4
Barn Nite Spot Wins Support '. . The red barn has won the .over- :wheiming support of the student ·body. In the referendum held Mon- day the vote was 2,698 to 302 in of renovating the barn. At -the earliest, the nite ·'spot will be ready for use next fall. · Plans have been made to con- .. vert the barn, located east of' the · library, into· a place . where stu- dents can eat, dance and talk in a · relaxed a trriosphere.' Due . to the . $i50,000 cost- of the project;. the . administration wanted to determine ·student attitude. toward the idea :making a def_inite decision:·. · The following are samples of , dent' opinion· which point out .ad- vantages and disadvantages: any personal benefit' froJl1·the barn, his disgruntled 'roommate. · ... .''It's a great .idea even without However, I voted: for it because · "A great idea·! The admlnistra- a liquor license. If it served. liquor feel that it will• definitely be an as 7 tion is showing a real interest in a or beer, it would only .benefit .a set to the u·niverf?ity.'': ... · definite .student problem.':- small- portion of the student .body.!'. . . ''For the mere fact that now we'll "I'm agiiinst fixing. up the. bal)l. . "It will be· a flop. When I'm 21, have two places to take a date, I'm Buildings on ·this campus have I'll be down ·at Giuseppe's.'' ·.·······for it," ·and another, "I have·a girl notorious . for remain-· ''I believe it will make 'social life fx:om St. _Mary's, it'll great ing once they're put to use. The here more· natural.'' place to take her on a date." center. of . the. campus is.,moving . · .. , · . east .. the red barn will look: "Of course I'm- for it.' By the aga_inst the Idea .. I feel that. like hell sitting in the middle :of time I'm a senior, I figure they'll the the ne\v quad." · have :-vl!-nt and "This barn will provide a place to have to lug the stuff brick·to my more,than a glonfie u . · where you can treat a "girl like you Aroom," contributed on'e;: farsighted. '4! don't .think it's any better than do. when you're a.t' My date sophomore forgetting_ . there what we have now. It. will just be and ·I won't ·be just two faces in' are no. plans for obtaining a liquor farther. to ·walk/;- commented one thousand at 'dai1ce 'or .. concert; license. · .. · · ., junior .. "Absolutely'anythirig would .. we'II'be able to meet as individuals "Being a_ senior, Twill not derive be better than it is now," asserted on a personal basis." . . . . ·ROBERT BOYD . Boyd< . · ._ .. , •". ' . .._ . - . . - :. . . - . . _,J .,! -As· .. Red .. Strategy·-·_ , _ ·"Chimi·s· .:Peiteefu( co-existence not ·a matter of. policy, but· of · .. ' >-' strategy,", warned Mr. visiting aSS()Ciate, . : the Australian National University, who lectured on .Communist _ Foreign Policy last:Wednesday:' . · ·. · · ·. ._ ·. ·. c . · . ..·: · ·. ' Boyd ·iS_ the author of a book title published_;."bY: ·- Praeger; lie is now completing a work on India's'Foreign Policy for the Council on Foreign Relations. · · . · . - . · ,_ · In discussing China's aims, Prof.· Boyd divided his· topic into .three ' . . . ' ' categories of investigation: ideological pronouncements; official govern- •' . ._ Moot. ·Approitching;. .. -.- . ' ,. ' . . mtinist nations· and movements to complete the world-wide revolution. Supreme . Court ·D·ec·' on' Ap·. p'· e·aied China's -official government' pronouncements, however, have . ·. . .. . ' . ' . - . . •': . ' . ' . . . . . : '. ; ' ' • played for the most' part a desire "for peaceful co-existence, . - . . . . ' . · · . . . \ .. · . with her fellow Asian countries. Efforts have been made to unite. these {_.:Law :scl}ool Moot Court. finals 1964, ·open: t() ·the public, wil( be a precedent·in: the a countries against the· ."coloniai" and "imperialist" ·eastern powers.: ,·'will .be held Nov. 30 in. the Engi- held Nov. 4 and Dec. 19 in the law case is the· one .which the Moot Prof.: Boyd described the regime's conduct of foreign·. affairs .. _He · . . . , . ... The. Moot building. · ·:.: ·· · .' -., ·. Court will he.ar, Hall vs. Warden; divides. the trends of. conduct into three periods.- From their:attain-',. , ·Court, _directed this. ye_rir by: Jo'e ·· The <:ase this year: IS· especially Maryl!tnd Penitentiary.. 'Leonard me· nt of power 1'n 1949 to the en.d f the Korean war in 1_953, C_ommu_nist_ :. mterestmg .. In 1961, m the case of · · . · . . . :Mylotte,_Jack Jiganti and Jim Zmi.: Mapp vs. Ohio, the Supreme Court Hall was con:victed·of Nov. China pursued a course ·of .has· as its finalists Mike ruled, contrary to what 11,: His Is tllat Following _the war, China· endeavored to cultivate. those eouhtries · >; . Stepanik, :·Bob· Frost, Jim. Souther,- previously held, that federal courts, the evidence W!iS through a diplomacy of· peaceful cci-existenc·e: .The Soviet ·-qnion; ho\v:· .land and Mike Byran. Three as yet not state . courts;·. were . to "decide against him. was inadmissable, ac-· ever; also·· began cultivating her interest in. these areas., This aroused, · .. . . ·unnamed- federal judges ·win pre- what ·.and means·. of· cording to tlie Mapp case. Thus, if. China's.· resentment .. Then the. Chinese improved their: position. by_ ex- . : . .. ·: :side; Finalists' were- chosen on the curing •. evidence ·wete ,admissable .. the. Court. 'rules .. that the_ evidence 'ploiting the U.S:S.R.'sdlfficulties: in Eastern Europe !i_uring 1956, : :.. · . · biisis of Ilisf year's. competition: _ · However,. the . Supreme . Court -did was inadmissable, ft \viii,· in effect,. 1g9r5ea8tC··. ahminba 1 :th 1 _ 0 a.ns •tah_ ne• a 1 e';addenertsdhe 1 .psi.r 0 ef·-to·Inftuerrtn_haeti:_orneav_ 1 o_ lCuotim' on;m_ ua_nnt?s:m·a_ · · · :- __ < · .. : . The 16 ·try 4 no.t rule· whether this. decision was be ruling that .the. decision of the _ _ . ' " . :ca.ses, always on ,a,n"appellate level. retroactive." The court; rules. on ab- Mapp case_wasretroa'ctive and Will from .the Soviet: ?rof,·Boyd pointed out some· of: the advimtages.gained "" . the cou_rse of the'year-therc principles, -but_ op_im by China from her aggression,against.IndiiJ. latein 1962 .. Other,:Asiari ,, . are ·4 ·roJ!!ldS' each: inari. a case lS brougllt b:fore1t.-A tyhng men m nations;·especially:.Russiii; \yere __ border.hold- chance 'to work.'ot['eirch-:case-;·-two · .,,._.: · ·" · :' ·;- · '•···::. · < · .·· .• : '- > : ··· ..._, representing the- a ppeliant and' two · . i representing. the .respondents .. The . , .. court proceedings are as .realistic as possibk Much em-phasis is placed ' '. -on 'the most important aspect of . tli.e: ·· lawyer's ·paraphernalia, the ·-brlef. It·is this.high de'gree of.au-: :thenticity· \vhich places the. Notre Moot Court· among . the, best : iri the :nation. The preliminary for . ·\. Ger-man Ptrif · .: ... T ,:.-·D-- .• _,_.: ... · .. _.: ... :; .. -.·.· .- o ·tscuss > .·. ·... " : .. --- -- ;. . . '•. . '" . . On Sunday evening, ··oct. 20, the .- .... :' -, \, . ' ··<King Friday. Academic _Comrriissfon :win present a lecttire'by Dr. Erik 'von Leadihn on.:"Intellectual Freedom in the Soviet Union." The address will be given at 8:00-P.M. in 104 O'Shaughnessy.· . :_: . Dr. Kuehnelt-Leddihn will coil-- sider the amount of creative intel- lectual. thought allowed in the Sovi- et Union· today an·d analyze the pos- sibilities' for.'a .more free and open interchange with the West. :: · • · ,. . . ' . ' - .. · · Marti.n King, the. di- .. .. of 'the ·• Southern Christian Leadership Conference .and one Of . . . . ... . ' . '. 'thecnlsadiii.g voices'in the strug- 'ts 0_ ·: 0_ )•_gan'izes .. >gle 'for' racial equa!ity, will_ speak . ' ... •1 the stepiui cimter. Friday, .Oct. · ' ·18 at :s:l5. p.m:: Dr. King's speech , . . (·._ :Is sponSOred ·by·: the ; The .Volunteer ·seiTice OrganizS.- . i ·: .. :Bend,Citizens Civic tion hold: an organizational .:· mittee .. The lqcaL group is:an meeting at 7:30 p:m. Thursday, Oct . . , _;racial' association formed expressly '17 in'· room: 123 Nieuwiand for all . ' the .·of presenting students interested :iri. doing work ·.,: :::inng . :South Bend. audience: at. the Northern Indiana .Children's ·:The' comm1ttee;. whose- chairman is Hospital. ' :: ·. . · -:Miss Aiphia · Ganway,. will disband -The will feature a film. -after. the clergyman's presentation: on· mental retardation and: a talk c.).·· of; b:V C.hami;>ers, th,e hos= . .... _ .... , .... - .... SPIRIT. OVERRAN the seating boundaries of"the ·stadium as Jmndreds of N.D; students: spilled onto.Jho ... field at halftime of the· southern Cal-game tci.form a tunnel for the ·.The 'scor'ti at· \vas.tied at 14-14 uritit' il.'fourth'quarter thegame tothe'lrisb.:- ·_ .. : · · · · ·· ·: . · o.·' · h 1 · nip .representative· of ,Pital s social WO!ker. At the. · . . . . . . ·. _ . B ·. ··,'.''· , , · 8 , - • · ; . Committee;h'as ·the Mock. GOP.· Nalion·aa·· ·conveniso_mr !'stated that hiS organizatlmi .is Slgn __ up . , . . .. .;, . ... ::"'.;-' ·.·, ,: bringirig'King to 'Smith' Bimd hmmal:ytour. ofthe which , The Notre Dairie Mock':Natiomil tion .on the :ticltet is ate, has promised.to assist •·- :-. ,·.order :to· elicit donations·· for tlie isreqmred prospectivevolun- convimtion, a , qua-drennial arrair assured. ·.- - -... > . > , . , curing the .keynote. speaker.': P.ro-:;: • . .: :. ' . Southern Christian Leadership_ te.ers." After thiS tour the' since. its' advent in 1940; v:iil con'- . . . . ; · .. ' . " . . . ' D. . gram of. the :Mock Convention ·:_ .. ·;f. er·e-nce a·· nd. to ::promote. local then formal. apphcab.on,._ vene during. March. of 'the. present - event, b_y· included· kejnote speaker Senator · Th V 1 t S 0 . . . Paul Butler of .the Pohtica.I.SCience F .. k. Cl · h · f ·Idah. -- · 1 t k · of\;the·,n_ecessity' for; _e schoolyear,"' .. '·' ·· ·,.· o·i -··u· ·ran lUre 0 O,.aer ey- bon was established four year o m .1 94 :' s Y note spe:iker at ·the actual 'l)emo-' · ·tequa:tity•oropportmiity.:.- ... .-. :, . ..· - . sag .·.·campaign. in:anage_rswill __ bech.os- under.the sponsorship or.tne.P.o-.. . . . . · · .. · .... -. - ..... -·-. ·. · .i . · .·-; · :·". . · .: · · .. · · ,to. provide, the ·structure - 1 -.ti .-- 1 --S . · .. -A .. d. . f" N t ·. cratic_National Convention,.the_-late "''-· .. . :.:. •: · J?onabO!lf!.Yzlll._be used bail which students could do .volunteer en -ist by'the General Chair-. 1 . ca Clenc::. _ca emy. 0 .- 0 re Paul Butler, then.Demoeratic 'Na:.·. ".:'- ·., : ,·, \ and \vork (at the :_Children's .. ; Hospital. man· from the ,list of applications Dame: and. prehmlnacy: tional Chairmari.,"and 1\fayor: .. . · ' . S: The· is: jointly ·ad-: be judged orgamzational work. for, ·ard-Daley · -·:. :.: ;.;. - ' .. eff_ o.rt.·to ·e __ xpand rae_ ia_ L_equaht_! m. _·c.I.L-.A:.',· the so·._ on the ba.:.is or'the student's vention have been under.way·smce .. s·t t - 11 ·ti ·· -- •· ·. • ,. ·. "' - · . · ... .. · · : rue ura y, conven on: · . .:. .• - . :·the .. -2,·:3 or·5 dol- ciology Club and Aesculapian .ness of' the issues concerning the February of the Acad- zation Closely parallels tliat of the ·. ' .. , .; :: for. Club, supplied: ·the · hospitai ·\vith nian. on \Vhose behaif he '\.o.ishes to emy, -and full :scale: a.re actual' party conventioils; Th ·:ex-:;;;,_.,;. l{l_n ___ g'_.s; s_p_ eech;·.Iti is· .. no_ t··_necessary Sl'xty'_. student.'voluntee'rs·Ia"'st ··se·m .. -. campaigTI and.'oll the ba'sis of con: now commencmg._ The· c.onventi?n, . ti 'tt ... . . .. .... _. ,;.,_,. --· t · · · ·· · · · · · ... · f ... r · h 2 5 - .. · .. 11 - t ec:u ye comm1 ee, conmsti,ng :. of _ . . . <to mak_e a: donatlon.llln:border. to ad- ester. :. .• . .:. ' . . . ta'ctor potential contact_made with arc. ' \\-1 mee general officers and heads o{,'{fhe ..... ", i seats e. .- .• Althottgh i;{'':ttie''past: the the candidate:" · m- two dailY ove_r four committees,_ ·-· .•. do .. " .• .... ·,:·. pital has.utllized the entire'":force As-in the the day._pen()d. .. ' '.. . 'COJlVention preparations:E.'Cecutive ... :-··, . '\ c'ari be'·obtaiiied in 'the· of student voiu'ftteers i.n their "play. 'party.to ·be .represented :has been ' The keynote- speaker :and other officers ·are: Tom Woods,. general '. office the of they plan :this .. year to based on consideration of potential major ·speakers,will be, proffiinent• cll.airrmin; Monte · i,Academic:-Niairs.,. · .. · ·. · _expand the scope of student interest:Herice Ute 1964 mock' con- Reptiblicim<polltidans,. yet_ to be ecutive assistant; Kathy Hubbard; < '.The- subject .. ' of Dr; .King's speech ices. to teaching special craftS and :vention Will be 'a Republicai1 one; selected. Republican National Chair- secretary; ·anq -Fred ·Lirider/:lreas- .. . ., , ) _lias_.notJ)een . . doing secretari'al· : ·· - 1 as President Kenne<Iy's· renomina- man William· Miller;· ·an ND gradu- urer. · . · .. . ":.-... . .. _ .-' \. -. , . . _' · ...

Barn Nite Spot Wins Support - University of Notre Dame ... · Mapp vs. Ohio, the Supreme Court Hall was con:victed·of ~urd:r Nov. China pursued a course ·of hostility't~.non-Communist

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Page 1: Barn Nite Spot Wins Support - University of Notre Dame ... · Mapp vs. Ohio, the Supreme Court Hall was con:victed·of ~urd:r Nov. China pursued a course ·of hostility't~.non-Communist

Barn Nite Spot Wins Support '. . The red barn has won the . over-:wheiming support of the student ·body. In the referendum held Mon-day the vote was 2,698 to 302 in

~favor of renovating the barn. At -the earliest, the nite ·'spot will be ready for use next fall. ·

Plans have been made to con­.. vert the barn, located east of' the

· library, into· a place . where stu-dents can eat, dance and talk in a

· relaxed a trriosphere.' Due . to the . $i50,000 cost- of the project;. the . administration wanted to determine ·student attitude. toward the idea :~before :making a def_inite decision:·.

· The following are samples of stu~ , dent' opinion· which point out .ad-

vantages and disadvantages: any personal benefit' froJl1·the barn, his disgruntled 'roommate. · ... .''It's a great .idea even without However, I voted: for it because I· · "A great idea·! The admlnistra­

a liquor license. If it served. liquor feel that it will• definitely be an as7 tion is showing a real interest in a or beer, it would only . benefit .a set to the u·niverf?ity.'': ... · definite .student problem.':-small-portion of the student .body.!'. . . ''For the mere fact that now we'll "I'm agiiinst fixing. up the. bal)l.

. "It will be· a flop. When I'm 21, have two places to take a date, I'm Buildings on ·this campus have a· I'll be down ·at Giuseppe's.'' ·.·······for it," ·and another, "I have·a girl notorious . r~putation. for remain-·

''I believe it will make 'social life fx:om St. _Mary's, it'll be}~ great ing once they're put to use. The here more· natural.'' place to take her on a date." center. of . the. campus is.,moving

. · .. , · . east .. Ith~nk the red barn will look: "Of course I'm- for it.' By the I~ aga_inst the Idea .. I feel that. like hell sitting in the middle :of a·

time I'm a senior, I figure they'll the um~ers1ty.could ~ave the mo~eY. ne\v quad." · have a·liquor·li~~IJ-~~:. ~-~'?n'.t :-vl!-nt and eventu~lly _bu~~ ~~~~~~mg "This barn will provide a place to have to lug the stuff brick·to my more,than a glonfie u . ~ · where you can treat a "girl like you

Aroom," contributed on'e;: farsighted. '4! don't .think it's any better than do. when you're a.t' home~ My date sophomore forgetting_ ~that . there what we have now. It. will just be and ·I won't ·be just two faces in' a· are no. plans for obtaining a liquor farther. to ·walk/;- commented one thousand at a· 'dai1ce 'or .. concert; license. · .. · · ., junior .. "Absolutely'anythirig would .. we'II'be able to meet as individuals

"Being a_ senior, Twill not derive be better than it is now," asserted on a personal basis." .

. . .

·ROBERT BOYD

. Boyd< Le~bels . Co-existenc~- · ._ .. , •". ' . .._ . - ~ . . - :. . . - . .

_,J

.,! -As· .. Red .Chi~1ese .. Strategy·-·_ , _ ·"Chimi·s· .:Peiteefu( co-existence i~: not ·a matter of. policy, but· of · .. ' >-'

strategy,", warned Mr. Robe~:t. ~oyd, visiting aSS()Ciate, professor.~friJ,ill . : ·.·~ the Australian National University, who lectured on .Communist C~ina;s _ ·~ Foreign Policy last:Wednesday:' . · ·. · · ·. ._ ·. ·. c . · . ..·: · ·. ····~- '

~rofessor Boyd ·iS_ the author of a book ~with--this title published_;."bY: ~ ·-Praeger; lie is now completing a work on India's'Foreign Policy for the Council on Foreign Relations. · · . · . ~ - . ·

,_ · In discussing China's aims, Prof.· Boyd divided his· topic into .three ' . . . ' ' categories of investigation: ideological pronouncements; official govern- •' .

. _ Moot. Co~rt :fin~ls ·Approitching;. ~::l~~~~e~::~~~n~~~e~~p~~~da~r~~d g:~~:e~: e~~~~u~s:al~h!~~~-· .. -.-. ' ,. ' . . mtinist nations· and movements to complete the world-wide revolution.

Supreme. Court ·D·ec·' ~·-s:I• on' Ap·. p'· e·aied China's -official government' pronouncements, however, have dis~ . ·. . . . . ' . ' . - . . •': . ' . ' . . . . . : '. ; ' ' • played for the most' part a desire "for peaceful co-existence, especi~lly

. - . . . . ' . · · . . . \ .. · -· . with her fellow Asian countries. Efforts have been made to unite. these {_.:Law :scl}ool Moot Court. finals 1964, ·open: t() ·the public, wil( be a precedent·in: the future:.·~such a countries against the· ."coloniai" and "imperialist" ·eastern powers.: ,·'will . be held Nov. 30 in. the Engi- held Nov. 4 and Dec. 19 in the law case is the· one . which the Moot Prof.: Boyd described the regime's conduct of foreign·. affairs .. _He · . . . ,

. ,ne~ring:A.uditoriu·m ... The. Moot building. · ·:.: ·· · .' -., ·. Court will he.ar, Hall vs. Warden; divides. the trends of. conduct into three periods.- From their:attain-',. , ·Court, _directed this. ye_rir by: Jo'e ·· The <:ase this year: IS· especially Maryl!tnd Penitentiary.. 'Leonard me· nt of power 1'n 1949 to the en.d o· f the Korean war in 1_953, C_ommu_nist_ :. mterestmg .. In 1961, m the case of · · . · . .

. :Mylotte,_Jack Jiganti and Jim Zmi.: Mapp vs. Ohio, the Supreme Court Hall was con:victed·of ~urd:r Nov. China pursued a course ·of hostility't~.non-Communist Asian··~ou~tries. -~-~gro(!ki, .has· as its finalists Mike ruled, contrary to what had:beeil~ 11,: :19~9. His c.ontenbo~ Is tllat Following _the war, China· endeavored to cultivate. those eouhtries · >; . Stepanik, :·Bob· Frost, Jim. Souther,- previously held, that federal courts, the evidence wh1~7h W!iS ~mployed through a diplomacy of· peaceful cci-existenc·e: .The Soviet ·-qnion; ho\v:·

~ .land and Mike Byran. Three as yet not state . courts;·. were . to "decide against him. was inadmissable, ac-· ever; also·· began cultivating her interest in. these areas., This aroused,

· ..

. . ·unnamed-federal judges ·win pre- what ~viqence ·.and means·. of· pro~ cording to tlie Mapp case. Thus, if. China's.· resentment .. Then the. Chinese improved their: position. by_ ex-. : . .. ·: :side; Finalists' were- chosen on the curing •. evidence ·wete ,admissable .. the. Court. 'rules .. that the_ evidence 'ploiting the U.S:S.R.'sdlfficulties: in Eastern Europe !i_uring 1956, ~ince : ~

:.. · . · biisis of Ilisf year's. competition: _ · However,. the . Supreme . Court -did was inadmissable, ft \viii,· in effect,. 1g9r5ea8tC··. ahminba1:th

1_0a.ns _-e~x0prs,ees1Z}eed.· •tah_ ne• a

1e';addenertsdhe

1.psi.r

0ef·-to·Inftuerrtn_haeti:_orneav_

1o_ lCuotim' on;m_ ua_nnt?s:m·a_ · · · :-__ ~-· < · .. : . The 16 particlp~nts ·try 4 'actu~~ no.t rule· whether this. decision was be ruling • that .the. decision of the _ _ .

' " . :ca.ses, always on ,a,n"appellate level. retroactive." The court; rules. on ab- Mapp case_wasretroa'ctive and Will from .the Soviet: ?rof,·Boyd pointed out some· of: the advimtages.gained "" . ~During the cou_rse of the'year-therc stra~~ principles, -but_ ~nly.~fte:~a op_im floodgit~sf?rh~!!?reds:ofap~ by China from her aggression,against.IndiiJ. latein 1962 .. Other,:Asiari

,,

. are ·4 ·roJ!!ldS' each: inari. has~ a case lS brougllt b:fore1t.-A tyhng men m SlffillB;E.~l_ECU~ nations;·especially:.Russiii; \yere intimid~t~d, and_C~~I1~'s __ border.hold-chance 'to work.'ot['eirch-:case-;·-two 'is-then~m!l:tle;:-whlclrwm- · .,,._.: ~- · ·" · illg'ii\ver(i"consolidafeo;'~/~'_'T;~ :' :·:;f_7.'·.--:·~-:;:-::·'~ ·;- · '•···::. ~-, · < · .·· . • : '- > : -~ ··· ..._,

.· representing the- a ppeliant and' two · . i representing. the .respondents .. The

. , .. court proceedings are as .realistic as possibk Much em-phasis is placed

' '. -on 'the most important aspect of . tli.e: · · lawyer's ·paraphernalia, the ·-brlef. It·is this.high de'gree of.au-: :thenticity· \vhich places the. Notre ~Dame Moot Court· among . the, best : iri the :nation. The preliminary for

. ·\.

Ger-man Ptrif · .: ... T ,:.-·D--.• _,_.: ... · .. _.: ... :; .. -.·.· .- o ·tscuss >

.·. USSRIFre~d~rrr·· ·... " : .. --- -- ;. . . '•. . '" . .

On Sunday evening, ··oct. 20, the

.-.... :'

-, ~ \,

. '

··<King ·sp~aks :·H~r~ Friday.

Academic _Comrriissfon :win present a lecttire'by Dr. Erik 'von Kuehnelt~. Leadihn on.:"Intellectual Freedom in the Soviet Union." The address will be given at 8:00-P.M. in 104 O'Shaughnessy.· . :_: . Dr. Kuehnelt-Leddihn will coil-- ~

sider the amount of creative intel­lectual. thought allowed in the Sovi­et Union· today an·d analyze the pos­sibilities' for.'a .more free and open interchange with the West. :: · .· • ·

,. . . ' . -· ' ~ - ..

· · -R~v. Marti.n Luth~r King, the. di­.. r~ctor .. of 'the ·• Southern Christian

Leadership Conference .and one Of . . . . '· ... . ' . '. 'thecnlsadiii.g voices'in the strug- 'ts 0_ ·: 0_ )•_gan'izes

.. >gle 'for' racial equa!ity, will_ speak . ' ... •1n· the stepiui cimter. Friday, .Oct. · -~~H~spita[.Aid :· ' ·18 at :s:l5. p.m:: Dr. King's speech , . .

(·._ :Is ;·being~- sponSOred ·by·: the ; sOu~h The .Volunteer ·seiTice OrganizS.-. i ·: .. :Bend,Citizens Civic Planning'5Jom~ tion ~vill_ hold: an organizational

.:· mittee .. The lqcaL group is:an inter~ meeting at 7:30 p:m. Thursday, Oct . . , _;racial' association formed expressly '17 in'· room: 123 Nieuwiand for all

. ' ~ffor the ~purpose .·of presenting :0~~ students interested :iri. doing work ·.,: :::inng ~to . a· :South Bend. audience: at. the Northern Indiana .Children's

·:The' comm1ttee;. whose- chairman is Hospital. ' :: ·. . · -:Miss Aiphia · Ganway,. will disband -The mee~ing will feature a film.

-after. the clergyman's presentation: on· mental retardation and: a talk c.).·· D~;:_Tliomas .:Bro.d~~- of; the;1a~~ b:V ,1\;r.ye~Iar·d C.hami;>ers, th,e hos=

. '•·.~··~.~ .... _ .... , .... - .... ~

SPIRIT. OVERRAN the seating boundaries of"the ·stadium as Jmndreds of N.D; students: spilled onto.Jho ... field at halftime of the· southern Cal-game tci.form a tunnel for the team~ ·.The 'scor'ti at· balfti~;ne. \vas.tied at 14-14 uritit' il.'fourth'quarter fi~ld goalgm~e thegame tothe'lrisb.:- ·_ .. : · · .· · · ·· ·: . ~--:.. ·

o.·' · h 1 '· · nip .representative· of ,Pital s social WO!ker. At the. meet~ · . '· .· . -· . . . . ·. _ . B ·. ··,'.''· , , · 8

, - • ·

; . ~~:e~~i;i~'i:.la~~ing Committee;h'as ing,all_:studen~s-will'have ·the op~· Mock. GOP.· Nalion·aa·· ·conveniso_mr !'stated that hiS organizatlmi .is ~Or~U~UtY.~O Slgn __ up fo~_.the p~e- . , . . '· .. .;,

. ... ::"'.;-'

• ·.·, ~ ,: bringirig'King to 'Smith' Bimd ~ln hmmal:ytour. ofthe hosp~tal which , The Notre Dairie Mock':Natiomil tion .on the Deniocratl~ :ticltet is ate, has promised.to assist ~pro->· ~ •·- :-. ,·.order :to· elicit donations·· for tlie isreqmred of.a~l prospectivevolun- convimtion, a , qua-drennial arrair assured. ·.- - -... > . > , . , curing the .keynote. speaker.': P.ro-:;: • . . : :. ' . Southern Christian Leadership_ Con~ te.ers." After thiS tour the' S~!ld~nts since. its' advent in 1940; v:iil con'- . . .· . . ; · .. ' . " . . . ' D. . gram of. the ~1960 :Mock Convention ·:_ .. ·;f. er·e-nce a·· nd. to ::promote. local un~ -~ll- then m~ke formal. apphcab.on,._ vene during. March. of 'the. present -T~e event, firstorg~~IZed b_y· !· included· kejnote speaker Senator ·

Th V 1 t S 0 . . . Paul Butler of .the Pohtica.I.SCience F .. k. Cl · h · f ·Idah. -- · 1 t k · ·:_.~derStaildlng of\;the·,n_ecessity' for; _e oune~r erviCe_rgam~a:' schoolyear,"' .. '·' ·· ·,.· o·i -··u· ·ran lUre 0 O,.aer ey-bon was established four year o Dep~r_tment m .194 :' s pre~n Y note spe:iker at ·the • actual 'l)emo-' · ·tequa:tity•oropportmiity.:.- ... .-. :, . ..· - . sag .·.·campaign. in:anage_rswill __ bech.os- under.the sponsorship or.tne.P.o-.. . . . . · · .. · .... -. - .....

-·-. ·. · .i . · .·-; · :·". . · .: · · -~ • .. · · ,to. provide, the ·structure th~ough -1-.ti .--

1--S . · .. -A .. d. . f" N t ·. cratic_National Convention,.the_-late "''-· ..

. :.:. •: · J?onabO!lf!.Yzlll._be used ~or· bail which students could do .volunteer en Nov~ -ist by'the General Chair-. 1. ca Clenc::. _ca emy. 0 .- • 0 re Paul Butler, then.Demoeratic 'Na:.·. ".:'- ·., : ,·, \ .· •:funds;,::~tc:>IJley•~·fees and other.~~- \vork (at the :_Children's .. ; Hospital. man· from the ,list of applications Dame: r~a.nnmg; and. prehmlnacy: tional Chairmari.,"and 1\fayor: Rich---~- .. ~ . · ' . ·c·~,pense~ 1~5u~re~ m.t~e Con~er~nce. S: The· pr~gram;:~·hich is: jointly ·ad-: recei~ed;·Applications\vill be judged orgamzational work. for, the_-~on~ ·ard-Daley 'of-Chicago~ · ~", -·:. :.: ;.;. -

' .. eff_ o.rt.·to ·e __ xpand rae_ ia_ L_equaht_! m. ·-m'Inl'ste~d-·by-·the. _·c.I.L-.A:.',· the so·._ on the ba.:.is or'the student's a\_;vare~ vention have been under.way·smce .. s·t t -11

-· ·ti ·· -- •· ·. • ,. ·. "' - · . · ... .. · :· · : rue ura y, conven on: o:rgam~ · . .:. .• - '· . :·the .. so~th.,Do~ors 0~ -2,·:3 or·5 dol- ciology Club and .the~ Aesculapian .ness of' the issues concerning the February bY..membe~s of the Acad- zation Closely parallels tliat of the ·. ' ..

, .; Ia~s ;ow~lh_:rece1ve :: ~ckets for. Dr~ Club, supplied: ·the · hospitai ·\vith nian. on \Vhose behaif he '\.o.ishes to emy, -and full :scale: op~ratio_ns a.re actual' party conventioils; Th ·:ex-:;;;,_.,;. '· ~-:, l{l_n ___ g'_.s; s_p_ eech;·.Iti is· .. no_ t··_necessary Sl'xty'_. student.'voluntee'rs·Ia"'st ··se·m .. -. campaigTI and.'oll the ba'sis of con: now commencmg._ The· c.onventi?n, . ti 'tt ... . . .. ~- .... _. ,;.,_,. --·

t · · · · · · · · · · ... · f ... r · h 2 5-.. · .. 11 - t ec:u ye comm1 ee, conmsti,ng :. of _ . ~"- . . <to mak_e a: donatlon.llln:border. to ad- ester. :. .• . .:. ' . . . ta'ctor potential contact_made with ~c~eduled ~r ·~ arc. -~- ' \\-1 mee general officers and heads o{,'{fhe ..... ~. ", i

.-__-::·._~tend, ~but seats ~VI_; e. r~~erv~ .-.• Althottgh i;{'':ttie''past: the ·has~ the candidate:" · m- two ~ess10ns dailY ove_r ~ four subsidiary~ committees,_ hea9~::the:·''•. ·-· .•. ~for..thos~.~who do .. " .•.... ·,:·. pital has.utllized the entire'":force As-in the p~t. selecti~n ~f the day._pen()d. .. ' '.. . 'COJlVention preparations:E.'Cecutive ... :-··, . '\ ··.Ticket~ c'ari be'·obtaiiied in 'the· of student voiu'ftteers i.n their "play. 'party.to ·be .represented :has been ' The keynote- speaker :and other officers ·are: Tom Woods,. general :•c>~:,., ~­'. Schol~stic office or~ the O~ce" of program~·. they plan :this .. year to based on consideration of potential major ·speakers,will be, proffiinent• cll.airrmin; Monte Kloberdarii;,:·~x~: k~:

· i,Academic:-Niairs.,. · .. · ·. · _expand the scope of student 'se~v~ interest:Herice Ute 1964 mock' con- Reptiblicim<polltidans,. yet_ to be ecutive assistant; Kathy Hubbard; :-.~_,,l < '.The- subject .. ' of Dr; .King's speech ices. to teaching special craftS and :vention Will be 'a Republicai1 one; selected. Republican National Chair- secretary; ·anq -Fred ·Lirider/:lreas-..

. . , , ) _lias_.notJ)een announced.-.·.,~ . . doing secretari'al· \York.~ : ·· -1

as President Kenne<Iy's· renomina- man William· Miller;· ·an ND gradu- urer. · . · .. -· . ":.-... .

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Page 2: Barn Nite Spot Wins Support - University of Notre Dame ... · Mapp vs. Ohio, the Supreme Court Hall was con:victed·of ~urd:r Nov. China pursued a course ·of hostility't~.non-Communist

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._" . t·

-Scholarships for Married Students·

r- . . :.:,-.. It is necessary for large institutions to function along the lines of policy. It is comfortable to enforce policies rigidly: easy to meet a pr~blem and-dispatch it with a rule. Often this is a legitimate expedi~ . cnt forced by circumstance, but' sometimes it is an C..'CCUSe for COm-':fodable neglect. · · · -

Otie of the basic policies of the Administration. is the requirement that its scholarship holders reside on campus. In gerieral this is a reasonable requirement and a 'sound policy. The handicap of this regu­lation ·is that it does ncit tal<e into consideration the plight of the married undergraduate applying f~r a:. scholarship. And more. important,

. 'it forces the revising of the scholarship if a student, holding ~n award

.·of' financial. aid, marries during his undergraduate y~ars; _Here a· per­.. son loses his award although there ·has been. no change in his intellect­' '. ual ability or financial responsibility. . .. ' . · , .. ·. . ... · . · · ,

-· · Und_erlyin~(this regJ.Ilatio·n is ,th(dorJr).itory-society concept which ·is a key factor in Notre Dame's ca~p~_!)~~op:t_!rl.unjtyjdeal.It is ~el_t_,~}1at ·ih~ student is ·best ·positione·d-.to 'ftilly--particifiate-·in tli~ "attainment of the Notre _Dame dream if he dwells "within."· On-campus. he has ·the fullest opportunity to contribute to arid share iif the tyPe of society envisioned ·as community living. Here he can best realize the "full life'' which. Notre Dame offers. · · .. , As a· sciio1arship student he has an obligation to uie _university to contribute, even to lead. The relationship of on-campus residence to 'effEictive 'curriculum action and intrci-uriiversity dialogue is a real one.

'.m ":rBut to .maintain. that a scholarship_ student, who· is incidimtally ·married, cannot effectively participate or successfully overcome the

./, ·spatial disadvantage is an unfortunate linder~estimation. It is m?re­over contradictory to the assumptions about a.'scholarship student .. · It \Vould 'seein 'then tluit there are individhals for whom this gen~ c~l ideal cannot apply. They. cannot al(be· dismissed a~. victims of a,

TilE VOICE Octoocr 16, 1963

Events Calendar An Open Letter ..• Dear Greg:

Wednesday These lines are ·being written to

let you, Gregory Waisnoras, · of Chicago, Ill., realize that Notre Dame is \vaiting for you ..

Oct. 16 8:00 pm-LECTURE: ."Science and Wisdom" by· · • -· Gabriel .Marcel .... ; •· •....... Library Auditorium

16. 8:00 pm-'-ORGAN RECITAL: by Fernando · · Germani , .....• • ......... Sacred Heart Church . Your stoi;Y illustrates a real; yet

hidden facet of any university ....:... ·16 8:15 pm-PLAY: ''No Time for-Sergeants". , Price: $1.25 ......... ; .First Presbyterian qhurch its· personal side. . .

16

Thursday oct; 11

·1.7

·i7

17 Friday, oct.' 1s .·

18 : •....

1S 18.

18

. 18 18

. · . . . 333 W. Colfa}{ ~TICI{ET SALES: Detroit Club Smoker .

for Stanford Game at Sunny Italy

Like hundreds of. others, ever since ·_you were yourig, you had a burning ambition and desire to be­come a Notre Dame man, and more

6:30 pm to~Homecoming Refunds for ' specifically a doctor. There were · st d t Center at least a dozen campus ·visits arid 8:00 pm · Lottery .Losers .. · .... • ..•. ;-;..... u e1_1 ..

7:00 pm &-GRAND OLE .OPitY · football games. You had -·been · 9:30 pin' · · . ·-· ' . • '¥orris Civic Auditorium ranked exceptional in academic and

8:00 pm-LECTURE: "No Snake Has All the Lines" athletic a'chievemimt. Your a·ccept-. · by Caroline Gordon Tate .... Library Auditoriu~ arii:e at ·Notre Dame seemed:· quito

8:15 pm_;_PLAY."No Time for Sergeants" (See Oct. 16) ·. obvious.· · · . · · ·· · · · · · . • · · · · . It was just .siightly iess than: a

4:00 pm.;.:;;cOROSS :COUNTRY: N.D; Invitational······· ·."- · · year· ago· that it: oecarile l<nown i · , Meet . · . Golf Course you had cancer.· The why. and ~the

4:00 prri-LECTURE: "Patents and Progress" by • . how have.'baffied the physicians. · Ml'.· K.;.F,' Jonda •.••. : .·;; . .'; .•.• ; .• ... Room· 123; The'orily alternative was thifn:tnpti~

. Niemvland Science Bldg. tation of the leg· just above the 6:45 pni-PEP RALLY •••.•• ~ ............ Stepan 'center knee on March 2, 1963. Yet.your 8:00 pm-LECTURE on the llfe and works of John , dreams; your aspirations of tlnter­

·Fianagan by R. J. Forsyth . : ...•.... Art Gallery ing Notre Dame. remalried. unal-8:00 pm-CONCERT: by Notre Dame Glee Club . .. . : :tered.· You ·became ·a. -Freshman,

· · . . , WashingtonHall SepL·'14".:-19~3;: · .. '' ~:_15 Pl11__.:.r~A:¥; ~~~o Tiin~ for Sergenh~s" (See Oct. 16) . For four days you• we're officially 8:15 pm--:-LECTURE: by Martin Luther King a· part :of· Notre Dan'i·e. ·For four

• Stepan Center days you exp'erienccd tii~ -initial Saturday . . . - • . . · · . - ·. - , · · · ·· joy,·· enthusiasm, ·excitement;·· and· Oct 19 . 1:30 pm-FOOTBALL: Notre Dame vs. U.C.L.A. -Stadium anxieties of a beginning Frosh; but·.

·19 6:30 pm &__.:.1\IOVIE: "Manch1,1rian Candidate'-'. . . -~, • for-y<?u'there.was aiways that'pahi.' · .. poor aitituqe or as nialcoritents or a~ selfi~h men: It i~ here _th~t the · fact of sincere and well considered dissent has to be recogmzed and . should be acted ).!pori. . · · . · . · . , ·. . . .: - · . . . . ? 19

. •· \Ve feel that the recognition is present .. The possibility of "ex: 19

8:45 pin ______ .· . -· •.. ... . : . ·- · .\Yil.sl:lingtol} Hall At the advice of --physicians, you· 8:15 pm-PLAY: "No· Time for Sergeants" (See Oct. 16) . .' withdrew from the/ Uni v·ersi ty. ·. 8:30 pin-:-VICTORY DANCE ;· .•• : · · · · · · • ;·.Stepan Center There was still· the cancer. on· : ceptions" is admitted, . but too often. as a theory .. One argument ad;. Sunday

. vanced is that an exception based upon marriage will invite a host _oct. 20 . of other applications; many based upon selfishness or improper under~ standing:· The ·administration simply doesn't have the· resources avail~

. able. for tiie effort. that proper screening and assessment would require ..

. If. this is· true then the individual must be sacrificed. for .the common

. I .

20

ga'od.·~ · · · .· · , . , ·

_-: . ~ · - · -.. · · .. · ' · · . Sept 23nrou underwent an opera-2:00 pm-1\IOVIE: "Bachelor -in Paradise" . . . lion at the Illinois Research Hos"' 6:30pm Cost:. 25c-by Ntw ·England Club ... ' . _. {·''. pitiii:· The remainder of 'your''!Eig' . 7!30 pm-'-LECTURE: Aesculapill:_n Club •. , .127 Nieuwland · · · ·· · · ·d · · · ..... · . . . , _ . was remove .. . ·. · , ; 9:00pm.. . . . . · Engmeerm.g Auditonum :Greg in yo~ is .vested. another

· 8:00 pm-~ECTURE: "Intellectual .Freedom m t11e · "-· 1 . · . • · · . . . -. · ·· ... . ·• · Soviet Union" 'by Mr. Eric ·Kuehnelt- · · · :· ' segm_ent ·of what· IS proper~y-: r.e-,

· .-:>·:,There is, however, an: obligation whi,ch· the university has toward (~ - :the •scholarship -student. The A:B. Bulletin contains this declaration: Tuesday

Oct. 22

. · . · · · · , · · 1· garded as the Notre· Dame spirit. Leddihn ..•.. -....• Room 104, 0 Shaughnessy Hal y· . · · t·· t·· · · d . · ··t· f ·1·· . . . :· · -.. · .... · our mo IVa wn, your nve. o u 7-

4:30 ~.::_LECTl:H:~E: "Sexualit in the. Genus· . _filL a', life~lo~g. ~rilliitii:)n has, .r~7 . ,.. . :_ "Also-th~ college acknowledges th~ different ways of different student~ ; , ·with -knowledge~ The: student is not treated simply as part of a col7 , . · · · ·.lectiv·e cluster: the educational effort is highly personal. The_ center of

p •. Ph to hora;, ·by, Dr.- Jrl:J. Savage. . ·. . ll1ai~ed _undaunteE!. Y,ou serve a~·~ _ Y p · Biology Auditorium remmder .. to some of ~s, on:~amp;t~.. . ..

;.' 'attention is the action of each student, and the development that must

~-~. . .-tak:g~:~J!-i~;thi~·r~sponsibility and thereai d~nger of c~~fortable ,~--rJ .. .- R .. -.·. /J • - · A .· . · /J :: : .. · ' .· negie_ct,-we believe. that' an attempt'_to·fin_d the needed resources should - ue, . ' eatuHa_· ·_ ' .e_uo.a_·. f' .. ··· . be initiated. Nothing ·vast. is ··required, only a rational and. sensitive _ _ T _

of aiioth.er meaning for the Spirit . of·Notr.e !)arne.:.: ,: . . ,: _· ... ,.' ;! 1

. So' Greg, .as_you ariXipusly:-O.lvait;: ·. 1 youbrecoyery.:, and '-then~,your lren! ···. turn, we, Notre·Da.me,: are likewise· ...

f~~ . . .. response,._ beyi:mcl'1the rule. :,POSSible .. COmplexity. SliOUld .not beA:,allowed . _,· __ l: ~-... ·alt_.· . ,··. _'··t'' _·~ ...

1 . ., .. ___ · .. -.·~·.·_·i.·····.·.·.·-:·_.·:··.,_.,!/M!'" -'-'! ~-_·'/ia-e •.. _··_'."_: ···t:: ·.·.,-.u. ':··.;·• .. _._-.... ,·~.'·;t. __ -_ .... ·?~.·-.·_·. ---·; ~-~-•·,•··-tO iri'ghten us::·into-treatirig"ariy~studeiit "simply-a:s a'part=of 'the . . ' . . ..;_;_;_:.:.._.:;,_;""-"-""-.~-'•:;r,· .. ; .. "H;-'

~ · colloctivE(cluster."- '' ~ ·· _ ·· · :-:,.: .. ,r · ( .,. :i 1 :·; ... :1 .:_..

. waitiDg )for -yOu. ; ., ~··.~. ·.~~, ~~=.:.: • :~:~q~~ '... ~.:~: __ <- _.·.,,.

f · . . ··A/:: ·._.~.--N-·. __ ·e··-_.W·._:::._._.--~---.~~;W·>_·.·.·.·:~: .. _a•·-: •. _:~5~··~ ····n.:._ .. ·ri't.: ·rinc··_ .. H.·. ·_.a····J·I· . in 'vhat-:br. Da~i~ -R~isnian ball~. "The A~ad~~ic ·Proc~ssion" ~£ ~:a.:1!~~~r·:JO ·THE :ED.ITO_~~--~-. Jf.l ~ "" colleges and universiti~sdt)s a: donimon~ari(Lworthwhile imictice fo~ Last y~'a/r tr~veled. to '"see" ~~~-: "

~-: .• WasliirigfonHali; 'a landplark• ta' the ljtlidents ';of Notre Dame,. h~s iristituti(ins on 'the rise' and perhaps "growing_.up". to ~borrow ideas and football tean~ .play Northwestern, r .. •-.

• ..

. " . " . . . . in"nova·t'io"ns from" e"achother .. Neither Nol!re":Dame rior.any other. _uni- two \Veeks· ago.·to .,'.'watch". our, long been-the traditional hoine of good entertairiment on. the campus; . . . Yet ·even as-'the 1963--64 year· advances; promising its fair share of versi(y _should be "ashamed~! -'.dr -reiuc~nt .to' adopt practices which teain. battle Purdu_e. Botll· tim~~;( movies- and dramatic presentations; something- more ·seems to be pos- have proven their value else\vhere. Orie~·siich' ·innovation: which . bears found myself and the· rest of the .

. slble in the ·use ·of the comfoPtable faciiities-offered by Washington seriO'us · consicieral:.iori· is the·· ''Reading Period:·~ . Notre ))arne. student: body seated' Hail: With the .eiqninsion; of Notre Dame's image iri the fo.rm of the F~eling that th~re ar~· ~a~y:·st~denbi: and faculty ,inembers Wh~ in the· deepe.st corners, of bo.th stad-' ne;v.Memorial Library, it seems appropi:late thaLa gi-e.at uruversity may not know what.·stich a·periodjs;-whatit:entails and what ar~ iums; the··seating'sectio·n,entir~Iy· consider exparid,ed~_.uses of facilities which _iiave heretofore . remained its' a~ins and possibilities, :The Vole~ wi~l, in ~hree _parts, describe the beyond the end zone. 'At our home·-

. ·­.-. •· . ,. '. •· 1 .... ly u' ta .. 'd ' practice. and' its. ration_ al_e,_ ._as .'wel.l, .. as_, its.poss.ible u_s_e in_ the academic games; I. have noticed' that our :op~. _. arge n ppe . ~ . . . . . . . . . . . ,

•. \yashirigtori Hall can benefit the student body and .the University caferidarhere. This: first part \vilr.simply outline_the system as_ itis ponerits'. student.section.begins . fn. a ·fa(' greater capaCity by ,open_ijtg ·its' doors ·to neW 'ideas Of Usage employed at other 'colleges _and: Ul,liver,sities.: :" . . . near the forty yard line · · • a far ~~d an easier me tho~ of iwailabillt~·· ; ' ;> .. : . '. ; .•..... /.. : . The Reading Period,' .also called . "Assimilation Period'! or "Dead better. position than most of. our

.· . For"-instarice, the Social CommiSSIOn could sponsor. a movie-dance Wee!<,'; is iiseti at over 30 iriS,titutions in this•country,;Iri almost as students are afforded. To what do ·party somEitime iii 'Lerit, using the· theater :·faciiities 6( Washington many forms~ It generally is a time, usually just before. semester .e:>.:ami~ we owe this miscarriage of justic'e'?.

Hail. This \VOUld cost less, 'save the students j•roril an unnecessary .trip nations, dui:irig which no. classes~ meet.:_ The period_ ;varies in: length; . . . C:(·J; iandolo, >65'' . ' .. ' to town, arid provide a whole night of entertainment. Washington Hilli but is iisiialiy aoinit a week,: though some .colleges; such· as Harvard · Off-Campus . . .

r.- couid be made.availabie to the clubs i:u1d prgiinizatioris on tiils campus, arid Priricetori; havc..a two~week p'er'iod; In-some colleges it is:a 'recent Editor: Not only do \l'e provide such.· as. NSA, NFCCS; or' Yes;· for. tlieir .. annuai conventions al1d addition to _the ·calendar;: in''others; such.: as :Newton.College' Of the goou seats for the· visiting' tea'm's• .

. regiomil meetings: Surely .this· would·'Ieave a better iffipressioh of Sacreu Heart,- it is an insti.tutioh :of mol;C than 15 years standing.. :~ rooters, but N.D. parents are rele-·-· ,. . Notre· Dame. than the engineering auditorim~. ·Also,· perhaps more 'Iri gcnei·al, th~n, the_ Reading,·P~riod is a' time of 'intensive individual gated to end-zone sections. ·..- ' · . campus cliibs'could be. persiiaded to attempt more social-or:academiC study arid reV.ie\v, durin~(whiqh students may complete:papers or the . functions for the student body than the preserit .25 cent movies in reading for. courses, do related: readii1g; .correlate the materials 'of· a

Nie!l\\•latid S~ience'Hall. Along the line of:inovies, 'if- the::'f~ee·;~atiirday: course, or simply get· some' r~st'-before. exams, free from- the academic .,· nlg}lt ·schedule is limite<! bcc~us_c~ of: dt;am~uc: rehe:irs_!tls,; the: usc.' o( responsibilities of classes and the pressure onmmediate ex1uninations .

• . . .. >·; tiie :auditorium' in ~thc.-:Memoda1 ,Liorary: might: be soughtoi.tf. as .'a · · . ·· . · . ·- · ·· ' · · · · ·1

·: · ·. ·.... · · ·tl ·t ·. ... ~ · · .. : • . . :· ", ~ .:temporary- substitute:.·: This' would. prdvide 'a :'Stable 'program" of movies Next wee!<, we .will .consider t lC reasons for te initia ion of. such ~--.: .· -~ .. ever'y Saturday· as.-iritiinated~fn:i:he. li7re.shtiian~Brochure f6r ~incoming il.ji~ograin; and ,the :C!p~r :objec.tio!ls. to: i~._:: :·. ;:. > '· ·:·. -; students: Finally ·\vhy 'cari't.:arrnrigeinerits:.be Inade, ori. short' or·'long :· · •-. :.notice to<entertain J?rominent-sppaiiers'.iiijva11hingtori H:ai(f ori¢'-can ·• ·-- · ... , · L. '.generaily'never~deteinline the s!zc:'ofi.il~ .. iludience, _but,at;·least the ·... >y'"'H" 'E'':_, __ ·.·v .... o·:-lcr 'ST· AF' F-.· i · · . riwst impressive .building should be .used. -To ... cit~ .an example; Father. , , . • .. · 8; . r-; · Dismas Clark ~;as.·squeezed • into 1~7 .. Nif?uwland; _ ~l1Lthe seJlior. mar~ :. · _ . - . . . :- , · .. :. ; >- · · ;;._ J-: : · ' · · . . · · ·. · · •~.. . :riage institute'niade Washington 'HalL There. just hasri:_t been any con~ : :.P_z~blzsl~ed wrckl)l.durzng tlu (1Cfl~Ctn1C ycar·by stud~tzts of the u;ive;sit~

sistency:in what the~ hitilding should ~he us'e(Lfor>.-' · · _ ··, .· o[:l_{ot~'i. J?nme. 0/fzces at_ LaForturu iStudmt:Cen_tcr; . . k . · -~ . · Understandably. the ultimate decision for such a change .rests in Edztorzal·Board.: _:_.:,-'-:'-Mr. Edward iGoerner;· Rev. Jo~eph Hoffman;- C.S.C.,

£. • f.h~ coordinate(reffoiTof many, but that should. not constitute a suffi.'cierit E. ,'!,z't_o.rc_.> _. _·_: ·._. ·._·. _; __ i_-_. _, · ._' ,.- ___ . _. __ .. _-'·_ .. · .. · .. : .. :::. .. :· .. : .. ·-·.·· __ ._._··.: __ ._: .... ~.· ..... :_'_·_.·_:.-.·.· __ Jo:hDnayGeeEa•r!leins f ~. _· 'TeasOil· ·,vii)•-: sOIDe_. iiiiioYauOns ca~·riot __ be tlltr¢>ctUCe~-.~- WashingtOn. Han ---~~ :~cO'tild Pe Changed_ intO- a_ more_ uinitarta'll 'building;: no~· Jus£ a i)Iac·e. f9~ AisOCiai~ ·EditorS:, -~~~ --~ :( .. ~~~-Qr~-;~~-. N'i~~--:To-~-.. B;ejcha,:. Lar"ri .' K~·u;r,· r; a good Saturday night play or i!Iovie: ~ " .. . _.: ': . < . .-: -; ' < ,: . -~ . . . '- .. ' : ·, ; . ·.. . :': ·- ·. ·,: Bill McDonald; Roger Sobkowiak; John Roos ~: . . . The movies and plays; ,indeed; presently. pacify; the' students' ·needs Nc~s ~'Editor: -· _ __:~~:_.:_~:_"7 ____ .:_.::_ _ __:_~---:---:__ __ Barry J oha~sori ~ . \t'oi- j. ·saturday night' ~u.t; ~n~_.incon~cqtiently·; the :eritertairun:ent is Assistti11i News E.Jitor:.·;-::.:..~---·--· _. ___ . -----=-=--John Buckley • . , . good. Buf_stilrthe facilities of Washington Hair have.bel~ri \vastea;•·No 'Ni:rii:s Staff: ____ :..:....:·)ini.Berbe~et/Jo.hn,Bryne1 Gr'eg· Callahan; .John· Griffin;

. (~ · .. ··one~has explored, ·witli a deptJ:i of 'iinaginatfon; itidull possibilities ·a{ . · Ed ·Hurley; Ken KiiviCkas; Dick M:\her; ']itn .Muller, Tom. Pletz, f: . ·· , benetiftinif the ·stuclents and rcfiectlrig a;better' image' of Notre ·Dame; ' : . Jerry ,Pok:rr;';Ja_ck:'Quine, Howie SmitJ!,·. Greg· Theissen,. Steve Pepe, :0:: , . _ :J;ty;ould be a .shame ;fo appropi·iate;,f).m~s·for 'a rie'v theater'wheii it is •. . ·-·~ .Alana McGratten; Louie.:Jepeway,. George Keenan,. John. Lyons; ..., ~ .~_qui~r?~V.!~~s Jl.i~ttlf~ j>!_~s~~t-.:.2~~ 'i~~·t bc!~i,f}lllY;ilsea,: .·:. . . . .< · · · Jed Kee ·- .' ·' -'./ :'~-: ···:. / -_.: · .. --~ ..• · : · .. · : : .• L .. ·. Notogra'phy: · ..:....~~~~.::.::.:.:=:..::.-__ . · _...;. __ · ·_. -~Bi!J.Mcpuirc, Pat. ·Ford

h.··· : ~ ~mR~Ri·il~trns:,<~~o~dny ·'throug)i· sat~iday;· ·a:oo ~m ~ io·i1:45: r)ni ~;:~:: :s~'1#~~~ \~:.~lt~r:~~~ -~t~~:~ina~~;: nrii~ ~e~usa-ri,o ~:~'hh~i11ff~~;~1i~~ t: · . ~ ... · -.! • ;· • :: .:sund!ty;·1·:ori ;pm ·through :11:.45 .,pm·.... ··•· ... · · · · Terry Murphy~ George Kruszewski,~ Dave Schiavone, Fr·ank'Sn1ith;· f: · PATRIOT. OF THE YEAIVElSECTIONS:' .' • /, : ·· · ·r ·· Steve Vogel : < · •-• · · . .';··-. :} · \ '. · • : . · -/ ·· · .. - ~ · (·. '!. >.: - 11':30. aiit' tO 1:00 pirl &: 5;30 to 6:30. pn(,:'' ·,_:~ · ·:- B~sbtcJs;~izd :4dvrrtiJlllg!i~liuia!iers:J.ohn o:I!~nlon/-B_oy~'Fa.~st,'~,e_ie:cr.~~l.ey. ... i' .·-. bii-Campi.t:S Seniors: sciiitli Dh:iirig Hall . ', '' . . . ' ·Czrculn/IO!I_Mnnngtr.; ';·; . .:..:::. >::-:--~·. -7::;7;,.-~-:-;:-:-.,-:~.-:--:.:. .. .:.",-.:.:.Jt~ ,_rv.t.agagn~. :· ' . " .;·, .. Utr-cf·~ .. u· S · ~ Off't • ·-, ·R · ··-f s·t--·a ~t- 6 · f'' : ·Copy.·EdztorJ: ~:_..:.~.:~=-.::.~~~~~~~·-··BtU Metz, .. ·Tom~Ochetree· f :. ·. ·. "~ >. ·: -·. ~- .~n;p.s . emo~~ · ... ,,", ampus , .0~~ _D,,, .:' e_n. ·. ,en e: · .' ·-LnyoJ('Edit~ri: ;_~iL:.::•·: . .2.~:i.Li::.:.::..;::...;:;_;;,;L~'-·-· ·· ,.::.:.:.:.ieri· Ser~phin > . SUNDAY :MASSES:· ~acred Hea_rt;_ 7:15, 8:30,·9:45, 11:00 am &:12:15 :Assiitimt:Layout· EJitor:, . ..::...;.c-.o.:::.;:.:_;_··-·~--~-'-'--.:'....:. ........ ..:-.. :..::.Dennis Kenl f.-·>'-.~,[L_·· . J'_,· .. ;; ~ecnan_~~~~~~-~r~_.:~8.=~.-~;;.~.:1,5,:}:f.:OO:.alll &12:15 ·• ·- "·'····· '• ·· ..... • ' .. . ' :. . . / - . . . -. - ~> . -" .. :-. < s .. : _,. v·.-

t

'.· ',: .

'.

·· : n~ a- gooa:da~~-~r; · ...• .. aitd -.gain . c?itfldei1ce! f L:.: :~

.Come t~ Arthur M~r'i-afs ·and Iearit" the:sccret of. smooth g'rnceful dane~!

· ing;;Yo.u'll bti ~aniaxed;:ariil>thi-iiiHL !how'qtiickly·:and easily .you will))e: ;danCing with" carefree confidence. In' :no time·a·t all·y'ou·:will•be'thc:en~y· .... ;oLyour' friends.- But· ai:f 'no\v I . •',· · ' : . . . , . .., .. " .· , '•.. ' :..' I.' -' .;~, • : ,' ~ .. •. :

··:ARTHUR· MURRAY./'.," ,. : · ~ '12o E.· wayne~~"' ..... ·,:-_· ., .. ~·"

· · .. .~lf~~~-cE:2~~3~9-~: ., ·_::·:·:; -· :.

Page 3: Barn Nite Spot Wins Support - University of Notre Dame ... · Mapp vs. Ohio, the Supreme Court Hall was con:victed·of ~urd:r Nov. China pursued a course ·of hostility't~.non-Communist

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· October 16, 1963 THE VOICE

:..--·

,·.

:'posT GMIE CELEBRATIONS hh:ve lUOVCd on; ieaviiig only a· quiet figure to reflect on a nearly deserted : stadium and ;a 17~14 N.D. _victory._ . . · · . . ,

' ~:.

:,~InterVieWs.·· .. · .. Shapifo Lectures. On Cuba . : B. ' e:. g· : n· . -~0 o·.' v· .. . . 1. ' . Poverty is the big .obstacle .to United States success' iii Soutli

.;

- . 1 · ·II~ · · e - . America: In a country like Bolivia, where the per ~api~a. income 'is . ,_,·The Placement Bureau; located $90, compared· to the U.S.'s $2,500, the P,eOple have rioti!ing tQ lose .and : bn: the second :floor of the admh1is~ much to gain by revolution, so they revolt. Dr. Samuel ShapifO, visiting

l ·· tration building, 'has'the:important professor of Lathi American arid 'American history;_gave these views :l . : respoiuiibilily . of 'l:iringing . Notr~ on the Uilifed States' relations \.vith Latin America in his lecture; r .• '· :Dame se"niors and indUstrial firnis ''Republicans. and' Ctlba," Oct. 9, sponsored by the Yourig ri_einocrats.

. , ·together to "put ~ur graduates t6 . · Dr: Shapiro said that .the Alliance for Progress indicated that the :work." ·These -·arc the words of administration \vas recognizing that South· America can be won for Father Louis Thornton, the direc-' the, West through economic progiess .. There are mariy atrocities. in

. · , . ·· ;tor of the ·Notre Dame Plac'ement p'reseiit~day. Cuba, according to· the professor, who has made nn ex-Bureau.' ·, . .. tensive study of Cuba on his visits there; 'but Fidel Castro is doing

··._ ·. It is with Father .Thornton that much for the' people. He is carrying out massive campaigns to combat :•·. :-approximately. three hundred· and illiteracy. ·similar programs to help the people are doing much to help

· · .. ·; twenty-five . companies place · re~ the ~United .States' h:ifluimce throughout soutiJ. America. _,._ ' ,·quests each :year -for· campus · re~ · N:otlong· ago,· in ,Chile,· it was accepted' that a co·mmunist would

,~ ...... ~~cruiting_ privileges. From. ~ese r.e~ win the next election; But since the Peace Corps has begun its work ::, .· · quests; Father. Thornton. sets:up a tliere,. the Catholic hier~rchy lias exerted pressure on the wealthy, an~ · .. .':date schedule· of 'the.recruitlrig per.: the Alliance for Progress lias been initiated,. the democratic forces are

' ~; iOds · alloted ·.to each company. and ·gaining strength; . . . . . . . . • . . plac~~:this schcduie:-a~d ot}ler·per-7 .,-,-Dr:· Shapiro severely~'critlcized the. Republicans' policy towards

.•· .. ·. ,tincnt information -at the disposal Cul:ia during Eisenhower's .administration arid their present thinking .. ·(if .interested students iri the :form in ·regard to it.:soine leading Republican~ have sttggest~d. that we for~

·:_of• a ·smail•bobklet eni:itled:'.1963~ cibly overthrow Cas~ro. Dr~ Shapiro re~lied; "Cu~a is ~imply not con­':"'64;:campus :Interviews: •/(_y · ; '·~ querable by the United States. Surely we·~~uld' \_3-ke 1t over, but ~e

.· ; .. ,. Company recruiting. 'and.~inter-' :would not .get a ~pacified -Cuba.:.. \Ve .. would. Slmply~get _another Algeria . view· sign-ups start. _Nov. 1 a~d close 'or-Viet :Nam;'~ •· . >t.. ' .. , \ • . ... \Vith the Christmas holidays in J?e.:

. .. · -~~~~~~-ia.et/~~~:r:~~:i~~1;-i~:~ . ·Rehearsals N ea_ r C_ amp· 1etio11'_ with the -Easter vacation .. ·The

=!~~g~~~~J/~~~~~~~-~~~~s~\~~cr;;~: ·,_.-For --washin-gton· ·B4~1-• .··Play_. tors: First;' the. size and per~onnel . . . r~ql.liremerits of Hie part:.icular com_.: The University Theater' lias. star- the iriexperienced \viii shape up' and

f ' 'ted into ·its last three. weeks of that the experienced. will hold. up; P, any; scc·ond, ·the. numb!'!. r _o ,c·am- . . . . . I.. ' .. . . . . rehearsal before .'tlie p' erformances Mr. Syberg, assista_nt- direCtor, ap-puses . the company. canvasses. , . .. . .

.::.... o 'It· is the gradua tmg student s re~ of . the season's . first .. play, . "The pears . very pleased with the pro-. . . : ipbnsibliity'~ J<i a6quaint : hiiris~lf Visit." Preliminaries such·as· block- gress. . . 1

. ;· ~ '

·. '\vii:.h the recruiting periods the par" ing of . scenes and ··final· casting The~sets for "The. Visit" and for 'tlcula:r companies' he· is interested changes have been settled and Fr~ this year's. productions . will -be ·in ·have established. The week prior Harvey, director; has begun . the handled by, John Patrick Hart, a :·t:o .his ·assigned. period;. the. studerit difficult work'· of integrating .. the standout in. previous. years .. as an !must sign up for an,.interview time performances through attention to actor aria· this year's newly ap-

. ~in the· Placement Bureau annex; interpretative detail; '. ·. · . · point~a. technical director. Many ~Sirice a'· company· will interview. In the year's first ca!"!ting,, the· and mobile, the sets for ''The Visit"

· orily about t\velve . men each day University Theater has filled a cast are ·no't full stage. · , . ."and.no companywill·cyer Sta)' on of·35 from approximately 40 peb" Described asfan "unusual".dra-··campus longer ·than .three· days, pie who tried out, and· as .a result .

. 'Father Thornton c advises tlmt it of.· the large cast and sniall 're- rna, .. "The. Visit"· is a modern· play '. .: .. ·is . best .. to sign· up as soon as you sources has, had to contend. with· written in 1957. by ·the S\viss play~

:'can·· at: the begiiming of each week incxjlerierice. · . right DurrenniatL' It is a story of · · · · · · · · · · revenge ·and greed, of the corrup-

.: to assure. yourself of an intervieW~ . As. a backbone for the first pro- tion of a: town through the prospect · 'In February, bulletins are pu!,.J- ·d~ction, rillatively ·experien_ ced peo.-.· · .. · · ··

' . . . t of wealth. _:I'he play is termed "ex-·.: , . :lished· listirig sumhier emp!oymen ple'have ·oeen'found for l~adrol~s~ pressionistic" and ·is .considered a . '': .· . opp6rtUI)ities' for, ~ll_students, -~tit Dave- Clennon, a: junior who was chiilleng!ng ·undertaldng :for .an ' - ·,· . · : since companies do· not conduct m-. seen last year.' in "Hamle:t'.'· and . · · · · :. · ... :terviews for· summer._einployment "i3liiy Budd," \vill hil,ve a leading amateur.grotip. · ·

.... · , . 'oh dini>usrthe student must' follow male role. The female lead· wm be . .A · subscription ticltet . ror tiiis . · ~-~ .. is_u~:~Il his ~;w~._:. :: · .. :~<· .:;; . ,·: played. by·.Aphrodite Pappas, wh_(j Year;s productions cari be' bought

· is new .to .University Theater;· but from a hall represcrii:ative or ·from. _has. gajneq mtjch ·a ding exp~ri~?ce tlic ;thriversity ,_Theater office ~be­\viur south Bend's Presbyterian hind · Washingtcin HaiL Thi~. In: j?layers; ·:r-..faiiy .of tiie other i:ol~s C:iimes riext month's "Tlie·- Visit" will 'tie a' test for untried talent, and subsequent \vh1tei: and spring Two freshmen will be seen in more produchoris; . '.'Tartuff_~,; and "The ·~mpor.tant roles. The' hope is thai:. Three Peiiriy Opera.'' .

.· ·=· ·· .. :. ....

< '::·."i~~8{~ ' .• . ·i .',: •. ·GuiTARS. ,.

r , .. ; :·•:;BANJOS- .. . ... ' : :. , . e: SHEET~::L\IUSIO .·

,.· .· ·, iarge~t· ·Selection .. :· · : 'Discount· to.: Students,.

··-..'

~- ·:: ':327 S;.:l\UOIUQAN, ....

> .•. ·~ '·DRJ··:~J FIZ·IiALri ; ~ OPTOi\iETRIST ... · . '

• • >. • ..:. •• " ' ... ': ..... l ; - ~ J~;... ~·· : .• • .. ..

~-;~· ,;coNTACT·LENSES._: ; .. >··. ihclui'ries invited .· ~· . .. .. '

.... ,_,

; EY~S-.EXMUNEh'::· .• .. · :·'GL~SSES!FITTED .. ·: ',:· ·.·; . . .. ·'oi>TICAL:REPAIRS·· :. •·. ~ ~1-~ t~·.z4:~li~u;.:·s~h.ice:· · ·. ,;

.! ·3~s-s:'i\licititi-a~· · · :·A.T 7-5477:

. . , _, :· .,

~ ·- ;.. , ... ..- ..... · ............... . , ... : ~. ,.. :· . ~ . \; - . .

·' Tliis ~a: is:·\,1ol"tli 50c iii~ trad'e oiil aiiy,'Dry?le~nhig order.

< l.

RUBiN-:.'ctEANER:s ..... 217 -EAST JEFFERSON ..

.. iil bo,Vn.tti\\~i ·south ::Bend· -.•. -Quality ory cie~ning~ . · • Fast Service · . ·

. . '' •· · Exp~rt Shirt L:tund~rirtg · · •• • • • • ' •'• ' •" •. I .h• ·Complete Laundry Service ·, ·: . . . . •'

. : , • · '8 'sei\:ing · N~tr~ oarite: M:i!ri' ro:r dvc:i:-to y~:,rs· This :.ad i~ \Vortlf 50c 'in trade on anf Dcycleaning order · .. •· · : ~ ~-: ... Good until November 16, 1963 ·.. · .

. ' . '" '.·

Page ,3

Mysterious ·Penthouse,~ To Open By December~

Some call it "The. Penthouse". ates may be able to see this unique· ; The. offiCial designation is "The portion of the library during·'up- · Trustee's Room". Whatever one coming open houses. The ultimate·· tends to call it, the 14th floor cif purpose of the room is· certainly; the Memorlai Library is one of the no mystery. According to Fr. WiJ!.. cam{ms mysteries. son, "Thl!! is a fitting room for the: · To add Clariti to the situation, holding of importari~ nieetirigs o£.

Rev. Jerome J. Wiison, vice pres!- the _Driiversjty. The ro~m shou~~l dent -- business administration make an ideal place to hold Trus--arid the library architect were in~ tee and Advisory Board meetings;. terviewed. ' . as well as to enterbiiri prominent.

Construction· is . stiil underW-ay, With a completion date set for De­cember. The TrUstee's Room acti.t~ aliy occupies only about one~haif of the total floor space. A sizeable portion of . the remaining area is already devoted to water storage tanks necessary. for the mainten­ance of the library fire· equipment. · The room itself. measures 40 .by

60 feet, with. a 12 foot ceiling. Light tan teak \vood and vinyl adorn the wall partitions. The ceiling and lighting closely resemble ·iiie lounge areas of the first and second floors. Eventually wall to \van carpetii'ig rind furniture similiar to the lounge adjac'ent fo the library: audiiotiuni will complete the furnlsliirig.

The most impressive highlight of the room is the view through the penthouse \i:indows on the west arid south sides .. An outside \valk\vay enables the observer to circum­navigate the entire 14th floor. No prediction is· given concerning the distance that can be seen on a clear day, but a water tO\ver in Niles, 1\ficliigan -.,..about 20 miles away -lies just on the horizon. - ..

A compact kitchen; complete with sink; stove; and · dish\vasher has been provided · for tiie pent­house: K blank wall spa,_ce near the elevators niay. hold a inural. '·

Although the 14th floor and the Trustee's room \VIII .be officially .off-limits for. stugents,: uridergragu-'

L. . ....... , .

visitors." . ' ; ~

ELECTION RESUL rs: Elections for hall officers wer.e'

held Monday, . under the manage-: ment of the Blue Circle Horior·So,.­ciety. · '·' ,~ · . The \vinners, in the' order s'eria-·

tor, ~resident, and.secretacy-ti:eas:,.: urer, . were: Dillon: Jini Reynold~;. Jon Ritteri, Larry r:ioillin; Howard~: Paul Walker, BaiTy Mc:Nariiarn;. Tom McMannon; Lyons: .Steve-· Walther,· Paul :Knipper; and-David! Fletcher; Badin: . Sid Gage, Hoy;' Booker, rind John_Loarie.

Morrissey . eleCted Richard La,­Porte,· ;Pete Goyer, and Lou Ziin-· merman; Pangborn: James Kelly;. Joe LaNasa; Michael Eeri:;· Altiflli.. ni: Frank Smith; John 1\forari, Will;.­iam Tynan; Cavanaugh:· Joe PeriJ.:.:.. li, Vic Paternostro rind.Bob Ansari;: Zahm: Tom Begley, Michael Me•· Manus, Joe Weiss; ·Walsh: ~rc,.. Gowan, Engler arid Yarivi. .

Fislier's senator, president, and! secretary are Gene Ostrom, Brian! ·Beck, Louis Yu; Farley: Ken Liss;. Michael Hughes, John O'Mear~; Breen-Phillips: Stewart Beall, Briam McMahon, Steve Wasmger; SoriJi::· Gerie McGuire, 1\tike ·Kealy, .Lee: l\IcCartliy; .Keeriari: Bob Frarik, Raymond McDonald, .John Over-:-· mann. Jerry Berthold is Off-Cam;:. ... pus senator. . .· ·. -~ .

Stariford .elected Bill .Dimagard! senator fro in a:. field: of nine, andl Steve Werner president.· st. Ed's; seriator is Pete Carey, . with Frnrik Brerinari president .. There \Vas ho nominee ·for seCretary. .. .... - - .

. a~n·gr·y .. . The.Notre 'name laund~y has cut the average .Wash load·liy three·

pair Of SOCks and two hiuidkerchiefs, While' at the· ·Safu.e time it haS' raised the cost. of everything,. save shirts. Fr. Wendel estimates that it is costing Jhe average Notre Dame student 38 centS a weeK :inore: than last year to have his wash done,· riot counting his· 35 cent wasih pants. . · .... · . · · · ·

·· Notre .Dame· men can not·look to t11e future witli any hope of. a change in laundry price; Should the cost of living arid operating ex"­penses continue to increase, we will be faced with the prospect of yet: another increase, says Father Wendel, Ass't. Vice President for Busi­ness Affairs. . . · · • . . . . .

· . Should -~riyone ·desire to. kno\v: exactly what each item will cost. him, the partial list below ·should help him to draw up his $2;25 allot-. ment. - . .

'Costs: Shirts,·regular, 20c; shirts, polo, ·15c; underwear, tops; lOc, . bottoms,. lOc; pajamas, 30c; socks, pair, lOc; handkerchiefs,. 4c; bath•. · towels;· 7c; \Vash cloths, 3c. . · · · . · ·

There seems to be little that the Notre Dame student can -do about. this latest incursion into his pocketbook. The weekly $2.25 allotment: cost, $72:0o yearly cost on the basis of the thirty-two \vash loads allowed! the student, is deducted directly from the yearly fee of some $2,0001 He has no recourse to outside agencies for his excess wash load; or;. more ·particularly, for his dry cleaning, since the delivery" trucks froml these establishmentS are not allowed on. campus.- · · ' ·

· .-Expert 'Watch: Repairing \ ,_

Trophy Engraving , ... t _.,..,,_ ' ._,.

·:G. MACRI

.. ~MACR-I. . .

JEWELERS 12-1 \Vest \Va.shl~gton Street

So~th Bend i, Indiana Phone CE 3-fOSO

--!

'EYES: EXAl\iiNED. GLASSES FITTED t

Broken Lenses Duplicated · Broken :Fra'm~s· Repl:u;ed ·~

•• •• ·_ ,-, ... > •••• ••

."fast service" ·

· DR.: .l\1~ · 1\liTTERl\IAYER ·· 'Oi>t~ii~-~trist : ·•

-. 228 S •. 1\IlCIIiGAN .

< ...... .

T-HE: PATI.O 'R E.S T A~ iJ R A N f

...

744 N. Notre Daiiie ,, ... ,

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Special Diniier __ Daily

Private Banquet Room .

f . •') ...

i ~--------------------~t .

.t> .. •·

Fine Portraits. Sirice· 1861- 1:

') ], ' .,,,. ·McDONALD: STUDIO . ·

itG \V;_ Colfax -A-\·eri~'e ~g; . ·soutli Bend .. -~ : · r;·,;.: ' J?ilo.ne c:E -t-ssni 1

· • ' SpeCiai.:Pric'is · Fo'r :Studniti · Send .Youi-'·Portrait ·Home',:,;, . . . '. . . . ~ _:.."'~ .... ·-·

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Page 4: Barn Nite Spot Wins Support - University of Notre Dame ... · Mapp vs. Ohio, the Supreme Court Hall was con:victed·of ~urd:r Nov. China pursued a course ·of hostility't~.non-Communist

' . '_·

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'October 16, 1963 THE -VOICE •,.

· R1ls4i~g .~ttaCk Qverwhehns USC . . _- · Saturday's ·win· over Southern entire game, not just the first half.

IRISH- QUARTERJ!ACn:'.:lm~I\. Cal can be· attributed only to a For the first time. this season we BUDI\.A is:brought down after a great team effort. Not. since Notre were able to pick up big yardage short gain in Saturday's '17-14 con-. Dame· defeated Syracuse in· 1961 on third and fourth downs. Our quest of Southcril· California. Bud- has one game. generated as. much running plays enabled the Irish to Im,. in his first .offensive starting excitement and as happy an end- control both the game and the role in more than a- year; picl•ed ing.. clock. It's damn nice to watch the up 8t yards on the afternoon· aml clocl• run out on ·someone. else- be-luul' a 4.9 average }Jer carry. As in the previous two games of sides Notre Dame. This success can .

:. SPORT' SHORTS

Bill Wolski, with a 87-yard total in Saturday's conquest of Southern Cal, ranlts second in rushing yard­age behind Irish· fullback Jo_e Kan­tor.· Kantor leads the team :with 143 yards- in _29 carries for" a 4.9 yards-a-carry average, :w:Ith Wol~ ski ·averaging 5.3 ·yards in 19 at­tempts.· Frank Budka's 84 yards against the Trojans -lifts him. to third in rushing yardage ...

the· season there has been little only be·. attributed to'·. the tough-doubt about our defense. It would · · line, surrounding N. orm Nicola, the be unfair· to. name only a few of ·- · smooth quarterbacking of Franlt . the outstanding Irish stars ·last Budka,. and. the determined back-· Saturday. Certainly Bill Pfeiffer, field spark-ed by Bill Wolski imd and Tommy MacDonald played one Joe Kantor. · of their finest games. Every· per­former on the li'ne and in the se·c­ondriry. gave Notre Dame'- ail he had. They proved that Notre Dame does possess a respectable pass de-· fense which . will continue to'. iin~ prove as. the season progresses. In great part this' is due to our. new~ found ability of rushing the passer.

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· Another. bright spot was the ab-'. sence of penalties.· In fact, ND \vasn't even penalized in the first half and in the . second was as­sessed · only thirty yards.

Without ·a . doubt though, the most surprising aspect of the game 'was ou'r offense. Southern· Cal, ex­pecting end sweeps. and 'freque'nt passing, was somewhat stunried by Devore's ball control offense: Go­ing inside. and up .the·middle made for a strong offenSe that lll;sted the

GONZALEZ SPARKS IRISH VICTORY ·•::··

-·Tommy Ma-cDonald 'put the Ir~sh on the scoreboard with a first quar­ter 62~yard return'· of 'an 'intcrcep- . tion off · tlie · fingertips of USC's Hal Bedsole. Pete Beatliard evened the score with .a scoring plunge early in -the· second quarter. Bill Wolski ran the ldck back 35 yards and sparked' the' drive. that. ended as he scored from the three. Beat~ hard hit Mike Garrett with an' 11.; -yard scoring tOss-With-only sec;o~~s.~.- · ~ left in the half. ·_ l)

The score re~ained deadlocked·. , . I through the~·third quarter,· -then _- If sophomore Ke'n Ivan booted. a 25- .. ;:.

r:;dvi~:~~y.goal _to, give th~ ~Iri~h . ·. · ,-:(J: · ~evore has- ind~ed ·i_t · fine tea~ .: ;, · jj. th1s year; What we. m1ght lack ·m . ;. · .-r material. is 'certainly :·more · than· :· ·· -'~­made· up. for by desire and guts. ;'. ·.· ·:t­Our· tremendous line, proves' this· .· . .f fact. The steady: and brilliant play- .... · i of both ·the first-·and ·second team:·. -'··-:: lines gives us this year a feeling·:;.--:~ ~-:!; of depth unknown· in the pasf few.<· · ··_; years; It's a pleasure ·to ·play like ,/ ._ ~~ a Michigan State and. wear .some~_ . -·:, ·:f one. else down with fresh: substi-_ ':; <·.:)­tutes·whcri the first team:riee'ds- a :. ·. -:1, break. As far 'as the-so~called quar.:. :; . ·. ·l terback problem· goes,- .it doesn·t·>·.\ exist- ariy ·longer .. Saturday ·found : , ... ,:,--=.1'

Notre Dame w~th a steady quarter:.\_.:: ·~l back able to lE~ad the team·for sixty·.::-· 1; •

full minu(es:· ,Thus,·· 'the .. so~called .... fourth 'quart'er fadeouts shouid :· ;:· ~~: fadeout; - · · · · <·.{