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Seale University ScholarWorks @ SealeU e Spectator 5-16-1972 Spectator 1972-05-16 Editors of e Spectator Follow this and additional works at: hp://scholarworks.sealeu.edu/spectator is Newspaper is brought to you for free and open access by ScholarWorks @ SealeU. It has been accepted for inclusion in e Spectator by an authorized administrator of ScholarWorks @ SealeU. Recommended Citation Editors of e Spectator, "Spectator 1972-05-16" (1972). e Spectator. 1320. hp://scholarworks.sealeu.edu/spectator/1320

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Seattle UniversityScholarWorks @ SeattleU

The Spectator

5-16-1972

Spectator 1972-05-16Editors of The Spectator

Follow this and additional works at: http://scholarworks.seattleu.edu/spectator

This Newspaper is brought to you for free and open access by ScholarWorks @ SeattleU. It has been accepted for inclusion in The Spectator by anauthorized administrator of ScholarWorks @ SeattleU.

Recommended CitationEditors of The Spectator, "Spectator 1972-05-16" (1972). The Spectator. 1320.http://scholarworks.seattleu.edu/spectator/1320

school in the area of develop-ment to search and coordinateall financial support, to planto achieve University goals andpromote its image and to studythe adequacy of plant facilitiesand use of University proper-ties.

The new regents, includingthree women and seven men,are Genevieve Albers, daugh-ter of the late Mrs. George Al-bers, whose bequest of $3 mil-

lion to S.U. was announcedyes-terday; Carlos Flohr; GordonW. Roessler, andMrs. T. EvansWyckoff, all of Seattle.

OTHER NEW regents areRalph M. Davis and EugeneE.Lynn, both of Bellevue; Mrs.John E. Cunningham, Zenith,Wash.; Arthur J. Heisdorf, Red-mond, Wash.; Rhoady R. Lee,Sr., Medina, Wash., andEugeneJ. Brenner, San Francisco.

Ethnic cultural week opens todayto provide 'interchange, sharing'

noon will feature karate, kungfu and judo exhibitions and ex-planation of self-defense tacticsby Roger Tung, a blackbelt inkarate and Jason Balinbin, bothS.U. freshmen.

S.U.s HawaiianClub will per-form the hula, tahitiar andmoarian during the three-hourpresentation.Ethnic foodwill beserved.

THURSDAY WILL be high-lightedby "Evolutionof a Lead-er," a film on the socio-politicaldevelopment of a leader in aPhillipinevillage. The film maybe seen, free of charge, in theLibraryAuditorium at 7 p.m.

This Friday is Malcolm X'sbirthday. A soul-filled eveningis planned, including a WDBSdance in the Chieftain.

man auditoriumat noon today.There will also be a slide

presentationon "Hawaii and itsPeople: Today" in the LibraryAuditorium at 7 p.m.

Sponsors of Ethnic Week areS.U.Minority Students, the Pan-Asian Council, ASSU and Officeof Minority Student Affairs whoprovided money and manpowerto put on the scheduled activi-ties.MONEY CAME from the

ASSU contingency fund whichgranted $300 last quarter forAsian Week and funds remain-ing for Cultural Day duringhomecoming which was can-celled due to the hospitalizationof DaVerneBell,chairman.

Tomorrow a cultural arts fes-tival on the Library lawn at

Ethnic Cultural Week 1972 be-gins today.

The festival is to create "annterchange of cultures andshare what we (minority stu-dents) have— not just have acti-vities for minority students,"said Vivian Luna, Ethnic Weekco-chairman.

THE COMBINATION springAsian Week and Cultural day,postponed from homecoming,willopen with a speech by War-ren Furutani, former editor ofhe Gilda, an Asian

-American

newspaper in Los Angeles, aroving speaker on Asians alonghe West Coast and field direct-

or of Japanese-American Citi-

en's League (JACL). Futuraniwill speak on "The Emergenceof the Asian-American" in Bar-

Tomorrow marks the date ofthe third and final faculty eval-uation of the year.

Unlike its predecessors, theresults of this evaluation havethe possibility of being publish-ed. "The publication to the uni-versity community hinges onthe favorability of faculty re-Eionse," Pat Lupo, ASSU Pres-

ent, said.SO FAR, there has been anrerwhelming response by theculty in favor of the planned

Year's final teacher evaluationdue tomorrow; may be published

publication, Lupo added.Lupo stressed the urgent need

for proctors to distribute theevaluations. Nine hundred hourshave been put into the surveysto date, but the labor forceis small. The proctorsare need-ed to "insure uniform statisti-cal analysis" of the data.If the evaluation results are

published, distribution will belimited. Each faculty memberwill receive a copy of his re-sults. One copy will be given

to the ASSU, another to theUniversity's faculty rank andtenure committee, and a thirdwill be sent to the circulationdesk of the library whereit willbe under the close supervisionof library personnel.

TO INSURE no possibility ofreproduction, each copy carriesa warning against such action.

Anyone interested in being aproctor is urged to contact eith-er Bill Brophy, ext. 6843 or theASSU office, ext. 6815.

$3 million endowment announced at schoolfuture needs, would be sold or leased at the ear-liest opportunity.

The Very Rev. Louis Gaffney, S.J., Presidentof S.U., took the podium next. While calling forenthusiasm from the University community hecautioned against false optimism. The new en-dowment, he said, "does not in itself solve allour problems." Rather, he continued, it shouldserve as a catalyst to further action.

Fr. Gaffney announced that 150 studentswould enter a "problem oriented, interdisciplin-ary program nextfall."

AT A PRESS CONFERENCEafter the convo-cation,Fr. Gaffney toldnewsmen Mrs.Albers hadoriginally intended the endowment money fora scholarship fund. When she learned of the Uni-versity's financial difficulties she changed herwill.

Further faculty cuts would notbe made, saidFr. Gaffney, unless the student-faculty ratio goesabove its present 15 to 1level.

Award to composer . .

byRobert KegelS.U.s fledgling endowment stands at approx-

imately $4.2 million with the recent receiptof $3million from the estate of Mrs. George Albers.

The gift fulfills the requirements of the anon-ymous $1 million challenge gift announced inFebruary. In addition, the Alumni Associationhas raised $200,000 for endowment purposes.

THE MONEY, to be known as the AlbersMemorial Fund, has been placed in trust, withthe interest tobe used by the University. In tenyears, or if an additional $5 million in endow-ment should be raised, the principle will be madeavailable.

Mrs. Albers, who died this March, was thewidow of George Albers, co-founder and presi-dent of the Albers Brothers Milling Co. Albers,who the fund memorializes, died in 1937.

Robert D. O'Brien, chairman of the board oftrustees, termed the gift "a turning point in theUniversity's history" when he announced it toaspecialconvocation yesterday.

STUDENTS AND FACULTY at the convoca-tion were given a brief history of the school'sfinancial difficulties. Problems began, said O'-Brien, when the University began preparing foran enrollment of 5,000 that never materialized.A quicker reaction to the community collegeboom, O'Brien added, would have kept the Uni-versity out of deficit spending.

Deficit spending came to an end in Octoberof 1970 when the banks refused to loan the Uni-versity more money and demanded repaymentof loans already made. O'Brien said that afterseveral days of negotiating, the banks agreed toextend the loans if the University balanced itsbudget.

The budget for the current fiscal year is bal-anced, said O'Brien. Furthermore, he added, thedeficits of past years have been picked up.

O'BRIENNOTED that CampionTower,whichhe called surplus to the University's present and

SEATTLESpectatorUNIVERSITY

—photo by bob kegel

KNUDAGE RIISAGER held the diploma for his honorarydoctor of music degree.

BudgetsSenate weighs requests

Consideration was given to athirdof the proposed ASSU bud-get allotments, to clubs who re-... . , ..quested financial assistance, atthe senate meeting last night.

Tim Flynn, ASSU treasurer,presented the allotments and the

cuts that he and the financialboard made on the budget re-questsof the clubs.

Senate discussion ended withHomecoming andwill resume ata meeting Wednesday night at7. There were no binding decis-ions made last night.

Ten new regents named;advisory body at 25

Ten business and civic leaderswere added to S.U.s Board ofRegents last week, bringing themembership of that body to anall-time high of 25.

APPOINTED by the VeryRev.Louis Gaffney S.J., UniversityPresident, with approval of theBoard of Trustees, the new re-gents come from five Washing-ton communities and San Fran-cisco.

Regents advise and assist the

Vol. XL, No. 47

t;sday,May 16, 1972Seattle, Washington

A. S. S. U. BUDGET REQUEST—

1972-73Organization 1971-72 1972-73

Request Allot Request AllotS. U. Yacht Club _... 525 300 125 50Aegis 16,500 15,000 15,000 14,900AWS 2,255 1,265 3,050 1,001Burgundy Bleus 600 450 1,224 400Chaplains Fund 300 300 1,120 300Draft Counseling 210 150 50 50Drill Team 821 425 778 300Fine Arts 775 750 1,975 800Fragments 400 225 655 225Homecoming 4,500 2,950 4,000 2,100International Relations 4,065 3,800 2,390 1,255Intramurals 1,192 725 2,972 750Political Union 1,300 1,200 1,500 1,400Publicity Director 900 700 895 500SAAME 1,660 1,200 2,150 800Scholarships 7,875 7,584 7,584 7,584AWS Scholarship 1,000 800Special Events 2,000 1,250 3,000 2,900Spectator 22,066 16,001 17,662 13,800A.S.S.U. General Fund 5,300 5,000 5,000 4,175ASB 1,050 150 580 460Awards Banquet 450 425 450 400Student Nursing 177 25S. U. Rifle 325 25OAS 405Chieftain Renovation 2,000 1,000

DaVerne Bell, S.U. seniorburned in a house fire last Feb-ruary, feels that she has "alot stronger awareness of whatpeople go through when they'resuffering."DaVerneleftHarborviewMedi-

cal Center three weeks ago. Atpresent she feels "pretty good."Ahead of her is more surgery,probably at Cabrini Hospital,cared for by Fr.D Harvey Mc-Intyre's doctor who has workedwith burn patients before. Fr.Mclntyre is pastor of the Im-maculate Conception Church."I SHOULD be well by about

September," she said. "Youknow it takes about six monthsfor burns to heal."

Ethnic Week begins today.Da-Verne says she's been "helpingwith suggestions and I'm all forit. I'd especially like the picnic

Fr.Michael T. Toulouse, S.J.,professor of philosophy, will bea panelist during the Washing-ton Mental Health Association'sday-long conference on "Vio-lence in Our Society" at theSeattle Center today.

He willbe discussing the topic"Television

—The Home Instruc-

Fr. Toulouse to beViolence' panelist

tion Course in Violence?" withAncil Payne,president of KINGBroadcasting; John Murray, aresearch coordinator on theSurgeon-General'sScientific Ad-visoryCommitteeon TV and So-cial Behavior; and NathanielWagner, professor of Psychol-ogy at the U.W.

THE DISCUSSION is sche-duled for 12:15 p.m. to 2 p.m.in the Rainier Room.

"These mental health peoplemake you out to be mad if youdon't agree with them complete-ly," Fr. Toulouse said.

He also mentioned that hereally doesn't know that muchabout the panel, but that hewill probably be used as a sortof "moralistic goad" for theaffair.

The SpectatorPublish** J Tuesdays and Thursdays during

the school year except on holidays and dur-ing examinations by Seattle University. Editedby S.U. st .dents with editorial and businessoffices at 825 Tenth Aye., Seattle, Wash.98122. Serond-class postage paid at Seattle,Wash. Subscription: $4 50 a year; close rela-tives, alumni $3.50; Canada, Mexico $4.00;Other foreign addresses $6.25; airmail inU.S. $9.00.

PageTwo/Tuesday,May 16, 1972/The Spectator

brothers. Branches were located"up and down the coast and asfar east as Salt Lake City", Ms.Albers said.

Albers came to Seattle at thetime of the Alaska gold rush"intendingto go up and do somegrubstaking, but he didn'tmakeit," Ms. Albers added.

"ALL HIS LIFE, though, hewas trying to get someone togoto Alaska and grubstake forhim."

Albers diedin1937.Ms. Albers was also named

a new regent last week. Sheworked as presidentof the S.U.Guild in 1960-61. A graduate ofSan Francisco College for Wom-en, Ms. Albers is active inmanycivic and charitable organiza-tions, including the JuniorLeague of Seattle.

ANONLYCHILD, sheandhermother traveled a great deal.

"We've been on all the con-tinents now," she said.

Bequest donor long interestedin Jesuit work, daughter soys

by Ann StandaertMs. Eva Albers became in-

terestedin S.U. through her as-sociation with the Jesuit fathers,Ms. Genevieve Albers, herdaughter, said yesterday.

"SHE WAS one of the firstcontributors when the S.U.Guild was founded," Ms. Albers added.

The late Ms. Albers, whodiedin March of this year, bequeath-ed three million dollars to S.U.to help build an endowmentfund. An announcement of thedonation was made at a specialall-school convocation.

THE ALBERS FAMILY own-ed Albers Brother's MillingCompany. The companyproduc-ed flour, oatmeal, poultry andcattlefeed. In 1935, the companymerged with Carnation but re-tained the name of Albers.

The late GeorgeAlbers found-ed the company with four of his

Eberhort 'fascinated' by poetry;values suggestion, implication"The poet conies icitli his brok-en wing to teach them flight."

Richard EberhartLast Thursday S.U. students

and faculty were given "flight"as Richard Eberhart made sel-ected readings of his poetry andgave explanations of its mean-ings.

HIS HOUR long presentationincluded such poems as "For aLamb". "HardeningIntoPrint","Illusion of Eternity", and"The Groundhog"— perhaps hismost widely known poem.

Eberhartattributes "TheGroundhog's" popularity to thefact that, "The little creature isan analogy of our bodies, ourimmorality."

"Everything about poetry fas-cinates me

— Ishutter at thethought of being known and re-membered for only one poem,"he stated.

DESCRIBED AS a "poet ofmoral dimensions," he insiststhat, "Poetry must come fromsome deepcompulsion to evalu-ate one's progress through lifeor time and to state for othersone's meanings."

Eberhart feels that poetry is,". . . a worldof suggestion

—what is not said in a poem hasa deep value to it. The implica-tions reward the reader each inhis own way."

He believes very much in thesubjective world

—the spiri-

tual rather than the materialside of life. He notes, "If we donot live by the spirit we willdie by the flesh."

FOLLOWING THIS philoso-phy his poetry reflects his em-

by Margaret Enos

—photo by rosemary hunterRichard Eberhart

pathy, concern, and respect forthe lives of others. These as-pects are especiallyapparent insuch poems as "The Fury ofAerial Bombardment", whichnotes the evils of war.

During World WarIIEberhartwrote a total of 25 anti-warpoems. He says, "Man's abilityto killhis fellows, while claim-ing to be Christian has alwaysbothered me." He continues,

"Perhaps the idea of Christian-ity is too high, perhapsman cannever grasp it completely."

Yet Eberhart's optimism andfaith inmankindare exemplifiedby his statement that, "I pro-phesy the end of war, the endof nationalism, andprofit— whenpoetry willbecome the universallanguage o f the soul and thesoul becomes more importantthan the body."

DaVerne Bell home from hospital

STUDENTS MAY also signupfor student-at-large representa-tive to the Publications Board.Candidacies are being taken inthe ASSU office, second floor orthe Chieftain. Candidates musthave a minimumof 2.20 gpa.

The primary election will beMay24 withthe finalon May30.

Students interested in work-ingonorientation mayalso signup for that.

Last day forsenate,presidencysignups-filing sparse so far

Sign- ups continue until 4:30

p.m. today for the four studentsenate seats and the three classpresidencies which will be con-tested in this quarter's ASSUelections.

As of late Monday afternoon,sophomore class president wasstill without a candidate whileone student had signed up foreach of the other positions.

byPhilFrank

Students are being asked toparticipate in a comprehensivestudy of financing higher edu-cation in the State of Washington.

STUDENT INPUT is beinggathered through the StudentResource Survey, a 72-itemquestionnaire which exam-ines current methods studentsuse to finance a higher educa-tion. The survey takes about 15minutes to complete.

According to Ms. Mary AliceLee, registrar, the survey hasbeen disseminated to S.U. stu-dents through a random selec-tion of departments. An additional stack of questionnaires isavailable at the registrar's of-fice, second floor Pigott, forother students who wish to filloneout.

QUESTIONNAIRES should be

Questionnaire seeks inputfor education fund study

completed and returned to theregistrar tomorrow at the lat-est, Ms. Lee said.

The study has been undertak-en by the Washington Councilon Higher Education and in-volves several phases, from anexamination of who is to payand who benefits from post-secondary education to collec-tion of data on educational fi-nancial resources.

The Council will base its re-ommendations for future fund-ing of higher education on theresults of this study. These re-commendations will then betransmitted to the WashingtonState legislature.

Ms. Lee encouraged S.U. stu-dents to fill out and returnthe questionnaire to help en-sure adequate input from pri-vate university students.

FRANKLYSPEAKING

to go well and Ihope a lot ofpeople show up."Fromher ordeal,DaVerne says

she has, "learned about peo-ple and things you didn't knowbefore." Lenzy Stuart and Fr.JamesB. McGoldrick, S.J.,have

kept her informed about eventsaround campus.THISSUMMER DaVerne plans

to work on her core require-ments by taking theology andphysics. S. U. professors willtutor her at home.

"THIS ISTHE SDST ofm <£XJ OIAKT

U&l OPTICALEyes are accurately meas-ured for quick and perfectfitting.Take care of your eyes .. .they take care of you! Seeus soon.

616V2 BroadwayS.U. Students Welcome

NBofChas an easier waytobalance your budget.

Unsteadyaboutyour finances? With anNBofC check-ingaccount you simply reconcile yourcheckbook withour statement r.-ach month and you'reback in control.NBofCcheckin^-aneasier way tobalanceyourbudget.

NATIONAL BANK OF COMMERCE JN13\>MEMBER F.0.1.C. " ACCOUNTS INSURED TO 520.000 EACHDEPOSITOR.

Firtt HillOffice: 1201 Maditon Street

—photoby ann standaert

IN THE MIDST OF THEIR race, the Chieftain crew teampulls along toward their third place finish during this pastweekend's LaFromboise Cup Regatta on the 2,000 meterSeward Park course. Crew team members from left to right

are:coxswainMitch Ikeda, DaveChandler,Mark Pembrooke,Frank Pontarolo, John Ruhl, Barry Leahy, Gordon Alexan-der,Rich Ottoand Jim Larson.

Chiefs came across in the sev-enth inning. Bob Polaski led offthe inning with a double. Hewent to third on an error, andscoredon John Varga's sacrificefly.

7-5; Soriano beat Brad Look,6-2, 6-0, and Merill triumphedoverRodBradshaw, 7-5, 2-6 6-1.

THECHIEF'S double team ofPrineas and Farmer defeatedFernando and Look, 7-6, 6-3.

by Ed HaydukThe crew team placed third

in the LaFromboise Cup Re-gatta, the championshipof smallschools in the Pad'c North-west, held Saturday on LakeWashington.

The Chieftain shell finished in6:35.4, behind unbeaten WesternWashington, 6:19, and PacificLutheran, 6:25.4. The Universityof Puget Sound finished fourthwitha timeof 6:40.2.IN THE JUNIOR eights race

earlier in the day, the Chieftainjunior varsity finished third be-hind two shells from the Uni-versity of Washington. The JVteam finished the 2,000 metercourse in 6:32.5, beating the var-sity's time by almost three sec-onds.

The crew team is currentlytrying to raise funds to attendthe Western Sprint Regatta thisweekend in Long Beach, Cali-fornia. Last year the S.U. fin-ished second in the lightweightdivision,beating such teams asOregon State and UCLA.

BASEBALLWinning 14 out of their last

18 games, the baseball teamconcluded its season Friday bybeating Western WashingtonState College, 3-2.

Left-hander Ron Thompsonwent the distance, giving up sixhits. The winning run for the

Lord-McKeon vie next

Jonson's rounds of 76-75, whichgave him the individual award.

The team lost all three dualmatches, two against cross-townrival University of Washingtonand one against Bellevue Com-munity College.

Among the four tournamentsthe squad participated in theytook a third, fourth, sixth alongwith the first place finish in theWCAC tourney.

Five out of the six startingplayers will be back again nextyear: George Jonson, Max Nor-gart,GregSegai,KeithWilliamsand Pete Vagi.

TENNISThe S.U. tennis team gained

a split in matches against twoPacific Coast teams by beatingthe University of Oregon lastFriday and losing Saturday toOregon State.

The Chieftains beat Oregon5-4, with Mike Prineas, WarrenFarmer,Marc Soriano and DaveMerrill, all winning their singlematches.

PRINEAS, THE team's num-ber one ranked player, beatJumboFernando,7-5, 6-4; Farm-er defeated Rick Wilson, 6-4,

Tuesday,May 16, 1972/The Spectator,.3

—photoby carol Johnson

STAN TOMASO swings away during last weeks intramuraltennis tournament that eventually claimed Tom McKeonand Frank Fennerty as the doubles champions. Frank Lordand McKeon will vie this week whenever the sun shines up-on us again, for the singles title. The mixed doubles gamewill also beplayedthis week.

THE WIN MOVED theChiefsrecord up to 22-11, a recordwhich generally pleased coachEd O'Brren.

"Despite all our injuries andall the bad weather, Ifeel theseason was quite successful,"O'Brien said.

Many of those injuries cameto key men such as Polaskiand Varga.

"WE PROPABLY would havehad a better record if we didn'thave to move our infield allaround because of all the in-juries," added O'Brien.

O'Brien also said that first-baseman Darrell Prentice hada very solid year and freshmanpitcher Arnie Kvarnbergwas apleasant surprise. He addedthat Polaski had a super year,getting40 basesonballs.

As to next year O'Brien saidhe will need a couple of pitch-ers, a shortshop to replace Po-laski and a center-fielder.

"These replacements couldcome from this year's team butwe will be looking around forgood high school or junior col-lege replacements," concludedO'Brien.

GOLFA fourth place finish in the

British Columbia InvitationalGolf Tournament in Vancouver,B.C. rounded out the Chieftains1972 campaign.

The S.U. six went into lastweek's tournamentas defendingchampions, but came out thisyear toward the bottom in boththe team and individual scoring.

OVERALL for the year theteam swept up the West CoastAthletic crown in both the teamand individual honors with theteam outscoring all other con-ference teams behind George

CHEFTANSportsElgin Baylor dismissesrumor that he's applied"I question whether we

can get all the Board mem-bers together this week tointerview all the candidates,"Ed O'Brien, S.U. athletic di-rector, said yesterday.

THE SELECTION committeemet last Friday and Saturday toscreen through the dozens ofcandidates that had applied forthe open position.

"We came up with less thantennames. It is now in the Ath-letic Board's hands," O'Briennoted.

A high administrative sourcesaid yesterday that the fieldwas definitely narrowed downto seven candidates.

by Sue hillThe selection committee has handed the Athletic Board

a list of seven candidates to succeed Bucky Buckwalter ashead basketball coach, but the announcement of the newcoach will probably not come until at least one week andpossibly two. IFTHE BOARD can not meet

and come to a decision by theend of this week, matters willbe delayed until at least nextWednesday. O'Brien and Fr.Timothy Cronin, S.J., facultyathletic representative, will bein California attending the an-nual West Coast Athletic Con-ference meeting for all athleticdirectors and faculty reps.

"We would not convene againthen until probably Wednesdayor Thursday of next week," O'-

Brien commented.O'Brien added that the Board

will meet probably today for apreliminarymeeting to go overthe ground rules and get theschedules of each of the Boardmembers as to when they can

Seven candidates recommended;decision delayed till 1-2 weeks?

meet.THOSENAMES most likelyup

for consideration are BernieSimpson, former assistant coachat S.U., Jack Schalow, at Louis-iana State and former S.U.freshman coach and Rod Thorn,former assistant coach of theSeattle SuperSonics. Probablyunder consideration also arePaul Harney, assistant coach atUniversity of Puget Sound andformer Chieftain basketballplay-er, and Dean Nicholsen, headcoach at Central WashingtonState College.

Athletic Board members are:Ed O'Brien, chairman, CliffBurglin, John Doyle Bishop,William E. Boeing, Jr., Dr.Walter Scott Brown, Fr. Tim-othy Cronin, S.J., Willard H.Fentin, Robert Harmon, RalphHeyward,Henry T. Ivers.RalphE. Malone, Jack A. Morrison,Dr. Joseph T. Page, and Fr.Leonard Sitter, S.J.

bySuehillElgin Baylor dismissed all

rumors that he had been con-tacted or had applied for theposition as the new basketballcoach."I HAVE not been contacted

for the coaching job butIwouldhave been flattered and honor-edhadIbeen," Baylorsaid yes-terday when contacted by tele-phone in Los Angeles, Calif.

The former Chieftain and LosAngeles super-star said, "Iwould not have taken it anyhowas Ihave other interests downhere that Iam involved in."

Bayloradded that he hadcon-

ferred with Ed O'Brien, athleticdirector, but not about his ap-plying for the job.

"We talked about the job andthe candidates that he (O'Brien)has received word from, but notabout me taking the job."

BAYLOR added: "Iguess thatthe assistant coach there (Ber-nie Simpson) and Jim Harney(from UPS) are some of theapplicants."

Not comparing the two, Bay-lor remarked, "I more or lessrecommended Harney."

The rumor of Baylor's appli-cation has been going aroundsince Buckwalter resigned.

Crew team finishes third in LaFromboise Cup Regatta

Spectator Spans Desk exl. 6852

Be

AmongThose Who Will

Bring To The World The

Peace Of God

WRITE TO:BROTHERS OF HOLY CROSS

VOCATION COUNSELOR13645 Riverside Drive

Sherman Oaks, Calif. 91403

5Point DriveInCleanersA Comp»etc Modern Plant

ASK FOR YOUR STUDENT DISCOUNTFor 21 Years "THE" Cleaner for S.U.

Right across from the "Chief" EA 4-4112

Formation of Von-Karman Vor-tex Streets" and managed tocapture second place.

The conference is hosted bya different school each year.Next spring, S.U. will host theregional event.

LAST WEEK, the SeattleASCE chapter held a StudentNight honoring S.U. and U.W.student chapters.

Woods and Norm Davis, U.W.paper contest winner, met eachother in an oral presentation.Woods defeated Davis to be-come the undisputed top localspeaker.

Shari Marie Graver, S.U.junior,received two awards, in-cludinga cash scholarship, fromthe professional chapter.IN ADDITION, the American

Societyof Mechanical Engineershave been working on papersof their own.

May 4-5, the S.U. chapterhosted the regional paper con-test. Kenneth A. Roe, national

sours man donut briaadesI m

Spur tappees will be selling donuts and coffee from 10 a.m. to2 p.m. todayon the mall.Locations are in frontof the Chieftain andbetweenthe Garrand and Spectator buildings.

Theprice is 10c for a selection of assorted donuts or coffee.

ski club sets beach partyThe Ski Club beach party is scheduled for Sunday, May 21,

from 1-6 p.m. Members needing rides may meet with drivers infront of Bellarmine at 12:30 p.m.

Jane Norine's house, 8 Crescent Key, Bellevue, is the site ofthe party.

head start needs volunteersVolunteers are needed at all four C.A.M.P. Head Start Day

Care Centers to assist teachers in the classroom and playactivities.Male volunteers are also needed to help sand andpaintplay equip-ment.

The Head Start program is designed to prepare three-year oldpre-schoolers for kindergarten.

Those interested in contributing a few hours per week shouldcontact Marguerite Spearman,volunteer coordinator, at EA 9-5800.

sandy hill gets phi chi theta awardSandy Hill of KIRO-TV will speak tomorrow at 12:15 p.m. at

Phi Chi Theta's luncheon meeting at George's Top 24 Restaurant.Her topic is "Sexuality appealsin business." She is being spon-

soredas "Business Woman of the Year" by the women'sbusinessfraternity.

beta gamma sigma initiatesInitiation of 22 new Beta Gamma Sigma, national business ad-

ministration, honorees will take place May 20.The spring quarter initiation will take place prior to the As-

sociated Students of Business banquet. The new members areMargaret B. Anderson, William H. Alsdurf, Michael R. Bum-gardner,Kenneth N. Cost, Roger A. Davis, Gregary P. DiMartino.

Bruce E. Eliasen,Stanley C. Lane, Donald W. Leonard, WayneA. Lundberg, John H. Magneson, Janet O. McNiven, Denise M.Pressentin, John C. Ryan, John D. Sakai.

Ma Erlinda Sibal, Janet M. Sorensen, Charles A. Venskus Jr.,Lloyd M. VanNormann, John F. Welch Jr., Patricia H. WerstlerandEdwardB.Zee.

Spectrum of eventsMay 16-17

AKPsi honorgoes to Cooney

Lloyd E. Cooney, presidentand general manager of KIRO,Inc., willreceive the 1972 AlphaKappa Psi Civic Award at Sat-urday's second annual Associ-ated Students of Business ban-quet.

THE AWARD is presented for"service to the community andcountry and for his inspiringleadership and in recognitionofhis ideals and efforts to enrichthe lives of others."

Presentation will be at 6:30p.m. at the IronShield Restaur-ant, 7th Aye. and Blanchard St.

The award is given annuallyby students of S.U.s GammaOmega Chapter of the nationalprofessional business fraternityto individuals "who have ren-deredexceptionalcivic service."

COONEY, who is the princi-pal banquet speaker will talkon "Tell It Like It Is." -

Dinner is $6 per plate withreservations accepted at theSchool of Business, ext. 5456.

I.K. Little Sisters: 6:30 p.m.meeting in Ba 403.

Liturgy Planning: 7:30 p.m.meetingin the LiturgicalCenterto plan theme andmusic for theSunday masses and special celebrations. Priest celebrants willmeet with interested students.TOMORROW

New Conservatives: 7:30 p.m.meetinginLL 113.Hawaiian Club: 6:30p.m.meet-inginBa 501.

TauBeta Pi: 12:10 p.m.man-datory meeting for all mem-bers. Election are scheduled.

Alpha Sigma Nu: 7 p.m.man-datory meeting, for election ofofficers.

XavierHallDormCouncil: 8:15p.m. meetingin the Xavier Con-ference Room.

Foreign Students: Open houseall afternoon in Marion 109.

SIMS: Second lecture on tran-scendental meditation in Chief-tain lounge at 8 p.m.

1972/The Specctator

TODAYYacht Club: meetingat 1p.m.

in basement of ROTC building.Sailing instructions for LakeWashington will be given.

Alpha Kappa Psi: 5:30 p.m.meeting in the Chieftain con-ference room. Pledges will beinitiatedand the court of honorwill be presented.

Spurs: 6:30 p.m. meeting inthe Chieftain lounge. Tappingactivities will be discussed.

A Phi O's: 6 p.m. executiveand 7 p.m. general meeting inBellarmine Apts. Blazers arerequired.

A Phi O Pledge Class: 6:30p.m. meeting in Bell. 102.

Bellarmine Dorm Council: 6p.m. meeting in the Bellarmineconference room.

I.X.'s: 6:15 p.m. executivemeeting and 7 p.m. regularmeeting in the Xavier meetingroom. Blazers are required.I.K.Pledge Class: 6:15 p.m.

meeting in P 454. Sports coatsare requested.Page Four/Tuesday, May 16,

Reaction on wallace shooting

ranges from cynicism to dismayNewsbriefs

Campus student reaction tothe shootingof presidentialcan-didateGeorge Wallace in Mary-land yesterday ranged fromcynicism to dismayat the use ofviolence.

The Spectator gathered opin-ion from a random sample ofabout 20 studentson campuslateyesterdayafternoon.

"HE'S A ROTTEN person,"said one woman near the Chief-tain. "You can't justify takingalife but Ithink he got what hedeserved."

Another womaninthatvicinityechoed her view, "He's a racistand he got what he deserved,"she said.

A student walking past thebookstore,said "Mypersonal re-actionis pretty cynical.I'm sur-prised it took this long,consider-ing his politicalviews."

"MY INITIAL thought wasthat it was tragic," said hiscompanion. "Aside from being

age to deplore this— and deploreWallace too."

"Itwouldbe amuch less inter-esting Democratic conventionwithout Wallace," he added.

Several students noted thatthey did not agree with Wallacebut weresaddened at the use ofviolence. "Shooting is no wayto handle it," "people have noright to attempt murder" and"it's a sign of how barbaric ourcountry is that you can't runfor office without being shot"were some responses.

A STUDENTnear theChieftain said "It's a sad stateto have acts of violence occurin two presidential elections.They've been all Democrats,"hemused.

"It's really toobad that Wall-ace is in a position of suchpower that anyone feels he hasto be shot," said one teacher."Both things are a comment onthe state of our nation."

cynical it's tragic for someoneto try to run for office and besubject to the possibility of be-ing shot. It reflects more on ourcommunity than on Wallace.""I didn't feel bad likeIdid

when Kennedy was shot," saidone upperclassman. "I didn'treallycare

—Iwas curious about

when and where (it happened)butIreallyhaveno feelingsonewayor the other."

One Republican senior in theXavier loungelookedat the mat-ter from a distance.

"I'm not too emotionally in-volved," he said, I'm curious tosee how the press and politicalleaders are going to react. Thenext time they record "Abra-ham, Martin, and John"— willthey includeGeorge?"

"HE'S BEEN generally castas a villain andIthink that'smostly deserved though hesometimes doesn't get a fairbreak. I'll be interested to seehow the opinion makers man-

laigo on library muralVal M. Laigo, assistant professor of art, will give a commen-

tary on the meaningand concept of his mural in the library read-ing room, today at 11 a.m.

At noon, also in the library, the Thalia Chamber Ensemble willperform compositions by Dr. KnudageRiisager, who received anhonoraryDoctor of Music degree from S.U. on Friday.

Tonight at 7:30 p.m., there will be an open-to-the-public pianorepertoire class conducted by Ms. Carolyn L. Booth in BuhrHall 122.

dr. shoufani to discuss mid-eastDr. Elias S. Shoufani, professor of Middle Eastern History at

the University of Maryland and an associate of the Institute forPalestine Studies in Beirut, Lebanon, will discuss the Middle Eastconflict on Thursday, May 18, at noon and at 7:30 p.m. in thelibrary auditorium.

His appearance is beingsponsored by the Organizationof ArabStudents.

smoker sign-ups sliding inSign-ups are still being taken for the eleventh annual A Phi O

Smoker, scheduled for May 26 in the Astro Room of the ConnollyP.E. Center.

Matches will consist of three one-minute rounds. Tag teams willhave two two-minute rounds.

Trophies and medals will be presented to all participants.Those interested should contact Bob Vanina at 626-5865 or Bob

Bunch at CH 3-5422.

ASME president, was a specialguest on campus.

Scott M. O'Neil, senior,placedfifth in the competition.

IN APRIL, S.U. ASME com-peted with theU.W. inBelleyue.U.W. students captured firstand third places but KamalHamed, senior, placed secondwith a talk on anti-skid brakingsystems.

Speaking awards

S.U. engineers rack up honorsSeveral S.U. engineering stu-

dents have been winning speak-ing awards recently.

April 24, the student chapterof the American Society of CivilEngineers held a paper contestat S.U. Students from S.U. andthe University of Washingtoncompeted separatelyhowever.

S.U. WINNERS included TonyWoods, senior, Terje Lund,freshman, and Jim Ozann c,sophomore. Winners wereawarded cash prizes.

April 28-29, a delegationof 11students attended the annualASCE Pacific Northwest Con-ference in Moscow, Idaho.Woods delivered his talk on "AnEmpirical Observation into the

official noticeStudents interested inwork-

ing on summer registrationMonday, June 19, shouldleavetheir names withKarenNaish in the Registrar's of-fice.A limitednumber of posi-tions are available. Workinghours will be from 9 a.m. to5:30 p.m. at $1.75 per hour.

Q>atkedralX/oncertsFriday EveningMay 19 at 8:30

a concert oforgan music by

&His Contemporaries

played byFenner Douglass

on the greatFlentrop Organ

St. Mark'sCathedral

1229 10th Aye. E.-Seattle, Wash. 98102Telephone 323-0300

Admission $3.00Students $1.50

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"DEMONSTRATE Our Week of Con-cern, May 22-26"

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