Vol. VIII. No.7 Published by Students of Fairfield University, Fairfield, Conn. March 14, 1957
Cluh~ Hartford Nurses
Sing For Diocesan SisteTs
MARTIN~REYNOLDS HEAD
IJUNIOR WEEI( PROGRAM
Approximately one hundred nuns were the special
guests of the University at a joint concert by the Saint
Francis Hospital School of Nursing Choral Group and
the Fairfield University Glee Club on February 22.
-------------~~ The St. Francis group, under
I
the direction of Mr. Reginald G.
Large Group Attends DeVaux, opened the concert
NFCCS Confab In N.H. I with a group of songs including:
"Where'er You Walk,"
Tihe WinlteiI" COIUlnlci,l M'ee:tli.ng Handel-Pitcher; "Lift Thine
{)If the NeJW Enlg],aJIlJd: R€igioill', Eyes," Logan-Ryder; "The LitNFOC!
S wrus heLd at Mtollllllit St. tIe Worm," Sachs-Riegger; "Oh,
Mary's' College in Hooksett, What A Beautiful Morning,"
New 'HaJffiIp.shliJre the week-end Rodgers-Sticles; "Three Little
.oif FelblJ."u1l!ry 15.' Maids From School," Gilbert-
P.res'idelI1Jt J,alffies R<Jlurr-ke COIIl)- Sullivan and "Sanctus" from
d,uoted ,t!h'e three diaJY s,et":'3,iQ1n, Oil11e the "Sain~ Cecilia Mass," Gouolf
,the hiJghligl.hJ!Js, beilllig !hJjIS' eva:l- nod-Dowmng.
'ualti,olll od' fue Senli'QiI" alIlld J'Ullll:Cr. Traditional Songs
de'lelga,tes :fu101ffi the Valr]OI1.lJSI !Nelw The University Glee Club fol-
Enlglan:dcaimpUlse,s, lowed with the traditional
"Good" Ratin.g "Men in Red," arranged by R.
The wo'rk of the! FaLrfielld d<eile- Ross, and then: "My Bonnie
gla:tes 'WiCltS g,ilve[1J a "good" l'altill1lg Lassie," Bennett - Tepper - Mc,
for the' iFali! semes1elI'. The alt- Clurg; "The Rose of Tralee,"
tendance at workshops was con- Glover-Spencer, Donald E. Hof-
(Continued on Page 5) (Continued on Page 5)
FROSH AND SOPHOMORES
1\TTENDBYZANTINE MA.SS
Various Workshops Planned
By NFCCS For March, ?224 Tribute To Blessed Virgin *-' - . ~01Utr olf Ithe SOlIllgS olll'thi:s r,e-
. .d h cOl'di:nlg Me IlJelw fu'ilbiU'te'5 lOt the
The weekend of March 22 to 24 IS set a~l e ere at Bles,sed VilI1giIll ;Mary, to hOIllIOiI"
Fairfield for the annual on-campus meetmg of the her ,under ItJhe tilJle olf Our Lady
N.F.C.C.S. Students from the various New Englandl<J[ He'allitlh, Happd:neslsalnd Pe,alce,
. . 1 b t" t . I a1 herr- rNaroilQlI1Jll'l Slhlr~llie a:t Sy1'V13'
CatholIc co~leges V:1l e on campus to par IClpa e .m iMaI1i
'
a Olll' hilg;hJwaJy 9, at Fmm-the
ForenSICS FestIval, LR.C. Workshop, and FamIly illlighiaiffi. The,y l3rr-e: "Moltrue:r
Life Workshop. Everr- LOfV'i[lJg," "L,€!t Us iProy to
'The weekend is not limitedS M,a['y," "SOltlls' <Jd' MaIJ."Y,". am;d
to members of the N.F.C.C.S. •• "iLaJdy od' }I€I~lith, Ha!PiPllllleslS,
O th contrary all Fairfield Muslc SOClety Formed aillid Peace. The fflth. IhrymIlJ
n . e , "H'l Mi " b Ail Ih
students are invited to attend By Fairfield Students D'A'aI
t
., alI'y, r..!~. d:P o~o
any or all of the weekend's I. [' Iga, wals pe.L.lUJlI'm~" lPiUJu-slated
events, Naturally, it is HavdiIlJg s,e,ClUJred :the O.K. f,rolffi hc~y fol!' tlhe ~Slt t1lffie S'l':C yel~m
important for the school to the DeaJllt',s office, Dr. [)ollllal~,dtIago by t!he F,a:l,rfield ,u[lJl'Ve:r,s'lty
make a good showing ... keep .R,OISIS ]r1l!s,1 'We'ek cail:leid a me:etilllrg G.Ie,e Club.
the above date in mind for a Dorr aJ1'1 ,thos,e willa were ilIlJle;relsit- Tihe wOlrds of the forur new
greatly worth-while weekend. e,d iItlI fOlI1ffi1illllg aJ ,c,l:aJs's'ilca[ Musilc soltllgs ,aJre by Rev. EdiwralI'd iF,
The program for the S'cic'iety, FiJJitrerenl snUidelIlits alt- G.a're,s,crhe, S.J., f<JIUII1Iderr- olf the
N.F.C.C.S. weekend is as fol- tJein:dJed alnld alfter dilsIClus's~nlg :the comffilun:Lty. ~'Artelga, a weBlows:
ibrusk piUlI'!p<Jls,eIS' Hn,dLnteln!ti<JlI1Js olf I ~noIW.ru ,coimpols'er aJIlJd roooUlc:toir,
F'r.iday & S.aturday: Foren~ics ~Ihe club, J)1r .. ROls,s, ;PiI":esideid .dJuil"- Iwmte the mUlSIi~ to "0tlIr Ladly
Festlval - mcludes debatmg, mig the erieicholili od' officelJ."s. TheiY <JIf HeaMIh." MUls'~c !f<Jrr- t!hJe' O'thelI'
ex-tempore deliveries, ,and dra- ,aiDe: BriS!IlJ 'MIUJI1pIh1Y, '58; Ted t:hrr-ee sOlI1Jgs WaiS, OOlll1(p<Jlsed by
matic declamations as well ,as Col1'l1lJj", '5,9; RQlbeTt iBalllyai, '58; Elmii Cote, IlJa:tilQlIlirul1y kIllo[W1l't
(Continued on Page 2) (Continued on Page 5) ch'O'r'a:l diiI'elctro;r.
A Mass of the Byzantine - Slavonic rite was cele- At a recent meeting of the Junior Class, President
brated March 7 at 9:15 p.m. in Loyola Hall Chapel. The Mike Rossi announced that Vince Martin has been
Mass was attended by freshmen and sophomores due named chairman of Junior Week, and Ed Reynolds,
to the limited seating capacity of the chapel. The inten- chairman of the Junior Prom.
tion of the Mass was for the Chair Unity Octave of Jan- 0 Martin, a graduate of Fair-uary
18-25, the return of lapsed Catholics and the con- • C . H 'I field Prep, where he was cap-version
of unbelievers. Due to the exams in January IgnatIan ouncIl ears tain of the basketball team, is
the Mass was celebrated in March. Talk Bv Fanlous Artist I a resident of Bridgeport. Be-
01 I sides being a member of the
The Mass was celebrated bY~ At the past meeting of the I Knights of Columbus and the
Rev. Yaroslav Shust, pastor of I Fairfield U. Slated Ignatian Council, Mr. Oscar I Business Club, Vin was also the
Slater, a nationally famous winner of last year's CPA Ac-
St. Mary.'s Uk:ainian Catholic ITo March In Annual painter, was the guest sp'eaker. i counting Award.
Church m Bndgeport. Father, He gave a talk on his work as I Ed Reynolds, a member of
Shust has been pastor of St.[ St. Patrick s Parade an artist, followed by ,a discus-I the Vet's Club, has been for the
Mary's Church since 1950, when m1l!iiI"fie1d Unli.IV'ertS!Lty w~illl be sion period. I past two years a member of the
he arrived in the United States. 'fI;;lI'eB:e,nJverd in t!he St. P1l!trJJck\; PROM CHAIRMEN Painted Pope Pius XII I Bensonians and the G~ee Cl~b. '- IHe has also beenactlve wIth
The introduction was made D1l!Y PiaiI"\aJde 'aI~aliJ1't t!his ye,a,r. A Mr. Slater presented t? the the Business Club and various
by Very Rev. Monsignor Mich- 1()()lffiJmi'tltee, heaJded by Bolb. scho?l ~ framed reproductlOn of I dance committees. Ed is from
ael J. Charnecki, pastor of St. He:a'ley, wrus 'I'elCelIlltly aiPiPOti:nlted IRCA Vletor Releases. a ,Pamtmg he has done ?f .Pope West Haven and is a graduate
John Nep..Church in Brid?e- by ~Ih'e SltUident C:0 iU'llIci:l to 0['- Album of Hymns Sung PlUS XII. He. w.as commlsslO.ned i of Notre Dame High.
port. NarratlOn and explanatlon :g,aJnJIze a delle,ga'tl!OlI1J to. JreiP(l'e-. to do the pamtmg of the reIgn-! Starting Junior Week which
of the Mass was given by Very 'SElmt FailnneiJ.,d] i,n the a'IlJnlua,l, By Falrfield Glee Club ing Pontiff by t~e supreme'[ will be April 29-May 5,'will be
Rev. Stephan Chrepta, dean of Nelw Yo['k paTade. Be~aUlse st. I CouncIl of the. ~nIghts of Co- the traditional Sports Night,
. St. Basil's College in Stamford, P:a't",i;Ck's DalY :tlall1s Olll; a Sunday An aCb'l1'm od' hyuTIlIlJS de.dkla'ted ~umbus. The ongmal no:" hangs I highlighted by the guest ,ap-
Conn. St. Basil's College is the 1t11J:IS' ye:arc, the pair'alde, w\VH be ,to ,the S<J,ns <Jd' Ma["y, He'aJltih: olf m the Supreme office m New pearance of a well-known pro-
Minor Seminary of the Ukrain- h'o[,d ,01IlJ t'h'e pT'eicedLnlg Sa'bUlrd'ay, the Sick ColmmUXlJi'ty od' Frrarrn- Haven, Conn. Ifessional athlete. On Friday
ipn Catholics in the United IMad:l:-t 16. 'I1her commilute.e ha:s' 'I"h Ma,-- h - b l' ,- Other Paintings I night, the University's three-
States. he'Eln alb'e to obt,a,i'n: <Jlllle ad' the- 'In,,,aJm; ~b.,. ',aJS eelIl. reo eaJS.'-
d b th F field U iIt! Mr. Slater has painted Cardi- day "Dogwood Festival" will be
The 'Mass was sung by the l frolIlJt 9,o1sl~tiol!1ls: m the [lYarratde el.' y I' e 'aJIl'!" nlwelI'S' y nal Spellman on five different opened by the Prom at the
members of St. Mary's Ukrain-2lnld h1l!S' t:h<UJ3 a,slslUlDed ani elarrl'y Glee' ClUJb. occasions. He has also, from Longshore Country Club. This
ian Catholic Choir under the s,+,aa:-t and a v,ecr-y g,ood ,poSisilb,il,ity T.he 45 RiPIM :r:elcoil'd piI"'8IP:a:red photographs taken out of the event will be graced by the apdirection
of Mr. John Kozak. {'If a<plpeal:-;IIlI:r OIIlI te'evis:lotDI. In 'by Ca'Va:'cade' RelCQrrdsl, Inlc. Ol~' country, painted a portrait of pearanc-e of a nationally-known
The Altar Boys were also of oOtrld'er to make a' gOI?td .a(P',ueall'- New YOiI"k, is the secOIllid' aillbiUlffi Cardinal Stepinac of YUgO-1 recording star. Following the
St. Mary's Church. 'a,nlce ,~In;d to be fiJttLTIlg 'l'€i1Jre- :,n,a, yea,r Ife1aJIJurirug the FJa,illlfi.€'ld slavia, clothed in the robes of Prom, a party at the Fairfield
Although in the United States ":'~Ill:tal~,!v,els of .the schoc;Q'l, two U. singers. La,st S'll'ffiffierr the a Cardinal. It is the only one of IInn, sponsored by the Vet's
at the pr'esent time, it is not I,daNs' ,clf mlaiI"C~llIllg prlaJetr:lc,e ha'Ve 'glrQlup, cOlIlleVuc:ted by StilffiOIl1l its type in existence. It now Club, will be held from twelve
permissible that priests marry, Ihe,eln iP"'1l!lllllied. Haratk, recorded: its moiSt POiPU-I hangs in Archbishop Stepinac I to four o'clock. On Saturday the
this permission is still allowed At Least 300 Stude'nts ~all' seleK:'tLOltJiS' <Jtf th'e yelair. The iHgh School, White Plains, N.y., annual picnic is scheduled, as
in Eastern European countries. Hi,s, the hOlPe ?d' m~niy od' t'he 1956 aJllbUJm WIaJS PIr'OiCetslSled and Mr. Slater is a resident of a pref,ace to the Dramatic So-
Nester Shust, a junior B.S. ,slt'uldelllt,s thiaJt furs w,rla be~:Olffi,e prr,elssed by ROA VliJctQll'. I Riverdale, N.Y. (Continued on Page 2)
Chern. here at Fairfield, is the aln ,3Jnllllua,l laffialLr fOlr ~alir'fielld'.
Prolceeds fr{)lffi the TIelW rrec- I
son of the celebrant, Rev. Yar- orr-os wi,H law tlhe SOII1JS, od' Mrury, GI
solav Shust. Support The Missions Health <Jlf the SilCk, in the;ilr ee
pr,e:paral!iroln for tlhei,r metd!i;ca,l
land IlJurs,i.llIg wOlr,k [Ill the M'iisSOOlI1Js.
Page Two THE STAG March 14, 1957
Feature Editor
William Lavery, '59
Sports Editor
Larry Lessing, '59
Exchange Editor
Sal Gilbertie, '58
News Editor
Dick Cummings, '59
Make-up Editor
John Murphy, '58
Business Manager
Robert Kaulbach, '59
EDITORS-IN-CHIEF
William Keish, '58 - Paul Nagy, '57
ASSOCIATE EDITORS
David F. Barry, 57 - Edmund F. Measom, '57
By TED COMBS
THE END OF AN ERA?
One morning last week I dashed, as usual, into the
cafeteria at 9:09 for a quick cup of ... coffee. As I
downed the last swallow the thought suddenly struck
me that something was missing - something that had
put a little ray of light into the dismal existence of my
fellow students. - All day I wondered. During one of
my mental wanderings I was suddenly snapped to
attention by a booming voice, "If you don't come back
to life in ten seconds, I'll paddle you gently on the head
with a club." That was it! ... paddle ... club ... PingPong
... Cards. I must confess I smiled inwardly at
the intricate mental feat I just performed; and without
any formal training in logic, too. Immediately I set out
in search of information regarding their clandestine
appearance. The following is a report of my findings.
The names of the parties involved are withheld for
obvious reasons.
It seems that a certain Celtic Professor who is no
longer with us, ever zealous toward the proper intellectual
development of his wards, decided that PingPong
had to go. It was poisoning their minds; and
worst of all, they were enjoying themselves. So, he
waited and watched; and one day when he saw that
none of his beloved B.S.S. men were around, he quietly
removed that "matter out of place" from the lives of
the students, forever-:-- This was his last gesture of
friendship before leaving us for some distant tropical
island.
Now, as to the disappearance of the card games.
Things were going great, no one was getting rich but
everyone was having fun. For a second time that was
their grevious mistake. No one knew that they were
being watched and that a raid had been planned. So,
one fateful afternoon in a smoke-filled, third-floor class
room, the boys were just breaking the seal on a new
deck of Bicycles when the door burst open. Framed in
the steel doorway, a triumphant smirk on his face, stood
the house detective. Not wishing to appear intrepid,
one of the boys moaned and then fainted. "What, no
cut for the house," uttered the "stranger."
Well, that's all there is to the story. Perhaps this
is the end of an era here at Fairfield, but I don't think
so. Some fearless revolutionary will someday appear
to champion the cause of all those who are tired of a
stratified existence. Who he'll be no one knows, but
one thing is certain, he'd better have another school in
mind ... just in case!
D,E ,CONCILIO
WORKSHOPS
(Continued from Pag·e 1)
original oratory.
Saturday, P.M.: Banquet
awarding of trophies to winners
of above named categories.
Sunday, A.M.: LR.C. Workshop
- Topic: Eisenhower's
Atoms for Peace - Two speakers
to represent Fairfield.
Sunday, P.M.: Family Life
Workshop - presented by Family
Life Committee seated at
Fairfield; General Chairman:
Larry Fayette, '58.
• Smith Corona
• Underwood
•
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•
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A True Spring Value!
•
Homework is simpler, faster
Men's Clothing, Street Floor
Choose from a wide selecti~n:
•.. when you use one of Read's
All Wool Sport Coats
$19.98
PORTABLE TYPEWIRITERS
• Remington
• Royal
Here is a handsome single breasted 3 button model sport
coat for campus and ,all casual wear. Fin·ely tailored ...
expertly styled ... Select tan or grey tweed! Regulars,
Shorts and Longs.
And remember ... a typewriter is an investment that will
payoff long after school days ... You'll use yours for many
years to come, particularly in the business world.
ciety's presentation of the
"Caine Mutiny Court Martial"
at the Shakespeare Theater in
Stratford. Sunday will begin
with the Communion Breakfast
at Loyola Hall, and rounding
out and capping the activiti'es
will be an informal Glee Club
concert in the afternoon at the
outdoor music shell, and a
Editorial
IFres,ideont HOib Im'bro caJJed
Once again we are on the threshold of the forty day ~he Felbl1uary 26 mee!tin,g to CIr-der,
and Stev,e POQr, Ireco['d~nl.g
period that precedes the greatest feast day of the s'eer,ebary, read the miJruuJtes.
Liturgical Calendar. How well we know what Lent Dave MoCwthy, 1NiF' SeniOlr
means, it's been a part of our Catholic lives ever since Dele'gJaJte, ,and LlaDry Fa,yeltte,
JIUlnior D€legJalte, who are both
we were old enough to sa.crifice candy, ice-cream, and members 0If the Coumdl, repOtr:t-the
Saturday afternoon journey to the local cinema. We ed on rt!hJe NimOGS Wu,ntetr Co,un~
knew that this deprivation was good for us spiritually, eil Meelbi'ng held at MOIunt S~I.
b · , ·1 1 + h 1·' d h Mary',s' CQlle,ge ~ Hooksett, ut It wasn t unh our aver years t at we rea Ize t ere New HamlPsihire, OIn Fe'bTlUJar,y
was the positive aspect of Lent. Complementing the 15, 16a:nd 17. In adlditiOin Ito;
negations of fastinCf of abstaining from meat tobacco lour delegaJbes, bhe COIUJnJc~l Wi8iS
0' . ." Iattended by rrom FitZlge:rald and
and several other pet mdulgences, we dIscovered, were Ed Movey, oo.,chaitrlffitm. of the
the practices of Daily Mass, Stations of the Cross on Fam~ly Ufe Corrnmu,ssiOlll, J,il!l1
Fridays, the Novena of Grace, and perhaps some selec- O'Mela'r.a, dha,Wm~n. of the
. .. 1 d· F'OIr€ns':lc,s Comm~s:s:lolIl!, and
hve spIntua rea mg. eleven oibs€llwem from FaJirfie1d.
H b t th O ? H t F . fi ld Im, the, lregiOillal vke-pl!1el::lid>ent's
ow a ou IS year. ere a aIr e we are ev,a'1ua,tiolIl!s, the Fotrensks Com-afforded
ample opportunity to fulfill these exercises. mL::lsiol!1 J'ece:ived an "eXJcelle'll't"
Are we taking advantage of the Daily Mass being r'a.ti:n~g C~he o,n~y Il'egiolnal 1C01!l1-
ff d · R 212 L- 1 Ch I? Wh m~S'SlQn so ew1uaterd.) }<'li8iID1,]'Y o ere In oom , at oyo a ape. at are we life was mood as "good." Mr<.
going to do with that unspent coffee money? The McCarthy reported that f,aliirMITE
box collections have been below par latelv As fieLd's :p1~aJns [orr- an NFcas
h h h v ··fi weekend on CaJffiPIUS M:a:nch 22,
a supplement to T eology class, ow muc of a sacn ce 23 and 24 ]!1Ic1udrmcr the NelW
would it be to read a book on the Passion? Obviously, Eng1aJnd 'F:~Ir,elrJJSics F:sHval, iaJnid
the list of positive exercises is an insurmountable one. Fa:m~ly Life aJJ]d Intematiol!la'l
R,elllllt~O'ny IWOirk:lhopsl, hard been'
,g,iven ,aipp11olval by the Wimer
MARTIN, REYNOLDS buffhet s"uDpper ond cFamp.us.1" ·11 COlunc~l..
(Continued from Page 1) T e. ogwoo eshva WI Bob He~ly rep,Oa:"ted thla:t Falir-be
re1gned over by a queen, fie!ld hias been aJccepted to' mamch
chosen ~ro~ among. the d!l;tes illn St. PaJtriJck's Day P,ar.~de :in'
of. the JUl:U?rs. As m keepmg N€IW York OiJty, aJnd we ha,ve
w:th trad1hon, the week-end belen gWeIl:l .~ very good POlSlitiOIll
WIll be opened to freshmen and.1n th,e parad€.
~oph0r.n?res, and a large crowd 'the 'dhl~i11m~n olf tn'e 1957
1S Cahnt~c1PatedM· ti. h 1 Winter Cal1n:ivaJl OOilIll!l1'i'utee,
a1rman ar n as a so an- . ,.. fi 1
d th th' d IT John CaJg'naiSl:lo,la, 11Il! hIS 1Il!3.1
nounce at e procee s . om "- C· ·1 tl t d "
the P rom WI·11 b e donated t0 thel'elP,o.lI1t to tlHe ,O'UTIlCII, s ,aJ e ·a1
b ·ld· f d t Sh d' b k tenta.trv,e !PI"oot to the Coumlc1'
Ul mg un a a ow roo. of $465.
A $2'5 'ohelck TeC,eLV€ld as a gilft
fro,m FlwltOiIl! Cl'O'tfrl,ielrs 1W<l'S'
llJna'll'imOlu::llty g1iven to the Sh'aJdo,
Wb!I'OIolk F'UJI!l!d.
The Co'uncL1 ]llIterviewed
three ca,ndidwtes for the clhailrllIlia'llI3lhiJp
of :the 1958 W':lIl!ber
Oarrm'i'Via1, laJnd seLetcoted Emiile
COlte, '58. Lt wws suggested, because
OIf the ex.ceUeJnt Qlu:~li£Jc,ations
olf the olJher two ClalIl!d,ida'tes',
that tiheyaJLd IMr. COite in'
his' task.
The SOIdaJl~ty W;aiS gJ.1aTIJted $25
to pay foil' tl1aJv,el expe!1JS€6 incurre.
d alnd to be incurred tin,
trips to' HJaJmden, WoT'C'esteT, ;a!nd
New York Cr~lJy.
Bill Hal:l,1gaJIlJ moved thart the
COIUlncLl gtraJIlJt $15 ~o New
FIDO'!1ItLeirs to pay faT tihre OOIS,t
od' the mlai~aJz'me'& dDculatiol!l to'
o,tihJer s,chooih. After d~S'CUS6!:OIll,
';;~~~~~~~~~~~~~~:;;~~~~~~~~~~I~i,n Iwhi!'ch .it w,as mentiolned tihJ3Jt
~ Ne,w Frro,nt~ell1S & Nucleus, the
BiJo,:olgy ClUlb's p'ub.lkaibiolIl!, all",e
the only si1Judem~ p~b1'~calt~on,s flO'
disbrilhuterd :a,nd 1:!hat Sludh Iii s'tr'i'bUlt'i,
o'n dioes mUlch to s'pTe1aJd
F,a,il'field's' good naJme, the moBOln
was vassed.
The La,slt ibUls'mes;s br,aJns,aJetiom'
wa,s '~hle choo~lg oIf dJaJtes fOil"
st,udent €,rectiom'S. ClJaJss offilce:r,s'
wli'11 be e~e,cted .on' \Ajpmr! 11, wLfu
00 c'aJffipa~g1ni'ng beJfoJ:'!e Aipr~l 5,
a:nd StJudent Comer! electiomls
w,!,!ll take 91alce o,n M:a<y 2.
March 14, 1957 THE STAG Page Three
• • • •
JUNIOR PROM
FRIDAY, MAY 3
THE WORLD.
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GENERAL INSURANCE
ED 4-6179 - Phones - FO 8-1661
955 Main Street, Bridgeport, Conn.
Prompt Service - Reliable Companies
AROUND
a:nd they rwill th€lI1 illIOitJify ~0iU
a's to w.h€lI1 aII1d wihiere to Te\P'O'I'it
to take tJhe examma!tioll1l.
IJf Ja!Ily of yOlU 'Oiv,w Serviice
MJimded' genlts are iJnteresil:ed in
seekilnig il5urtihJer illllfoll1l11laJtioll1J as' I
l"e,gJal11ds' to th€l OIPlPO!I'tun~i€l:>
offered in gOlVerrr1Imell1t.
Careers· .. tih.re BeillammilIle LectJuJres ,wOlUlJd
be i:n the best i,nterests ad' the
tmJtire Student Boory. And ass.
uredllry the albs€llllce cd' theSiE!'
LedJUf,es IhCl's been !f.aJI' !frolll1
beinelfiCial.
TQ Editor
Dear Sill':
Lette,rs
I 'Wli,sh to ca:1l atJtellltro;ru to tille
atOSelJ1l('f;! of a ve!I'y mOlI1Il1Ja1liv€'
lelcit'Ure Is,eries wh~ch in previolUs
years wa:s ;pant of tIhe iJnJteil'lectual
'9!nd C'ulJ1Julral lMe at Failrfiell:!,
By BOB CARROLL By JOSEPH P. CHESTER
Civil Service WRONG WAY SANCTIONS?
President Eisenhower, in a recent nationwide broadcast, deOUlrgOiVe=
nnelll¢ artJtJraJCts .ftrolll1 elared U,S, intentions in seeking to avert n'ew trouble in the
Tille sltruderr1lt ~s ItlJOt the 0II11ry 2 ,to 4 per cell1Jt cd' ,the gradiuartes Middle East. The declarations were aimed at Israel's refusals to
PaTty iIIldull"ed by th~s s!hanneli'Ull of collegeoS al1ld UJll:i':,e:-,s~ties ~<IICih withdraw her troops from the Aqaba area of Egypt. Israel ina1bsleIIlJCe.
The Umvemity aLso is yeall". Th,e nJUII11'ber ]s' :nru;ruffimerut. sists that she will,not leave the area until she receives stronger
oorue a diss'e!I'Viice, W.idesplre,a;li The proipootion, od' tlhel to;tall guarantees of security in regards to her borders and her ship-
1: am cOIllfi<ie;rut that the ma- pUibliicity W,CI'S alJwa'Ys givelI1 io grr;adJuati;rug each year tJhiaJt ell1JteT. ping rights. Our President insisted that Israel comply with the
jooilty olE oo1'l€lg'e' srfJudenJtJs /Will. the SipoIIllSoosIhJia> od' a lectru:re at the F,edem'l setr'Vilee muslt be I demands of the U.N. to abandon the area and w,arned that, in
readwy ,alg'ree thait UlIl>i.vemilty tihe Uruiv€lI'SiJtY. P€OIP:le /Were i'JUIbsitalI11i,aHy in,lor.ei8,iSed as tille the event Israel fails to do so, the U,N. and the Unit~d States
lille lOOII1Silsts iJnJ nrore attendance Ima<ie awaire thait Faill"'fie1d €'xisJts; rOte od' gove:nnrrnell1t gIl"OIWS. would apply stronger measures and actually pressunze Israel
·at c1aJsses, stUldy, examilllJaltrixms and iJs a livmg, dynJaJmiJc a1llJd The Fedenal gOlVeTnmell1,t haG into withdrawing. Doubts, however, are in order as to whether
and tihe extJra'-IOUINiculJar actdivi- pmLgl"esSliiVe cu:ltur,a[ and UJI1Ite[- made an, inIoreasillltg effu!I"t. OIVeJr or not the United States would actually apply sanctions against
be's. A UruiiV€II'siity is muclJ. mo['e: lefCtiuaI ceII1ter. ES!IJ€!Ciailliy when ,the past couple oli y€lCl'rS to a1t- the Isr,aelis. For to do so would, in 'effect, be a refusal on the
It ,S'elI1Ve!S as a ceII1Iter oli leaJI1I1lin~ the Si,p€alkell" /Was a; relno/Wneid' ltriaJCt a laTgeir ,n;urrn/b.etr od' albite part of the West to allow Israel to retain what she easily gained
a'I1IdouLtUlr€' wihQse oibjecrtrl.veils and esteemed alutlro,rity did rthe YOIUlIljg. glI"atduate!s. rrhe OilVil in defeating the Egyptians. Not only that, but sanctions against
to ed'Uioate' and develoip as! fruHJiy University Ibenefilt; JfO>I1 :t!helll S,ervke CommiSlsci.olll has imprOlV- Israel would only mean the f,avoring of the No, 1 obstacle in the
as po>:ssilbie thew'hole main', IDur- F,athii,eld was, haJi1ed aJS' an orult- ed its, se,lelotion! ted:lII1IiqiU€s ood Middle East - Nasser, As it is now, most Europeans believe
ing my FU"eshlll1an year I was srtiaJIJJdJinlg iIIlst~t'UtW!n /Whilcih ~t has ma,de la mOlI'e pols'itive effort that the pressures being applied in the Mid-East are going in
privileged to be IiJn alttell1Jdanlce mrus.t have beerr1l to atltlr.act slUlOh to r,ecnuiot .alble ooit!le:ge gTIlJdu- the wrong direction. More than one European country believes
ail: tihJree progmms od' simlgruila!r ex.ceIl€lIl!tJ 'P€fI"!3Orr1IaJl~ties Ito ills a'tes. 'I1hiG new s'eilelOtiJOn te,c,h- that Egypt and Nasser would be the target for sanctions - not
mteTest aOO· de'.redua,l va'1ue e,aJInipruls. Ce!I"'talmly tihell1', iIIl this nique isrprima:rlliIy dilre,cterl wt Israel. That, of course, raises the big question - why punish
on oompUlS'. 'Doose I believed to respec:t aot least, the UIIlIi",ersiil:y 0= NattiOin's icolHe,ge5 aII1d m tihJis Israel when you let the others (Russia, India and Egypt) get away
be alll etslS'€II1tiJal aII1d vitalI CO!l1- has SiUffered a lms of pr€5ltiige way O'U!I' gOlVerll1lll1err1lt receives with almost, if not, the very same thing?
tTJ:butJiolI1 to tille iliulfill1ll1elllit od' a ,~n rohe albSi"..Jlce oIf the Be1'lall"- m~y hdiglhtly q.UJa'1iJfi:ed, 'ca!ree,r- CAPITALISM IN COMMUNIST POLAND
Uni'velrsilty'~ piUJripol"e. mdnJe; Lelcture..s JtJhiiJs y€lalr, mmJded m€lI1 ,who beicome car'e€Jr P 1 d' , '11 f d t t th d d
miaJna'<Ter.5 telchllliiCilainls and :n;ro- 0 an IS m an 'economlca y con use ,s a ~ Ese ay,s ,a~
I re!felr to the BelJ1aJrmilrue LelC- I aliso feel that an rostiIVution f ," 1 '1 d ~ one of the results of that apparent confusIOn IS the pOSSIbIlIty
ture ·Sene' s' '.w...u..'L'~".o...·hlaiS '1iOIn',g .b:een St,eepe,u..Jt'ill, an 1,,U,..",.S.'l.!.J,.ll:U,~IUS' and l.II1I- SeeSl,SelcOtiIilo'an Beay. eCI'loS,mpetitive Tests tha t the coun.t ry mI'ght'm tr0 d ~ce ,a syst em 0 f ~oderat e ,capl'taII' sm
a tJradHron' OIf F,aill"'fileld UIIl>i.lVe,r- spitl'inlg lJelsoU~t tJr,aditroll1J, as is Th I 'b 'Lt UIIlId to help alleVIate the economIC pressures, WIth nothmg a cersioty,
:It :iis w~tih 1fhealbslenloe elf Falwn€lld ,has in: 1i.~S' flaVlure Ito till e [lr{)/Fg~~. ~Sl Stvl' .!caroI
E
· , tainty in that country, except that old styl-e Communism does not
1 • iL . ,e nleJw '"""",Ir,a: eII1VJ eo . n... ,
tJhis most wOlrthwlhitle and iIIl:- prlOlmoroe tlh,e Be'li.aJI'ffivll'e 'eiC- trance Exami:nJ3Jtrolll; while'll its work, Pol.and's ~conom~c planners have agreed that theo~ly .way
fO!I'.ma;tJi,ve proIg:I"!aIffi bit ;r shall tUires, 'committed aJll' ind'l.lJStke t 11 ill ,~,..J ••._.' ~_,..J Ito get the saggmg PolIsh economy back on the road agam IS to
co"."c,el.rrr1lJm~ViOlel!f iIIl IthtiG lette-Ir. to that traditiorlJ to its sJttvderr1ltJ.s:, os~lD,neionJr0 a' ,co' elge g!r<1JUJuJd'.elS atuiu d t' 't l' T "th' th b d studerr1lts. The pI1OiCeS's of en
f
cMoura~e pro tUhcdlve catPhI a 1
1
sm
b
· 1 ,0 ,;em
d
aln t:""1 m 't e
l
, o~nts
""o~ .,...·-'oe UJIl:fu.mi];~ wilthi the p.eJriha::p.s:, oolWeiVe.r, wetre Fa,iT- 0 arXlan or 0 oXy ey a e It pro uc IV'e capl a Ism 0
"'. "UIUl~ I selediolll' iis by mearr1lS' ad' COJlTh- d'; 'h' f th 11 d" ·t' 1 't I' " Bellanmroe LOObuTes', ~ wOLlld field :the partrorr1l olf otlleJr iinJtel- , ert't' _ t't-. whrl 'h _ ' IstIngUls It rom e so-ca e parasl lca capl a Ism we
be WIe1U to eXiplaro theciT lIlJatJure leleibUJa!l' prQgrams the ab:S€!IllCe od' P \ IV:e e~ ~ ]IC ~e~~b°iI" Americans allegedly indulge in. In effect, the proposals tend to
anJd scope. The Bellarnnine Lec- ;the Bel.larnn1in:e tseil'ies. would Mit :~a"Ula ~ llJ ~~: 0 t~ s ,ci.,e- decentralize state-own'ed industry and to let the independent
tUire'S are talk,s deJii'Vell"ed !to the 'be as sme:lry fel1t Olr aJ.s COII1JS1P.iC1U- ,alVlOlr' a~;8J tlli or ' pre: .1(:- peasant farmers take over the abandoned collective farms.
eIJ1rtire UruWetrSi1Jy b'Y leading O'U!SIly no,ted as it ~s at iplre;sent. tWlIll of prOibaJ? e futUJre belhavilO{l". Already priv,ate individuals have taken Over s'everal now bankSICIholars
and ,lec~ f!rOnl BUit the lfiact i", tihJat the UlIlIirver- 'I1he ~'Oos~ wi?-ely !USed, !f0!l"ffi of rupt establishments previously operated by the state, Although
vaTiOiUS fieLds, TIwo yean> ago sirty is notoriously devoid o!f eXamllTIlaitlOlIl ol:S i1he wntrt€iIll test top Communists in Russia are watching the goings-on with worwe
IWelr:€, pI1wiJlelged to l~srteln' to inlt.el:l.eCltJual atrrnospheoo :t!his but pell":£o~l1l'IlJa!I1Ice' allld 0:rail. teG~s ried eyes, they feel safe that their associates in the Polish govan
Irish ScriptUire. Scihoitair, a yoEair and halI1dly il1e,taiIllS a 6oElll1- are ,al~~g]ve'nto dete~'1llle 0u::e S ernment will nevertheless keep a firm grip on the country's
pil"OImillle:nt Catlholk leladieJr in blailice olf a oUiltUI1atl aJIlJd irJJtel- c,alp:albllllIrty ~()Ir a p!art~1UI1:a!l' Jolb, economy through means of controlled credit, raw materials and
the u,n~te:d Natioll1/s, Allba Zizza- leiCtual 'center. Werre the (Bell'l:air- , The fliPP]liCJall1it ma1Y t'ake teS'ts prices, Control or no control, Polish leaders are no longer askmia
'and a most mel!l-veTsed amd miIIle Lectures to !be re'-irustiJtut- :n almols1t a~ry field he chooses, ing if Communism allows such a thing, but simply "will it work?"
eloquent InilialI1 JeSlUlit, Faltiher ed, I am, cOioodenlt t1hat the iPlre- A few of wfrlooh 81re: The BiUlrearu WHERE THE TABLES WERE TURNED
De SIOIU~~, who, Igav~' ~'l'I,lIal,!.~LVe se'I1lt .d~~1 bl iJnJtel'l ' .....-1 b Iof the BUidJget, De[laJI'ltimeinlt olf , . 0Il1aJ e 'le,cUUk"'~- AjcrlrOCul D <l!l'tIll1ernrt. oli .Two. and a half years ago, free-w<,>rld spec,:latlOn had 1~ that
and eII1l1JghteJlllJIlig l:IliSLghrt lII1to retrlJrJJeSlS< wO!U'ld be ceip1JaJced wurth CO tJure, D ~..._ t .. Indo-Chma was doomed for Communlsm and It would be Just a
IlIldll,aJll pohi,ll,c.s arrlId ~1" I '" "'"1 _,..J .e-.,:.'''' '1 ' teIll:t Olmme{l"ce elpau.'WH€1I1 Oil , '!"V"'1C·lIeiSi. n a .leO''''': e allJU' l'1'U11"a:U I'll,e'C. - IH 'loth EeL at' ! d W tflar matter of tim'e before the red flag would wave over the country.
pr:eviOlUIS y€laJI'S, I lea;r;rued fr()1ll1 uail altlll1ospheiI"e, IDea_....: . ~'CoIEI01I1Ualball1J ~~~et
, At that time, Indo-China was divided according to a truce line
,.~, .,....~ tihe Bell eop=·Lim,e;n,. oc ......~p<L'o'-
UJPlPeIr~Cl.<lJSISlll1I€1I1 'WlI<1't ' a~-I Ln: j,us:t~ee to the admill1Jislt:ra- 'It f t'hAJrnnry Navy and which was the result of a bloody war ensuing after the Com-mill1Je
LootiUlrelS colV€!l'eod such dl- 'trorr1l dit mUist Ibe s1Jatedlthat they ~,en FO eDep• rnrt. oi I~- munists overran the Indo-Chinese nation, Two separate governViers;
e, :boip~CS iaJS PsyiChlia1Ty.. In.- !have beeili !hJaJmpe[1ed by manry t 1~ . oroe'd '" ,_ eD'''''' t- ments were formed by that line, one totally Communist and the
il:erlI1a'u..1..0,ll1/at1"D1,,,€11altU'IOII1,~_,. SelSmo- new and ,conif:uJsi:rug plro!blems eTlotr, ThaoII-1' .lhlrea;;JU!rYnf'~;t'latilh" o th . 11 . C 'Th 'N h- V' 0 er nomma y antI- ommunlst. ey were ort letnam ,and
101gy, Phi'lo,slO;pIhry and TlheiOllol~Y, i.e. c1als-lI'ololll1' sruOIr.t",cre' BlI1Jd ~SeE,nIE' l' "tl~ew 0 qrt,Ual [dY l[lI';~t,~ South Vietnam, respectively. Hopeful that in time they could .~. ...,., "1" e",,, laire, en e're· 0[1 UlliSl,~ • l' C'
Suffice uJ to say Ithat the Ben.. dlOil'lmiltolrry difficultJres, I BIll1 od' f 1: "bI' d ,1e1c.t' ,'" mcorporate a 1 of VIetnam under ommumst rule, the Reds
, doe~gl, ,e~, arrlI se 10lI1S lor . d t fir t l' d d' " f th t It
armLrue Lec1JuJre PI'OIgIralll1, s&'Vel ,the OIp~IlIiollli, hOlWeve,r, thlart iliiils .a:Dl,pO,mlt!ln,e:IlIts aJ!I'€ 'mJaide by var.ii- agree
th
0 tah ctefase e, l.drucel'tl~t; an IV
t
lsl
I
on
d
o Ch,e couffn rY'
to ,coI.T...Y...l.rnle:rn€lllt' the leOCTIi'~I.n,'c.r,.a.JC- 'ma,..·..=~~..;1"- u-'a" "C,"J=L~H;l1I~~=~.". ";"~•~•~n...lt_ OU• S Fe de')Tal1 a'genJC"le.."c.:l.Il.OIl'IL tlh'ewlass ,een ,a ree-wor po 1 lclans "wro e n 0- Ina 0 as lost.
qut\r,ed :£r0lffi teXJ1J:> lCl,nd c1aJss diS- alllce to wa=arrlIt sOlll1e eolllJSiid~ J'~ts', The South VIetnamese have ~~rned t~e tables ?n everyone, though.
?us's'iOll1. It b~glhit vhe wOlI\ld€lI1atiJOII1 wh~c:h: oibvioUlsly iJt ~a!s Mo&t \P06irti()lIlJs fined thrrxJiUJgih After ';l shaky st~rt, So~th Vletna~ IS begmnmg to m~ke enormtIIlto
the st'llldenJt s ].a;p arrlId Sen:"'V- not beenJ Cl'oCOIlded. TIre Adimi[ll- 1h FSEE . ~ d GS--5 ous gams under ItS antl-Commumst government. WhIle veteran
e;d ,to broaden his UIIlJderstand- ;'st~a""o~' muot 1..~,~~ ID milIlKl. ""'\t ~th ~_,:Il"e ~"~~Ta~; $3670 Communist Ho Chi Minh, leader of the Northern regime, has his
i,ng 'arrlId appre;c.J!a.tJi,'Oll1J oIf ht'is eoiUlI1- o"ll1•J.ly'wp.i"h;yt:liIc~a'l ""a"r"rl"Id pro.cediUJ'"rVaJI l WI' a SH"o<i1WllI.lIIlig SaukUJ \JI1 ,'rr1!t h andsuf 1I WI'th scarel·teis ·m f d d 1 th' b d d 00 an c 0 mg, a ogge own
t'ry aOO world and tihiemall1lY~.Si:n-......~1 oli 1U!I1>i."eJrlsoirty lire ......liJch :a: y,e:_T, evd€'l", ,StOmed~GSl-6- economy and a restl'ess population, the government in the South
~ ,...""'li:> 'y IVY" melll,.~ aTe mJai e a gm es ",. l't d t b k db' d l' ,
ip!1"IQbIems IW'htm pIlaJgue a;nJd be- aJI'e i!I1loide;ruta1 'to eduiCartIDII1 burt land OS-7 'WIiih srtarlinl<T saJ1'alr'ies IS gammg m po~u an y an .suppor ac e, y Improve Ivmg
s,ert' iIt, the intellectual development of . '" $4 000' ..J 4>45'25 0' d' standards, a r,apldly developmg freedom-mmded army and eco-
Thi6 ryeiar the' Und'v€!l'So~try bias, i'ts s't'uderr1lts wht~cih iJs od' thle I0p1el"ll!d'illlig uiapnOlIUl1Jl 'lt' h,e qlUalalEylefia:ciari,tJione!S- n0.m'lc assI'Stance from the Un,I'ted Sta t es. Two years ago, ~ver~-
not s!polll'sorreid a sillligle BeUaIl"'- e'S:se:nlce olf a ualJiveil"'S'ity. Iii' <Ii elf the canidi.da:te a,nld tlhe !l1I€e:dls one ~greed.that the COI?mumsts could h';lve Won any electIOn m
m~ne IelauUJr€' ,arrlId I strongly fee,l so!rutiolI1 100 rthe prolblems, elf olf the agenlcies" a umfied V:letnam, ~ut ng~t now.such a VIctory lo<,>ks very doubt-that
the 'absence of this exce'l- ipI'€~ioUis ye1ars' cOiUJld have been ful. ~es.plte the dlfficultles f,acmg ~he Sou.th Vletn,a~, govern-lent
series has been most denio s'UlCooSlsltiul'ly met and provliJsliolllls Annual Leave ment, It IS the gen,eral consensus of mternatJonal PO~ltlclans t~at
mental to both the University made for tihe B'eHalI"mi;rue Lec- A Fledelrlal €IID'Pw;yee receives that goven~m'ent IS slowly, but, neverth~less, certamly provmg
and its students. '1JW'eiS, I Carr1lltlJOlt conleeilVe ad' 'a, li:bell"lait a:l'lomanJCes cd' pam alIlJ- more than Just a match for ItS Northern rIval.
The :iJn:dJi,viJduail. 61tuiderr1it ihJa'S ~aitid ex10use fOIr' the aldJrnilllistTa- n'lllal (va:oatioll1/) aoo sillck lea'Ve,
be€lll d€ipl'ived ad' va:Luabile m- tiOIlJ's lcrumrell1Jt faiLure to make ATIrr1IUa'l leave i6 ealrll1ed 0111 1l'
fO[1maltio;ru diue ,to mIle faiwure Do s~ilall" !9r ovi;sioll1S. gI1adulaJ1:ed basis. DUlrinig the first
hold Be1'laI1milIle leictUr€6, SinICe l'f we fa~l to, resltoce the Be3.1- 3 ryears 01f serviice, €!miplorye:es'
the ~iiVO!W€ld piOOpo!S'e of a Jesuirt armine LeiCbUires to the~ilr deser;v- aTe enotitled to '13 IdaylS elf anUinii'V'€
ll"sitty is to im;pa;rt a bal'- edl dJm;po[1t,anlce /We s1ha['l b~ lIlIUa'! leave; €Il'Il!Plo~ees lW1i'bh 3 to
a::ruced ,and well-roru:nidJed edUICat- g'UiiJ1'ty cd' a dli,sls€lrVliice to the 1'5 yelair,s of selrVilce 'geit 20 daIYs
UOiI] ilt' lbelcolll1ffii iOJeJcels:salrY iJn UinliivelI15iJty and~ to; oUIrIS'elvels, If olf annJUall ileave; aJIltelr ,1,5 ye'aIl'S"
tihJ~s, day alnd alge' olE spe'Cli,ailiz,a- we sUCleeed we shall htaJve' bell1J€'- a fedell"lail ,emploryee (lanl take 26
tioln to SiUJPlplelll1leJnIt a stUiderr1lts" fitled themtelleciJUJalIme olf tIIre day,s of Ie,alVei e,acl1 iYe:aIr. ~
kll1lO/Wledlg,e W;iltihl ti!ntfolI'1ma1;'m Uruiv€{l",srr'tJy and hialVe enihJa<nlced ,plo~e'es' alIso eall"1'1 13 da~s olf
fmm fieldJ.s' otJhel' thaJI1I hits' 0/W1I1/. the ,poslS'ilbfi;liity oli OIU'l' own Jper- skk yeaIVe eaJclh yealI", lWftIJiJah c!aIIlJ
The Ma'th MajOir /W0iUJ1d do mel'! sonJal deve3.b;pIll1'€'IlIt. We baJIlinJO,t be aJOcUJmul!Cllted :£r0lll1 yeIa!r to
to l~n sOl!llJ€!thiJnJg od' the SIOiCi;atl roi'l ill we bear iJn: mind the year.
sciell1c€'s; tille B>i.oh>igry MatiOIl' Jesru.li1J rtJradli1Jroll1 arrlId ed'Uicaitrorr1laJIThiO!se se:niiOil's' who all"'e JiIl1!ter.mUJSrt
111m be IdaJted Jiin !hils WOiI"1d objecii:ve . , . to eliuJcaJte mIle es-ted i:n: takiinJ~ tlhe Fed€!l'alof
m~aro-Oi1':gJa1ll1i'SlIDs an~ moire polished man, the lWelrr-rO!UiIlided: 8€1rvke EXiammi(l!ti.olll may get
thalll 1Ihe Hi;s:toIry lMajo[' should manlaIlJd Ithe whioite man'. To a1llJaWlka1io[1 Cam FOII1lTI 5000be
loslt W' tJhJe arr1IlliaiLs ad' mIle paslt, thiJs' err1Id t'he restoil"laHolI1 oli the AB WIl'IL Mtl', 'I'artaIrOi olf the
AII1Jd yet ilt ~S' :mallltitfeiSrtJliy :ian(pos- BellaJI'ffii:ne SeTies Wlillil be 00, Placement Office. Testing dates
Siilbl,e to alcreolll1lpL~sh tllJi,s, lilbernl ilnV'al,ualb'lie cornrt.milbutm. andl olther detJali'ls, alborurt tlhe'
balcrogtl'olUlilid ;and baIanlced eidJu- Iexiamlirr1latiolili can aJ1J&0 be oIbfbaro-catioll1J
in tille ,c'liaslsroom alOlI1/e. [1; GIDateliruJ:ly ed. MteiI' yoru fil'l ill1J the FOII1lTI I
stands toreasOll1 therr1l in! vJew '15000-AB, mail tJhe' Ifoll"lffi to the
oIf th~s', itft1at al pro,gtr;aIll1 such alS' Fffi,A,NCrns DQHiER'I1Y Civill Sel'v~ce COimil'I1JiJssixm office I.!::::==========================:::!.l
Page Four THE STAG March 14, 1957
Plush Thrush
•
Tireless Wireless
Bantam Phantom
WHAT IS A WEALTHY BIRD'
WHAT MAKES SHEEP RUN~
WHAT IS A PINT·SIZED GHOSH
EMORY DUNTON.
GEORGIA TECH.
ROSE DE WOLF.
TEMPLE U.
WHAT IS A RADIO THAT RUNS ALL NIGHH
SANDRA BERNSTEIN.
U.C.L.A.
I
:.::
;;"
CIGARETTES
~~~f~~~H'~~
your name, address, college and
class to Happy-Joe-Lucky, B0x
67A, Mount Vernon, N. Y.
TRY THIS: put a pack of Luckies on a pedestal-under glass.
Observe closely for several days. What happens? Not a
thing. You've just learned the hard way that an unsmoked
Lucky is simply Waste Taste! Light it, and it's simply
wonderfuL You see, a Lucky is made better to taste better.
It's packed end to end with fine tobacco ...
mild, good-tasting tobacco that's TOASTED
to taste even better. Don't just wait aroundlight
up a Lucky. You'll say it's the besttasting
cigarette you ever smoked!
Musical Musings ...
By MIKE WOLCOTT
Bargain Jargon
Stretcher Fetcher
GIVE TO
DAN LOPEZ,
BRADLEY
SHADOWBROOK
IRENE ALLEN.
WHAT IS DISCOUNT DISCUSSION'
EDWfN JOYCE, JR •.
BUTLER U.
WHAT IS AN AMBULANCE ATIENDANH
WHAT IS AN ABSENT-MINDED MOTORISH
WHAT IS A NAIL-STREWN CROSSROADS'
~
~~.f!~~j,~
~..J.J,J,!
.~
Puncture
RYAN PREPARATORY COLL, Juncture
I
plished . facts for almost a Iwih1cJh rElCei'V'ei5 thie s'O'ul1'd :fir'O'.In
quarter of ,a century. The rea- the· .r<e!coIDd'e;r:, FIM rbUl!lJeT:, 011' ibape
son for their apparenily recent If,eloorde;r and <l! spe,aker., (WMch
development lies in the fact i'n Uul1I1 pl1og€lC'vS' !the petrlfolr1m-
Horw "h1-" dis the "fi-" A g,olod that for several years high aJruce to OIUJr eaJr,;~.
que1slviJoill arud OiI1Je 'WIhiJc'h! maJruy fidelity equipment was de- ~ As, has been the case in. the
peopte: wou:1d iLiJke aJl1'Slw€'ried signed, 'buill:. and used by sudden rise of many business
professionals stricily in pro- enterprises, the high fidelity
dU!DilnJg t1hiJs' p['es€lnt tr€lnd Blrud fessional capacities. Today, boom has bred its score of
p'O'pUlI,arioty 111' mus:iJc,al re;prI'odIU!c- however. elecironics manufac- opportunists seeking a quick
tilo,ru. Horwery'e;r. S'1Il1ce no, die<flnilte turers are producing this income by deceiving people
·31rJJs,wer .calli be ig,1vern, ;a re:l,wtiiv,e' same equipment in a quantity who have failed to learn the
cOImpal'is'OIn ,wdill eXiplalilI1J sotrne- and at ,a price, suitable enough facis about this particularly
what 'by, prers,eil1'tiJIllg all H'Ve' to make it 'available to the complicated field. The resull:
mUlsri,c :a;s "iPierrifeot fidelri'ty" and public. has been the widespread use
clur abtelm~'iJs ~; ;'eJ?rodIUlc€, ~'t i~ System Explained of the, term "hi-fi" for pro-
C,UI' nomer" ,a:" ~~g~,,, !fid,eh'iJy. Od' ,OOIUl'se ,it mus'! be ke:prt :un duds rangin.g from pocket
The exte.rut od' the hl- ~elpetruds m1nd that tlhe lriJsteil1iel' 'hals, [1J() radios to face creams and the
IUIPOin the ~meaJn" oorrufilelctlIl1g the IoOlrubml o'Ver the brolaodJcaJsltiJIJ.1g complete, bafflement of many
f~::lme': WJ1tfh th'e so'U!nd as we Io,r n~COtrd:iJI1Jg olf llie liJve pelI'- would-be high fidelity buyers.
hc.laJr 1't' f'o'r1maIIlIC,e laJnrd thar! tih,e hJi:gh R,elgatrdJ1e1Sis olf fui,s Iprorblellll
Surprisingly e,nough high fj,deliity sys'te:m rirn olur Thomels' ilg 'the 'P'l'elSell1lV hugh fiJde:l,irty market
fidelity sound transmission. there'DoII'e, 'rec€oivhllg ,a sOIlll!ewhat hiaSi p\l1olgtrie!s'sed atrud €'X!PIaJ'IlidJed SlO
recording, and reproduction alit-erred poermQ["U'rul1n1ce,. The basilc 'mUlClh that ,aJruyoll1le c:aln olblbain aJ'Il1
are not fund'ame,ntally new. C{)imp.OIl1l€,IlIts olf, the sy-s'iJem I eXlCle'Ueil1lt system s,umply by)Wisel
but have, actually been accom- sihOiuld iJnlcliude aJru arrnpl'iJfielI' ,arrud s,elledt'iv€ p:uDcha:slinl,g.
---------------------=-----
Imakes few mistakes, if any,
and even though he does encounter
difficulties, there is no
doubt in the reader's mind that
he will win out. Throughout the
'entire novel the author concentrates
his efforts not on verbose
description but on vivid plot
development. He shows in the
work that concise, to-the-point
reasoning which characterizes
the lawyer.
In theme the book is nothing
new, but its, unique style proclaims
the author as another
valuable addition to the world
of story tellers.
Review
By TED COMBS
1260 Main St.
BRIDGEPORT
Ethical
Pharmacy
Book
Anthony Lawrence was destined
to become a PhiLadelphian.
It could be n? other way.
His blood was too thick with
that desire which had prompted
the maternal side of his strain
to labor toward that goal for
three generations. Three women
had cleared the path, but now
it was his job to build the road
to the big white pillared houses,
the Philadelphia Club, the social
register. His success story
is the latest effort of author
Richard Powell, a Philadelphian
himself. He pulls no punches
when painting the portrait of
an old and powerful soci'ety
that keeps its skeletons in velvet
lined closets.
Lawrence's shaky beginning
in Prep school melts into inevitable
success when he enters the
law firm of Morris, Clayton,
Biddle and Wharton. This was
the first step in his approach to
the social register. Secondly, he
fell in love with Grace Shippen,
heiress to three fortunes. She
was the final prerequisite to his
acceptance as a Philadelphian.
As his wife she could provide
the wealth a n d successors.
However, a test was necessary;
one which put not only Tony's
future on the witness· stand but
also' the whole of Philadelphia
society. Even if he wins the case
for the defendant, he might
drag too many prominent
names through the mud. But
he had worked too long and
hard to lose it all now and he
measures up to the situation
brilliantly without rattling a
skeleton. He has now reached,
"the upmost round," he is nOw
a Philadelphian. As in many
cas'es the anticipation is greater
than the attainment, and
Tony finds that his growth cannot
stop here. Can he now place
himself on 'a pedestal above the
"little" people whom he has befri'ended
and helped during his
years in court? He chose to
move back into the city "with
all its dirt, noise ,and crime" and
run for mayor the following I
f.all. I
Througout almost the entire
book Anthony Lawrence is a
Collosus. His life is run with
the order and precision of a
carefully planned law case. He
Fairfield Laundromat
CLOTHES
WASHED and DRIED
REASONABLE RATES
DAVID BARTON.
U. OF ILLINOIS
Bumper Thumper
Luckies
Taste Better JAMES TAHANEY.
rONA
Shear Fear
. 1227 Post Road Fairfield "IT'S TOASTED" TO TASTE BETTER ••• CLEANER, FRESHER, SMOOTHER!
Opp. Post Office
CA.. T. Co. PRODUCT OF c.f'1:,~y~AMERICA'S LEADING MANUFACTURER OF CIGARETTZII
March 14, 1957 THE STAG Page Five
By FRANK O'ROURKE
The dire",s r€lhJeamaJl 0If tlhe
OIrue-oot iPla~, "The GalIne oct'
OhelS1s'," by Kelruruetlh SaJWYff
Good;matn W<IJS1 preS1e:nlted ii!ll!
Berxfumanr's Halll dJuml1lg the SeICOlnd
;pe!I1iod, ThunsJday, Feb. 28.
The pliay,a c.ol!1Jtir~butiolrr by the
newly-Qir,g<lJnizeid Dil'aJmati.c Society,
to the JIe'.s:uH CoUelge Drn,maJtilc
Fe,s1.iv,a:l, heLd Ma'l1ch 2 alt
F,oll1dhBJffi ,UIlii'Versi'ty, W<lJS oIPen
to the' e[Jjtiire s'budeln,t body a:Ilid
the memlbelr,s olf the f,aJclwl:ty,.
The IPID!ClJwctioIIll, ]asti~nlg albOlUlt
tweOJJty mi[1jutelsi, [,s a SICeIl1Je in
the lif,e off A:le1xi!s IAlexam:!rovitich,
a patridBJIT governlOlr 0If a
province somelwhere in RusSLa
dw-.i[1jg the eair'ly I1Jw€IIliHeth ce:tlJtwry.
He ii,s aln <ligJitnJg ffiBJnwihos:e
a!bmdJty ,iIIlJ gOlve'l1Ili1Jl1Ig people aJnId
pl'es'elrVi:nlg the C<lI31te society off
the tiJrnes should, he feels, be
roeflected i,n hLs! plaY,~Ilig 0If ~hesiS.
Wheln hlis skin I1J;S a, chless plia'yer
seems to dw~nI(He, 'he' fea:rs that
his keen sense od' pe!rCejptlioiIll
wiJfl be lost to hiJm fOireveT BJl1Id
he ,w:ilt, Icolnls'eqrueiIlit,!y, become
• odern!
IVe
---------------------------------------------------
I
power-lelss laIlJd ;usele~,s. D€lS\Pii~e GLEE CLUB The Hartford group presented Veterans Club Gives
~he deo.>per,aite pile,adlln:g of hIS (Continued from Page 1) in their final appearance: "The
c'heS's :p.art'Ilier, COiIllsltiaJIltiiIl!e, he Great Awakening," Kramer- Scholarship Grant
3J!rIi3JIlge:S a pr~v<lJte iiIlJtelr:vi,ew €II', soloist; "Kemo Kimo" Cote; Barlow; "The Way You Look
be'tw,e,en h~mselltf alI1Jd a man., "The Rigoletto Quartette" by Tonight," Kern-Sticles; "Be- At a, r,eceiIlJt meeti:n:g off the
-RolntS" SIh!<lImmyeff, whiOlITI he the Campus Minstrels. They yond the Blue Horizon," Whit- Vet's Ch.lib,a '$200 l31chOll,aJ['s.hdiP
kJIlJOIW,S ihals ,SWOlriIlJ to k,ill him. closed the first part of the pro- ing-Harling, and closed with gralI1Jt was vCited oln ;<JiIlId appro:vA
bni'l!i:a:l1It dilo,nlla~T off !Wilts elIll- gram with a med1:ey from the "The Omnipotence," Schubert-
..."..-J • ed. The sdhol!3Jl'slhiJp w.il11 be
sues 1IlJ ,whLah Alexi,s, s'takels his current Broadway hit "My Fall' Pyrker. .
Hfe 'UlpOiIl the geniiUS" off htis wi:bs. ~ady," Ronald A. Skurat, SOlO-, The enjoyable concert was aJwarode.d t.~ I<lIIlJ\)' del3>e-rW1JIlig v~t-
A l~aJme Oif TiJfe a:nd deaJth i:s 1St. ended with the combined glee ,e,r~ who b In need ad' OOaJ11ICH1,1
pLayed, olf lr'eipeiBJ~,ed chlallleiIllge After a brief intermission, the clubs, under the direction of I ~SlslstaIlJCe heire at th,e U:tlJIVe:I'BJnd
UlI1ISluroe cOIUlmge - Alexi,s Glee Club reopened the recital I Mr. DeVaux, singing the "Hail .:>'lty.
armed wuth IOIIJIly hils. oUIIl'nlinlg, with the inspiring "0 Faithful Mary" and then the "Holiday B~ll FOlg,BJrty, club !pcr-esi'deiIlt,
a;nd BoQlris, wllbh a' iPi!s'tol. I Cross," by Yon; the Negro Song," under the guidance ofl re,ported that $25 has been senlt
One oQlf the i"equi,s,iteis' olf 13'Ulcho spiritual, "Somebody's Calling Fairfield's director, Mr. Simon I to 'the Falirnelld Po,l,ilce De.p:aT!ta
"caJt (lInd mouse" gam'e is goo,d My Name," with Michael A. Harak. ImelIlit to. be uSoed a,s a ltempolraTY
aJCt1Ilig. Tlhe pla'y had I1lhialL The Glean and William A. Halligan After a dinner at Loyola Hall, bo!nd Do,r aJny sEI~vk,elmlaln w!ho
caS't olf ;£oll.llr ,indUided: KeiIlln,elth as soloists, was quite effectual, a social was held at Berchmans might be ,a,rrested .fo,r h~tIClhCiaJtBJIlide'Ha
in the lelElJd rd'e' olf as were the close harmony bal- where Dav'e McCarthy was for- 'hikinlg on the Meril'itt Pa'rkw3Jy.
Alexils; Froanlc1S' B. O'Rolurke als lads of the Bensonians. William tunate in discovering a"Swami," Tlhe BJrnOIUiIlit olf uh€! Vet',,1 C1JUIb
the r,eV'OtI,Ultiolni,slt, BOlr,iis; [)oll1la
'
ld J. Doyle was soloist in a salute Eduardo Jay Morii, (obviouslYcoIllt!rilblUtioIlJ to' the ShaldolWJ.
LoughlmBJnl aSI GOiIl's!tialnt~IlI:'~ to Leroy Anderson and Fairfield left over from King Saud's bDO,ok Fund has yet to be de'te,r,
a'IlJd J'onn C. Kelly a,s the ifolQlt- 'ended its part in the concert visit) who gave a demonstra- miJlJed. 'Dh~s is'slue wa,s 1.wbled to
main. with the thundering "Granada." tion of extra-sensory perception. .a1a'ter date.
DRAMA. • • • •
Pick the Pack that Suits You Best! MUSIC SOCIETY
(Continued from Page 1)
aJl1Id J'OIS,elpih M'oIIlJa!hIa:n" '60. R~ch'all1dJBrleto-
iROtClias iwas pli:cked to,
head the COIIliSibtUitiloiIlJall colIl11IT1iittee.
A comlt'ttmjt]oiIlJ mUist be 'P1'2'se!
IlJteld to the SltUldeiIllt C'OlUncil
f0[' a{pipiI'O'VlaJl b efo!I'€' the dub CoaJIli
be ifotrlm'l:Uy l3IQoelPteid.
Motiolnls' w:ere 'aJtso mBJdie re,
g,andilIlig tlhe nlaJme fo!I' :tIhe SQcile,ty.
It WaJS d;elCided t.o iIJlalme the
org,BJIlJiq;atioIIli, "AioaJdiJrnia de
SaiIlJeJta CeCli]ila" ]Ili hiolIl!Oil" olf the
p<liurxm ,slalilIl't olf musiiic.
The pUI1pOl"e olf the Aic,ademy
a,s Dr. ROls!s s'ua:1Jed is lIlot to st.alrt
'a nelCiomd Glho:p 1O1ll' tlhe CBJmpUIS,
but 00 fiwrtlh'er the aJP!PlI1eciart;~OiIlJ
OIf clasl",iIc'aJl mUisilc aJmOlIlig i,ts
member,s. AnyolIlel lWiith ,a,ll' ~nltereSit
ilnolBJsslical mUls'~c iIS wI"lged
to ,attel1ld the Imee!b~nig,g: wihJiJch
aJ['e teiIlltiatweily set for WedIllels,day
a!fteJ.1nOOIIlisl. The' ooga'Il'iz,arbOIl!
is OInlly iln its i,nJf\aJnlt Sltage
but ilt ;pTiOIITI.i,sles 'to be I()IIlJe. olf ilhe
,m'Olslt \n3!luaJbloe extra, - owrrii'Ci1l'l,a
a'CtiiV1i1hes ever offeirled to the
studreilits.
LARGE GROUP
(Continued from Page 1)
siJdeI1etd €I XiCe11:ent DIll OaJIDPfUlS
while it. wa5 very IgKJod alt neiJghbOirilIlig
sichlool;s:. O[",iieIlitiaitioiIlJ lWWS
geIlieil':aill'Y ,good, but fbhelI1e is
muoh trOiOlffi fon Lrmpr;olVemeiIllt.
Father Rooney Speaks
A 'h!iJgh!lLght olf ~Ihe week-;eIIlId
was a' bark delivered by Rev.
Riilclhand ROOIIliey, S.J. ali the
theQllolgy depBJntlmell't. Faithle!I'
RooIliey sltre.ssled the (pod!IlJt rthiat
1Ihe NF wD~keTs should g1U1al'di
iaJgiBJ~IliS't b einlg eiIlJVeilOtp€d i:l1l IWhlat
lhe ielI1medBJs, "Aicti,visrrn." TOOl
OOteIlJ a rolleg'e sbud€iIlJt e'ViaJ1I\ll:
a'tes hilmse1':f .BJCJCOIndiJIlig 00' (Wh1aJt
he does, Iliot !what he ils. ·The
,spe'e!chi (was r€'Cei'Ved weLl by 1Ihe
OJUdi,enlce alIlidi gJilVelIlJ s'elrllolUlS
de1iJberntioiIlJ.
A SaltlUil'dia'Y IIlJi/gM solei-all ilIt the
'',SnlBJck B3J!r" WIaIS :fie'at\llned by
'oownrtmy sqlU3J!re daJIlJ0es., in wdd'i- '1
tilo'l1l to the !Il1.QI['e if'aimi:li:3J!r daJIllce
sitelps.
HiealdLnig tlhe F'<I:imeLd bo:tlJt!~ngem
{)If mOire than fifteleIli lWere
'tlhe SeiIlJim' BJIlid JIUlIlJWT Dele:gates,
DalVe McOamtihy aJIlitt LaJN:y F\a:y'
ette, Tom Filtzigelr,BJM ruIlid Ed
,Molr'ey, ICO-d1/aJi:rim!en off :t(he
F:aJmiJry LJilfe C~rmrm~sslio:n, aiIlJd
J l1m O'Meara" ooalirrmalIli of tihoe l
F'O!l1e<ns'tcs Cormrm~s'S'ioiIl'.
Smoke modern L&M and always get
full exciting flavor
••• PLUS THE PURE WHITE MIRACLE TIP
01957 UGGETr '" MYERS TOBACCO Co.
~1
M
Ir:~::~~{t~@:~~f
:@.Ql
With L&M ... and only L&M .••
can you pick the pack that
suits you best. And only L&M
gives you the flavor . . . the full,
exciting flavor that makes L&M
AMERICA'S
fASTEST-GROWING CIGARETTE
'Page Six THE STAG March 14, 1957
player alnd aJS, GlD! amaJteUI'-IP1Ja~er--
cO'ach. AifJ FairSel-d !PreiP,
Gacr'olflallo ea",ta:nied the great
1945 baske1tball team thart had
a· 20-5 r·eicolrrd ~d that finliJsihed
third in the SlkOiIlJ~ NewpolI1t
Lnlvita:tionial Tolt.l!I'IIlla:ment. GalOOfaJlo
wlas also the high;3,c,o:r,elI' od'
thait squad wih~ch urucllUded
Matty FOIDmaIIlJ, w'h,o wenrt on, to
::Jllay .filmlt st:ri,rug alt RoJ.y Cross
wiitih the IgrJealt Bolb Ccmsy, a,nd
George Bisacca, who is now
head Icoaloh alt Fa:iJme:ld PreiP'.
Aftecr' IeaVlilnjg 'the Bcr'e(p, C,oatch
Ga:rolfalo welnt iQln WI NotTe
DaJrn,e IWheT'e he wa'3 a v,acr'ls·iity
b,ais:ke:tball.l ialndl ba'seball s·talf.
AH)hoI11Igh. he: salw a lo,t mOTe
alotio:n OIDi tlhe bals'elb:3.:ll d:~am:ol:1ld,
Galrodialo was sti:1l a highly r€'sipectedi
hOlQlpslteT fOir tihe "FdJglh:tinlg
Ia:-i,sih."
Upon gr.ad!Ulalt,~oln from N orr're
Dame, he ,s·er,v·eid tiwo y€<llTs with
the U.S. Anmy wihecr'€ he conlUnlued
hi,s /b a:s'keit!b:aJll aJrudbaseb3'
l.l a,s a memIbeir oil' ithe' Albelfd,
eeTl; Pro,v·inlg GTlOiu:n:d!s' sq:uad.
On ,pelce.i!VIiinig his dislchaJI1g'€', he
jO:lned the W.ilre:tex lMiaJnmalc:t'UJr:
Inlg c.olmVlaiDiY, ~n: Fa>irfielId of
wihilcih he iSI n:OIW selClI'etJaJilY. During'
the .p,aJst fQlucr' 'Yeafls, iWlhile
3·ervinlgaJs playel!'-iClQIa!ch, Glairo,fa
·l01 h3.is led it/he' acrn:alt.elu:r SOIuthOOcr't
Fill1eimen slaf·tibalU aJI1Jd b,a's'ketlb:
alll teaJms, inlto staJte wJ:de
olOOmin:eIT1Jce. ,Ua:srt [.aN GaJrOdl3l1o
Dla1rtlilc.ilp.ated inl the lWorld Soft03"
1 TO!UIfin:alme.nt aJt SaJCDaJrnenlto,
C.alilfoll'nia· as a :m,eimlber olf the
l'UDirueT-IUiP' R,ay!bes·tO\s Ca:rdiimJalIs'
who piicked him u~ i>ro:m the
Firelme:n [ocr' ,this: ooUcr'!lIaJrn,el!1lt.
Freshman Coach ...
ByRAY MARTIN
SPORTS
NE~$ J: VIEWS
AHhiOlUlg'h this 'wa:s his fiJrsJt
y-eaJr of 'Coilile:giiaite cOiaJchinlg, Assl:
Js:taIDlt COaJch iEnnil G:a'fiOlfa:o haG'
beeIlJ a treme!ndoUis a's6et to the
FlaiJI1fiJeld U[lJi:v'ersIHy Baisketihall
p'l'OIg-ra!m.
llIlJ this' ofllicnail 'C a,paJci,tJy als a,s·Sil.~
taiDlt eOaich, Co,alch Ga!l"olfaCo
haDldl-eSi :the Flre:shcrneinl baisket-
There is no school spirit at Fairfield, as is clearly shown by ba]Jl telaJrn ,aJnd ·s·e:DVe:s a's als61,s't-the
recent a:t:tendance statistics released by the Sports Publicity allllt to nelaldcolaJch Jim Ha:Dll"la-department
which will be found elsewhere on the page! ! ! , , . :'la'll with the varsiJty squad.
Remember when you look at these statistics that they include Ev.eriyoll1Je d:ru tine SlCihJoQJ k,DlolWs
students from other schools and they also include youngsters who the '!',emalrkaible job Co~chl Ga!l"o.-
come in with their parents. If we are going to have big time On and Off .fi3!;o h3ls dOIDie wvth thms' lYem's
basketball, we have to have big time spirit. Anybody can criti- F're,s;hmaiIll squad wh::ch finkihed
cize, but it seems to be too much trouble for them even to go the CantpUS the s'e~s'OIn wiJt'h alili OIUItsItall1ldiJnlg
to the games to see what they are criticizing, .. If you want an 13 ,aJrud 2r.e:cocrld. ~aJruted he' Ih,aKi
example of school spirit, recall how the Notre Dame students the beslt FIf€ISihmalit malter-i:al in
stuck by their team through the worst year in their gridiron tihe s'cnooll'ls b:ri'elf hiJ3Ito,ry, blUlt
history ... We wish to apologize to Don Kennedy for a m~stake
he did a pa:-.3']s,e-lWortthy jOlb in
made in the last issue af the STAG. Mr. Kennedy is the very DRINK PEPSI co-ordi>nlati:rug the mamlY hi;ghlysuccessful
coach of the NIT-bound St. Peter's squad ... Rider, touted li'IlIdvvidlUJ3;l- sltlaTs ~IJJto a
another Fairfield opponent, has been chosen as an Eastern-at-,
large choice for the NCAA ... Kenny O'Brien threw the season's te3'm. ThrQlughorut tihe S€aJS!OIl1l,
longest she·t, a 55-foot one-hander against St. Francis ... "My the "Little Stalgs" !proved thecrn-greatest
moment," answered Pedro. "That's easy, last year's p;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;1;;~3·e:lvels·to be la wel1-dcr'i;Ued sq,u,a:d\
upsets over New Britain and Bridgeport." ... The "Four Tee '3.IIlId fHine SllJOlI'tl3crn,en, whether
G>h:e,aJd air beih:lrud, whi!ch ~s a
Shirts" have just made their last song filled varsity trip. The GREEN' COMET road trips were made much more pleasant by this group's ex- cnalraict.er·is:t:IC of the Garolfa::o
cellent repertoire of popular songs. In case you don't know who tmaliruiJnlg.
these singers are, they are the graduating Pedro, Wes, Danny and DINER Ther,e we:r,€' maJn~ times
Art _... After the New Britain game the squad was given milk i~lh~Qughout the se:313,on. whe!IlI fue
and ham sandwiches by their hosts. Thanks also to "Tiny" who mrol"h W€I"e as much aiS 13 POUll1lts
brought along four dozen donuts which we·re thoroughly enjoyed .. Tops in Town" heihi'Illd {thei'!' QiP'POlllJen:t3, bUlt
by everyone ... Baseball is in the air, as the ba:t:teries have been C,olalcih GalfiolDa:o allway,s' necrnaill1l-working
out indoors ... The baseball team has a big time scheel- 90 Kings Highway Cut-Off '~d ,cai'm a[lJclJooIHe'Cted on the
ule as they jlre playing such teams as Seton Hall (South Orange), Fairfield, Conn. belIllCih to pull the FlrOlsh tOlgew:r
St. John's, St. Peter's, Holy Cross, Rider, Farleigh Dickinson and, to SICO!f!e anio'thelf viJcto:r'Y.
o·f course, U.B.... The tennis team is being held up because of Tel. FO 8-9471 'RDio'r Ito corrninlg to Fadrlfield,
the trouble in finding courts . . . The Freshman Track team will CO!aic'h Ga',o:f!aJ1Q, had aln olUlt-probably
meet the UConn Frosh at Storrs this Spring. ~,taIDldi:n,g r,elcQlI'd as a baI3ketlb~l[
Mo1et ~w;Jk~v!
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