hand

in the second half (3 for 10) andthe inability of the rest of the Catteam to compensate proved to be

the downfall of the Blue and White,

as they failed to overcome a Prov-idence 32-28 first half lead.

VILLANOVA FC PT$.

\-^''

Craws