The Voice of Notre Dame - University of Notre Dame Archives

At Birth Control Symposium
Speakers· Dispute Church's Stand
,..._
by Sarah jane Van Roo
journalism Senior
Marquette Universitv
"The Church's arguments against birth control are completely inefficient," charges Dr._
Louis Dupre', professor of Theology at Georgetown University.
Dr. Dupre' was one of four speakers at the 1964 Advent Symposi-
urn Saturday, Dec. 5, in the Stepan Center. The topic for the symposium was "Birth Control, its
implications for the Contemporary Catholic."
"I myself have no position on
this," Dr. Dupre' went on to say.
"I will wait until the Church
speaks out. But right now, it is a
problem to be discussed."
Earlier in the afternoon, Dr.
john Higgins, professor of clinical psychiatry at St. Louis University, made a similar observation.
"One of the most exciting parts
of a controversy like this is the
way it stimulates people in different fields to think about it,"
he said.
TilE
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OF NOTRE DAME
Vol. 3, Number 9
THE VOICE, Notre Dame University
December 9, 1964
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The other two speakers, Dr.
Ralph Kenck, an Obstetricianand
Gynecologist practicing in Chicago, and Dr. Donald Barrett,
professo_!:'" of Sociology at Notre
Dame spoke on birthcontrolasit"
related to their respective fields.
Tlie Symposium was co-sponsored by NFCCS, and the Academic Commission and drew over 200 delegates from throughout the Midwest. Seven hundred
Notre Dame students also attended the speeches in Stepan Center.
Dr. Higgins spoke of the psychological and physiological problems involved in the use of rhythm as a method of contraception.
As the essence of people united
in the state of marriage, the marriage act is an integral part of
the relationship. Rhythm, even if
only practiced for a short a period of time as a month, fosters
the idea that the act is not neecessary, not integral to marriage
he said. ·This is contrary to the
nature of the sex act. Itisas artificial a method as any contra-:
ceptive.
''However," Dr. Higgins emphasized, the system of birth control chosen must conform with
personal moral requirements, as
well as the nature of human sexuality." Any birth control method must also be convenient, easily learned, reliable and effective.
It must fulfill the person's requirements morally as well.
Methods other than rhythm ful-
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fill these other requirements. he
said, but exclude the personal
morality factor. Rhythm has as
its main advantage that it fills the
needs of the moral code, he said.
Dr. Ralph Kenck, who has
worked in the Catholic Family
Information center and the Cana
conference in Chicago, disagreed
with Dr. Higgins' views on rhythm.
"It will work if you want it to
work," he said. ''If a woman tells
me the basal temperature rhythm method will not work for her
because she can't remember to
take her temperature every
. continued on page 3
Stay-Ha}} Plan Modified;
Vote After Christmas
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The ascent through the cold, beginning' in the Grotto and going up steps in the snow.
Gt:aren, Kee AttendWest Point Conference
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j~hn Gea~n and jedKee, International Commissioner, represented Notre Dame at the fourday 16th Annual Studdent Council
·on United States Affairs, held at
West Point . last Wednesday
through Saturday, The conference
dealt with foreign policy with
spect to the emerging countries.
The 180 delegates from 90
schools, divided into groups devoted to study of five areas: Africa (Gearen), Latin America
(Kee), Southeast Asia, South Asia
and the Middle East•
The evenings were devoted to
speeches and panel discusionsby
experts in academic, diplomatic
and foreign policy areas. Orville
. Freeman, Secretary of Agriculture, spoke Oil world population
and the food problem, ·
During the mornings and afternoons, groups. of 20. delegates
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(by]. Sawyer)
The fate. of the proposed stay- Badin and Sorin seniors. This
hall system will not be decided system of quotas was set up,
unt·il after Christmas, according Sordi explained, on a pragmatic
to Nick Sordi; stay senator and basis; the committee didn't wish
chairman of the Stay Hall commi- to set up a system that would fortee. A vote on the issue will be . ce people out of their. ha~ls.
The higher on-campus average
taken by the senate when classes
reconvene following the long holi- for juniors forces approximately
40% of them off•. But the sopho.:..
day break,
mores who maintain on-campus
The original stay-hall plan of averages seem to live in the same
. dividing each hall into certain halls. Therefore a strict percenpercentages of freshmen, sopho- tage breakdown \vouldforce some
mores, juniors and seniors has of these out of halls in which they
been modified. The new plan is ·wish to stay.
The committee realizes that
to test the desirability and workability of stay-hall by initially there is a great deal of opposition
setting up three halls (tentatively to the idea offour-:year stay-hall
Alumni, Dillon and Farley) on the residency, and there are some
original stay-hall basis. Fresh- valid arguments against it, Sordi
men would be included in those hopes that stay-hall "be given a
chance'' in the experimental sys·three halls.
Aside from these halls, fresh- tem proposed, and that, once inmen would housed on the fresh- . stituted in this form, it will prove
man quad as in the past, while up- the· worth of its general accperclassmen would be divided in eptance.
After the trial period, and with
fixed quotas among the remaining
the improvment in campus acchalls.
The percentage ofeachclassal- omodations when the proposed
lowed in a particular hall would new dormitories are built, the
vary between · halls; Zahm and students will have a choice to acMorrissey would maintain their cept or reject the general fouryear plan.
majority ~f sophomores, _and
Notre Dame Sues Movie Firm
Over Film Spoofing ~~~~!.ut'""'"mi"''"'"d
each discussed their. particular
Notre Dame filed suitintheNew
·areas of interest; finally four students from each group drew up York Supreme Court Monday askreports, which will be included ing that 20th Century Fox be forin the final report of .the confer- bidden to. show a film,. entitled
ence. Kee and Gearen were each "john Goldfarb--Please Come
on their drafting committees. Home.'' The suit claims thatthe
The policy paper resultingfrom film depicts a Fightinglrishfootthe conference each year is sent ball team as "undisciplinedglutto the State Department, and is tons and drunks" who cavort with
a harem of sexy women the night
given some credence.
"One thing we gained," Kee before a big game.
The suit also names Doubleday
commented, "was a realization of
the difficulties there are in mak- and Company, Incorporated, as
'ing these decisions in foreign po- defendants, and seeks a ban on
further publication of a novel on
licy.''
The two -Notre Dame repre- which the movie is based. ·The
sentatives went in order to bring suit was due to return before the
back the ideas expressed at the court. today.
conference, in keeping with an
It charges that the film does
aim of student government this "irreparable and immeasurable
year of bringing about greater damage" to Notre Dame, which
, awareness on campus of interna- "won large prestige for academic
·excellence and.the high character
tional issues.
of its students and graduates.''
Rev. T~odore M. Hesburgh,
C. S, C., said the school does not
seek any damages, but wants. the
film to be scrapped. Twentlet.h
Centu~y. Fox commented that It
was difficult to. understand why
Notre Dame v:ai~ed untildaysbefore the moVIe lS to be released
to file the suit. Christmas day
was the scheduled date of release
when the book was published 17
months ago. !he ..m~ company
called the moVIe a good-natun:d
lamp?on of contemporary Amencan life-:•
.
The sult.. char~ed that ~he fllm
an_d book ~owmglyandlllegally
misa~propnate, .dilute an~ co~merc1ally. explmt for thelr prlvate proflt the name, symbols,
footb~ll team, high .P~~stige, reputatlon and goodwill of Notre
even o•;er its objections.
Father Hesburgh said that "the
story is directed to the efforts of
an Arab king to field a football
team, coached by a blackmailed
American jew, Goldfarb, for the
purpose of challenging and defeatingNotreDamebywayofvengeance for a supposed wrong done
the king' s son by Notre Dame,
"Its climax is a scene in the
king' s harem in which Notre
Dame players, under the influence of harem girls, are depicted as undisciplined gluttons
and drunks, and thegamethefollowing day in which Notre Dame
players, dressed in the uniforms
of the University, led by a violent
and vulgar coach, befuddledbythe
previous evening's ievelryandin
the grip of nausea, are defeated
by their challengers,"
December 9, 1964
THE VOICE, Notre Dame University
Page 2
Iron Curtain Thanksgiving.
Dick Veit
(lnnsbruck Correspondent)
Nov. 30 • The three days I spent behind
the Iron Curtain were among the most rewarding of my life. On the outside, it
is easy to be fooled by Czechoslovakia,
the beauty of Prague, its delicate porcelain, good hotels, the world's best
beer, and fantastically cheap prices.
The people arc friendly and eager to
change your money and give you a deal
on the black market. But only after you
really meet them and win their confidence, when they tell you what they
really think of Communism and the regime, that a true picture of life in Czech
oslovakia comes clear.
I met a Czech who was jailed for .. pro~
American tendencies," who speaks five
languages and yet cannot travel because
he is not a .. politically mature citizen,"
who) as an "expert" in his field,earns
63¢ an hour. He must choose his friends
carefully and watch every word, for anyone could be an informer. Above all, he
has little hope for the future.
Instead of turkey, my Thanksgiving
dinner was goulash and smoked black
beer, But never before did Thanksgiving
mean so much.
Right Down· The Drain
With the appearance of the JUGGLER
we see that not all forms of intellectual
ism have died away on campus. But we
do wonder when the two other bulwarks
of thought are going to raise their heads.
The Bookmen, a respected literary discussion club, consists at the present
time of two members. This is, we admit,
enough people to permit a dialogue, provided of course they bump into each oth·
er on the main quad. It is interesting to
imagine that the two pages usually devoted to the Bookmen by the Dome will
be two 8.. x 10" photos of two large
heads.
The Wranglers, a highly respected dis-
cussion club that wrestles any important
issue, has yet to schedule a match. The
oldest club on campus has decided, obviously, that it is simply to old to engage in any more battles. It has a long
past to reflect upon and maybe that 1s
more interesting than participating 1n
anything new.
It seems that being an intellectual has
'become so exclusive that the bureaucratic moldings of meetings, discussions,
encounters, have become meanirigless,not to mention membership drives. Maybe 'Bookmen' and •wranglers' look good
on application forms for graduate school
and exist for that reason, alone.
'
lETTERS TO .THE EDITOR .
Events Calendar
\VEDNESDAY.,.,, •• ,,, ••• ; , . , •• , , . , •• DECE'\IBER 9
.
.
Young Democrat's Movie: "The Making of a
·
President"
127 Nieuw.
8 p.m.
THURSDAY , , •• , , • , , • , • , , , , , , •• : , •• , • DE CE !'vi BE R 11
4 p,m,
7:30 p.m.
8 p.n:.
Dr, Samuel Shapiro: "Population and Birth
Control;;
IC LaFortune
Mr. George Patton: "Local Politics - - the
Precinct Level''
103 O'Shaug.
Prof. L.G.A. Schlichting: "The Crisis in
NATO"
Lib. Aud.
Basketball: N.D. vs. Detroit
Fieldhouse
8 p.m.
writer happens to be a member sc:wols, in · turn, are sending
of our club the views he express- r11ore and more ·good players to FRIDAY.,-,,, ••••• , . , . , ; , , , . , ••• ,, •• -~ DECEMBER 11
! have been a Notre Dame fan
ed are not those of the club, and our colleges, which have tradifor 32 years. At that time, as a in fact we asked him not to print tionally relied on Canada for their
Philadelphia Club Movie: "Pal Joey"
.·
6:30 and_
six-year old, I recall sitting by the article.
best material,
Engin, Aud.
8 p.m•
. my grandfather's Atwater Kent
Although the club was dis- Manifestly, interest in the Midradio on Sat, afternoons and appointed in not being placed on· west is growing 'proportionately
Flamingo.
Chicago Club Banquet
6:30-8 p.m.
cheering for the Irish.
a level with Soccer, Skiing, Lac- with the general growth of the
Had not W. W, II interfered I · rosse, and Rugby, we do not feel
sport, Michigan, Michigan State, SATURDAY, ••• , , ... , • , •• , • , • , , • , • ; , • DECEMBER 12 .
entered Notre that the Athletic Board dealt us a Michigan Tech and Minnesota are
would
have
Dame in 1944. It did, however, "punch below the belt". Withthe perennially among the top teams
"Midsummer Night's Dream" and "The
2:00 and
1
and my career· in. the Air Force . facts available at the time, the · in the country, and the virus is
Taming of the Shrew"
Engin Aud.
8:30p.m.
was-the result,·· I hope my son, Boaro's decision to give usa sec- moving south as inexprably as
SuNDAY
••
• . . • • • . • • . • • . •.• • • • • • •.• • . :. DECElv1BER 13
now a strapping six-yearoldfull- ond year on probation was justi- the great glacier. Indeed, proback, will one day have the oppor- fied. · Furthermore, we did not fessional hockey is enjoying
9:15 a.m.
Knights of Columbus Communion Breakfast
tunity -to become "a Notre Dame lose ''hope for a budget-and the
success in southern Califorrua
·
North Dining HaJI
man,"
use of athletic facilities on cam- - and the Carolinas because of the
Perhaps I let my prejudice seep pus." Both Fr. McCc.rragher,
construction of first-rate indoor
2 p.m.
"i\1idsummer· Night's Dre~m" and "The
through, but I feel that Notre the Vice-President ofStudentAf- facilities,
Taming of the Shrew''
Engin. Aud,
Dame was cheated (robbed · or - fairs, and Mr. Napolitano of the
8 p.m.
Same movies as above-~ Little Theatre (Sl\·IC)
rooked) out of the victory and the Athletic Department have done .I am delighted that hockey at Not7:30p.m.
International_ Christmas Dinner-NorthDining Hall
national championship Saturday. everyt}ling in their power to help re Dame. is beginning to reap the
Those penalties seemedtocoin- us. Last year this help included. benefits of the work of a small
MONDAY.,,, •• , , , , , , · . , , , . , , ; , . , , ; , DECEl'vlBER 14
cide too perfectly with Southern· some financial support, and this· group of· intensely devoted en.. Cal's greatest needforthem.The year they are also supplying us thusiasts, I sense that the Ath~
6:45 and
Detroit Club Movie: "Psycho" · Engin.' Aud.
last one, on Jack Snow's jJunt, was with goal. cages and protective letic Board's decision was based
9:15p.m.
a prime example.
The one'for helmets.
on fiscal conservatism combined
holding, on Kantors. touchdovm,
It is true that our battle for sue- - with a lack of feeling for the po- seemed ridiculous. Who ever c~ss illis been and still is an up- tential of the sport. Be that as TlJESDA Y. , , • , , • , , •••• , , ••••••••• , •• DECEMBER 15
heard of an offensive lineman hill one. However, with the con- it may, major league hockey will
4:30 p.m.
Dr. Ben Burmester: "Research with Avian
. holding on a fullback plunge from tinued efforts of our members and come to Notre Dame because it is
Tumor Viruses"
the 1/2 yard line?
·
· cooperation ·_of :the University, too good not to come, . When it
It's also sickening to realize Notre Dame will have a powerful - does come, there had better be
that now Alabama, with- their hockey team readyforthenewice plenty of seats in the arena. THE'
"rinky-dink", ,Anglo - Saxon rink thatJs to· come in just a few
schedule will back into the nation- short yea-rs. If I can do anything to hel!'V I
Yours truly,
would appreciate being asked.
al (?) championship, I wonder how
a team can receive the .national
. Bob Bolduc,
OF NOTIIE DAME··
· Sincerely,·
championship without playing
·President
t~ams from all parts of the nation.·
Bowen Kerrihard
~
In fact, I suggest that until the· Dear Editor:
Dear Editor:
Publi Sh~d we.ekly. during the ac-at:Iemic .year by students· ~f. t~· Uni~ . ~Southeastern Conference . plays
I was most interested in your Innsbruck, Nov, 23-The accomp- versity of Notre Dame,· Office, Room 2A, LaFortune Student Center;·
some ''outside games", As does
hockey editorial in the November lishments of our month-old lead- Post Office Box I.
·
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the Western Conference, the Big
ll issue.·· I recently returned to erless government have been so Board of Review, ••••••• ,Rev, Daniel O'Neil, C. S.C., JoiiD Gearen
Eight, and the AAwU, theybedeIndiana from a northern New York satisfactory that its continuance EDITOR••••••••••••-•••••••••••••••• BARRY· JOHANSON
nied consideration for the nation-. college where hockey is king, was voted overwhelmingly this Associate Editor: •••••••••••••••••••••• ~ , ,Grover Nix III
; al title and perhaps referred to football running a pale second and Thursday,
News Editor: ••••••• ~- ••••••••••••••••••• John BUckiey
as "the Ivy League_oftheSouth."
basketball drawing crowds of up ' On November 22, Notre Dame Assistant News Editor:•• , , • , • , , , •• , • , , • , • ·.Bob Lumpkins
In closing, May I offer my deep to SO. As an erstwhile Hoosier, sponsoNd a Mass in remem- News Staff:. , ••• ; • , , , • , •• ·•• Earl Guertin, Ken Krivickas, Dan
and sincere congratulations· to I found it bit haru to get used to, brance of the death of President
Murray, Jack Quine, Bob Scheuble, Al Schulte, john Sibley, Dick· <"'
Notre Dame's gallant team, They But--and this ·is the burden.of Kennedy, Fr. Engleton sang the
Veit, Stephen Feldhaus, RayFoery, Buck McFadden, Rick Schlee!,
~·
still haven't ·been beaten this my letter-college hockey is in- Mass and eulogized Kennedy beBill Siska, Tom Anderson, Pat Strickler, and. Jim Elliott
year,
disputably· a ·whale of a sport, fore a congregation of Austrians · Sports Editor:. • • , , - • , •.• • • • •• , ·, , , .-,George Kruszewski
With best wishes,
for participants and spectators and Americans,
Sports Staff: ••••• ;, , , ••• joe Ryan, Mike Mooney, Mike Read, Dan
alike. It may well be the fastest Football and basketball teams
· Ferguson, Bob Campbell, Ed Hugetz, and Mike Granger.
DonaldR. Feltey
~···
growing collegiate sport. Cer- have been organized. The Notre Business Manager:, ....... , , ·••••· ; •••• ; ••••• John O'Hanlon
Major USAF
tainly it has evoked great in-. Dame football team in Indiana Advertising Manager: •• , ·•••••••••• ; , •••• , •• , • Ken Socha
" ''
Richards-Gebaur AFB
terest in the East, The annual may have fared well, but here on Advertising Salesmen: •• ,; ••••••••••• Cregg and Roger Barron
Missouri
.E.C,A,C.
Christmas Holiday the East Campus the season re- Copy Editors:, •••• , ••••••••••••• Bill ~tz, Lou Bartoshesky
Dear Editor,
tournament draws better than the . cord is 0-1, We lost a well played· Layout Editor: •• • • • ••••••• ~ •• , • , ••• , ~ ••• ·• Deimis Kern
-t. .. 1
On behalf ofthe Hockey Club, I Rangers,' Pee Wee .hocke'y is game to a team of American se- Assistant Layout ,Editor:•••••••• ·•••••••••••• ,Neil Bowen
would like to clarify some of the feeding budding RelivcaU:s into minarians, 18-2. Our basketball Layout Staff:••• ~ ••••••• ~ ; ,· •••••• Dave Griffin, :steve Vogel :.
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facts that were presented in the . secondary schools the. same way team is already. practicing and Proofreader:.· •••• , • ·, ••· •• , , •••• , ••• ~-, , ,John Radosevich
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· recent eclltorial concerning our Little League is producing pre- hopes for a- better record.
· Circulation Manager:•.• • • • •• ~ .. • ••••• -. , ••• , .. Ted Purvin · "'
::.
· efforts; Even' though the sports- adolescent shortstops.-· The high·· ;
by Dick Veit · -.
Dear Editor,
.-
YO :fiJIIl
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THE VOICE, Notre Dame University
December 9, 1964
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'I Know How You Feel About Defeat'
by Bill Metz
"Through the past season I saw how you felt about success, I hoped I'd never have to know how
you felt about defeat. But tonight you've shown me
how you feel."
Ara Parseghian, Nov. 30, 1%4
There will always be a touch of The night was snowy and cold,
melancholy for the 1%4 National and it wouldn't have been unChampionship that might have reasonable to. expect very few
been, but in defeat an aspect of people to come to cheer for a
Notre Dame has become apparent team that had lost in the final
which we would never have seen moments-- had "clutched.''
in any other way. The pep rally
But everyone who was there
held one week ago Monday could knows -- and those who weren't
have been almost morbid after should hear -- that the gathering
the loss to Southern California, in t.he field house on Monday night
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"Gentlemen, in the hearts of the players, the
staff and yours truly, tonight is a night to be long
remembered," Ara Parseghian, Nov. 30, 1964 •
(Voice Photo by john Sawyer)
Oldest Priest Dies At 93
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was the most powerful demonstration of spirit that we have
witnessed in the last four years.
The ovation that we gave Ara when
he first entered wasn't just long
and loud, it was electrifying. The
figure that we saw standing before
us wasn't a defeated coach. who
had just missed greatness; it was
the figure of a handsome, still
powerful man who was a little
more mellow after seeing "how
the students feel about defeat,"
The team sitting in the balcony
wasn't crushed by itsloss;itwas
a sober, quiet· team which was
just beginning to realize in what
sense it was truly great, No one
apologized for defeat. Indeed, no
apology would have been accepted
because to apologize would have
been to contradict what we had
gathered to demonstrate Monday
"You're still number
night:
one."
Somehow both pride in success
and humility in defeat were realized at the Field House that Monday night, You could sense it in
the way Jim Carroll spoke, in
the way each of the players
carried himself, and in the attitude of the student body. It made
you glad to be a part of the whole
thing. No speakers were interrupted, and no single members
of the team .were cailed to the
microphone by the crowd. At
the end of the rally, no one
hesitated to sing out "Notre
Dame, Our Mother," stronger
than ever before, and no one
could resist the soft spontaneous
chanting of the Victory March as
he departed into the night.
The sense of unity of students
and team, which had been growing
for ten weeks ·reached a fitting
climax on November 30, Jim
Carroll sensed it strongly, and
he spoke well for himself and the
team when he said that "The
thing that we are most proud of
is that we can be a part of all this,
of you out there.'' At that moment no one could doubt the privilege of being a part of "you
out there.'' No one could deny
that he felt something of the real
unity of Notre Dame.
The Notre Dame_ spirithasbeen
often questioned and discussed in
an effort to define its elusive, ·
ethereal qualities, But the people
who
· in the Field
Circle Plans
Caroling
Glee Club To Hold Concert
Rev. joseph A. Maguire, C.S.C,, ted with persuadingKnute Rockne
the oldest priest at Notre Dame to remain as a chemistry instrucThe Blue Circle will spread the
. died December 1 in Holy Cross tor following his graduation, An- Notre Dame Christmas spirit
House on the campus. Hewas93, _ other of his celebrated students throughout South Bend this weekand had been a priest nearly sixty- was Rev. julius A. Nieuwland, end with its annual program of
C.S.C., who developed thefomula Christmas caroling and parties,
eight _years.
for
synthetic rubber and for whom
Father Maguire, who came to
Hernan Puetes is chairman for
Notre Dame as a seminarian se- t_he science hall is named.
the caroling .program which will
venty-eight years ago, remem- For approximately fifteen years send 350 ND and SMC students in
bered the University's founder,. after leaving Notre Dame, Father groups of 30- caroling through
- Fr. Sarin, who dies in 1893. He Maguire was associated with Saint various 'parts of-town on Friday
also recalled that the gold dome Edward's University in Austin. night.
atop the Administration Building Texas, serving as its president
In the part some residents have
was first gilded the year he arri- from 1934 to 1937. As recently invited groups into their homes
as 1953 he taughttheology courses for hot chocolate and doughnuts in
ved at Notre Dame.
. As head .of the chemistry de- at Notre Dame; since then, he had an exchange of hospitality, After .
, partment from 1897 to 1920, Fa- been living in retirement in Mo- caroling for an hour or so, the
ther Maguire is generally credi- reau Seminary,
groups will return to the RathOn Thursday, DecemberlO, 1%4 skeller to conc.lude. the evening.On Sunday, PhilHa1ghthasplanthe Committee on International
Continued from page. 1
Relations will present a lecture ned three parties, two in the
morning, then I seriously doubt by L.G.A. Schlichting, Professor ?fternoon f~r children, plus one
that she could remember to take of Political Science at Nijmegen m the everung at the St. joseph
a pill every day for twenty days University in the Netherlands. Home for the Aged.
either. There has to be proper
motivation.".
After an explanation of .various
methods of birth prevention, Dr.
Kenck explained some oftheethical problems a doctor has.
''When .a patient tells me her
confessor has given her permission to use the pill," he said, "It
puts me in a very awkard position. I feel that I should be bound
by what the Pope says. It all
seems to come down to a question'
·of 'who's in charge here?'."
~ "I feel that the Catholic Church
would be derelict in its duty if it
left fertility regulation and its
choice of methods completely up
to the individual conscience,'' Dr.
Barrett said, speaking on the sociological aspects of the problem.
''But I am an ardent advocate of
birth regulation."
WHEN YOU BUY ONE IN SAME
Dr. Barrett said that there are
PRICE RANGE AT THE REG.
many questions that he feels the
MFG. SUGGESTED LIST PRICE
Church must answer. A nation
must look ahead 20-40 years in
its planning, he said, but in what
sense is a couple ''permitted to
limit births by legitimate means,
to assist 'others?" Further, he
asked, should a couple in the U.s.
limit their fertility to help pea:..
pic in India? How far are we ''our
brothers' keepers?"
D'r. Dupre' and Dr. Higgins both
came to the conclusion that the
best solution that could come out
of the Council would be granting
freedom of the individual con'scicnce to ali married Catholics. ·
House Monday night knowthatthe
Notre Dame spirit lsneitherelusive nor the real. It is a very
real, shoulder - to - shoulder
bumping together of five thousand
guys who share completely great
hopes and great disappointments,
who accept them with humility
and who will always -- in the
last analysis--carrythemselves
with dignity.
This spirit can never be captured on paper because it can
never be spa rated from the minds
and the hearts of the people who
are Notre Dame. It only rarely
rises close en'ough to the surface
in each of us to be recognized
and known for what it is, Last
Monday night that spirit rose to
the surface through five thousand
people until it became evident to
evident to everyone present that
this -- in a very unique way -is Notre Dame.
The student body that remembers the quotes
spoken in a rally after the loss. ·
_
All the old Christmas standards
plus numbers ranging from composers as widely diversified as
Bach and Aaron Copeland, will
resound in Washington Hall Manday night as the Notre Dame Glee.
Club presents its annual Christmas concert at 8:00p.m.
The concert will feature the trio
of john Fisher, Mike Ambrose,
and Dick Leonhardt singing seIections from "Guys and Dolls"
and "West Side Story,"
Besides the usual Christmas
carols, including "Carol of the
Bells," the more classical numhers in the program will be presented by the Glee Club for the
first time on campus.
In addition to preparing for this
concert, the singing group has
made two recent tours. Over
Thanksgiving vacation, they visited Pottsville and Shamokin.
Pa., sponsored by the local Lions
Club, who also accompanied them
on a tour of the local coal mine
and the brewery, And capitaliz,...
ing on the free day yesterday,
they made a four-day concert
tour of Ohio last weekend.
Grants Aid Research
Notre Dame has received twelve
grants totaling $335,000 in recent
weeks, according to Francis Brad
ley, the University research administrator.
Dr, Morris Pollard, director of
Lobund Laboratory, has been awarded $56,000 fromtheNational
Institutes of Health, which also
handed out some $108, ono to
members of the. biology department, The chemistry department
received 6 awards for $97,000,
and 2 engineering professors
were given grani:s worth$74,000.
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Page 4
THE VOICE, Notre Dame University
December 9, 1964
Sl~m Doberman Becomes. Mardi Gras Mascot
Dolly and Doberman have made
their appearance ori campus this
week. Although their identity was
concealed for a while, they have
been found out as the "mascots"
of this year's Mardis Gras.
Doberman was supposed to look
as his name implied, and the first
sketches showed him short and
fat, but grotesque at the same
time, so he received the sleek ap-:"
pearance that will abound on posters, brochures and flyers until
Mardi Gras actually takes place,
over the weekend of Feb. 26 to
28.
The grand prize in the raffle, the
major money-making venture of
the weekend, will be a 1965Thunderbird. This week all students
have received chances to sell over Christmas vacation. The
committee is stressing sales
now, since the shortened semester break will keep many Students
from selling them at home at that
time,
Student prizes will be two 1965
. Ford Mustangs and a one-week
trip to Bermuda for. two, An additional trip to Bermuda for two
has. been tentatively set· as the
prize f'lr St, Mary's,
The proceeds from Mardi Gras
are apportioned to a scholarship
fund, operating expenses for Student Government and the Student
Center and, through a charity
chest administered by Student
Government, tovariouschari":ies,
Last year, MardiGrasnettedalmost $30,000, around $20,000
from the raffle alone, The goal
for the raffle this year has been
set at $30,000,
The Mardi Gras Carnival will
open Feb. 24, the Wednesday before the weekend; assorted clubs,
classes and halls will erect
booths in the Stepan Center in an
attempt to simulate the color of
New Orleans during the festive
time, They also will try to seParate visitors from their money,
for their own profit and for that
of Mardi Gras~ The carnival will
also be open on Feb, 25 and 27
and March L
Peter Palmer and his Voices
will provide the music for the
Mardi Gras Ball Friday in the
North Ballroom (the north dining
hall converted to a dance floor
for the night),
Saturday, Feb, 27, will begin
with a Champagne Brunch at Robert's Supper Club, followed by a
concert with the Serendipity Singers and ·the Oscar Peterson Trio,
in the Morris Civic Auditorium,
On Sunday, the Communion Break
fast in the North.DiningHall, will
mark the official closing of the
weekend.
Dick McCarthyisgeneralchairman of Mardi Gras for the second
year, and he heads a staff of around 100. On the executive committee with himareStanAntongiovanni, ·executive chairman; Dick
Ragone, raffle chairman; Karl
King, business manager, and Rick
Devlin, public relations chairman,
Also assisting are joe Schlos-
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Ragone stressed, are that anyone that each book soldearnsthe set- Mardi Gras activities began
selling ten books of tickets will ler $2.50 and a chance on the two several weeks ago, with the Harry
receive a free bid to the ball and Mustangs and the Bermuda trip, Belafonte concert.
~
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S_tudents Receive
$1 Million
scholarships to other schools or the reasons Notre Dame does not
simply chose another. "The top award undergraduate scholarBy john ·Buckley
Notre Dame students receive Catholic students are still choos- ships to married students. The
nearly $1 million each year of ex- ing the Ivy League for college." College Scholarship Service proThis year, around 225 students vides information on the parent's
pendable student aid, according
to Rev. johseph W, Hoffman are receiving university scho- ability to support the student in
C.S.C., acting Director of Schol- larships, ranging in a~ounts college, Legally, and usually actarships. This includes scholar- from $?00 to $?000 per year, Up- ually, the parents cease· to supship awards and student jobs, but perclassmen's ·grants average port a married son except for oc$1100. Another 400 or so students casional doles.
excludes loans.·
Fr. Hoffman suggested a new as- have been awarded scholarships Notre Dame draws top students.
pect concerning the idea of schol- from outside sources, such as· But to cope with the competition
arships. He spoke of thecompe- the National Merit Corporation Fr. Hoffman described, scholartitian between schools for top stu- or _local alumni clubs, 'One hun- ship program needs .expansion.
"Notre Dame is actually a rich
dents, and mentioned schools who dred students are receiving full
"buy .up" these scholars. But scholarships in the RegularNavy man' s school, . If a student needs
a large amount of money, much
the philosophy on scholarships ROTC program.
There are few regulations gov- more than the tuition and promise
here is that a student shouldn't
erning scholarship winners. They of a job we can give him, we often
be paid to come to Notre Dame.
Notre Dame, along with over 250 must maintain a 3,0 average to will discourage him from coming
other colleges, subscribes to the . retain four-year grants and to be here," said Father Hoffman. "If
. principles of the College Scholar- eligible for renewals. If scholar- he does come, he will probably
ship Service, a subsidiary of the ships are for one year, the stu- last for a. while on what we give
group that administers the Col- dent must reapply and enter sel- him, use up what money he has
lege Board Examinations. After ection competition with the rest saved and borrowed, and finally
have to drop out after a couple of
studying a confidential financial of the eligible students,
Scholarship holders must live years. It would be betterforhim
statement filed by the parents of
scholarship candidate, the ser- on campus. "Since they are the to go to a state school, for exam·vice recommends the ·amount of top students, they will naturally ple, where he would have less
scholarship award that will be be the leaders in their campus worries about financing.''
needed by the parents to send life. They are already good schoAt the present time, about 12% of
ser, special arrangements; john their son here. The Current es- lars: they must become goodmen, the undergraduate students here
Moye, publicity chairman; Dave
Rosbrook, ball chairman;· Dan timate of annual expense is sharing in the responsibilities of are on scholarships of some sort.
their." life here, becoming good . A goal for Notre Dame'sfuture
· Morello, · executive secretary, & $2,7000 plus travel.
C.S.S. considers that a student school.citizens,'' Father Hoffman is to ·bring this Percentage up to
john Munson, carnival chairman.
should be able to earn$300 a sum- exolained.
one-third of the student body.
The incentives to sellingtickets,
.
I
Also, they asked to write letters
mer to be· applied to education.
More immediately, Fr. Hoffman
to their benefactors, once a se- is hoping to add 25 scholarships
Meanwhile, backatNotre Dame,
· about 25% of the applicants for mester. ".This can mean a great worth $1000 apiece each year for
admission also apply for scholar- deal ·to the students themselves, four years as a result of the
plans of the· c·adet; a further re- ships. Usually over 100 of these to the school, ·and to others, Since · ~hallenge II program. Thiswould
scholarships are actually a form require an endowment' of $21/2
flection ·on how the time spent in have college board scores of700,
·
of charity, those who contribute million at 4% interest,
the service would affect his car-. or better.
eer future; or the fact that conA grade is given totheapplicant them like to learnthattheirfunds ·. Expanding on this idea, Fr. Hoff.tinuation . iri the program would for his board scores, his high are being used profitably.
man points outtha~ "These scho"Many nationalfirmscontribute · larships would enable Notre
not be compatibie with plans for school marks and otherinformation. contained in both his scholar- scholarships; this is· not their Dame to make scholarshipoffers
future higher ·education. .
Saturday December 12, marks ships application and his admiss- business, but they do· like to be to a large-range ofverygood stuthe deadline ·for signature of the ion folder. Then the students are · remembered,"- Father cited a. dents, in the · 6?0 to 680 bracket
new contract by all junior and listed according to their grades. case in· which a letter from a on the college boards, ·whom we
Senior cadets wishing tocontinue The scholarship committee goes . ·Notre Dame student on scholar- can't cover now; Notre Dame
in their .respective corps. Signed down the list, awarding the a- ship. reached the president· of does .get top .students, but.our
by Pres. Johnson on October 13, mount recommended by CSS, General Motors. "This demon- scholarship program. cannot
stration of the benefits deriving handle them all, .
1964, it includes a monthly pay "until the money runs out.''
When the scholarship service . from the scholarships, since the
"These additional scholarships ·
raise, higher summer camp and
travel pay and other benefit in- indicates that.a· student needs no letters are usually quite well done would also enable us to draw
assistance, the university awards .will encourage the benefactorsto . more good science and engineer. creases•.
. .ing studen~s;" for whom competiBut . more importantly the new honorary scholarships. "Some- continue their support.''
Father Hoffman also discussed tion with such schools as MIT is
contract binds the: cadet to com- times the prestige of being able
especially fierce." ·
pulsory non-commissioned ser- to go home and say he has a
vice in his respective service scholarships is enough to make
branch should he wilfully violate - a student choose Notre Dame,"
the contract,
says Fr. Hoffman. Butthe school
------~-----­ does not award honorariestojust
A collection wili be taken up next a bloc of applicants after the funds
Sunday, December 13th, after all
have run out, hopingthattheywill
the Masses in Sacred- Heart
come· here.'
,
Church
and Kennan-Stanford
Last year 20 honoraries were
The College of·Science isplannChapel, to answer a special plea
offered, but .only five were ac- ·ing
several specialeventsonMay laboratories of the College of'
·for financial help from Fr, Schocepted. Often the ones who de14 anq 15, to observe its lOOthan- · Science, Undergraduate students
mber, C.S.S. R., a missionary clined them were awarded cash
niversary, Highlight ofthe spec- will conduct toursfortheUniverworking in the urban slums of Pu~
erto Rico,
.
.
ial weekend will be a speech by a sity' s guests to partially fulfill
distinguished scientist and hu- the goal of having a high degree
.
of student participation.
manist.
The Notre Dame debateteamha~ ·The speech.will be the majore- ln addition to this activity in
fared well in tourneys held in the vent in the weekend's concluding May, other plans are being laid
past ~onth at Purdue, George- convocation to be held at Stepan to commemorate the College of
town and New Mexico,
Center on Saturday night, The Science's centennial. Dr. Milton
On November 15-17, the team of speaker's identity has not yet Burton, who is in charge of the
Larry Petroshius and john Roes been announced by Rev, Theodore centennial observance, expects
"great. emphasis on science
competed in the Purdue tourna- M. Hesburgh, C. S.C.
Other activities areal so planned throughout the year''. In this conment, against 60 schools, and
came in third, More recently, for the weekend. OnFridayeven- nection spring commencement
over Thanksgiving, Notre Dame in'g several reports on the history may be science oriented. :
was among ll6 schools represent- of science at Notre Dame will be Also several centennial lectures
ed at the Georgetown tourney, Ho- given. Then on Saturday morning will be heid, and'exhibits will be
ward Dooley andjimCavnarrea- scfence department heads will displayed not only in the departched the octo-finals, and Roes and describe current research. These ments and laboratories but also
Petroshius made it to the quater~ reports, .five or six in number, hopefully in the Memorial Library
finals before losing a 3-2 dec.:. ·should last about 25 minutes with The theme. of Universal Notre
· ision, Among the schools having some discussiori. The reports Dame Night essentially'will con2 teams at the meet, Notre will be on high levels but pre- cern science at Notre Dame, and
sented in such a way that those the groundbreaking for the new
Dame~ s combined scores came in
first,
·
not expert in the area will be abh! · Life Science Building may be inThis past weekend, December to follow. Both the Friday even- corporated as part of the program·
3-2, Petroshius and jim Magana ing and Saturday morning events . In the sprlng both the "Science
debated at the University of New will be held in. the Library Audi- Quarterly" and the. Notre Dame
magazine sent to University
·. Mexico, The Notre Dame·team torium.
staged an' exhibition. match with
Saturday afternoon's activities alumni arid friends will observe
.Stanford, thencarneinthirdinthe will feature exhibits and displays the College of Science's.centencompetion. ·
in the various departments and nial,
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Most ·Cadets Rejoin ROTC
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From early tabulation, the
change in present enrollment in
the three Notre Dame ROTC units
due to the new ROTC contract is
slight,
Lt, Col. Biakely stated ·that of
47 senior and 38 junior AFROfC
cadets, 40 .seniors have signed,
leaving only five who have refused to sign and two \Vho are as yet
undecided. In the junior class,
only one of 38 has refused to' con·
tinue.
In the AROTC, out ofl45 seniors
15 have declined with five doubtfill candidates. Of the 85 junior
AROfC cadets, four have refuse~ signature, This, according to
Col.' Stevens is "believed to be
below the national average/'
ln the NRarc; according to
Capt, Wiemer, of the 63 seniors
and juniors in the corp affected
by the legislation, well over half
have already signed, and not one
midshipman to date. has made
known his refusal to sign. -.
. -The reasons given by those cadets for refusing to sign are as
numerous as the number of re. fusals, But basically they consist of:·. a change in the marital
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College Of Science
Plans May Centennial
.....
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Debaters Do Well
1965
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Be Sure You Get YQur Raffle
Books And Sell T~em E~rly_
..
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December 9, 1964
Law Day Held Tomorrow
ISO Holds Party
...,_
s
The International Student Organization, under the direction of
Rev. Thomas O'Neill, C.S.C.,
Foreign Students Advisor, ,will
have a Christmas dinner and
party Dec. 13 in the North Dining
Hall. The foreign students will
present the Christmas foods and
customs of their different countries.
I.S.O. has also recently opened
an ~nternational Room in the Student Center, with publications in
many languages ayailable,
Notre Dame's Law School will
conduct its twelth annual "Law
Day" in the Law Auditorium tomorrow, with sessions are recommended, of course, for those
undergraduates who are interested in a law career, but others, especially the large ''undecided"
Car Show
William Staszak has been awarded the Borden Freshman
Prize for achieving the highest
freshman scholastic average for
last year.
~
....
John Sheehan listens intently as Prof. John Meagher grieves o·
ver the imminent death of the Queen in "Escurial." The lmperson·
al Pronouns Production was staged in the Biology Auditorium.
(Voice Photo by John Sawyer)
..
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Impersonal Pronoun Productions
Presents Trio Of Belgian Plays
who?
who?
none but
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Impersonal Pronouns Productions is at it again. This unaffiliated theater club majoring in the
"avant garde", presented its first offerings of the yearlastWednesday.
Advertised as "informal in the
extreme", the affair was as promised: a shirt-sleeved audience
sat on the stone tiers, no chairs
having been provided. The production made the best of these
unpretentious surroundings, however, and though ragged in general, it showed a good deal of imagination and a few standout acting jobs among the mediocre.
The three one-act plays were
poetic dramatic sketches written
to depict a dramatic moment or
a fleeting mood. The last two of
these plays, "The Blind Men" and
"Escurial," ·:vere successful in
'-
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Page 5
THE VOICE, Notre Dame University
~ "
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this respect,
The "Blind Men'' was a memorable sketch whose melancholy humor was laughable and touching.
It dealt with three blind pilgrims
who bungled along together
through an encounter with a oneeyed king of the ditch country, It ·
was a both lovable and sad crew,
''E scurial", though weakened by
an extended high emotional pitch,
was powerful and well done thanks
to exceptional acting jobs by John
Sheehan and Prof.: John Meagher
of the English Department,
The production, even with its
ragged edges, showed that it had
been carefully thought out from
printed notes to recorded music.
Impersonal Pronouns, though
still in the painful process of dis. covering what it can do, still is
one of the. best exhibitions of.
creative initiative on campusand
promises to become better,
A general student committee
will arrange the Sports Car Spectacular; originated last year by
the Detroit Club, Proceeds will
be donated to the University's
Challenge ll Program.
The show will take place April
24 and 25 in Stepan Center. Gary
Kohs, chairman, plans to repeat
la~ year's showing of sports and
competition cars and styling prototypes,
Other executive committee
members are Larry Wind, business manager, and assistant
chairmen Tony DeLorenzo and
Greg Obloy,
Wind has announced that positions are open· for advertising
salesman for the show's program
and for members of the publicity
and decorations committees. In
addition. he says, typists and
printers are needed.
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group, should find the discussions
stimulating.
Father Hesburgh, university
president, will formally open the
sessions with a brief address of
welcome. Following this will be
various discussions, including
one on the aspects of criminal
law by a former member of Senator-elect Robert Kennedy's
staff. A model contracts class
will also be held, under Law Professor E, T, Murphy, giving visitors an idea of what a law student
actually studies.
Discussions will be held on three
of the' "extra-curricular'' activities of the Law School, including
the Law Review, the Student Law
Association and the well-known
Moot Court.
Arrangements for the day have
been handled by third year law
student john Gottlick, who says
that while the emphasis of the
program will naturally be onNot..;
re Dame Law the theme will be
law in general,
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6
THE VOICE, Notre Dame University
On Hitch-Hiking
Police Chief Agrees To Plan
The result of this luncheon was
to set up a plan whereby motel
Work continues in the Student managers will know who exactly
Government committee for the is using their accomodations. A
improvement of Notre Dame- Triplicate form now in usc which
South Bend relations, As of last requires student activity leaders
Wednesday, two areas of "gown ~o ap~ly for ~kays by.t\vo ~dmin­
and town" relations were descr .1strat1on off1cers w1ll glVe the
and town" relations were de- managers an assurance ofidentiscribed as "much improved.,. fication.. .
.
Paul Knipper committe chair- The tnphcate form needs only
man said that problems · be signed by t\vo administration
hitch hiking and in obtaining m~~ men; the third unused slip on the
tel rooms for either week ends form will be sent to the motel,
or lodge manager whose
Or aftern o0 ns were eac h pro- hotel,
. ..
.
gressing toward ameliorated fac1httes the student grouplsusfeelings bet\veen the students and ing.
local officials .
While this system will be used
·A third part 'of the committee's for l.arge gat.herings, per~aps exwork, setting up a plan for stutending late mto the eve~mg, andents to eat dinner in the homes other problem was discussed.
of South Bend families over This involves the use of a motel
Thanksgiving vacation, was said. room for an afternoon of football
to be a success, Six'ty-five stu- watching, or some similar actidents ate dinner in South Bend vity,
homes, and there 40 unfiled in- Students interested in suchactiVitations.
vities need not secure the tripliSouth Bend Police Chief Irving cate form, but will only be reHampton attended last \Vednes- quired to sign a shorter form at .
day's meeting between the city the motel. These forms·Will be
representatives and students on circulated to those places which
the Knipper. committee, He was agree to house students. Together
agreeable to a plan offered by with this signature, a student may
· the committee which would set be asked to giVe up his ID card
up designated hitch hiking posts
for NO students at several key
locations. On Dec. 17, the traffic engineer of the city and 'com- Are you a Senior who can reach
mittee member Marty Stamm will your classmates? Will you help
tour the town and make "more - them expose their talents, t'rainfinal decisions about the lo- ing anddcsirestodiversifiedemcations."
players throughout the nation?
Hampton indicated that South Our new and unique computerBend might erect the posts at based service reports qualified
their own cost. Progress with students to recruiting employers
this plan will be reported onjan. and we need a student agent to
· 6, when the committee meets distribute our forms during earnext. Chief Hampton will be at ly December,·
that meeting.
In regard to improved feeling Set your own hours. Easy, no
between the school and motel and order--taking, no money handlhotel managers, a luncheon was ing, no reports--but very LUC.
held more than a week ago at ·the RATNE,
Town Tower motel. Attending
were the city representatives who For complete information, write
met with the student government immediately to Sven B. Karlen,
committee, that committee itself, President, Q E DCenterlnc,, Box
and several representatives of 147, Bronxville, N, Y. 10708
area hostelries,
By Pat Strickler
while using the accommodation,
or to place an· advance deposit
for damages which might be done,
Motel owners will be given a student directory so they may be able
to defend themselves against
false identification by some stu-
December 9, 1964
dents,
A long range plan of the Knipper
committee is a package of letters
from Fr. A. Leonard Collins;
Mayor Lloyd Allen, and the student Government office, and a
questionaire about the motel owners' regulations and other data,
which will be mailed to all area
owners whose facilities students
might have cause to use.
This package will produce a file
at Notre Dame which will have all
pertinent information about rules,
regulations and requests of the
owners and managers,
Knip~r explained that this
elaborage system of regulations
was not necessitated by general
bitterness of owners toward NO
students, but out .of a need for
them to protect their own interests against a predicatable minority who periodically cause
damage,
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HOLY CROSS
Brothers
Priests
.
* Office and
* Teachers
* Missionaries * Parish Priests
* Preachers
* Chaplains
*
'*
Manual
* Teachers
* Workers
* Missionaries
* Social Workers
Writers
France.
Italy
Spain
United States
Canada
Haiti
.,-,
Brazil
Chile
Peru
India
Pakistan
Uganda
Ghana
Liberia
visit or phone (284-6385 or 284-6497):
Father William Melody, C.S~C., St. Joseph Hall·
ore on the way
every day!
JOBS
Thanks for waiting!
Your wait for one of these new 1965 Chevrolets is about over-and we want to
thank you for yo'ltr patience. Come see us now. When you get behind the wheel,
. you'll be glad you waited!
'65 Chevrolet
It's longer, wider, lower. It's swankier, more spacious. You could
mistake it for an expensive car-if it weren't for the price.
'65 Chevelle
Fresh-minted styling. V8's available with up to 300 hp. A sofrer,
quieter ride. And it's as easy-handling as ever.
·
·
'65ChevyH
Clean new lines. Fresh new interiors. A quieter 6 and;-V8's
·
available with up to 350 hp. Thrift was never so lively.
DOUBTING THOMAS?
HOPEFUL AGNOSTIC?
Christianity has more to offer than· hope. it has positive
proof in the form of a n!IRACLE which was foretold,
described and is intensely personal. Ask the Religious
Leaders or send me a ·card marked ESP-17. My reply is
free, non-Denominational,· Christian. Martyn W. Hart,
Box 53, Glen Ridge, N.J. 07028 (USA). .
·This card
will save you money
on Christmas vacation
_,..
•"·
·-·
-.<,
(Get one free from your S.M.O.C.)
,-?..--
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Richard McCarthy, 205 Walsh Hall Phone Ce- 4-6690
Your Sheraton Man on Campus has a free Sheraton Student ID
Card for you.· (If you're faculty, ask for a Faculty Guest Card.)
With it you'll get discounts on room rates at Sheraton Hotels
and Motor Inns all over the world. Even in single rooms. (With
_two or three in a room,you save even more.) Good Deal.
J
~~
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'65 Corvair
It's racier, roomier, flatter riding. With more ·power available.:...
up to 180 hp in the ne~ top-of-the-line Corsas.
Get in touch with your'S.M.O.C.:
· 95 Sheraton Hotels &Motor Inns
f
!:
. More to see. more to tnJ in the cars mo're people buy
Order a new Chevrolet, Chevelle, Chevy II, Corvair or Corvette now at your dealer's
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THE VOICE, Notre Dame University
December 9, 1964
Page 7
Harriers Upse_t Twice
Clark, Coffey, All-Americans
Led by the fine running of captain Billy Clark, the Irish took
second place when they were upset by Georgetown 52-69 in the
IC4A cross country meet in New
York. At the final half mile mark,
Notre ·Dame was leading with
Larry Dirnberger as their fifth
man in 20th place, But Larry
stumbled and fell as they came
down cemetry hill and failed to
finish in the running.
This turn of luck dulled the effect of good races by Clark who
was third, Mike Coffey who placed
7th, Ed Dean who grabbed lOth,
Bob Walsh who took 13th, andDick
Raemer fifth man and 38th.
Bob Walsh was also hampered
by a strained muscle in his instep that he had suffered the preceding Friday at the Central Collegiate meet,
Fame came the way of Billy
Clark and Mike Coffey as they
placed second and sixth respectively in the N.C.A.A. Cross-.
country Championships, and were
selected as All-Americans,'
Both Bill and Mike ran well despite the snow and cold that ham. pered many runners. Some streches of the course were ice-cov..:.
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ered and others blocked by drifts.
But both run with a short, choppy
stride and were less affected than
the taller, long-legged men.
Next came Ed Dean in 31st and
Bob Walsh in 38th, Ed made aremarkable recovery from a preseason injury and bettered his
position of last year by 20 places.
This was Bob's first N.C.A.A.
meet and despite a worseninginjury turned in an excellent performance, Bill Welch was fifth
man, in 69th. andhe, too, was plagued by season-long injuries,
·Preview : Wrestling
early encounters will be sophomores Marshall Anders at 123
ising, but for the most part un- pounds, Arthur Nilsen in the 130
tried, underclassmen. The squ- pound division, Cetus Willems at
ad's frontline in the eight weight 137 pounds and J arne s Bowers in
divisions will consist offour jun- the 167 pound division, In addition
to these, sophomore Bill Schickel
iors and four sophomores,
Indicative of the Team's youth will replace the injured Ed Bilinis junior captain, Dick Arrington. ski in the 167 pound class.
Returning from last yearwillbe
Arrington, after compiling an individual record last year of 12 Ken Graf and Mike Eiben, in the
wins, 2 losses and 2 draws, will 147 and 157 pound divisions rebe in contention for national hon- spectively, and heavyweight Bill
ors, according to Coach Fallon. Kallal, who along with Neil PieOne of his draws last year was trangeli will replace Arrington at
with Bob Hopp of Purdue, the 1964 the present time •
As a whole, the teafi1 will have
N.C.A.A. finalist. However, Arrington will be sidelined for the depth and quality as the season
opening matches due to a foot in- progresses, except in the 147 and
jury he suffered ·in the U.S, C. 157 pound classes, which have
only three squad members betgame.
Those leading the team in its ween them.
This year's wrestling team will
be built around a group of prom-
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Ron Reed aims (or two more against Lewis.
/'
(Photo by
Bill McGuire)
~-4
c-
Meet The Irish
...l
j
by Mike Read
... •
TOM BORNHORST No. 40, 6-4, JOHN BERNARDI No, 31, 5-9,
205, junior,forward-center. , • 160, sophomore,. guard, Prepped
1 Saw limited action as a sopho.:,
at Toluca, Illinois High School ·
more last season appearing in where he gained all-northern
four games, but is expected to and all-state recognition. .aveplay an important role as are- raged 20 points per game as a·
.serve forward-center this sea- senior•• ,a Dean's List Student
son for 60% ••• highly rated
enrolled in the College of Busi·a so ph from Piqua, Ohio where ness Administration.
he· attended Piqua Catholic High
School, •• Captain of :his football JOE VALES No. 36, 6-2, 165,
and basketball squads as a sen;.. sophomore, guard•• ,Joe follows
ior gaining all-state recognition his brother :Ray, who earned a,
· in both. •• an accoimting major monogram in basketball here at
·in the College of Business Ad- Notre Dame in 1960-61,. ,gained
all-Catholic and all-city recogmini strati on.
nition in.l962-63 at lana Prep••
BILLY O'NEAL No, 34, 6-0,170, averaged 22 points per game as
Juruor, guard. • • ,An outside a senior, • ,also a candidate for
sheeting guard who won all-state ND baseball squad as a pitcher, •. ·
selection in both football and , Dean's List Student in the Collbasketball as a senior at Speed- ege of Business Administration.
way High in Speedway, Indiana.,
should see a. considerable
amount of action on the hardwood
this, season. .played against former Purdue star MelGarlandin
high school.. • ,enrolled in the
College of Business Administration.
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HOLID
TRAVEL
BARGAl
·. ·,
"'
Christmas
SS%%SSSSSSSSSSS%%S%%SS·SS%aa%%S%$% 5 %%%%%S%SSSSS%\%'SSSSSSSS*S
Go ·December 15, 16, 17, Return Limit: Jan. 4
SMC Presents
Royal.Ga_~bit
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JIM MONOHAN No; 42, 6-3, 180, Royal Gambit, a play based on
. sophomore, forward ••Top soph the life of Henry VIII .with his six
·prospect on the'_team and has wives, will be presented in the
looked very impressive in early Little Theatre by the Drama Deseason drills for the Irish. ,Jim partment of St. Mary's, beginning
follows his . father· and two Thursday. The play was written
brothers (allfootballers) to Not- by the German playwright Her.:.
re Dame, •• averaged 23 points mann Gressieker and first perpeJ? _g~me in senior. year at Ar- formed in Germany in 1957.
· cola· High in Arcola; Ill •. • .honSean Griffin will star as Henry
orable mention on the· Illinois VIII. Griffin played Talthybius
all-state team ...enrolled in the in the season's opener, Trojan
College of Business Adminis- Women.
·
· .
tration,
Henry's wives will be portrayed
BOB BENTLEY No, 30, 6..:3, 192, by: Marilyn E. Petroff as Kata.:.
sophomore, guard, •• Prepped at rina of. Aragon; Pinks Wilke as
St. Mary's high school in Clin- Anne. Boleyn; Pam Gallagher as
ton, Iowa where he gained AU.:. Jarie Seymour; Patricia Harvey
Eastern Iowa first team selec- as Anna of Cleves; Marcella Lytion two years in a row•• possi-' nyak as Katherine Howard and
bly a .front line guard· replace-' · Lynne O'Donnell as Kate. Paar.
Performance·s will be at 8:15 in
ment••' ,once hit 52 points in a
high school game, ,a candidate the. Little Theatre at St. Mary's ·
·for the Irish baseball squad as on December 10,ll,l2,14 and 15•.
a pitcher, • ,an accounting major Tickets are $1,50 and canoopurin the- College of Business Ad~ chased at· the program office or
. reserved by calling. 233-9042 •.
. ministration.
Round 'rrip .
Via NEW YORK CENTRAL TO
New York ..... ..
Boston .......•.....
Albany ........... .
Syracuse_._ .......... .
$38.50
43.90.
34.30
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Rochester .. .. ..... $24.00
Buffalo .......... ... 20.85
· Cleveland ........... 12.10
Toledo ....... ;....... 7.15
I
AND OTHER DESTINATIONS
PURCHASE NOW
,..
NEW YORK
CENTRAL
SYSTEM
. Ticket Office, NYC Station, 8:00 A.M. to 11:30 P.M.
···r
Page 8
December 9, 1964
THE VOICE, Notre Dame University
What A Difference A Game Makes
by Mike Read
In a recent issue, Sports Illustrated noted that "Itisimpossible
to ignore the similarities between
Notre Dame's new football and
Basketball coaches, Ara Parseghian and Johnny Dee," Both are
40 years old, each has a wife and
three children, and each inherited a losing team with winning potential.
Well, the basketball season it
but two games old and already
Dee has. started along the same
trail as his football counterpart,
and drawn up a few more similarities of his own.
He has started out on a winning
note with early victories over
Lewis College and Ball State. But,
more notably, like Parseghian
Jay !\Iiller goes high in the air for a tip-in against Lewis College
in the first game, and win, of the basketball season. Larry ]ese•
witz also lends a hand. (Photo by Bill McGuire)
who engineered the Irish gridders
to the breaking of 24 schools records, Dee started an assault of
his own--and in the second game
no less. The Irish basketballers
combined hot shooting with their
power break on Friday night to
rip the nets for ll6 points and a
new Notre Dame school andfieldhouse record. In the process they
also scored a record 66 points in
the first half, and dipped into Ball
State's record book to tie the record for most points scored by a
Ball State opponent. ·
Showing a great amount of improvement over their ragged
opening night performance against Lewis College, Notre
Dame quickly jumped out to a 5-0
lead in the first 46 seconds, and
removed any hope tha~ Ball State
Football '65,
What's In Store?
by Bob Campbell
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might have had of a tight game.
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Behind the hot shooting of jay
Miller, and the overpowering rebounding of Walt Sahm, the Irish·
shot out to a 31 point halftime lead
and coasted home the rest of the
way to their ll~82 triumph. Were
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it not for the shooting of Ball
I·
State's Doug Reid, who con sis.:..
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tently hit his jump shot from 25
.;
feet out for 24 points, the outcome would have been much
worse.
Individually, jay Miller played
his finest game since coming t<!
Notre Dame. The 6-5 forward hit ·
the nets for 26 points in the first
'
half on 12 out of 15 from the field,
~'l
and had he. not been taken out of
..l.
the game with thirteen minutes to
j
go when he had 32 points, he might
i
have made a dangerous assault on ·-~• j.
Larry Sheffield' sNotreDame re..:
,..b.
cord of 47 points in .a single
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game.
Walt Sahm played his usually
fine game on the boards snaring
30 rebounds and contributing 23
points, Ron Reed also helred the
Irish to dominate both boards and
hit for 20 points. Larry Sheffield
with three foul~early in the first
half, sat out a good portion ofthe
game, and wound up with only lO
points. However, thiswasenough
to bringhiscareertotal to 828 and
move him into 12th place among
the all-time Notre Dame scorers,
ahead of former Irish star Armand Reo.
With about 10 minutes to play ' . 1.;,
in the ·game, and the Irish near'.;• .~_~.·,!.·
ing the century mark, johnnyDee
.
had a good chance to usehis re1
serves for the second time in two
1
games. Although, they made many
1:' ~I
mistakes, most of them scored.
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two did move up with· defensive
accolades with the linebacker slot
Many of us are wondering and in mind. These being jim Yackattempting to anticipate what now (6-2, 225) and Mike McGill
Coach Parseghian will do with the (6-2,2lO).'CoachSefcikwas strong
team next year~ Will he be able in his praise of these two, mento mold another offense around tioning that Yacknow played the
The Notre Dame Swimming cord. But Coach Stark's .optimthe .available talent which is as season with a broken hand and
Team will open its 1964-65 sea- ism is tempered by the graduaeffective , balanced and aggress- as a result did not get a chance
son this Saturday against Wiscon;. tion of Charles Blanchard who
ive as this past season's was? at offense.
sin University, at Madison. Notre was involved in record perforWhere
will he pull his quarterDame has never beaten Wisconsin mances on 29 different occasions
back from - the Frosh, or the One spot which appears to be
in seven years of Varsity swimm- during his collegiate career.
present candidates? What about wide open at this early date is
ing. Coach Dennis Starkishope- ·The leading Varsity 'swimmer the
defense? Willthelossofthree fullback.·Therewerenooutstandful that this years team will im- is Senior Rory Culhane, who is top linebackers force him to drop ing performances reportedonthe
prove upon last seasons 6..;s_· re- captain of this years team. A very
the present 4-4-3 formation?
Frosh squad, and the return of
modest young man from RochesPete Duranko with a 3.6 yard . - - - - - - - - - - - - - - .
ter N. Y., Roary holds the varsity
As we were quick to learn, coach rushing average two seasons ago
Cyr's &rber Shop
record fer the 200 yard Individ- Parseghian has what many feel to
seems evident.
MICHIANA'S LEADING .
ual Medley with a time of 2:13.5. be a unique quality, an almost
BARBER SHOP
100-102 South '!\lain Street
Another fine swimmer is Tim clairvoyant ability to concisely . The interior offensive line will
Opposite Court House
. Krisl, the leading buttelilyer for and accurately evaluate a player, have Dick Arrington back at guard :
South &nd, Inlllana.
the past two years. Krlstl' stime and, should talent merit, build an along With the possibility of john '
are 58.8 for the 100 yd. fly, and offen5e around the player rather .Atamain returning for another~~
2:14.5 for the 200. Other top than the player to the offense. This year of play. Bob l'vteeker will be
A Birthstone Pendant
swimmers returning this year in itself throws a new and hope- back at tackle, and Coach Urich
mentioned the possibilityofmovare backstrokers Terry Ryan and ful light on what to expect next
ing Tom Regner from the defenjohn Frey; ~nd freestylers Paul year.
sive to .offensive tackle in view
For Her, For
Drucker, Ted Egan, and jack
Parseghian's
biggest
task
will
of
the
potential
he
had
shownlast
Stoltz.·
Several sophomores are seeking be to develop a replacement for Spring at this position. Coack
Christmas
positions on the varsity squad. Heisman Trophy winner johnHu- Sefcik singled out Freshman Ruarte
at
Quarterback.
Hugh
O'Maldy
Koniecmy
(6-2,
220)
along
with
Bill Gehrke, afine backStrokerin
high school, now swims the sprint ley and Bill Zloch, neither of Gerald Wisne (6-4,235) attackle.
freestyle races.Other sophomore whom saw. much action; return \Visne is currently recovering
swimmers include Humphey Bo- from this year's squad, but the from a knee injurY. At the guard
a lovely gift
han, R·obert Husson, jim Mclan- need for new blood is obvious. slot, Sefcik mentioned.two boys,
Bill Dainton (6-2,220) and South
erney, and Richard Strack;
From the Freshman team come Bender AI Vanhuffel. At the cenThere are two promisingfresh- two players who seem to be like..; ter spot, George Goeddeke reo The Paulist Father is a modern men on this year's team. Mike ly prospects. One, Dan Koenings, . turns as well as Edward Knack
man in every sense of the word. He Cohen and Tom Bourke. Cohen, (6-2), moves upwithanarmrated who Coach Sefcik stated"showed
is a man of this age, cognizant of who swims for the powerful Ves- as "good" by Coach George Sef- exceptional ability at the offen:..
the needs of modern ·men. He is per Boat Club, duringthe summer cik, although perhaps a little slow sive center position."
was an All-American on moves. The other, Thomas
.. free from stifling formalism, is a months,
breastroker in High school. Tom Schoen (5-ll), appears to have a The defensive picture looks
pioneer in using contemporary Bourke, in his first meet against slight edge on Koenings, being much more stable, since· only
ways to achieve the conversion of the Varsity, broke the existing quicker and afine scramblerwith three key players will graduate
100 million non-Cathol.ic Amer· pool record in the 100 yard back- the moves of a halfback.
· in june. The line should remain
icans. He is a missionary to his own stroke.
much the same, but opponents
In the halfback position, a strong Will be seeingmo~ of Page, Harpeople -the American people. He
contingent returns with Bill Wol- dy, and Gmitter. All have the henutilizes modern techniques to ful·
ski, Nick ·Eddy and Pete Andre- efit of a year's experience. Bolfill his mission, is encouraged to
otti. From the Freshman team
come three competent boys, Bob stering these positions will be
call upon his own innate talents to
Mike Webster and Mike Wadshelp further his dedicated goal:
The Hockey Club announced that Bleir, John Butash, and Tom O'- worth who suffered injuries this
Leary. Butash adds speed with season. Tom Longo, Tony Carey
e If the vital spark of serving God it has obtained the services of Mr. good hands to the team, and could and Nick Rassas Will all be back,
Richard
Bressler
as
coach
for
the
through man has been ignited in
prove helpful pending full re- providing supurb talent blended
season•
. you, why not pursue an investiga- 1964-65
Bressler is a graduate civil en- covery from knee surgery which ·with a vast resource of experition of your life as a priest? The gineer from Michigan State. He was necessary last week. Bleier ence in the defensive secondary.
Paulist Fathers have developed an gained his hockey experience is rated "good" and O'Leary
showed promise while playing at At the linebacker position,
from •• ,
aptitude test for the modern man while at East Lansing and playing both
offensive and defensive po- where jim Lynch andArunasVainterested in devoting his life to semi-pro in Chicago and Cincin- sitions underpracticeconditions, sys return, the loss of jim CarGod. This can be a vital instrument natti, Ohio.
and is one of the quickest boys on roll, Ken Maglicic and TomKos· to help you make the most impor-. On the docket for the traveling the generally speedy squad. .
telnik will place a strain on the.
tant decision of your life. Write for squad are matches with Ohio Phil Sheridan will return at tight '65 team. Even so, Coack Ray
State,. Northwestern, Illinois,'
your diamond center
· it today.
University of Colorado, as well end, with the possibility of Dan seemed pleased with the materias the Air Force Academy. Also McGinn, who played behindSnow, · al he had and felt certain that
121 w. wo~hington st.
NATIONAL VOCATIONS DIRECTOR included are Lake Forest, North- as the flanker. McGinn will most the present system would be satsouth bend
likely
take
over
the
punting
isfactory
for
another
year.
The
PAULIST FATHERS
ern Illinois, Wheaton and others. ·
.between m~ehigon& mo1n
Practice and tryouts for the chores with the loss of Snow. additions of Al Loboy and Harry
415 WEST 59th STREET
Making the step up, there will not Long will bring depth to the lineteam
are
scheduled
to
begin
imNEW YORK, N.Y. 10019
we invite your occoont
mediately after Thanksgiving va- be anyone who distinguished him- . backer and defensive end respecself
as
an
offensive
~md,
although
.
tively.
.
cation.
Swimming Forecast
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HOCKEY
· Foto News Litho • Ramarr Publishing, Elkhart, Indiana
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