VU Harriers Ruin Georgetown

Transcription

VU Harriers Ruin Georgetown
V.-^tfrwr
Page 16 •
THE VILLANOVAN
• October
13,
1971
,-;•,/::/
Eagles Claw Wildcats 23-7
V. U. Harriers
By JACK KELLY
•
By JACK
College Eagles whipped
the Nova gridders 23 to 7 at
BC's newly enlarged stadium before 20,616. It was a pivotal game
for both t«ams as Villanova and
the Eaglesi now embark on the
heart of their schedules. BC now
has a 4 and 1 record while Villanova has sunk below .500 to
2 and 3. Joe Yukica's Bostonians
simply ran over the Wildcats as
they collected an eye popping 411
offense, 338 of
those yards coming on the ground.
"1 think they were probably better
total
lineman blew us out at times."
Offense Sputters
As in last week's game at Del-
aware the offense again, sputtered,
Luke Solomon
after last Saturday and establish a balanced offense" said
takes a handoff
from Daryl Woodring and follows John Heim into the B.C. defense.
Coach Ferry. Their stratagem did
not work however as the tough
Big Five
The Big Five Championships are
only two weeks from this Saturday
and the talk is of a Villanova -Penn
square off as usual. Penn looks to
have its strongest squad in years
and could be a real challenge to
the Cats who have won every Big
offense quickly demonstrated
they could move the ball.
Primarily behind the running of
tough Tom Bougus, who picked
up 215 yards rushing for the game.
The Eagles who run a pro-offense
like Villanova 's found holes
the
Cat
A
since its inception.
to
will
add
healthy John Hartnett
the depth of the team for this race.
The "B" race title could also be
Five
The big play of
came when Bougus
line.
series
caught the left side of Villanova 's
the
a mixup and scampered
35 yards. Kevin Dobbins, the Wildcat safety, saved a touchdown as
he brought down the 210 pound
Bougus on the V.U. 26. The tackle
was only a postponement of what
was to come as Bougus' Dowerrunning brought BC to the
ful
Cat one setting the scene for
speedster Ed Hideout's one yard
scoring plunge. BC's place kicker
Larry Berridge's kick was good
and the Eagles showed to everyone
at Alunmi Stadium that they could
move the ball on Villanova.
line
in
BC Scores
on Field Goal
The E^agles scored again the
next time they had the ball in
the first quarter as John Kline
booted a 52 yard field goal, which
broke his own BC record kick
of 51 yards. The Cats were now
Villanova's only score came on
a 39 yard run by Daryl Woodring. The scoring drive as set
up on runs by Luke Solomon and a
19 yard pass to Bill Malast which
brought the 'Cats toBC's 39. Woodring now caught the Eagles unprepared as he ran the cation play
and
Villanova's weak side
to
after getting a key block from
Woodring scooted 39
Malast,
yards into the endzone untouched.
Drew Gordon, subbing for Duane
Holland, brought the Cats within
three points of the Eagles as
his point after touchdown kick
was good.
This would be
all the
taken by the Cats on
scoring
Villanova could muster as the
offense didn't move the ball again
the basis of
"Grease Again Like
other in the 27's. A tough second
squad should be able to hold their
own against Temple, LaSalle, and
St. Joe's first team. Both the "A"
and "B" races should be exciting.
Cats this weekend
against LaSalle and St. Joe's the
following week as they prep for the
Big meet!
Follow
'
Donal Walsh and BUI McLoughUn
already have a substantial lead
on
Photo by Jim Grogan
the field early in the race. Walsh was
the eventual co-winner while McLoughlin placed fifth.
Thomas. Thomas
the whole
to halfback Bill
position
raced into the endzone behind three
blockers as Joe Miller, the only
defenseman with a chance at stopping Thomas was cut down with a
game. The Cat defense
the ball in good
offense
the
gave
after
Reilly
V.U.
linebacker
intercepted a
Ray
and ran it back
22 yards to the B.C. 28. After
three plays which brought the Cats
to the 22 yard line, Villanova decided to go for a field goal. Drew
Gordon's attempt to tie the game
from 32 yards out was no good
however.
Rippman pass
Pake Field Goal
Boston College scored twice
more in the second half. After a
Villanova fumble gave the Eagles
the ball on the V.U. 29, BC drove
to the Villanova 14 where the Cat
defense dug in and stopped the
Eagles. Joe Yukica sent in Kline
for an apparent 24 yard field
goal attempt. But the Eagles faked
the field goal and Rippman the
ballholder flipped a screen pass
block.
BC
^
dence
in the ballplayers.
Coach Ferry is not really looking forward to next week's Houston
contest. "They're really great"
comments Ferry "They have great
backs and they run and run right
at you." The Cats will have to
score alot of points next week or
score came in the
fourth quarter and was a ball conthey'll get blown right out of the
trol thing of beauty. Lasting thirteen plays, before Bougus rushed Astrodome. The way the offense
the final seven yards for the tally is playing the prospects don't look
on a pitchout the Eagles picked too good.
up the crucial first downs on
Artificial Surfaces??
third down passes when needed.
Saturday's game was played on
Berridge's kick was off to the
an artificial surface called Polyleft and the final score was 23
turf. When the Wildcats practiced
on it Friday most of the players exCoach Ferry said he did some
claimed how they thought it was
screaming after the game. "It
would be different if we didn't great because one could cut so
The
final
have the ability but we do." said
Ferry "I don't want them to get
that losing feeling and for them
to start excepting it." Ferry went
on to say that he still has confi-
sharply.
However
after the
game
was quite
players com-
the
OTHER TIMES
Tom
Flanagan (12)
Ron Stanko (14)
Ken Schappert (15)
Karl Kinscherf (17)
Glenn Jonnet (18)
Rick Kell (19)
Jay Williams (20)
Byron Beam
(21)
John Schaffner (23)
Ray Eganey (24)
Craig Brown (25)
Lou Wannemacher (27)
wishing to
Many
plained of the burns they got and
(Continued on page 15)
27:32
27:37
27:43
27:47
27:54P.R.
28:02
28:27
28:50
29:02
29:08
30:19
become
a football manager
please contact
Ed Bacon
or
Bill
the
Wilson
coaches office
the next day the analysis
different.
27:11
Any freshman
at
You Did
Last
in the
Field House.
Vil-
monstration; free doughnuts and
cider were served, and folk -rock
singers from Villanova performed.
There were not supposed to be any
scheduled speakers, although Ted
Glick spoke again, and representatives of the Main Line Citizens
Ted Glick spoke
lanova,
activist
outside
of Doughterty
Summer." More
grease
on page
3.
Hall
at
3
anti -government
activities;
Committee
Responsibility (which treats warinjured Vietnamese children), and
William
Professor
Haverford
conspirator
coDavidon (an alleged
in the Harrisburg 8 case) had a
few words to say. There were
about a couple hundred demonstrators at the peak of the rally.
It broke up around 6 p.m.
for Peace, the
including the Berrigan Brothers
who are being framed for their
of
their
the result of an al-
frame-up was
leged conspiracy to kidnap Henry
^
By
Haggerty
In the past few years there has
been much discussion on the possibility of a new Student Union
Building. Father Tirrell, moderator
of
Bill
the Student Union,
was
asked his ideas concerning this
subject and if any preliminary work
had been done. He prefaced his
thoughts by stating, " it comes with
simple inspection that the present
Union building is inadequate."
Father Tirrell said that "Dougherty Hall never captured the concept
of what a Union building should
Principally,
the
heating
moderator
there are two possibilities for construction of a new
building. One would be a separate
structure with Dougherty Hall renovated for other purposes. The
other is a wing addition extending
pointed out,
across the driveway towards Kennedy Hall, thus forming an Lshaped building. Under the wing
plan. Father Tirrell mentioned,
Dougherty Hall could be modernized "with a view towards turning
entire building to food services." He would like to expand the
Pie Shop format and devote the entire second floor to faculty needs.
the
Ted Glick
about their
case, denying that they planned to
commit acts of violence. He asserted that their acts of resistance
were always of a non -violent na-
for funding this project.
Villanova University has received a $200,000 check from the
Augustinian order as the fourth of
five payments totaling $1,100,000.
The actual presentation occurred
last June 17th when the Very Rev.
Harry A. Cassel, Eastern provincial, presented the donation to
former president Rev. Robert
Welsh. This sum represent the
contributed salaries of Augustinians connected with the University.
rector of Public Information, this
was significant in its
purpose. "There have been con-
payment
tributions in past years, but this
is the first time it was earmarked for a Student Union building,"
Ruane. The director
said Mr.
pointed out that the grant will be
used as "seed" or motivational
money.
means
He
explained
the initial
that
amount
this
will be
employed as a foundation for fund
raising and as encouragement to
ture;
that
it
talked
is
the
This week will witness the es,tablishment of an entrepeneurial
assistance service at Villanova
government
Minority Business Consultants
is a student (^erated organization. Its primary goals are twofold: (1.) MBC will function as a
consulting firm to those members
of minority groups who wish to establish small businesses, but lack
Vietnam was only a
of the rotten system
produces racism,
also
war
symptom
cidal
which
poverty,
social
in
and other
He claimed that the
repression,
ills.
the technical
He went
:;•:...
y
;';
Villanova's MBC program will
operate on an experimental basis,
in conjunction with the Small Busi-
Villanova 25
At 4 p.m., about twenty -five students left the Villanova campus,
and marched iq> Lancaster Pike to
Association. MBC will
ness
provide entrepeneurial assistance
to minority businessmen in the
Bryn Mawr
Commons. There they were joined
the anti -war rally at
whomarcnedfrom
West Philadelphia area.
of
theatre,
These
350.
feels,
Tirrell
and
lecture,
will
Fa//
Peace
For
bers. These courses will be taught
by guest lecturers from local in-
The West Philadelphia
minority businessman will, in turn,
dustries.
house, according to the moderator, recreational and office areas. Besides
administrative offices, he stressed, that organizations such as the
Resident
Association,
Student
I.F.C., and Blue Key should be
situated
Father Tirrell
here.
wants game rooms, an Arts and
Crafts center, conference rooms
and various types of music areas
to be included in this wing. Another
important consideration,
said
the moderator, is auditoriums. He advocates two auditoriums,
one seating 600 people
and a smaller one with a capa-
Father
MBC
offer instruction in practical business practices to its student mem-
Physiology
A new wing might
city
to
minority businessman and the student consultant will profit from
the services of MBC.
Eiqieriment
change
into a dis-
r\-:
order
dents wishing to put into practice
their knowledge of general business procedures. Thus, both the
course on his philosophy of nonviolence.
in
will provide
do so; and (2)
an effective outlet for those stu-
revolution (of a non -violent nature,
the situation.
acumen
MBC
government was not amenable to
the will of the pec^le, and that
there was not much hope of working within the system. He viewed
of course) as the best way to
could.
fulfill
cine-
matic needs. The cost for such a
structure, in his estimation, would
On Saturday, October
17,
the
Philadelphia Student Mobilization
Committee held an area -wide planning meeting for the fall student
anti-war actions in Philadelphia
area. Over 50 students representing
more than 25 schools met
in
separate general and high school
student meetings. They planned
a student strike for November 3
and endorsed a mass antiwar
march for Philadelphia on November 6.
On November 3 there will be
antiwar meetings in all schools,
then a 2:00 rally at the Selective
Service office at 401 N. Broad
St. to protest the reactivating of
the draft. At 3 p.m. there will be
a high school rally at both the
Board of Education and the headquarters of the Archdiocese of
Philadelphia.
the
demands
They
will be raising
be instructed in these general
business practices by the student
that these institutions
take an active stand against a war
which is depriving the educational
system of needed resources, and
that they respect students' political
and human rights. Student Mobili-
members
MBC.
Consultants program is not a new one. MBC has
branches on
highly successful
other college campuses across the
United States - universities such
as Drexel, Harvard, Temple University, University of Pennsylvania,
and UCLA. The students at Villanova are predicating their organization upon that of the Entreority
of education do not respect their
Rights."
At 12:00m., Saturday, November
6, there will be an antiwar march
from Independence Mall to the
Art Museum for a rally, at which
the well-known folk singer Pete
Seeger will perform. This will be
part of a national day of protest
called by the National Peace Action Coalition for more than 20
major
By Maureen McGuire
Standing committees, rank and
tenure, and possible dates for
extra meetings in December and
January were the subjects discussed at Friday's meeting of the
University Senate.
After a financial
Business
Service
Assistance
(EASE) - the MBC branch at Temple University. Temple began the
EASE program on an experimental basis in August, 1970, and it
peneurial
cities.
I
report
from
Senate Treasurer John (liugliano.
Senate Chairman Richard Miller
called the attention of the senators to the results of the recent
elections and appointments to the
Senate's
standing
committees.
committees have not yet
vacant seats; however, they are expected to do so
in the next week. Graduate and
Several
filled all their
Nursing
Senate
representatives
to
the
also be seated before the November 19 meeting.
Committees Within Committees
Mr. Miller pointed out that committee activity is not running as
smoothly as it should. He emphasized the need for sub- committees within the committees and
for extensive research by committee members during the intervals between regularly- scheduled
meetings. The Rules and Review
Committee has been charged with
reviewing the standing committees
and their activity.
will
Executive Committee
Mr. Miller then reported on the
activities of the Executive Committee. The committee has met
with Father McCarthy concerning
the TIAA Total Disability Protection Plan for faculty members.
As a result of the meeting, the
details of the plan are being worked out by the Business Office
and the plan should be ready for
implementation by January, 1972.
The Executive Committee has
also prepared a list of charges
to the other standing committees.
These include a charge to the Student Life Committee to consider
the need for an ombudsman, a
charge to the University Planning
Committee to establish a priority
list of buildings to be constructed
on campus, and a charge to the
Academic
(Continued on page 3)
Policy
Committee
to
study the research policy at Villanova. Reports from each of these
committees are sheduled for future
Senate meetings.
Executive Committee is currently discussing such
areas as environmental conditions
on campus, the necessity for revision of the student court charintramural athletics, fiscal
ter,
policy, and the character of VilIn addition, the
lanova.
The idea behind Villanova's Min-
Committee representatives
have often charged that the Board
Bill of
of
E]q;»erience
zation
own "High School
Senate Meeting
Business
University: Minority
Consultants (M.B.C.)
which commits violence through
war abroad and repression at
home. He asserted that the geno-
by other groups
contributions.
Consultant Service
Non- violent Resistance
be approximately $4 million dollars. Initial action has been taken
Seed Earmarked
According to Eugene Ruane, Di-
be."
/M/norify Business
and blow up Federal
systems in Washington.
Kissinger
Proposed Student Union Building
Anatomy
The next seven men last Saturday were within a minute of each
Here at
vandalized the Rochester draft
board during Labor Day of 1970.
He is also one of the "Harris
burg 8" -- those eight activists
Augustinians Plant Seed for
their depth.
Kevin
ten points in the hole.
title
still alive.
p.m. Mr. Glick has just served a
prison sentence for participating
in draft board raids in Philadelphia
and Rochester, New York; he is
part of the East Coast Conspiracy
to Save Lives which destroyed draft
files here in early 1970, as well as
being part of the Flower City
Conspiracy which broke into and
McLoughlin
tenth.
turf surface.
in
ment was
Photo by Ralph Tillman
spot for V.U. in 26:58 with Dave
Sheridan rounding out seventh man
spot again this week in 27:07 for
Lower Merion, and other schools
in the area. The rally resembled
a picnic more than a solemn de-
and to show that the antiwar move-
finally
race, a distance of approximately
ten »niles. Jerry Bouma took eighth
B.C. defense, a defense that had
only allowed nine points in the
shut off the
last three games,
run and allowed but 74 yards on
the newly installed artificial poly-
much
commemorate the massive Vietnam Moratorium of two years ago
Peace
for
Haverford, Bryn Mawr,
from
Radnor,
Baldwin,
Rosemont,
to
reeled off a
26:36 in his 1971 debut performance, outpacing Marty Liquori in
sixth with 26:40. Liquori added 37
seconds to last week's time, but
is most understandable after you
know that he ran from Villanova
to Belmont Plateau before the
Photo by Bob Adams
more
BC
Walsh, Wright First
Donal Walsh, as is his custom,
led the Villanova harriers, across
the line first. This week he was
accompanied by Davey Wright in
a winning time of 25:59.0, Walsh
slicing four seconds off last week's
clocking and Wright cutting off
took fourth in 26:17.
cided to go on the ground more.
"We wanted to run the football
Rank and Tenure
Main Topic dt
other directions --the Main Line
Citizens for Peace, and students
By Flip Ferrera
Wednesday, October 13 marked a
day of national antiwar activities
Bill
October 20, 1971
PA.
With Villanovans
notable exception.
Lucas of Georgetown who
died would be a better word, the
manner in which they did it though
was different. In Newark the Cats
threw 50 times, while up at the
Heights in Boston Villanova de-
Wm. Blake
Ted Glick Marches
(one healthy Davey Wright!)
Third spot for V.U. and overall
was nailed down by Wilson Smith
in 26:09, a 23 second improvement.
Smith put on a last quarter mile
charge that caught a tiring Joe
"*
-
VILLANOVA UNIVERSITY, VILLANOVA.
Vol. 47. No. 7
1:41
than Toledo" said Villanova head
coach Lou Ferry "BC's offensive
that
BREMER
strength and demolished Georgetown University 17 to 43. Improvement on times was also a
keynote as everyone of the varsity
five mile racers improved their
time from last week with one
Boston
in
One thought fills immensity
Health was the name of the game
Saturday as the Wildcat Cross
came on full
squad
Country
Villanova faced alot better team
than they expected last Saturday
at the Heights in Boston. The
yards
VltlAMOVAM
Ruin Georgetown
Bank and Tenure
Father John DriscoU, VicePresident for Academic Affairs,
then reported on the activities
of the Rank and Tenure Committee.
The function of the committee
is
the evaluation of faculty
mem-
bers for promotion in rank or
the granting of tenure.
In the academic year 1970-1971,
sixty-eight faculty members were
evaluated and twenty-three were
recommended and promoted.
Ir
addition, ninety-nine faculty mem
bers were evaluated and grantee
tenure. By July, 1972, Fr. Dris-
(Continued on page 2)
-
Page 2 •
THE
VI LLANO VAN • October 20, 1971
Federal Aid
WASHINGTON
(WCNS)
-
A
score of education groups - - from
the College Entrance Examination
to the National Student Association -- have banded together
Board
support of federal aid to the
neediest students.
The group is attempting to solicit
support among college students and
various organizations for a proposal to ensure that poor students
to federal
retain first access
grants, regardless of where they
study. The proposed is expected
to be made in the form of an
amendment' to H.R. 7248, "The
Higher Education Act of 1971,"
when that bill reaches the floor
of the House in the next week or
in
Neediest Students
the
to
October 20, 1971 •
through their colleges,
even before poor students. A student could not receive more than
$4,000 in four years, but his grant
would not be automatically renewed
from year to year as is presently
the
case under the Education
Opportunity Grant (EOG) program;
and financial aid officers would
have authority to determine a family's
"contribution" and decide
grants,
who was
eligible.
Need Halved
Under the amendment being pro-
Neediest First
President Nixon also proposed
posed by Rep. Quie and others,
students would receive $1,400 per
year less the contribution of his
family,
or half his estimated
"need" to attend an institution,
whichever is less. Student aid
officers would use a standard formula for determining what each
a new student aid program in his
higher education message to Con-
student could contribute. And students would continue to have the
so.
,-
February. With new
legislation he hoped that more
than 1 million more students would
receive aid. It would assure that
federal funds go first, and in the
largest amounts, to the neediest
students in order to place them
on an equal footing with Students
from higher-income families. It
would mean that (high school students') choice of a college would
be based on their educational goals
rather than upon their families'
financial circumstances.
"The most emotional issue Congress faced this year in the area
of higher education centered on
institutional grants," Representative Albert H. Quie (R-Minn.) told
the group at a recent meeting.
"But no one stood up for students."
gress
..
last
Renewal
Under H.R. 7248 as it was passed by the House Education and
Labor Committee, higher income
students could have access to these
same assurance
from year
to
of receiving aid
year
if
they continue
to qualify.
Quie told the "coalition" group
recently
passed
committee
would seriously erode
that
bill
the
the six-year federal
commitment
that "federal aid should
go
first
where the need is the greatest."
"A serious problem in this bill
is the increased power given to
financial aid officers," Quie said.
"There is a 28 percent turnover
directors annually, which
means many directors have little
experience. Under our bi-partisan
proposal, they would follow standard guidelines less susceptible to
of aid
mischief."
Qualification
"Students from families of middle and upper incomes would still
have access to federal work- study
and loan programs,'^ Quie said.
"In fact, under the EOG proposal,
families with incomes of $12,000
and
above would qualify -- but
the student would not receive an
EOG as large as those in greater
need."
Rep. Quie said student leaders
and student editors should make
their views known by writing to
their Congressmen and sending
Wed., Oct. 20
Congressional Record.
"My colleagues in the House do
not know the wishes of studentsT.
Only this eleventh hour effort will
most."
exhibit: Latin
VFSr "Images of Man
SencUe
Fri.,
Student-Faculty Evaluation
In discussing Fr. Driscoll's report, Student Body President Greg
Landers pointed out that students
have no real voice in the evaluathough
22
Oct.
Sat., Oct.
23
it
is
'
<.
Honors Program in the
College of Arts and Sciences as
of September 1, 1972. Dr. Kelley
assumed the post in September of
1967 succeeding Dr. Robert Rowland. (The Honors Program itself was founded at Villanova in
1959 by Father Robert J. Welsh,
then Dean of the College of Arts
and Sciences.) One hundred and
sixty students are officially en-
B
4
I.
p.m.'^
-
Jean-Paul Sartre" lecture by
110, 12:30 p.m.
Frosh football. Navy - H - 2:30 p.m.
Faculty club meets: Alumni House, 5 p.m.
Cabaret, East Lounge, 8 p.m.
Tau Beta Pi meeting, 12:30 p.m. T215.
Football:
Tampa — A.
Mon., Oct. 25
a two-day "Visiting Scholars and
Cat's Eye, East Lounge,
8 p.m.
Professorships" program was initiated
with
such schoors as
Princeton Theological Seminary
and
Eleutherian-Mills-Hagley
Foundation (noted for Economic
History). Dr. Kelley feels that
"The Honors Program brings
benefit to student both in and
out
benefits of small seminars and independent study are ob-
some
weight, but
the means of collection for stuare
not at all
dent
opinion
The
satisfactory."
Tues., Oct.
26
Consumer Protection Symposium: Faculty
Academic
Policy Committee is presently discussing new methods of soliciting
student opinion.
Three motions were introduced
Father Driscoll in the name
of the Rank and Tenure Committee.
The motions, all of which passed
by considerable margins, changed
the pre-tenure probationary period to 7 years for all faculty
levels, provided that faculty members will be given credit toward
their probationary period for "up
to three years of full-time academic service" at another school,
and made small changes in the
wording of the policy on tenure,
in keeping with the new policy
established by the first two moby
;;
,•;•,.•/..,.;:.;,•,;
Future iife^tbigs
In the final order of business,
the Senate decided that December 10 and January 28 would be
the preferred dates for any extra
meetings. The reasons for such
possible meetings are the threemonth interval between the Nov.
19 and Feb.
18 meetings, and
expected presentation of the
Budget in early December.
the
^
.1
'I,
Discussions.
Activities
.
WKVU,
Villanova's answer to co-ed fraternities, needs friendly women
to help keep us running efficiently by filing records, and secretarial
work. Excellent fringe benefits.
Dougherty
Hall. All are
welcome to
attend. For information: Call
And Now The
Spirit
Has come To
Of St Louis
Pliiladelphia
free
to
from
war in Indo- China and
American foreign policy
the
overriding influence of
the
The Pentagon Papers
show that the Viet Nam War was
manufactured by an elite group in
Washington on the basis of misrepresentations to the American
people and Congress. The government then prosecuted a major war
to salvage American prestige. Vilthe military.
are
lanovans
The
titie of
invited
to
attend.
the talk is the Truth
about the Big Lie!
Tickets available in Fr. Bradley's office -- Student Activities
-
$3.00.
Peace bq Peace Auction
for
The Committee of Responsibility
which
children,
will
during the afternoon.
People who have things to contribute should contact the Committee of Responsibility at VI 86685 to arrange for delivery.
The "Peace -by -Peace Auction"
will be held at the Germantown
Presbyterian Church, Greene and
looking for auctionable items
for a "Peace -by -Peace Auction"
to be held Saturday, October 30.
is
C.O.R. is planning the auction as
a fundraising event for its work
in treating war-injured Vietnamese children. C.O.R. needs donated items ^ such as furniture,
objets
d'art,
household items,
curios and antiques, books, plants,
recreation equipment, etc. (no
clothing please -- unless it's a
fur coat!) Donated toys will also
be collected for a small auction
Tulpehocken Sts., from 1 to 5p.m.
It
will be one of many events
sponsored by the committee this
year to support its continuing efforts to save the innocent victims
of
war
the
in
Latin America on Display
be held
Indochina.
week in Dougherty Hall you will be able to see
Latin American Culture. The exhibit was loaned to the
Until Sunday of this
an exhibit of
Villanova International Student Association by the Cultural Museum of
the Philadelphia Civic Center.
The exhibit centers about Argentina, Guatemala, Mexico, and Peru,
and all of the artifacts shown are from these countries. They show
the many varying talents of the people of these countries, such as the
diversity in the materials used in their artwork. There are birds
picturalized in feathers and beautiful works in leather. Also there are
articles of clothing from simplistic beauty to ornate designs.
So if you happen to be near Dougherty Hall or want to learn of a culture
foreign to your own stop in at the first floor hallway and glance at the
unmechanized works of other people.
If
Greaser Day slipped by you
last
Friday, this
is
what you missed.
Next year, Dr. Kelley hopes to
do research abroad during his one
semester sabbatical leave- ".
LA
5-8662; ask for Steve Cadorano.
.
then
I'll
resume full-time teach-
ing ... at Villanova
even though
I am still very
much convinced that this area
(Honors) should be academically
where we place our efforts
if one would agree that our primary responsibility as a University IS academic ..."
.
.
.
I'm stepping down
GUITARISTS and SINGERS
Anyone interested in joining the folk groups for the Sunday Liturgies is
very welcome. Please stop in at the Office of Campus Ministry, or come
early before the Mass to the room behind chapel.
-».
j>
.
.
HALLOWEEN DANCE
The Homophile Action League is sponsoring a halloween dance to be
held Friday, October 29 at 8:00 P.M. at St. Mary's Church, 3916
Locust Street. Costumes are optional, but prizes will be given for those
eerily dressed. All are invited. Admission $1.00 for benefit of
Homophile League.
;
^
:
m.B. Cm
(Continued from page 1)
now
gram.
is
;.
\
CAREER FOR SERVICE-MINDED
PERSON INTERESTED IN THE POOR, THE HUNGRY, THE
PEOPLE BURDENED BY LIFE'S PROBLEMS AND ARE
HAVING DIFFICULTY FINDING GOD, THEMSELVES, LOVE,
OR THEIR FELLOW-MAN. EMPLOYER WILL FURNISH
TOOLS BUT APPLICANT MUST BRING A SUPPLY OF
DEDICATION, LAUGHTER, INTELLECT, AND A HEARTFUL
OF HOPE TO BE SHARED WITH A WORLD WHICH HAS
LITTLE OF IT. COMPENSATION LEFT ENTIRELY TO THE
DISCRETION OF YOUR EMPLOYER. APPLY TO:
a highly successful proPhoto by Ralph Tillman
Expectation
MBC cannot function, however,
without the aid of the student populaion at Villanova.
PAY.
STUDENTS!
the various
selves from MBC.
Those students wishing more
information about MBC are invited
to attend an organizational meeting
on Tuesday, October 26, in Room
Bartley Hall, at 12:45 p.m.
,Any student unable to attend the
meeting may contact one of the
Banquet waiters
New
following students:
•
BUSINESS
PLEASURE
INSTRUCTION
Aviation
IfiAJIiir
INSURANCE
TO HY9
YOU ARE OUARANTEEO
wrlt*«n ajjflm the
Special Student
Discounts on:
• Sales
Rentals
• Repairs
•
41 V. UNCMin
|Mf«M ina ktmmt
t-Mli
m
SCHOOL
ir
*
FAA
is
designed especially for you.
•
Monthly repayments
will
be arranged to suit your
particular
hours available.
Are you looking for a tennis partner?
Can you travel to N.W. Phila. or the
vicinity
of
phone Steve
'58
Wayne
Jet.
Sta.?
If
so,
at VI 9-6066.
Willy's
(station
wagon)
Radio, heater, (overdrive),
condition. Call 687-4266.
Jeep.
running
circumstances.
'70
Stop in or 'phone
We'll
be glad to serve you.
.
.
.
I RiiiTER Finance
COMMERCIAL PILOT GROUND
Beginning Soon
(as
soon
as
we have
VW
AM/FM
Bus, excel, cond., carpeting,
newly inspected, $2400
radio,
or best offer. 647-4826. 696-9148. Nl
4-2857.
16 E. Loncaster Ave.
TUTORS WANTED -College students
needed to tutor grades K through 12 in
either math, reading or spelling. Hourly
wages. Daily. Need auto. Call f^U
8-1574 from noon to 3 p.m.
$100
Ardmore
bitwMii I AM-5
Typewriter repairs
-
done reasonably
by fellow student. 277-0735.
TCO
275-N27
LOANS TO
and PRO-
Instructor
signed 15 students) in Villanova Area.
includes books.
ML
nm
all
Inn,
FIRST TIME! Taught by an
FAA Approved Ground
FESSIONAL PILOT.
PRIVATE
1o pass ^he
Our new
STUDENTS SERVICE
•
Joe Rapko: MA 3-9075
BUI Kenney: KI-3-8507
Holiday
9«f o cash loan I
Jim Yudes: EL-6-8941
I
-
4th & Arch Sts.,
Philadelphia. Experience preferred but
not necessary. Apply in person 9—5
Monday thru Friday.
Of €6iir$i yin €an
105,
• Service
JESUS CHRIST
C/0 VOCATION OFFICE, DIOCESE OF CAMDEN
721 COOPER STREET, CAMDEN, N.J. 08101 - (609) 963-5210
classifiads
The chairmen
business departments have submitted the names
of several business students to
MBC, as prospective members.
MBC will also welcome any students who feel that they can be of
benent to and will benefit themof
«v
fALSTAFF BEER
THE SPIRIT OF ST. LOUIS!
"that stricter controls
should be imposed on government
agencies gathering and utilization
of information on U.S. citizens,"
met with little success, defeating
only the University of Southern
Connecticut. The negative team of
Chris Powell and Frank Gassier
from
among students ..."
hall located in
IIFETIME
Photo by John Novotny
The Dorm Counselors invited Fr. McCarthy, and Dean Bevilacqua, to an
open discussion of Resident living at Villahova. Subjects discussed
were: Parietals, Drinking, and the mass exodus from campus due to a
lack of social activities.
Father Joseph Bradley, O.S.A.,
Dr. Fred Carrier, Dr. Larry McGarry and Father Thomas Casey,
O.S.A. are a Villanova faculty
member and speaker in three out committee joining with other local
of five debates.
college faculty committees, parThese results were promising ticularly the Theology Dept. of
for the first debate of a season St. Joseph's College and Sane in
in which ViHanova has invitations
sponsoring a public meeting at
to tournaments from as far away
which Dr. Daniel Ellsberg will
as the University of Texas and the speak. The meeting will be held
University of Chicago. If you are Wednesday October 20th, St. Jointerested in debates, check the
seph's College Field House at
bulletin board in Dougherty Hall
8:00 p.m. Dr. Ellsberg who is
for further information on upcurrently under indictment for
coming activities.
possession of the Pentagon Papers
has risked his freedom in an attempt to free the American people
.
but indirect benefits from
Honors effort (i.e., participation
in Honors courses, sharing of twoday "Visiting Scholars and Professorships") contribute to a general raising of academic quality
JOB OPPORTUNITY
HARD WORK, LOW
fared better, achieving a 3-2 record and defeating Princeton and
Penn. In his first college tournament, Chris Powell was named
Gamma
the Truth
Tells
vious,
CLASSICAL MUSIC SOCIETY
Wednesday, October 20, 1971
Various interpretations of J. S. Bach
All meetings are held at 7:30 p.m. in the faculty dining
.
Ellsberg
the
Honors courses.
In the past Hve years, under
Dr. Kelley, Honors Degrees as
such, were established in the Arts
and Sciences, and the expansion
of Honors courses tripled. Also,
International Folk Mass, Chapel, 6 p.m.
Pentecostal Prayer group meets.
Film: "Personna" Vasey Theatre, 7:15 and 9:30.
Beta
position
individual
'
ion should carry
in
16, tiie
Debate Society competed in a
tournament at the University of
Pennsylvania meeting some of the
best teams in the east in an early
season tournament. The affirmative team of Regina David and
Tom Blazusiak, defending the pro-
program while approximately the same number take
rolled
1*
Sun., Oct. 24
.
teacher ... I must work at it
harder than I'm able to do in this
capacity," explained Dr. Donald
B. Kelley, who resigns as Direc-
"Un-Football" game. Stadium.
members, even
they who are most
closely associated with them. Fr.
DriscoU agreed that student opin-
Hall,
Soccer: Maryland - A.
Cross Country: St. Joe's, Belmont Plateau.
faculty
of
Dougherty
.
tor of the
Thurs., Oct. 21 Junior rings delivery.
Tampa ticket sale closes,
'
(Continued from page 1)
coll said, 57.2% of Villanova's
faculty will have tenure -- an
increase of 21.3% over September 1, 1970.
culture,
50c.
Dr. Busch,
tion
American
through Saturday.
Intramural track meet, 4 p.m.. Stadium.
Soccer: Rutgers — H.
Films: "Cat Ballou" and cartoons, PLH, 6 and 9 p.m.
tion in the
turn the tide in favor of the students who need financial aid the
VISA
On October
been a very enjoyable and
experience
I'm
worthwhile
stepping down because my primary obligation is that of a good
"It's
.
Daniel
Debate Society Opens Season
By Ifary Beth Ifonaghan
Villanova Union.
Page 3
Return
to
Teaching
to
copies to him for possible publica-
tions.
I:
Kelley
THE VILLANOVAN •
M9-I31S
Lost:
473-83M
black onyx & white gold antique
with santlmantal value. Reward —
contact B. Barrett, 687-5479.
ring,
PM
Homecoming Weekend,
lady's
-
.
.
p-^7
THE VILLANOVAN
Page 4 •
Ws
All In Your
VILLANOVAN
The
• October 20, 1971
Mind
unfortunate that some people never look beyond
the obvious. It seems that the older generation finds it
difficult to notice anything except the suggestive. The satire
inherent in "Strawberies, etc." somehow escaped the
President. We do not find such stories "vulgar." What one
person finds offensive may be acceptable to most people. The
VILLANOVAN is a student publication; students enjoyed
the stories and asked for more. They, at least, perceived the
humor and" the point behind the characters' obsessions. We
wonder if Father McCarthy and other administrators did so
as well
or were they preoccupied with what they thought
It is
—
was there?
f
Fleeino Amerika
(Fleeing
Upon leaving "home" one
To
Last Tuesday when
was writing my daily letter home to Mother, i asked her what I should do
about the fact that
I
of
kept finding
I
She said I should complain at>out
it, so here I am.
An occasional lock of hair in
our grub is excusable, but a chronic
occurrence of foreign objects in
our diet is unjustifiable. At lunch
today I noticed an extraneous insect lying drowned in my pear
halves in pear juice. I immediately
took the animal to a friend at a
nearby college who is majoring
in Insect Pathology. He verified
that the bug had been dead for five
to ten hours. This confirmed my
suspicions that such contaminations were due to the unsanitary
conditions under which the food is
prepared.
really hope something will be
I
done to alleviate this horrendous
Every time
string or a bone
find a piece
situation.
I
of
in
my
soup,
are only kidding. But late at night
when the indigestion begins, I often
wonder
.
.
Sincerely,
Pat Rafferty '75
My
Ptioto
we
can't be trusted,
from
dents
other
visitation can.
To
while stuschools with
the extreme, the
Board may think its students are
kept moral by the lack of visitaand other students who have
the right are leadinfi^ 'immoral'
tion,
lives.
weekend I traveled the
narrow and immoral trail to West
Chester State and visited a female
student in her room. I would like to
this
answer
someone
have
question, preferably by someone
on the Board of Trustees: Doing
this at W. Chester is considered
Last
to be staying within the school's
done at our devote
school, I would have been doing
something serious enough to have
myself ejected from the campus.
Why is it okay there, but not here?
If your answer is even close to
the two I have, you better think
entire matter on visitation
the
rights over again, not just for the
sake of the students, but also for
yourselves - and the entire Uniregulations.
If
usually
defined, the lack of.
stated over and over again
Oct. 6, upper left; and p. 5, Oct.
13, upper third) in the last two
many
times, however, the administration
only answers with silence the
majority of the time, with 'dangerous to morals' or 'impractical due
improper dorm
to
Editor:
the
empty sections
(p.
6,
issues of the Villanovan? Surely
the space could have been put
to some use. Some poetry, perhaps
.
.
Jim Wilwol
facilities' the
To decide this
one must go beyond the
boundaries of this campus and look
at the rest of the world.
In the real world beyond our
college campus (which I think the
rest of the time.
issue,
she standing alone
See pages 7 and
8.
Board
aware oO there exists
is
institutions of higher learning that
allow
their
students
visitation
Temple allows them 24
hours a day on weekends. A newcomer is West Chester State College. I must add that this is only
partly right. The male students
rights.
have had visitation rights since
TRUTH
Female students received this privilege just two weeks
ago, that can be exercised from
last
2
year.
p.m.
to
2
a.m.
on
weekends,
while their fellow male students
about
the
BIG LIE
.''K
Wea.^ October 9.0
_ 8 pn
JosepKs CoLlace
-,
ot
^
Field
*3.°°
Housa
ConlribuTion
24 hrs. a day.
With just these two examples,
only two conclusions can be reached, explaining why the board has
refused this to the student body.
First, the ones who run this university consider the students who
attend it too immature to handle
with visitation rights. If so, they
then also consider students attending
Student Activities Office, 2nd Floor Douf^erty Hall
Temple or W. Chester capable,
thus 'more mature.*
which is important
since we are supposed to be a
Secondly,
Catholic
of
Tickets Are Available from Father Joseph Bradley,
•,...,,,.
To
the Editor:
has long been a matter of some
concern to this student that a
species of vandalism has been
progressively perpetrated on the
Villanova campus, unheeded and
unchecked within the last year or
two. It has also occurred to this
student that these abuses have
It
university,
morals.
visitation
With
rights
is the idea
requests for
always being
knocked down, the board and its
associates could be implying that
been of a significantly more serious nature than washroom grafitti,
or any of the drunken neurotic
little pranks of some dorm dwellers (such as toilet paper parties
in the Quad, or even the fire hos^
incident in New Dorm). I refer
here to organized, premeditated,
and authorized mutilation of the
liberation
become sources
for
refusing to sign the loyalty oath.
country 'tis of thee sweet land of
legal
draining off as sludge? (Pretty Irish stewardess.
One must get away to appreciate beauty). Not
that he could respond save hypothetic ally now,
naiveties.
campus grounds.
The most glaring scar left by
this (what we can only call) administrative indifference has been,
of course, the newly constructed
Kennedy building with its socalled, or would-be, park, mall,
»
News
Editors
Feature Editor
Entertainment Editor
Sports Editor
Assistant Sports Editor
Photo Editor
Copy Editor
«..
When many jears younger and
tion.
r
%
>•-
Ronald Bryer
9)
'V
Peter Schmader
Jack Kelly
Mike Lipsky
Moderator
.
GENERAL STAFF
.
Zemo. Bob Perry, Jack Bremer,
Kathy Olsen, Mike Ehling. Ginger Moylan, Chris Rowe, John Novotny,
Ralph Tilmann, Clyde Webster, Bob Fontaine, Steve Kline, Gary Hunt, Rick
GroM, Jim O'Melia. Maureen McGuire, Bob Murphy, Michael Perilstein, Mary
Beth Monahan, Bill Ahearn, Bill Haggarty, Essie Fields, Tony DiGiulian, Sue
Blackman, Bob Schriver, Tom Rosooe, Keith A. Norris, Mike Grimes, Gail
Hartigen, Steve Chatot, Bob Petraglia, Walt Kunda, Mark Nolan, Donna
Capt.
-
V
V
Cappuccio, Maria Boruwitacola
The VILLANOVAN is published weekly during the school year except
Thanksgiving, Christmas and Easter Vacations, also Mid-term and Final Exam
periods by the undergraduate students of Villanova University. Opinions
expressed herein do not necessarily reflect the official views of the University.
Second desa postage paid at Villanova, Penna. Editorial and Business offices
located on the SECOND FLOOR OF DOUGHERTY HALL, Villanova University,
Villanova, Pennsylvania 19085.
m^
1
1
i»
ww
»' »«i
more
thought of eminent altercation over my propensity
to wear red socks, I have since censored all such
notions from my photostatic ganglion and proceeded to pry into the intimate depths of explana-
"guiding lights" determined that it would be to the advantage of few enough to warrant
carving into the relatively narrow
strip of lawn at the far left front
of Tolentine, in order to construct
further parking facilities.
Now another such disfigurement
threatens to mar the front of the
Monastery. Where will all this lead
to? Aside from a perhaps radical
reduction in the ranks of the University grounds crew, this student
feels that these projects, these
artless encroachments, will lead
to a sterility of atmosphere and
a sense offunctionalism which may
significantly diminish such pride,
spirit, morale, and motivation as
there is at Villanova.
• ; • •;
politically
aloof than a devoted scientist, I misconstrued the
meaning of McCarthy's message. Names become
ever so important, especially if one is overtly
biased and easily swayed by prefixes and consonants. Eugene is not Joe. Once trembling at the
metries and insipid foliation, the
site of the decade-old, temporary,
classroom annex has been gnawed
into to extend parking facilities,
and thus further beautify the
campus grounds: an old eyesore
has been replaced by a bland,
characterless plot.
Bcrnie Nunez
Bill Rothstein
Rev. Lawrence Gallen, O.S.A.
complete with nationalistic
one of the most conservative catholic colleges
in the country." "I know what aeon is - George
Jackson put us on too -- but what exactly is
a serv-?) Enough of endless meandering -- the
point of my intellectual idiosyncrasies has always
been a realization of potential. In transition Kinetics of the self and soul are at work. You tell
me no -- I respond yes! One must be positively
pursuing goals, constantly expressing beliefs and
passionately actualizing alternatives. Choice is
much more than a philosophical phrase.
*****
Margaret McCarvill
George Couri
Stephen AnuMilo, Steve Coiameco,
Jack Correia, Jeff Keefe
Kathy Kotas, Daizy Marshall
Jean King
Editor-in-Chwt
Business Manager
Associate Editors
--
-
whatever.
Next to this grand pretense of a
building - which clashes wonderfully with the noble architecture
of Corr Hall - and the new mall,
with its jutting, haphazard geo-
(Continued on page
might
("This is
George Jackson's reverse racism (pride)
viidIdAmovam
is
the responsibilities that go along
by Charlie Waters
nova's
To the
Why
The students'
reasons for wanting them have been
"new hope" and
forms parade past liberated strollers. Lacking
esoteric joy how might I dare look them in the
eye and still refrain from blurting out emancipating paradigms -- Shalom! -- Can you cry
over emaciated baby's body, ribs bulging, life
Finally, in an inspiration of organizational genius, one of Villa
discussion
heard on campus is the
matter ofvisitation rights, or more
the
justice - and it is legal to refuse). There is a
veritable cornucopia of joy emanating from pregnant acts of revolution. And yet 400 erect, sullen
^
QUESTIONING STUDENT
of
most struck by
resentatives
versity.
To the Editor:
The one topic
is
escapades and revolt. (Passport office teeming with
the treachery of 173 "juveniles'and ACLU rep-
hairs and dirt particles in my food
at the Dougherty Hall Cafeteria.
grapefruit juice really is.
Please help me from believing
what these guys say is true, because I pray every night that they
is
bootstraos can pull
bootstraps
null you
vou up
un or hold you
vnu down.)
Hnwn \
transcience of relationships.
After 21 years in the motherland and three of
those years on an important campus, incredibly
intense disgust unfurls and repressed fantasies
the Editor:
begin believing the others at my
table who are giving vivid descriptions as to what the chocolate pudding, stewed tomatoes, and
Why
—
-
Oppression
By Jack Correia
I
Photo by Chartie Waters
On
Notes
Letters
has been censored, Fr. McCarthy in
a letter to the paper's moderator, Fr. Lawrence Gallen,
threatened to cut off funds if stories such as "Apricot
Thighs,*' and "Strawberries for Eileen" (see Sept. 22 and Oct.
6 editions) continued to be published. Father President
objected
to
the
content of the above mentioned,
characterizing it as "vulgar." Specifically, he found the use of
certain words offensive. None of the words used in these
stories were of an obscene nature; we could point to various
professors who use theo^in class.
.'
October 20, 1971 •
.
(Fortunately
my
time here
is short
and Mc-
THE VILLANOVAN •
Page 5
Spiral
Descendins
^
^^
THE
Page 6
VI LLANO VAN • October 20, 1971
October 20, 1971 •
COEDVCA TION A T VILLA NO VA
A Female
Approximately two hundred students were polled
last few weeks ih af}'w tempt to discover their
Viewpoint
over the
feelings
on co-education
at Villanova.
VEiriation within the group.
The great majority of
those polled stated that their
only contact with the opposite sex was on a social level,
e.g. dates, mixers, parties, etc. About half felt that in
these situations their behavior differs with respect to
language, dress, and common courtesy. This tends to
1968 the Board of Trustees decided to have a
dormitory for girls on campus. One of the Board Members
was rumored to have said at the time, '*They*ll bring girls
here over my dead body." To some people, co-education
still is a shocking idea. The notion that men and women
could go to school together and overcome the obstacle of
glandular attraction is doubted in a few select circles.
These people would probably be shocked to know that
what Villanova needs is not less, but more interaction
between men and women. Too many people look on the
In
I
believe in equality of the sexes.
don't behave especially different when
know that the opposite
going to be present.
is
have reached the point of
dehumanization at which no longer care who is around.
I
I
sex
I
I
Social
life at
Villanova
is'all
right
if
you can
get into walking
campus
at night.
I
.;:
wouldn't behave any differently
the Pope himself were in
if
my
classes.
'
It
•
.
'
'.
•
.<
•
doesn't bother
charming
me
to have girls in
my
classes.
I'm just
my
usual
self.
Do we have
reinforce our hypotheses that co-education in most circles
at Villanova is truly a myth It undermines the potential
that an education can offer.
'
The percentage breakdown is as follows: (These
numbers are rounded off to the nearest five per cent.)
1) 50% found soci-}} l^fa to be inadequate. Many
looked to fraternulkjf as their chief means of
recreation. A significant number felt that it was up
If
I
present.
do
3)
60%
Common
when
I
know
courtesy calls to treat
that
girls
girls as girls.
t
less helpless.
Something
4}
happen
a
at
Villanova; the present situation here smacks of aberration.
Tensions exists which are unhealthy, to say the least.
Co-education shouldn't simply mean that men and women
attend the same classes
it should be a total experience.
—
in the
V
''"Tf- "i
tisrt; '':*'''"''^«m^^'ym^^'^'ntr'%
i;:ss*
A
Male Viewpoint
By MIKE
applied here but that girls
that Villanova was co-ed when
were in the extreme minority. The fact that Villanova was co-ed
didn't effect me either way. If one reads the Blue Key Society's
pamphlet on undergraduate life, he gets to believe that there are
McGOWAN
I
Villanova co-ed's image to
dissipate steadily throu^out the years? Why, aside from
dating situations, is there so little intellectual or social
interaction between the sexes?
In answering these questions we must concern
two obvious factors: 1) The male
ourselves with
Villanovan's ego, and 2) the late arrival of girls on
campus. Aside from the fact that there just aren't enough
girls on or around campus, these two factors joined to
create our problem at hand.
Villanova is a "man's world" simply because males
were here first and thus established the social, academic,
and extracurricular standards. Just as is the case in the
outside world, VU males tend to view the female co-eds in
a somewhat inferior light. A vast reputation has been built
up around the unfortunate girls; unfortunate in the sense
that this reputation is of obvious detrimental value. To a
large extent this image was and is a grave misconception.
What
has
caused
the
There have been various attempts on the part of the
overcome this rather serious plight of
co-eds
to
ill-conceived stereotyping. In order to accomplish this
however the co-ed must work against years of prejudice.
Some girls are able to overcome this situation simply by
ignoring it all and taking their intersexual relations in
stride. Others feel that in order to combat the prevalent
ideas of the male faction, they must obey the adage that
states, *'If you can't beat 'em, join 'em!" If this approach
has any effect at all, it usually serves to worsen the
''.
V:f
situation, creating a
more disturbing image. Too many
on campus throw themselves
people, by luck or persistence, have actually
crossed the barrier of social suspicion and when they do,
they never go back. Who needs to play adolescent games
when you can explore the resdms of the human
personality? Careless manipulation of another's emotions
gets to be a boring exercise of little meaning.
But reaching out means acceptance, too. It's seeing a
girl with no make-up, hearing a boy swear when he's
thwarted. The masks must be removed before real progress
is made. We assume the mask to protect ourselves from, the
world's eye, but there comes a time when we either
become our mask or go beyond it. Education should draw
us out from ourselves, if it reinforces the prejudices of the
past it is pointless. Why should we repeat lessons well
memorized? The university can help us to know each other
by providing students with programs to facilitate mutual
contact. Many schools such as Penn, Cornell, the State
University of New York, and even the despised St.
Joseph's College, have dormitories or apartments which
feature co-ed living. No such plan exists at Villanova, on
the contrary everything seems to be done to minimize
contact between the sexes. Day-to-day contact is the best
way to break down the barbed wiring of defense
like this has to
women
social situations.
50% felt that they behaved differently when
company of girls (or boys).
-A
are going to be
the way to start things
occasionally) your sexual
to
little
a
Maybe
relinquish (at least
prejudices. Men could be a little less chauvinistic,
is
it's
said that their relations with the opposite sex
were confined to
Things on campus are usually
you want something to do you really have to
act differently
not at alien species;
life.
opposite sex with one-dimensional vision — Girls are for
the dating not talking to — Girls rate an outing with a boy
by how much money he spends. And nobody ever talks
with each other, only at each other.
So far co-education at Villanova has often meant that
you don't have to go to Cabrini or Rosemont to get a date.
But it should mean morenf you confine your experience
with the other sex to social situations you may never know
the person behind the gender. Too many Villanovans are
products
of single-sex
prep schools. While these
institutions^ may be effective in communicating knowledge
they are typically lacking in means of socialization. It is
important for the mature adult to understand the
psychology of the other sex, to comprehend the
differences, to realize the basic similarity. Men and women
have to talk, to grow with each other, to help each other
towards maturity. Why don't you see groups of girls and
boys studying together? They're in the same classes now.
But if you walk over to the library you see the familiar
pattern of a table of girls here, two tables of boys there,
with a few couples scattered about. As long as a mental
isolation is preserved you might as well be still going to
prep school. The longer this isolation continues the more
difficult it is to overcome. Perhaps this is why so many
students feel awkward with each other. Can you try to be
a friend to a girl without being suspected of ulterior
(sexual) motives? Is it possible to say hello to a boy first
without being considered "too forward?" Almost everyone
here has encountered some variant of the above situations.
Sadly enough, too many people are put off when their first
effort goes awry, and never initiate another one.
HUNT. When you find something it is usually too far to walk, or it
doesn't pay to take public transportation. Without a car you are
stranded (socially speaking) on the weekends.
Yes,
is
to individual initiative.
2) 73% saw a need for improvement in intellectual
a social life at Villanova?
dead on weekends.
mechanisms. The opposite sex
• Page 7
MYTH?
IT
IS
THE VILLANOVAN
Some
Females comprise
19% of the undergraduate
enrollment of Villanova, yet they receive 28% of the
financial aid awarded
by Villanova amounting to
$177,046. At least you can't accuse Mr. Femia and the
Office of Financial A ffa>rs of rnfle chauvinism!
Interviews and Research Conducted
By
MIKE GRIMES, SUE SCHARFF, MIKE McGOWAN,
MARGARET McCARVILL, JEAN KING
Photos By
JOHN NOVOTNY
and^C|lARLIE
-^ »>-*
-^>
"
-
WATERS
at
guys resulting
girls
in the usual
diagnosis of possible insanity or nymphomania. Evidently
the harm is easily seen in this particular situation especially
if the girl is neither insane nor a nymphomaniac.
Obviously the answers to our basic questions do not
lie in either ignorance, (a bias will not be dissolved by an
individual's ignorance of the bias), or flirtation. E*resently
there doesn't seem to be any answer in sight. Perhaps, with
the eventual equal distribution of males and females on
campus, the image will assume a more dignified
atmosphere. However, we are concerned with the
immediate future and therefore we must attempt to make
certain proposals in hopes of curing the ailment. I think
the answer lies with the female faction. They are the ones
who originally determined their present image and, thus
they must work to alter it. I think the first and most
important proposition the Villanova girl must face is that
she is neither the only girl in the world nor the last.
with
the
competition
great
is
there
Obviously
overabundance of girl schools in the area, but I feel that if
she were to individually strive to attain a decent image,
eventually the mass as a whole will be influenced and
following suit, the reputation would definitely be affected.
Competition will always be present and if handled right it
could lead to some extremely nice improvements.
knew
I
thousands of
girls right at
Having guys
m my
our back door.
school, and I
feel comfortable here when
all-girls
my
my
behavior. I went to an
could dress really sloppily there. But I don't
does affect
classes
I
look like a slob!
confined to either dating or mixers.
What else is there to do when you go to a, Puritan, excuse me, a
Catholic school?
All of
social relations are
don't care to specify what the
opposite sex encompass.
relations
I
between
me and
the
my
decision to come
here. I have since learned that the fact that a school is co-ed does not
have any bearing on the degree of "improvement" of the school.
The
.'-
fact that Villanova
was co-ed Influenced
Villanova 's being coed did influence my decision. didn't want to go
all-girl college —
could have gone to Immaculata if wanted
I
:
to an
I
I
•
that.
behave differently when
I
perhaps because
feel that
in
the
company
am
of the opposite sex
expected to behave that way. am
way sit, etc. There are social
expectations which are fulfilled just because they exist. These norms
often do not have any real basis by which to justify themselves.
I
more
careful about
my
I
language, the
I
I
PaseS •
THE VILLANOVAN •
October 20, 1971 •
October 20, 1971
Music 'Round Midnight
\A/H AT'S OIM
& \A/HERE
By
Not Overjoyed
To Meet
Jesus, I'm
il
;
You Face To Face
By
JOSHUA ELLIS
around their microphones which
are disgiiised as ropes for no
apparent reason. With the exception of Yvonne Elliman as the
New Testalnient's Sweet Charity,
Mary Magdalene, and Jeff Fenholt
as Jesus, the cast could be heard
a fantastic idea, but it might
work! How about an all-star revival of 1971 's Broadway musical
It's
comedy blockbuster, Jesus Christ
Superstar? I'm well aware that the
Tom O'Horgan production which
was elaborately dumped onto the
stage of the Mark Hellinger Theatre last week may run five years
if
clearly.
Fortunately,
the
producers
would be hard pressed with find-
producer Robert Stigwood has
soon be 'a place
in Philadelphia to hear music as
it should be heard -- in a small,
acoustically sound hall -- where
the point of a concert can be
musical art.
The Walnut Street Theatre, at
9th and Walnut, is beginning a
series of "Music 'Round Midnight" concerts on October 22
and 23. The aim of the concert
series is to present "the finest
of contemporary music to an older, more sophisticated audience
at a very special tim^," in the
words ofLarryMagid, whose Electric Factory Concerts has been
contracted by Walnut Street to
book the shows.
These concerts are part of the
over-all program of Walnut Street.
The 168-year old theatre has just
been refurbished at a cost of
$2,000,000. The drive behind this
is to provide a cultural center
Philadelphia -Walnut Street
for
Theatre aims to be the performing
arts center of the city. There
will be ballet, theatre, chamber
and
dance
modern
music,
symphonic music as well as popular music.
According to Randy Schwartz,
director of Walnut Street, "Music
'Round Midnight" developed partly
out of necessity. Because of week-
There
EnTERTnmmEiiT nsuis
JOHN ANTHONY
drama guild
chamber recitals,
long
productions,
ballets,
etc.,
there was no time left for the
concerts. The only solution was
to hold them late at night. The
midnight concept presented itself
as a kind of dramatic effect, away
of stressing the uniqueness of the
undertaking.
At a recent press conference,
Magid said that one motive for
the concert series is to create
again some night life in Philadelphia foryoungpeople who "don't
want to go home to bed at 11:30."
(Ben
Judas
Vereen)
and
Jesus
(Jeff
Fenholt)
in
Broadway's
"Superstar."
'•
'
•
''
/'
•'
•. .
.'•,'
.
V"^,'.
".
f.
hope that the
word of mouth is as foul as most
of reviews were, and that the
D.A.R. cancels its theatre party
for March, 1974, which, incidenthis way. Let's just
ally,
is
the first available Satur-
day matinee. Now about this allrevival^ which must be
star
directed by Jerome Robbins or
Harold Prince and Michael Bennett. These three men are keenly
aware
that a stylish musical need
not be elaborate or overstated to
make
a point. If there is a central
metaphor on which the entire production is based (Chagall's paintings in Robbins' Fiddler on the
Roof, for example), everything else
falls into its proper place. Superstar's
director O'Horgan has
stressed the universality of the
material with the same tribal unity
that makes Hair, neither hurts
nor helps Lenny, and virtually
destroys Jesus of Nazareth.
Folies Tableau
O'Horgan has made every effort
to theatricalize his product, constantly reminding us that what is
on display at the Hellinger is
definitely not a concert version of
the Tim Rice/ Andrew Lloyd Webber rock opera. The all over effect
is a tableau of the final seven
days of Jesus as performed by
the chorus of the Folies Bergere.
At Radio City Music Hall they
would call it blasphemous, but on
Broadway it passes as art. There
is a straight forward, eloquent
love that is expressed in the Decca
At the Hellinger the
muffled because of a
is
system that has the or-
recording.
music
sound
chestra pit entirely covered save,
a few man holes for the conductor and air. The cast schlepps
He feels that 11:00 people in the
city before and after the shows
may prompt
club, restaurant, and
to stay open for the
performers as bland as
Miss Elliman and Fenholt. You
see, Jesus and Mary Magdalene
were just two swell kids who got
screwed by some two-faced lepers,
some Roman soldiers, and as-
cafe owners
new audience.
sorted others. Fenholt is totally
without the slightest bit of dignity
or charisma. Now for my revival,
1 would insist on Barbra Streisand,
for Mary because 1 know she could
sing "I Don't Know How to Love
Him" like she meant it. And after
The Owl and the Pussycat, we
know she's one helluva hooker.
series is definitely aimed at older
audience. No one under 17 will
be admitted (ostensibly because
of Phila. curfew laws). The promoters are interested in a clientele
ing other
Drag King
Now, O'Horgan has made King
Herod into a drag queen, with six
platform heels, and beehive
turban. In the garb Paul Ainsley
could barely move. There were
these two little chorines doing the
Charleston around him, to simulate
action. But, 1 want dear Pearl
Bailey for the role. Just picture
Pearlie Mae swinging her arms
in wild abandon, singing, "Prove
to me that you're no fool, Walk
across my swimming pool," then
looking up, pausing and saying,
ad lib, "Honey, if you walk across
inch
my
swimiifiin'
pool,
I'll
believe
just about any thin' you .say!"
After the intensified, six months
of chorus auditions that nearly
every actor in the United States
attended, (I personally know 512
people who had third call backs),
I expected a well disciplined group
but, let me tell you, there's a
severe need to have Ethel Merman up there. First, you could
hear what she was singing, and she
has a definite stage presence. One
verse of "Jesus Christ, Superstar" and you'd have a theatre full
(Continued on page 9)
However, the real motive behind the concert series is musicall types, from Livingston Taylor to Yes to Roland Kirk. The
who are
one artist's music and
will
and do
what he wants. The shows run
from 12 midnight to about 2:30
a.m. There are six parking lots
adjacent to the theatre, and at
that time of night parking should
be no problem. Tickets are $5.00
will be able to stretch out
each, all seats, first come first
served.
The acts lined up so far are:
Capt. Beefheart and His Magic
Band, Oct. 22-23; Alice Coltrane,
Oct. 29-30;
'
come
surround
concerts. The concerts are an attempt to reach the "forgotten audience" -people who no longer attend
concerts regularly either because
of the quality of the music or of
the place in which it is presented.
Neither element will be compromised at Walnut Street. Magid is
booking onl^ quality acts from
any field. There is alot of good
jazz (Roland Kirk, Sun Ra), and
rock (Youngbloods, Move). The
problem, according to Magid, with
booking some rock acts is that
they want more money than Walnut
Street can give them, or they just
prefer the big halls. The impression he gave is that he will reach
as far as possible for good acts
and the rest is up to the bands.
Thad Jones -Mel Lewis
Big Band, Nov. 5; Seals and Crofts,
Nov. 20-21; David Steinberg, Dec.
3-4; Livingston Taylor, Dec. 1011; Brewer & Shipley, Dec. 17.
Acts which are on the agenda
but without definite dates include
Move, Sun Ra, Chase, Roland Kirk,
Yes, Youngbloods, Archie Shepp,
Herbie Mann, and Joy of Cooking.
successful, could
mean a lot of new things for Phila.,
musically. Magid said that with a
thousand people a night they will
break a little over even, and that's
all it will take to keep the program going beyond its one -year
try-out period. If you want to hear
This series,
if
more good music
patronize
Walnut.
By JIM
They
in PhUadelphia,
these concerts at the
^
Jesus
(Continued from page 8)
of converts. Barry Dennen
professional
dition.
Dingo
began
it
all
brilliantly
with a spectacular version of the
Leon RusseU-Duck Dunn- Don Nix
composition, "Palace of the King,"
which still failed to match Freddie
King's rendition. After being introduced by the King of the Progressive Top 40 World, Long John
Wade, the Haverford-t>ased band
proceeded straight downhUL Their
attempts at reproducing Chuck
Berry and Little Richard were
awful.
a too-lengthy intermission, the 2300 faithful suckers were
treated to Delaney and Bonnie's
first appearance in the Philadelphia area in over 97 days. ^
After
First the good points: I don't
who the sax player was,
but he was quite decent.
know
Now
we
bad points: where do
the
start?
1
&
Bombie
GREENFIELD
and Bonnie at the Fieldhouse on
Saturday night. They might as
well have tried to bring back zoot
suits.
Delaney and Bonnie have a lot
of famous friends, but apparently
none of them cared enough to show
up Saturday. It was even rumored
that Duane AUman would show
his sallow face, but that was merely
a pipe dream.
As an act, Delaney and Bonnie
reached their peak about a year
and a half ago. Eric Clapton was
by saying the arrangements were
rotten and the general sound was
a lot like that produced by a
demolition crew, but it doesn't
end there.
Delaney Bramlett used to be
catch up in
the second half fell one goal short.
For ViUanova Bob Befiglio scored
both goals and Gerry Fay gained
an assist on half of these goals.
a
picking his guitar for them then,
and that March they successfullv
CHERRY
crity.
Bonnie Bramlett has a nice body,
face of solid stone. When
she tries to be seductive, she only
but a
to
retch.
Her
when she is as
loaded as she was for this one,
more closely resembles the waUespecially
ings of an enraged ostrich than
those of a rock-'n-roll star.
guess that about ends it, except that I didn't even stay for
the end. After D & B completed
their hopelessly abortive version
of the vintage -Clapton "I'mComin
I
Home,"
HILL
I
>*•
second period. Karl Rostworowski
took a cross from the left side
and headed the ball into the goal
past the surprised Millersville
goalie. While Greg Lindsay was
in the goal for V.U., he did a fine
job and received a big hand from
the bench when Chris Furlong replaced him.
Villanova came out of half time
•
did just that.
ARENA
a ball of fire. Dan Sampson
quickly got things going for V.U.
with a hard shot just inside the
like
left post. In
Saturday, Oct. 23,
I
ed a real honey by the goalie on
>\
Fay had lots of
bad luck last week without scoring any goals. The one he scored
on Saturday must have felt real
the
8:30 p.m.
TICKETS <4.50
Free bus Service To
High-Speed
And From
•jf*4
As
far as the facility itself goes.
Randy Schwartz said the sound
system has "no comparison anywhere." The 1100 seat theatre
has an intimacy about it that was
repeatedly stressed. The farthest
seat from the stage is 87 ft. away
and the sound is no different from
a front row seat.
The structure of
the series is
as follows: Only one act is booked
per concert; there are two onehour shows with a short intermission. This means you can get into
*
•
FOR INFORMATION CALl 609-795.3900
TICKETS
AVAIUBIE AT
right
V.U. In the penalty area. The fate
of the game hung on the resulting
penalty kick awarded to Millersville. It was up to Chris Furlong
to save the game for V.U. Furlong
smothered a low kick and victory
came
CHERRY HILl ARENA,
All TICKHRON OUTIBTS,
WANAMAKERS DOMNTOWN,
ANt OTHER IBAMNO TICKR AOENCIBS.
..«
side.
good, because it proved to be the
deciding goal. * Later on in the
third period Millersville got one
goal back off an indirect kick.
In the fourth period, Villanova
hung on by the skin of its teeth.
With 20 seconds remaining in the
game a hand baU was called against
& «5.50
Lir)e
sure jubilation, Samp-
son ran into the goal for the ball
and carried it out to the center
circle. Sampson had such a good
day against Millersville that at
one point he dribbled around two
MillersvHle backs for his shot
Following
that just went wide.
Sampson's goal, Gerry Fay kick-
LEON RUSSEL
at last to Villanova.
With its first victory in hand,
the soccer team is ready to move in
on Rutgers this Wednesday. Watch
the 'Cats put their best foot forward against their New Jersey
rival.
Next week, just in time for Halloween, I'll have an interview with
an honest- to-goodness Witch! This
is no put-on! In weeks to come,
this column will contain interviews
with a famous screenplay writer,
a movie star, and I'm currently
working on obtaining interviews
with a very famous ex -worldwide boxing champion, as well as
a famous long-haired high-pitched
male
singer
with
the initials
"T.T." Expect the unexpected, and
you shall not be disappointed! I
may even decide to let some of
you go on a television show that
I may be producing. So keep reading.
This week, the contest winners
get their stuff printed. However,
Rit Marafiote, requested that his
winning entry, titled "Screwed
Again", not be printed. So it won't
be. The other winner is Marietta
Nuzzi for her short story "The
Honeymoon." Before reading that,
I have a few things
to say. My
sincere thanks go to Villanova 's
Theatre Department for their help
and cooperation. They donated two
season passes for all of the plays
presented by them. Each pass admits two. So again, thank you.
THE HONEYMOON
to
In the first period, Millersville
took a 1-0 lead. Villanova looked
like it just could not get started.
However, things changed in the
presents in concerf
-
effort
Saturday's varsity contest had
to be a must game for the 'Cats
booters. In their first five games
at
they had looked very good
not
find
the
could
times, but
A defeat at
winning formula.
the hands of Millersville would
probably completely demoralize
the team.
to
i
valiant
Must Game
improved. Now he is fast
approaching the level of medio-
voice,
but
Page 9
TLA
By FRED TRIETSCH
a
(Continued from page 11)
sity soccer club journeyed to Ursinus and came home with a disappointing 3-2 loss. The 'Cats
were behind 3-1 at half time and
of critics because he didn't want
to insult them. On Saturday night
he played lead, and he has def-
makes you want
Pilate,
is
Booters
could content myself
initely
tried to resurrect Delaney
Pontius
Keaton At The
Perilstem Presents
Ruth Gordon would have been funnier. If its camp you want, and
that's apparently what O'Horgan
was after, why not outdo Nanette?
Dali-Surrealism
A word about Robin Wagner's
set. There is no attempt to observe sight lines. If you don't
sit on the first couple rows of
the orchestra in the center section, you won't see the show at all.
The effect is Dali- surrealism, but
its impractical for this show at
this theatre. Randy Barcelo's costumes are a liability threat to
every cast member. As Katherine
Hepburn said in Coco, "You managed to walk without injuring any
innocent bystanders." And that's
aU.
A brief question, who should
play Jesus of Nazareth in my allstar revival. Let me hear from
you, and then I'll be able to tell
you personally why you and your
loved ones should avoid Jesus
Christ Superstar at all costs.
afraid to play his guitar in front
Delaiiey
into music, not the social
trivia that have
the artist
invaded the now -defunct Electric
Factory and played on a bill that
also included Mr. B.B. King. After D & B's set, B.B. came out
and jammed with Clapton, driving
the crowd into a state of nearfrenzy. On Saturday night, D & B
teamed to drive the crowd into
a somewhat more moribund con-
THE VILLANOVAN •
By Marietta Nuzzi
And so
it's
Tuesday afternoon
and approximately 1:25 p.m. You
are walking to your 1:30, strutting like a dude because today maybe you know you look good. That
kid - there he is - yeah, he used
to be in your physics class. Well
he's freaky but you don't care
anymore, not since the summer.
Catching his wave, you wonder
what his line will be when you
reach him.
"Hey girlie, do you like this
shirt?"
"Yes," you lie. It's purple and
lined. And you detest purple-lined
shirts. Besides that, freaks in pur-
ple-lined shirts
make strange bed-
fellows.
"I'll sell it to
you for a nickel."
Nickel? Nickel, now where have you
heard that word before? You protest.
"That's okay
...
they're wear-
ing them bigger these days."
Feeling inadequately stupid, you
grope for something witty to say.
"Well, okay, I'll let you marry
me, if you want."
So the freak falls to his knees
and pleads not to marry and to
marry you all in the same breath.
When you've finally majde it clear
ceremony was not
exactly what you were anticipating
at 1:30 p.m. on a Tuesday afternoon, he scoops you up in his arms
and struggles forward with the
that the nuptial
words:
"To
the chapel."
As fear grips your heart and you,
his neck he approaches the door
to Corr Hall Chapel and demands
of the innocent bystander, "Open
up." You plead with your eyes but
the state of shock must have some
detrimental effect on your persuasive powers. The door is opened
and even the friend who had been
accompanying you has now defected
to the purple- shirted freak's side,
declaring herself a witness to the
ceremony.
Slowly up the aisle he makes his
ascent, while you wish you had delayed your dieting for a few more
weeks so as to give him a more
difficult time. As the altar looms
ahead, his eyes divert left. Could
it be? Is it a miracle? But yes,
it is someone steeped in prayer.
Your heart
is beating again as
he rushes back out the door, down
the steps and out onto the black
gravel path. He puts you down;
and while laughing hysterically you
wave and run off to what -is- nowbecoming your 1:45.
Later
Today you visited a friend in
the hospital and as you passed
room 329, you recognized a familiar aura about the scene. Pausing at the doorway, your eyes
fell
upon your purple- shirted,
freaky almost-husband recovering
from a what?
"A hernia operation," he stam-
mered
you
with
laughed
much
difficulty.
softly
And
to yourself,
while taking a seat beside the bed.
Maybe you could help him enjoy
is^nrsiES
his
almost-honeymoon anyway.
(Continued from page 4)
To
the Editor:
paragraph of the editorial of the October 6 issue of
the Villanovan is insulting and
clumsy in its use of analogy. The
second paragraph contains at least
six errors of fact and the relationship to any type of journal-
The
first
standards is not apparent.
The lay counselors (there are
graduate students as well as law
students acting as counselors) have
istic
complicated Student Court procedure be used. Also if the editorial writer had made any effort he would have found that
the student does not loose the total
semester room and board but an
amount thereof proportional to the
amount of time he has used his
room and eaten in the resident dining hall.
short the editorial is uninformed, grossly unfair to the counnever been given a directive to selors and a poor example of
"actively seek out students" and journalism.
James F. Duffy, Ph.D.
in fact there is written directive
to the contrary. Even a casual con- Vice President for Student Affairs
versation with the Counselor Coordinator (not "Head Counselor")
would indicate that there is no
attempt other than to enforce any
university regulation in a reasonable manner. No counselor had or
used a flashlight on the Friday
night alluded to in the editorial.
Students have not been told that
they must "leave campus within
one week" as an absolute deadline and in fact have been given
longer time in which to And different
lodgings.
If
the
editorial
writer (who failed to sign his (her)
name) would have done some inhe(she) would have
vestigation,
found that the Student Court Charter^ the practices of the past and
the facts of the cases under discussion do not suggest that the
In
(Ed.
Note — There are so many things
in this letter to
take issue with, that
it's
know where
to begin. First
of all, it is not easy to get people to
change attitudes which have t)een
ingrained for many years; it is not
insulting to state this fact. Unless there
is a hidden meaning in the phrase "the
difficult to
leopard changing its spots" this first
allegation has no basis in fact. We
merely reported facts as students were
experiencing them. Students were told
that they were given a week to get out.
Students gave us names of counselors
who were prowling outside of Simpson
We investigated the facts
Hall.
thoroughly. The Dean of Men managed
to t}e out the preceeding week. And it
is known that an official decision as to
how the cases were to t>e handled
(whether or not they would go to
Student Court, what was going to
happen to the students' room and
t)oard-)was not made until after the
VILLANOVAN went to press.)
The Theatre of
the Living Arts
currently showing outstanding
films of the past, and is now
half-way into a Buster Keaton
is
Festival.
The shows are composed
of several shorts and one feature
movie.
Buster Keaton produced movies
in the same era as Charlie Chaplin and their styles are similar
in some respects, but by no means
are they the same. Both rely
on sight gags, since they were
operating with silent movies and
only the barest of word cards
flashed on the screen. If anything,
Keaton may be a little more subtl0
or subdued than Chaplin; perhaps
he is more low key in his humor.
Keaton, as Chaplin, produced
and directed his films, although
he was not always the principal
character in them. The short Good
Night Nurse actually stars Fatty
Arbuckle as a too-friendly type
who is always bringing home bums
to dinner and partying with them.
This behavior leads to his being
and the
put into a sanitarium
film chronicles his attempts to
escape, focusing on a dream sequence of actual escape. Here,
Keaton appears in a small role as
a doctor at the hospital.
The second short on the bill
was The Paleface, which deals
with oil -hungry businessmen trying to push Indians off their rich
lands. Keaton strays into the camp
and, via an asbestos suit, survives their attempt to burn him
at the stake, becoming Little Chief
Paleface. He then champions the
Indian cause to the oilmen and
stages perhaps the first take-over
of an administration building by
the Indians. The antics here include mainly two chase scenes;
before the incompleted
the
burning at the stake and the other
first
later on, when Keaton is mistaken
for one of the oilmen and pursued with arrows and tomahawks
flying. The stunts in this film
were especially good, since the
Western setting lent itself to leaps
and crossing of chasms.
The final movie, the feature,
was Seven Chances. This was a
very low-key performance, with
less slapstick than the previous
shorts. Keaton played a nearbankrupt broker who could inherit
seven million dollars if he married
by 7 PM on his twenty -seventh
off cliffs
birthday, which, of course, turned
out to be "today". He flubs his
proposal to his true love and she
rejects him. It was a time when
things were done more formally
than today and blunders of misunderstanding were less easy to
be
rectified.
Keaton, however,
knows seven eligible women, thus
his "seven chances. "His business
partner persuades him to propose.
Here, the comedy was very subtle,
but also clever and cute. I think
this is Keaton at his best. Eventually, the partner puts an ad in
paper, drawing droves of
the
women anxious to be married and
have access to the seven million
dollars. The chase scene is quite
extended and very funny throughout, as Keaton attempts to make
back to his love's house by
it
o'clock after a message
from her gives him new hope.
He is pursued by hordes of husband-hunters through streets and
An absolutely brilliant
fields.
scene involves Keaton and numerous boulders rolling down a long
hill. It is a great, almost surrealistic scene, and caps off the
movie as Keaton arrives at his
seven
—
bride's house on time. They live
happily ever after, naturally, and
the whole tone of the movie harks
back to a more romantic time.
It's
actually a very poignant story
of love
from
in
a time very different
today.
Buster Keaton has a remarkable
way with movies and deserves the
accolades he has received. The
Keaton Festival continues until
October 25, so there is plenty of
time to take in one of the shows.
He'll make you laugh, and touch
your heart, too.
IN VIEW OF THE
SOFT JOB MAJIICET...
PLACEMENT
REGISTRATION
roR SENIORS &
CONCLUDING
GRAD STUDENTS
E XTENDED
T^
OCTOBER 22nd
The Placement Office
Sheehan Hall
Page 10 •
THE VILLANOVAN •
Y Wanna Dance
By KEITH
ALEXANDER NORRIS
Theatre Department has
The
grown a great deal in the last two
years, and this growth has brought
a new life to the Villanova community. This year is no exception:
sparkling source of new life
a
can be found in Miss Car la Murgia. Twice a week Carla teaches
October 20, 1971
October 20, 197) •
on Friday afternoons. This section is open primarily to Theatre
people, but, if you are genuinely
interested, I'm sure Carla will
you "shuffle shuffle, kick,
let
fessor of English at Westchester
State College, whose book A LIFETIM OF HAPPINESS was published last year. Aimed at increasing
brush, tap" right along. It's great
fun, and you'll learn something
new. Give it a go.
who are
'
,<
..
>
V
?
,
'
'
;:
graduate, takes her prize "prima
donnas" through all the motions,
stretching and developing all the
muscles vital to the art of dance.
Believe me, it's hard work, but
Carla makes two hours of stress
and strain fly by with a wink, a
smile, and, if necessary, a spoonful of sugar. She's good people.
Carla 's also a pro. She's been
dancing since she was three years
old and is still taking ballet lessons. Her preferences, however,
are Modern and Jazz Dancing. She
can do anything.
Along with her Modern Dance and
classes on Tuesday and
Thursday, she teaches tap dancing
Ballet
SUNDAY, OCTOBER 24
Modern
writing
their territory for only eight plays,
football
Villanova 's Freshman
Modern poetry
has been experiencing a renaissance around
the country in the past decade,
but Philadelphians have had little
chance to get involved until this
Fall, when a full-scale Poetry
Project emerged from the YM/YWHA Arts Council.
Based on the famous Poetry
Project
at St.
Marks Church-
Schooner,
"little
in
addition
I
in
in-the-Bowery in E^st Greenwich Village, the Arts Council's
new brainchild will include a workshop for the serious poet and regular readings by young poets of
emerging reputation
and older
poets with established names.
The workshop will be led by
Parker, associate proSteven
the
starting
October
19.
of the game.
NEW YORK
POST: Ingmar Bergman has
•'.
9:30
NOVEMBER
Haunting,
PM
.
3-6
down
Anton C hekh ov's
17-20
George Schehades
VASCO
.
FRI.
at
Genesis! was
roots in La Mama, so it is with
a special excitement that we face
our
^
the
MID-NOVEMBER
y
first
:•
::...
..
:
J^^y
VILLANOVA THEATRE COMPANY
DIRECTED BY ROBERT HEDLEY
"Brand,'* originally scheduled for mid-October, will be post
poned
New York
until
November because of
•
the La
Mama
«*
engagement.
Mama
527.9783
NOW
••
AWARDED
in the
from Car Wash)
FOR SHORTEST
99
Large selection
•
Special order service
day.
junior varsity
Hatty's pass protection
when
apart
and he was hit hard by three Blue
and Gold defenders and lost the
fell
Dave Teter recovered for
the Blue Hens on the 'Nova 21.
Delaware displayed a multi-forball.
mation and man -in -motion offense
which seemed tothrowoff the 'Cats
defense. The Blue and Gold dominated play the entire period and
the ball left Villanova territory
only because of punts by Bob Saladino. Coach Kernis felt thai his
team's shaky start could have been
to
were perhaps
the
a
fact
"We
that
bit jittery
out
there but after having to stop them
two or three times deep in our
own end we
settled
down."
Cats March
Settle
down they
did, for in the
By MIKE LIPSKY
Despite the lopsided score this
week there were several individual performances deserving
note, but only one player of the
week. Departing a little therefore from standard form I'd like
mention two people in particular before the player of the week.
to
John Babinecz kept up his brilliant defensive performances Friday
night.
His name popped
up repeatedly on most of the tackles '.officially he had 17 hits, despite
the fact of having two broken
knuckles.
Bob
Schaeffer also deserves
mention as ' he averaged over 44
yards a punt. He only had one
bad punt in all and eight were
over fifty yards; a very outstanding performance.
But even above there shone the
antics of cornerback Frank Polito.
This is the second time Polito
has been player of the week and
he should see a lot more before
Sophomore Frank Polito
his college career is over. The
end yet each time Polito upended
In the third quarter Cougar Qb
Pittsburgh Catholic product added
Odoms
with a loco tackle and he
two more interceptions to his team Peel threw an aerial in Polito's
leading total of six, also return- direction and for the second time weighs only about 170.
ing them for 111 yards. The flrst he intercepted this time returnWith
6 interceptions Polito
ing
it
yards
36
with
a
fine
disseemed
sure
to break VU's seacame in the second haflf as D.C.
play
of
moves.
As
I
said once son record of 8 interceptions held
Nobles of Houston tried to hit a
receiver in the right corner near
the endzone. Polito stepped in front
and snagged the ball as he tore
off downfield with several Cougars in pursuit but not able to catch
him until he had gained 75 yards.
before Polito seems
improve by Joe McNicholas (1952), and the
with each game and that doesn't interception return yardage
of 142
just include pass coverage. Polito held by Joe Greco
1966; Polito
to
one returned the 2 on Friday for 111
several one on
with Riley yards. All of this and Polito is
tackling
situations
Odoms, Houston's 236 pound tight only a sophomore.
came
into
final
con took an Al Brown punt and
ran it out to the Villanova 47.
After Dennis Troggio was thrown
for a five yard loss. Bill Margetich busted through the line and
picked up ten yards. Ray Querela
followed with an eight yard pickup which was good for a first
down on the Delaware 43 and Troggio then broke loose for 17 yards
and a first down on the 26. Two
plays later, Hatty found Margetich
alone and hit him with a 14 yard
pass and a first down on the 14
as the first quarter ended. A
four yard pickup and an incomplete pass later, Hatty rolled out
to the left and hit Margetich in the
left corner at the five and he
stepped over the line for the TD.
Saladino's conversion was good
and with nearly all of the second
quarter left to play, the scoring
was done for the day.
however, the j.v. Wildcats received a good break. A
Northeast Christian foul gave V.U.
half ended,
•
Quantity, Quality, Courtesy
STOP IN FOR BROWZING, BUYING, OR BOOK-TALK, ON
OPENING DAY: SAT., OCT. 23 (9 A.M. to 9 P.M.)
a direct kick from 30 yards out.
John Bevilacqua skyed the direct
kick over the goalie's head and
I
-4
under
'Cats
the
a
crossbar
to give
the
1-0 lead at halftime.
Open
The second
Its
AtUck
half
its
in
Wavy, Plum, Burgundy,
Gre^n and Black.
\/eJ^e:t
C
Jacke+s by
South Sea Bubbfe.
attack. Left wing
saw Villanova
Jim
inside Dave Courtright with a perfect pass. Dave
Courtright took advantage of the
situation and beat the goalie for
another score. Rubbing it in even
hit
more, Dave Courtright kicked another goal just before the end of
the
game. Freshman, Dave Court-
right,
has
booted
in
five
goals
for the junior varsity this season.
However, Dave Courtright
tunities to score. Just before the
LA 5-9820
•
same
opened up
Saturday's doubleheader with a 3-0
win over Northeast Christian. In
the early going of the j.v. game,
both sides squandered good oppor-
The
LANCASTER AVENUE
BRYN MAWR
(across
victories
V.U. soccer teams won their games
A PAPERBACK BOOKSHOP
WITH "HOT PANTS" -25^
off but quickly lost the ball
open up
Harkins
PERRY
the soccer
of
of socinception
season. Since the
cer as a varsity sport, Saturday
marked the first time that both
932 W.
fiik
utes to play, marching from their
16 to the Villanova 29. However, the Wildcats' defense tough-
own
first
EXCEPT GIRU
a
to
Playing on their home field for
the first time this season, Villanova's junior varsity and varsity booting squads picked up their
PRICE $1.25
PRIZES
down decided
fourth
By BOB
.near you
.
.
opponents are as one player on
the bus ride home said, "I think
we can take 'em all."
Villanova took the opening! kick-
attributed
PLAYER OF THE WEEK
Booters Win 1st Contest
^*
se
on
ened up and four times from the
29 Cubit threw into the endzone
and four times the ball was batted
down and the clock ran out to end
RESER VA TIONS AND INFORMA T/ON:
engagement, call the
Theatre Department at 527-9783.
..-i
!B!R^S3!D
Henrick Ibsen's
strength of his five receptions for
65 yards while Ray Querela was
the leading ground gainer on the
basis of his carries for 24 yds.
Next Friday, Danaher and Kernis take their 38 man roster, composed
of only^ 14 players on
scholarship, against Navy here in
what should be their toughest encounter so far. However, the players are not worrying who their
that would end nine plays and 53
yards in a touchdown. Dave Dea-
White 40. Delaware drove down
to the Villanova 12 but were pushed back to the 17 where they attempted a field goal. Mike Bonagura, who had earlier missed the
PAT had a chance to avenge himself but instead he turned out to
be the goat as his boot was wide to
the right and the Blue Hens last
scoring threat ended.
Defense Toughens
Delaware did start one more
drive, with just under two min-
Opening tonight at La Mama Experimental Theatre
Club in New York. Engagement runs through Sunday,
October 24.
Margetich was the leading
receiver for Villanova
on the
Bill
the start of the final period, the
Blue and White offense sputtered
However, Saladino hobbled
the snap and lost the ball to Blue
Hen John Records at the Blue and
GENESIS!
Despite poor pass protection in
the first half, Hatty passed for 121
yards on his 10 for 26 day and threw
three interceptions.
Page 11
• •W*********;*-**** ••••••••••••• ••••••
:
'
minute of the first quarter,
the Blue and White started a march
punt.
not Just another play
about another war
AN UNDERGRADUATE PRODUCTION
DIRECTED BY JOSEPH LEONARDO
exposure.
For more information about the
La
^^_
"i-'
in
Vasey Theatre this past summer
and was revived briefly in September. Hair, Godspell, and The
Dirtiest Show in Town have their
8:30 P.M;
in
performed
Effort
the game.
Things were different in the
fourth quarter as both teams seesawed up and down the field. At
and
in 1969.
OCT. 22
Team
for the
requires timing," explained Danaher. "And to get the
timing you have to have plenty of
practice which isn'tpossibleforus
to do since we are always scrimmaging against the varsity."
DIRECTED BY IRENE BAIRD
.
sideline
is all talent,
A GRADUATE PRODUCTION
.
right
Coach Danaher termed the game
"a team effort" and if the offense
has been sporadic in the first two
games, the coaches are not miffed. "Offense, unlike defense which
SISTERS
NOVEMBER
the
score.
THE
THREE
directed by Ellen Stewart, is recognized as one of the leading
forces behind avant-garde drama
in the United States, and perhaps,
the world. The Company has chosen
to perform Genesis!, the most recent addition to its repertory.
Genesis!,
ecological
exan
perience, was researched and
scripted by Philip Bosakowski. Joseph Torrisi is the director. The
Genesis!
engagement will run
through Sunday night.
Robert Hedley, Chairman of Villanova 's Theatre Department and
Artistic Director of the Villanova
Theatre Company, received the
invitation to La Mama from Ellen
Stewart. He previously directed
Elegy for a Down Queen there
>•;.>'
AND
7:15
For further
by the defense which did not allow
any points. The only Delaware tally
came mid-way in the first quarter
when a Bill Hatty pass was intercepted by Bill Johnson at the
Villanova 40 and Johnson ran it
intense beautiful movie-making.
ettects.
opens tonight at New York's La
Mama Experimental Theatre Club.
La Mama E.T.C., founded and
HOT
ff
PANTS
MIXER
NEW YORK TIMES:
accomplished extraordinarily powerful
Villanova Theatre Company, the
resident acting company of the
University's Theatre Department,
If
was another solid performance
It
information, call KI 5-4400.
presents a
field but also be-
the
cause of their gutty play as "No
one gave up." Repeatedly, the
Blue and White defenders thwarted
drives deep in their own end in
the space of the first quarter and
also stopped a frustrated Delaware
team's threat in the dying seconds
New
15 weeks, Tuesdays, 8 p.m.,
for
Delaware Blue "Chicks"
by a 7-6 margin at the Blue and
Gold field Friday and boost their
feat the
mance on
such anthologies
Yorker Book of
Poems and Naked Poetry U.
Parker is one of the newly
emerging "Philadelphia school of
poets," a group of individualists
who prefer to remain and work in
the Delaware Valley area.
Membership in the workshop is
$45 per semester. Sessions meet
as
de-
Mike Danaher and
Coaches
Mickey Kernis were elated not
only over their team's perfor-
magazines." His work has
been included
to
record to 2-0,
many
to
came from behind
team
for
MJorkshop
LARRY SCHNAPF
Overcoming a shaky first quarter, which saw the pigskin leave
Parker, who was poetry editor
the Ohio University Press
from 1966 to 1969, has been published in such national periodicals
as the New Yorker, the North
Amercan Review, The Nation,
Prairie
the
and
Perspective
Poetry
Villanova Union
w\
By
skill of those
Opening
Tonight
:>J
Frosh Edge Delaware 7-6
serious verse
today, the workshop is intended for
any one of any age who wants to
experiment with the more open
forms of modern verse.
Modern Dance and
Ballet to Villanova females and, yes, even to
a good number of fellows. Miss
Murgia,
an attractive Temple
awareness and
the
I
IVILLANOVA THEATRE IN VASEY HALLi
THE VILLANOVAN •
is not
the only star on the junior varsity.
Other linemen including Bob McDevit and Frank Filiciotto have
done much to advance the ball on
On defense, halfbacks
Aurelio Barria, Gary Fuggers and
Vince Clarke must take some of the
offense.
Northeast
credit for stopping
Christian on Saturday. Fullback,
Tom
Matty, has played superbly
against all of the j.v.'s opponents
Oppenheim,
ChristNortheast
stood up toevery
ian threat and earned his shutout.
On Wednesday, Villanova's var-
Land Lubber & Male f^nls
Discount
Frye &\^icle Bcx)t5
N^ODldS ...biq springs on
...our prices
all
on records «e the
LPs
loKAttst in
527-9/65
this year. Goalie, Billy
(Continued on page 9)
776 LancasterAfc^Bry^Mavr
^^^™B\B_B<.5
I
Page 12 •
THE VILLANOVAN •
October 20, 1971
VIIoIdAMOVAM
Cougars Crush Cats In Texas 42-9
LaSalle Explorers Exploited
By V. U.
VILLANOVA UNIVERSITY, VILLANOVA.
Vol. 47, No. 8
A
"They're a hell uv'a football
team!" was the way Lou Ferry
characterized the Houston Cougars
following Friday evening's dis-,
appointing 42-7 loss in the astrodome. I'lt was a case of too much
too fast as the Cougars scored the
first four times they got their
hands on the ball. However, from
the second quarter on the Wildcat
defense stabilized and allowed only
mutual first place tie in 26:46.6.
They weren't pressed this week,
therefore the slower time than
last, but you know when they need
to turn it on, it'll be there. Ken
Shappert set a PR (personal record) in tieing with Tom Flanagan
for fifth in 27:08.5. Seventh man
out in the
quarter," stated Ferry, "they
just had too much speed and quickness." And these two simple factors, speed and quickness were
the Cat's nemesis this week. On
the Cougars firstplay from scrimmage, Robert Newhouse, the full-
who
in his first 4
583 yards, took off over his
right tackle and showing why he is
one of the best backs in the South,
scampered 75 yards before being
brought down by safety Kevin Dobbins on the Villanova 10 yard line.
The Wildcats held for the downs
and on a fourth and one Cougar
halfback Mozisek drove for the
Hrst down but a V.U. offsides gave
them the ball on the three yard line.
Not conceding the Wildcat defense
held for three more downs before
Cougar quarterback Gary Mullins
for
.
'
'
took
it in
from
the one. Villanova
took over on its own 32 and establishing a pattern all too well
known this year of three downs
then punt gave Houston a first and
own 41. Not wasting any
time Newhouse carried twice for
a first down on the Cat 48, setting
up the next Cougar T.D. With
ten on its
second and six, Mullins hit 6'4"
236 pound tight end Riley Odoms
who cut to his right and rambled
down the sideline for a 44 yard
Houston's second in eight
minutes. At this point things looked
pretty bad for the Cats and they
had to now play catch up ball
meaning, get a quick TD after Bob
Carpenter returned the kickoff to
the 28 yard line. Daryl Woodring
threw a quick sideliner to Mike
Siani but it was good for only one
yard. With a third and five on
their own 33, Woodring dropped
back to pass and threw an aerial
which fell into the hands of Cougar
linebacker Tom Ward who returned it 23 yards to the V.U.
13. Faking a dive off the option,
a play very successful before,
Mullins reversed field and cut
inside his left end for the third
Cougar score of the evening.
T.D.,
T. D. A Must
At this juncture a T.D. was a
necessity for Villanova if they were
to stay in the
game. With
this in
mind Woodring fired a pass which
was deflected by Ron Peacock
but still caught by an alert Mike
Siani for a 59 yard gain and it
looked as if the Wildcats would
finally get moving. But mistakes
were again to plague the V.U.
attack as on a second and nine
Mike
then
did a down and out
cut back upfield very open.
Siani
But as Woodring let the pass fiy
the rotating Houston safety stepped
in front of Siani and intercepted
the second of five Woodring passes.
The last thing you would expect
Houston to do with a 21 point lead
and a first and ten on their own
ten yard line would be a long
bomb. But this is exactly what reserve quarterback D. C. Nobles
did, completing it to Willie Rob-
Photo by Bernie Nunez
Despite the excellent pass coverage of the Cougars, Mike Siani (88) still managed to haul in five aerials for
91 yards and scored the 'Cats lone T.D. in the game. He is shown here making a reception in the V.M.I,
game.
the last quarter the
Wildcat
defense
caught Peel in the
With four minutes still left in the
first quarter it looked as if the endzone for a safety (the second one
Wildcats were really going to be this year). The Cougars did manage
humiliated. But even if the Cats a last second TD to make the score
were down they weren't about to 42-9 anditalmost was 42-16 as Bob
give up. The next V.U. series Carpenter produced his finest re-
for an
erts
4:30
87 yard touchdown.
produced a drive good for 50 yards
but once again an interception
(the third) stopped the drive. With
11:55 showing on the astrodome
clock the Cats defense proceeded
>
^rn
left
in
of the season for 71 yards,
J"st missing a score.
story of the game was
Houston's overpowering speed and
The
quickness and depth. The Wildcats
to stop, for the first time, a still hurting from Boston College
Cougar drive. But again the of- played a very physical game, and
fense sputtered and BobSchaeffer,
without a doubt Houston is the best
opponent the Cats have faced in the
last few years.
The task now remains for Lou
Ferry and his staff to lift the
heads and spirits of their players
for the last half of the season.
The ability and talent is still there
to produce a winning season; the
desire is what has to be instilled.
The record of V.U. now is 2-4
but with five game remaining a
winning season is still within their
grasp.
the third
week
By
let
v/
Leiser and another counselor
walking through the "B"
wing of the New Dorm. They smell
ed
something burning
which
"wasn't a drug." Outside of a
room, the counselors found 12 to
15 broken matches. The occupants
were questioned in the hallway
about the smell. Leiser said, "No
one
burst in, contrary to the
story."
The
other counselor
thought he heard a girl's voice.
When asked about the presence of
a female, the students denied it.
The two counselors did enter the
room,
and
"didn't look under
things, but only asked the students
to open the closet."
For the one student, it was his
second involvement with the visitation policy. The first time was an
extenuating circumstance and not
his fault. "I have no sympathy
for this particular gentleman,"
were
have a place or two, but still the
final score was Villanova 15, La
Salle 50, a shut-out.
You may have noticed that the
name of Marty Liquori is missing from the above finishers. He
followed a different path Saturday
morning - the aisle of a church.
Congratulations and best wishes
from the team and coaches to you
and your bride, Carol Jones Li-
stated the counselor. "He
better than anyone else."
quori!
y-^-
met
i^
unit
for
most
quarter the Cats
pressured Cougar Qb., Terry Peel
as he passed and Polito stepped in
front of a receiver and picked off
his second interception of the night
and sixth cf the year this time
returning it for 36 yards. And with
the
'1
room."
Of the
thirty cases heard, only
seven individuals have been re-
told
not
to
try to trap violators
of the visitation rule.
"A distaste-
process' were the words he
used to describe the apprehension
of offenders. "Counselors have
better things to do on Friday and
Saturday nights than to scrounge
Law. The participants of the
included prominent women
lawyers Lisa Richette, Merna
Marshall, Carolyn Temin, Esther
Sylvester, Barbara Mather, and
Sharon Wallis. Women law students from Villanova, Temple, and
In
University of Pennsylvania as well
as established women lawyers attended the symposium "to explore,
the challenge of women in the
law and the status of women."
around the dorms."
Counselors Favor Parietals
Concerning the visitation rule,
Leiser said, "a change will come,
when, 1 don't know." He foresees
compromise
Villanova University's women
law students organized a symposium on Oct. 23 entitled Women
panel
ful
a
By Anita Di Bartolomeo
2.8% Female
Moderator Lisa Richette in-
that will satisfy all
Leiser added that the
counselors are working with the
administration on this topic. He
involved.
itiated
of English announces a competition for the best
papers written for an English
course or for a literature course
offered in the Honors TProgram
Photo by Jim Grogan
Dave Sheridan, John Hartnett and Jay Williams
Hartnett 's
first
appearance since
in the final stretch.
interested in
Becoming
Part of a Great
Team?
Their time was 27:39.5. This was
The papers will be published,
the name of each winner will be
his illness.
WOMEN'S BASKETBALL
TEAM MEETING
Any freshman
wishing to
become
a football manager
Become the Villanova
Hockey Manager.
Monday, October 25
7:00 P.M. - West Lounge
please contact
Dougherty Hall
or
Ed Bacon
third
Contact
Tom
Collins
or Fred Guera
calling
by
6872952
at Villanova University.
Varsity +
Bill
JV
Intercollegiate Competition
at
the
Wilson
coaches office
All Giris Invited
in the
To Attend This Meeting
Field House.
entered in the Undergraduate Bulletin or in the Graduate Bulletin,
notice of the award will appear as
an official part of the student's
transcript, and the winners will
each receive a cash award of $50.
reUndergraduate students,
gardless of class or major, are
eligible
the undergraduate
for
competition.
English staff
Members of the
may submit any pa-
pers which they consider to be
the best received during the period
from January 1, 1971, to January
1, 1972. Instructors should submit
discussion by quoting
a
from an Oct. 22 NY
Times newspaper article. Pres-
group, are in favor of a change in
the visitation policy."
ently, only 2.8% of all lawyers
are women. Concerning law school,
stated,
"The counselors, as
»i^'S»
Photo by Chris Bulger
Participant views agenda for day-long discussions and workshops held in
this past Saturday.
Garey Hall
women comprise 10-11%
of the
enrollment. Employment op-
total
portunities for these women lawyers, the first topic under discussion, elicited a wide range
of responses
from
the panel. Fed-
Merna Marshall stated that
government "just wants someone who is capable." However,
eral
the
Minutes of Student
Life
The student Life Committee held ence to the actions taken
its
first meeting on Thursday, McCarthy
has reaffirmed
October
1971.
7,
Fr.
this
right.
Greg Landers opened the meet-
reference to the disciplinary
procedure, Dean Bevilacque stated
that the students are given 2-3
weeks to find a new residence off
campus, that they are able to get
c) In
ing and conducted elections. Jo-
seph Persico was chosen Chairman and Frances Delmonte, secretary by acclamation.
A lengthy discussion ensued concerning the present disciplinary
money back, that Mr. Wechsler and the counselor participate
in hearings in the Dean's office
and that students have been permitted to appeal their situation.
d) In reference to the actual contheir
system for visitation violations.
Bevllacqua explained the
Dean
position being taken and made
the following points:
The Student Handbook states
that the Dean of Men has the
a)
right to ask any student to leave
campus at any time. This right
has
been recognized
at many
schools and has been used here
with fairness. This right is being
exercised now in light of the Board
of Trustees' reaffirmation of the
visitation policy last spring.
b) Dean Bevilacqua met with Fr.
McCarthy, Dr. Duffy, Greg Landers and Mr. Wechsler in refer-
sequences of a visitation violation
being required to move off
campus) Dean Bevilacqua stated
that students had previously been
suspended for similar violations.
e) Dean Bevilacqua noted that all
(i.e.
I
counselor's were instructed that
"Counselors should not patrol the
halls in such a manner as to infringe upon the privacy of students' rooms. Rooms may be entered only when there is good
reason to suspect a student violation."
Dean
Bevilacqua stated that
the information appearing in a
recent Villanova editorial was inaccurate and asked for an equitable
Creativity to be Awarded
In English Essay Contest
The Department
the
statistics
f)
of this third
Wildcat defense
shut them out. They stopped them
twice deep in V.U. territory. Regardless of the score, the Villanova team came to play four full
quarters and they did, hitting as
hard as ever even though they were
down by 28 points.
Cats Pressure Q.B.
.•..'>
student named Jim with
two girls on the stairway. The
counselor did yell at the student
and received some "grief" according to Leiser. Jim had a bottle
of whiskey and two ice-filled cups
on his person. Leiser said, "1
the
would make the assumption that he
is not just showing the girls his
quarter but the
In
'.,-
51
As Lou Ferry stated after
the game "The kids never ^ave up.
It would have been easy for them
first
knew
As of
week, the student is living
off campus and has been given a
pro rata share of his room and
board sum.
Unfair
The second incident involved a
counselor named John Scott. Scott
it.
,
stressed
that none of the counselors use flashlights.
During
Orientation, the counselors were
of the
RebutUl
La Salle
But this time with a fourth and
ten at the V.U. 15, Frank Polito
(Player of the Week) made his fifth
interception of the year and scampered 75 yards to the Cougar 15
before being brought down. With
Drew Gordon at the helm, the Wildcats got a first down on two runs
and a penalty setting up a second
and four at the 4. Unable to run
it in Gordon dropped back and saw
Mike Siani cutting across the end
zone and connected for the Cats
first score of the night. The half
ended just like that with V.U.
on the far end of a 35-7 score.
The second half produced little
in the way of scoring but some
important results can be drawn
over and play dead but they
didn't." And Houston started their
dorm counselor.
role
last
doing his best punting of the year,
a 40 yarder fielded by Pat
Orickin who turned up the sidelines for a 62 yard six point run
behind good blocking. The Cat offense did another three plays then
punt act and Houston had the ball
on the 50.
to roll
moved from the campus. Leiser
mentioned, "The counselors have
been given an unfair shake." He
Bill
Reacting to the October 13th issue
of the Villanovan, he said that "t>oth
incidents are misleading" on the
stories depicted
in the parietal
His version of the events
issue.
that took place are described in
the following paragraphs.
hit
from
Female Viability
Hasgerty
Larry Leiser, one of the two
Counselor Coordinators, defended
the
in a
Then the Cats
Symposium Explores
VILLANOVAN.
Kell of Villanova nailed lucky thirteenth spot this week all alone in
28:35.
Women-ln-Law
What follows is an account reflecting the counselors' views on the parietal
issues and their reaction to various stories recounted in the October 13th
row was
Dave Sheridan who was accompanied home by Jay Williams and
John Hartnett, in his first season
appearance. Their mutual time was
27:39.5. Tied for tenth this week
were Byron Beam, Karl Kinscherf
and Glenn Jonett in 28:09.5. Rich
for
games ran
Counseiors
A
In Defense of
Park quite accurately describes
what was billed as a dual meet
between Villanova and La Salle
in cross country. The "dual" didn't
start until fourteenth place when La
Salle's first runner
reached the
tape in 28:41. Previous to that,
multiple ties were the order of the
day as Donal Walsh (who else?),
Dave Wright, Wilson Smith, and
Bill McLoughlin came across in a
first
back,
morning
Saturday
pleasant
jaunt over the hills of Fairmount
two touchdowns.
"Blew Us Out"
"They just blew us
BREMER
By JACK
By MIKE LIPSKY
October 27. 1971
PA.
retraction.
a "serious lack of women in the
supervisory level" does exist.
"Frankly, there is a sexual connotation to having a woman in the
office." Later in the discussion,
the panel agreed that this same
connotation frequently prevents a
boss from sending a man and
woman lawyer
receptionist.
Students
may
also
submit their own papers directly
by leaving them with Miss Muzak.
All papers submitted should be
typed according to standard format
with both a full title sheet and a
title at the
top of the first page.
Interested students
may
study the
To
Dr.
Duffy stated
that a meeting of the publication
committee would take place on
this
point,
Tuesday.
Lawrence Leiser and Charles
Quinn were given permission to
enter the meeting to speak to the
counselor's role in the residence
halls.
Mr. Leiser made the
fol-
lowing points:
format of last
year's winning
essays from copies in the English a) The counselors maintain only
office. The receptionist, to prea secondary function in discipline.
serve the anonymity of the paper, b) The
counselor's function in
will remove the title sheet, assign
matters of discipline is further
the paper a number, and indicate
defined in reference to violations
whether it is undergraduate or of a discretionary nature and those
graduate. All papers will remain of a non-discretionary nature. A
anonymous while they are being student can be disciplined just
judged by a five- member commitas the Dean of Men might act but
tee of the Department of EInglish.
only on the counselor level in
Papers may be submitted anytime discretionary matters. Non-disbetween now and February 15, cretionary
matters
are those
1972.
(Continued on page 3)
of town to-
gether on case work. Esther Sylvester endorsed this opinion by
voicing
the
objections
of
some
wives when work necessitates late hours with a female
assistant. The size of the law
firm also operates in the situat>osses'
of a
woman
lawyer, "It is
easier to be accepted as part
of the staff in a small office,"
according to Carolyn Temin.
tion
V
Built In Attitudes
:
.:,•
To open
hiring
the discussion on the
practices of law firms.
Parents Welcome
lawyers, only twenty-four women
are employed. Three firms have
more than two women, with six
firms having no women. At this
point the discussion lapsed into
a series of personal experiences
with employers. Carolyn Temin
declared that the attitude of the
male interviewers was "built-in,"
compounded by the fact that all
interviewers at large firms are
male. Consequently, most young
women do not even bother applying to the large firms anymore.
At this point various members
of the audience raised objections
to the "rude" questions asked of
women applicants. While conceding
the law firm's right to know the
intentions
of
a
prospective
employee concerning tenure, the
panel agreed that such queries on
marriage,
are
In conjunction with the
Villanova
Union, the Blue Key Society will
present its annual Parents' Week-
NOVEMBER
The weekend
5, 6
&
7.
open with a
Cocktail Party in the field house
Friday night from 7 to 9, with
entertainment provided by the Villanova Dance Band, followed by
the Red Garter Banjo Band from
will
9 to 12.
Saturday will offer a reception
in the Day Hop Cafeteria from 9
to 10:30, addresses by the deans
of the various schools from 10:30
to noon, entertainment by
the
Villanova Singers in Kennedy Mall
at 11:30, and the highlight of the
—
weekend
a football game with
Boston University at 1:30. The day
climax with a concert by pianFerrante and Teicher in the
field house at 8 p.m.
will
ists
On Sunday morning, the weekend will close with Mass in the
field
house at 11:45.
pregnancy,
unnecessary.
Lisa
children,
etc.
Richette attributed much of this
attitude to the "pattern of work
in our male-orientated society.'!
Merna Marshall reinforced a wo-
man
lawyer's ability to have a
home, a family, and practice by
offering the members of the panel
as "living proof" of its feasibil''/'"''
ity.
For A Weekend
end on
papers by giving them to Miss
Muzak, the English Department
out
Barbara Mather presented a survey of Philadelphia law offices. Out
of nineteen firms with over thirty
Law
Schools
After agreeing that no discrepancy between women and men lawyers exists on the pay scale, the
members of the panel briefly discussed law schools. Lisa Richette
commented by again quoting the
NY Times. That Oct. 22 article
confirms the presence of some
discrimination in admitting women
into law schools. Although the
average board scores of women
are
higher
than
men, proportionally
fewer are enrolled.
Sharon Wallis closed the morning
session by commenting on the
importance of the attitude women
lawyers toward themselves. The
competitive, sometimes discriminatory
field of law necessitates
a
woman lawyer's projecting
a self-confident image of herself.
After breaking for lunch the
participants in the symposium split
into discussion groups. The status
of women in the laws was pursued in the afternoon with: Women
In Prison, Job Placement, Abortion,
Women
In
Law
School.