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CabriniReceivesGrant; PresidentSets Dedication Archbishop Presides At l.ibrory Ceremony
ACRL Awards Grant Toward Catalogue The Association of College and Research Libraries, a division of the American Library Association, chose Cabrini's Holy Spirit Library as one of the twelve recipients of a grant for equ_ipment in their 11th annual ACRL Grants Program. The $929 grant, one of the 78 selected from among 373 applicants can only be used to purchase' a card catalogue (the specific request on the application for the grant) from the Library Office Bureau of Remington Systems Division, Sperry Rand Corporation. The ACRL Grants program is designed for improving the quality of library service to higher education. It does not give attention to geographical location, but rather to the nature of the request. It is particularly interested in those applications which promise that an answered grant will •be matched by a special gift from outside the library.. When Miss Jane Vink, librarian, applied .for the grant this fall, she called attention to the increased debt of our new library, as well as the faculty,
On Saturday, March 26, Archbishop John J. Krol will dedicate Holy Spirit Library, at 11 :00 a.m., Mother Ursula., college president, announced recently. Guests will proceed from the Administration Building to the library where the archbishop will bless the new building. Following this, dedication of the new faculty i;,ffl.ces will take place. Friends, faculty, and students will then meet in the auditorium. Rev. Lewis Rongione, librarian of Villanova University, will deliver the invocation; Msgr. Edwar4 T. Hughes, Superintendent of schools in the will Phi1adelphia archdiocese, render the keynote address. Finally Valley Forge Military Academy' Band and Choir will perform in concert. Holy Spirit Library friend and student support in securing funds for it. This year, a total of 7'8 grants, 66 of funds and 12 of equipment valued at $61 ,000, were awarded and supported ,by McGraw
VU Professo,r Comme,nts On Pragmatic Philosophy
awaits March 26 dedication
Hill Plllblishing Company , Oiin Mathi eson Chemical Corporation, Pitney-Bowes, Inc., Time, Office Systems Division, Sperry Inc. , United States Steel Foundation, Inc., The H. W. Wilson
actions, otherwise the idea does us no good." . . The next lecturer m the Philosophy Lecture Series will be pre sented by Mr. Joseph Romano, Professor of Philosophy, Cabrini College .
February
•t• - Eng1·1sh ·Department011ates f 1rs • t campusHonorsoc1e • tY
28, 1966
English majors will seek membership in the first honor society to be established at Cabrini College. The organization, Beta Sigma Chapter of Lambda Iota Tau, an international honor society, is under the direction of the English Department. , Mr. Gennaro Annunziato, assistant professor of English and newly appointed moderator of the Chapter,
Also, she must 'be enrolled in her sixth college semester, have at least one year of active
participation
on The Criptic, or in the 1*rary Club, be approved for membership by the moderator of the chapter, and Dr . Green, chairman of the English Department. As a final requirement she must present an initiation paper of a quality certified by ttie chapter moderator on a litel'aary topic of a research, critical or creative nature (short story, essay, poem, drama). LIT members receive a membership certificate bearing their name, a membership card, and an honorary membership pin. They also receive subscriptions to the LIT, the annual journal of the association , and the society's biannual Newsletter which includes graduate assistantship information. LIT is one of the members of the Association of College Honor Societies . Consequently, members who enter federal employment receive a salary increase of about $1,000 a year more than other employees. Mr. Annunziato petitioned for the Cabrini chapter of Lambda Iota Tau, as an undergradute student at LaSalle he organized the college chapter of Lambda Iota Tau, and was elected president of the chapter. The Loquitur,
Dean Honors 28Students For Scholarship Jeanette Religious: Sister Arousiag, C.I.C. ; Sister M. Jonathan, SS.C.M.; Sister Maria, SS.C.M. Seniors: Noreen Redden, Dolores Treacy, Marie ·Porrecca, Mary A. Haflin , Patrkia Coughlin, Jo-Ann Hummel, Siusan Quinn, Mary Bransley, Ellen Gibney. Juniors: Ave M. Garchinsky,
Mother Ursula expressed her sentirp.en~ thus, "May every Cabrini girl feel justly proud and honored on this grand occasion of the dedication of the library by our beloved Arch.bishop."
Cabrini College, Radnor, Pa.
-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-
three methods as unreliable. Referring mainly to the works of Charles Pierce, including "Fixation of Belief," "Doctrine of Necessity," and "How to Make Our Ideas Clear," Dr. O'Brien indicated that the pragmatic method leads to questions on the Laws of Nature, and that complete logic is not ideal in pragmatism. When asked how the idea of God enters into Pragmatic Philosophy, Dr . O'Brien replied that, "God must influence our
Foundation , Inc ., and the Library Bureau of Remingtop Rand Corporation . Ecstatic over the grant, Miss Vink could only comment , "I'm delighted."
~-
announced that seniors will be screened for membership late this month. Student membership in Lambda Iota Tau is granted fu1filiment of the following requirements: One must be an English major; have completed 15 hours of literature courses, be in the upper one-third of her class, have a B average in her literature courses and a B average in all courses prerequisite to the fifteen credit hours of literature. Some of the Cabrini students en&"aa-ein a discussion with Mr. Joseph Romano (left) and Dr. Jamelil O'Brien (ri&"ht) following the latter's leciure to the Philosophy Club.
Krol
oquitur
"Any ideas that are in the mind which do not help a person to act are useless and meanin~le~s." With this comment, Dr. James O Brien, Professor of Philosophy at Villanova, summarized the basic theory of Vol. VII, No. 4 ''P¥agmatism..a.s...a-Philosophy -,'' Tuesday , February 15 --~ inHe thediscussed _Administration ~,uilding. Charles Pierce's analysis of the four ways in which people determine the truth of ideas : the method of tenacity method of authority, the a prior/ method, and the scientific method . Dr. O'Brien pointed out that Pierce rejected the first
by Archbishop
J,ane Rechter, Jean Baudouin, Patricia Mur,phy, Patricia PretzeLlo, Kathleen Haughey, Marie Schmidt, Aa-lene Frangipani. Sophomores: Marilyn Maggio, Michele Rusinyak, Jo-Ann Rondini, Kathleen Reardon, Carol Tavani. Freshmen: Claire RotJh:, Mary Sassani, Dolores Gussoni.
MISS HELEN O'CONNELL
Senior Claims Award InGlamour Contest Helen O'Connell wll represerut Cabrini College in Glamour magazine's 1,966 The Ten Best Dressed College Girls in America Contest . Two candidates m-am each class competed in, the annual catnjplUScontest on Monday, Febru:a.ry 21 in the A.dm:inistraition Building . Chosen for her poise and singulari ·ty as a fashion type, Helen must now submit three full lengitb, photographs to Glamour, and information about her on and off campus interests. Student Government Social Committee and facullty members judged the contests in four categories: suitable campus look; appro,priateness ot dress; posture, poise, and personality; ·and ilIIllpecabiliity of make-up, hair, and accessories. During the judging each girl appeared in a typical campus outfiit, an off campus daytime outfit, and a long or short party
dress.
LOQUITUR
l>age 2
Supporters
February 28, 1966 Ouch!
At Home
Ouch ! Powie ! Wham!*!?!. "Stop! This is an editorial; but please don't read it." "Would you type an article or even write one?" '.'RAH, Rah, rah ! Come on team . . . is this a game? Where is the audience?" "Pragmatism is a pltilosophy ... so who cares?" "Onl_ytwo .articles for Cryptic? What, no m~~azme this year? No one will miss it." You say, you lost your masthead Tch tch, pity." . ' "Let's get out of here before we have to clean the smoker." }'ve got th3:t table for bridge." Are you gomg to the lecture?" '.'.No, I'll miss my car pool." What ever are you going to wear on Saturday night? You know, parties make the world go _round." ·
They Also Serve As interested on-lookers we share a concern for the crisis in Vietnam; but as American college women is a passive, noninvolved attitude our only duty? Some area colleges have expressed a different opinion on this subject by taking an active interest in the future of the war, in the ravaged villages of Vietnam, and in American servicemen fighting in the jungles around Saigon. Pennsylvania Military College, for example, recently held a series of benefit dances; the proceeds will be used to adopt an orphan village in Vietnam. The women of Beaver College have directed their time and talents toward making valentines and small gifts to serve as morale boosters for our soldiers. Various other schools carry on correspondence with our soldiers keeping them abreast of current news in the States. This is effective in helping to create a high company morale. Numerous charitable organizations and soci~l clubs donate their time to bandagemakmg and volunteer nursing in service hospitals in the States. Those of us who have close contact with the war-brothers, boy-friends, or relatives serving our country-have probably shown some. sort of an interest in their welfare . But IS it not the duty and privilege of all citizens to show an active · support of those men striving to maintain our basic tenetfreedom?
'Erstwhile Campus Conservati .ve'c·ompares Liberafs ToAnts, Bees, Cattle-, Herds ofSwine Initially, this seems harmless enough; :but on second reading, the phrase "like-minded individuals" ·becomes ·rather disturbing. Ants are like-minded individuals, as are bees , cattle and herds of swine . Huanan beings, however, have shown a ;rather disturbing tendency to think for themselves, and it is my hop .e that t hey will continue to do so even at the risk of disqualifying themselves for membership in a liberal society . To be a "self-directing individual" and a member of a "group of like-minded individuals" at one in the same time is a logical impossibility and a contradktion in teruns. There is little if any room for individ ual i ni ti ative in a ce ntralized society. To .centralize is to consolida ,te-to focus; ergo, to centralize the government is to consolida •te pow.er in the .government. In the United Sitates the people hold the power to govern; this is :the esseIJJce of our democracy. If this poweir is taken £rom ,the people to satisfy ,the liberal desire for- a more centralized form of government, then democracy, robbed of iits essence, becomes meaningless. One of the most powerful governments in rthe worJd today exists in Soviet Russia. It did not gain power through instant communism. Obviously Russia's process of centralization had to have a beginning, just as it is be.ginning in the Uniited States today. It was beg;un by men who believed in fighting against ". . . injustice and tyranny;" but this idealism gave way to an ideology that caused the death of fi.f.teen million Russians during the (Continued on Page 4)
By CLAIRE CASSIDY As an "eI'S!twhile carrnpus conservative" I would like to ahsw;er the article on Liberalism .that appeared in the last issue of the Loquitur. The basis of Liberalism can be found in the following quote taken fu-om that article: "While it is true thait the liberal advooates a ,centralized form of •government , it should be noted that he founds this belief on the principle rthat society may be well based on the self-direoting power of the individual. This is reflected in the 'iPower of numbers , arising with a cohesive group of like-minded individuals . . . asserted against injustice and tyranny.' (J . Salwyn Schapiro : foeralism: Its Meaning and History)."
Analysts, Existentialists Rebel; Both Groups Deny Metaphysics By JEAN BAUDOUIN
AND MARIE SCHMIDT
A il"ecent issue of Time magazine diooussed the problems of philosophy 'Since the turn of the century. The sbrong ·belief in the ideal and the absolute rampant in the 19th century was weakened in th~ twentieth century wHh the increase in scientific and common sense fu.inking. The result was a i!"ebellion most effectlvely carried owt by two divergent schools of philosQPhY -the analysts and the existentialists . Yet the diver ,gencies of these itwo g1roups are not so apparent when i;t is taken into aocount that both grOU/PS have denied and ignored metaphysics~the very he.art o.f philosophy . The analytic philosophers discard the basic questions that metaphysics asks by a sserting tha t all difficulties concerning these questions are simply diffkuloties of language. Clear, straight thinking', they contend, will eventually iresolve supposed me.taphysical questions by asserting the ab surdity and unintelli,gibility of man's universe. Man is :pavt of the il'!l'ational ,absurdilty that is being; as such, any rainterrogation is tional answer to metaphysical impossible. As Time rpoints out , both schools have developed into somewhat confused "camps" in which they fail to understand each other. It also appears that they are unable to understand colleagues within their own schools. Time hints at the movement away from !Philosophy in which "the professionals are the ones who know the least about it ." The underlying, perhaps slow moving, trend is toward a reasking of the basic questions ,that metcllPihysics concerns itself with : causation, God , mind, imm~rtalit y, freedom . Contemporary tihilosophers are metaphysically waking up. David Wiggins of Ox.ford has said that they are beginning to see that the traditional way of stating the p;roblem "wasn't afiter ,all in quite a mess as had been r~cently su;pposed ." The trend is gradual and the awakening will be slow; nevertheless, the feeling is in the air.
CONGRATULATIONS!
Letter to the Editor Dear Editor: We'd like to take advantage of Loquitur's colwmns to say rthank you to the ·people who pi,tched in and help with the move to the Holy Spirilt Libil"ary--4:o the many students and faculty members who volunteered theiir time efforts and automobiles; to Al~ bert, Emmet , Eric , Frank and Gu ido for ,their part; and especially to the girls who worked regularly in the library. Not only did these last help to roDve, but they made the move possible by packing and labeling all those books (more than 23,000)'! To each and every one of you, as well as to ,the others whom we haven 't mentioned specifi·cally, we offer very sincere thanks, and eXiIJrressthe hope of being able to provide better seirvice in the new building. Jane L. Vink Josephine M. Kipping
Loquitur LOQU1TUR is published six times ,a year by the staff under the direction of :the Missionary Sisters of the Sacred Heart. ADDRESS LOQUITUR, Cabrini College Flhone MU 8-3270 Radnor, Pennsylvarua Associate
Editors
Art Staff
CLASS OF 1969 President .............. Kathleen Gavin Vice President . . . . . . . . . . Elizabeth Riley Day Hop Representative .. Margaret Boyle Resident Representative
. . . . Nancy Kelly
.. . . . .. . . .....
.. .. . . ....
. K. Ryan,
S. Quinn,
K. Caparella
Staff . .. . · .. . . . C. Cas sidy, M. Courtney, S. Durling, E. Fontan, K. Gavin, A. Lesoravage, B. Lucas, M. MagK"io, K. McKaig, M. Micalizzi, M. Monaghan, P. Murphy, M. Schmidt, P. Whitehead.
Typists
... . . .. . ........
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... . · · . . K. Carlton , N. Dillon, R. Fulginiti, J. Jingoli, K, Reardon, S. Suewer, P. Vertucci.
Circulation
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . K. Andreozzi,
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J. Sherknls, Dorothy
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Mother Gregory.
Brown,
Mr. Willard
.. .. ... .. ... Mother
Schuyler
M. McGinnis,
M.S.C. Bowers
Gre&"ory, M.S.C.
God IsDead
By SUSAN QUINN artist of the twentieth century attempts to portray a tragic vision of life , he must do so in a universe in which God is dead-in a God-abandoned world. Modern tragedy, according to these existentialist standards, gives us life not with moral or spiritual values, but rather only characters suffering in an unjustified and meaningless world . Jo •b could look to God to find justice in his suffering, while men like Camus and Sartre can look only to their own values to find justice in their suffering . The tragic hero, in other words, can really do nothing about his condition. Yet the tragedy is pres ented in the struggle against his situation -a struggle for order in an unordered universe. We search for his greatness in this attempt to ward off "evil " and death, death being the only reality of w.hich man is certain and from which he cannot escape." Albert Camus is one of the leading writers of the twentieth century who attemptrto .-show us how man can CODewith an existence which holds no ultimate meaning. His protagonist lives solely in the moment, and for the satisfaction of his momentary desires. Nothin2 else holds any real meanin&'. __ Meur sault, the main -character of Camus' The Stranger, says of hiimself "I have never been able really to regret anithing in all my life . I've always been far too much absorbed in the present moment, or the immediate future, to think back ." The "struggle" of iMeurault comes in his attempt to live and enjoy the moment, and to ward off death-his only enemy. He contains but one characteristic which prevent s him from attaining a truly tr;igic quality-his vast indifference. 'Meursault is indiff erent to all life around him; by the end of the book he is indifferent to his own existence . This trait prevents him from revolting against his situation. Just ll$ his life is meaningless to himself so to °ihe do all his action1. become ~eaningless reader. As a result, we can find nothin&' tragic in either the murder he commits or the punishment be receives for it. Before Meursault fired the fatal gun sho.ts he tried mentally to decide on the impact which his deed might have. Finally he concluded, "It crossed my mind that one might fire, or not fire-and it would come to absolutely the same thing." At the close of the book, immediately bef0re his death, Meursaul,t reflects, "Nothing, nothing had the least importance, and I knew quite well why . . . what difference could they make to me, the deaths of others, or, a mother's love, or his God . . .. all alike would be condemned to die one day.'' Nothing- has mattered to Meursault throughout his entire life except to live the moment, and by his death not even that. Death had to come sometime - what difference when. Camus has given his characters no capacity for revolt and consequently made him incapable of fulfilling the twentieth century vision of tragedy. The universe to Meursault has been wholly mechanical and indifferent. He has been an absurd character living an absurb existence able to affirm only one reality-death-and then not even that, maybe. If a literary
February 28, 1966
Page 3
LOQUITUR
English Professor
Spea.ks Out
Adventure Resolves Tarradiddle Question
Barbara Lagerquist, sophomore, and Mrs. Dorothy Brown, head of the biolou department, examine the anomaly.
Soph Spo.fs Sto·mach Shift; Food Finds False Finish For the first itime in the presentation of Comparative Anatomy in the Biology DepaDtment at Cabrini a major anomaly was observed. Barbara Lagerquist, sqphomore biology major, began the study of an e:ioternal.Jly norunal dogfish. The spiny dogfish Squalus acanthias Linne is one of the most widely used animals in compara-
by WILLARD B. BOWERS This is an adventure story. But ·be not amazed; everything gpes awry in the end. Recently, a few days before final exruninations in January, I was skipping do•wn the main stair of Sacred Heart Hall toward the ground floor. (Dr. Delaney insists that skipping is good for one's mental health.) My mind was afire with new of theories about the nature being, of not being, and of maybe being which had arisen from a warmhearted debate between leading pansophical epistemologists from the department of philosophy and a prominent member of the history department. Consider the problem yourself for a moment and you will immediately begin to understand at least the superficial impedimenta of the mental ferment that I was at that moment experiencing. The problem was
tive anatomy laboratories although all specimens are not exactly alike. Following normal disection, Barbara opened the body on the midventr .al line from the tail region ,to tJhe upper pharnyx and confronted a mass of abnormal tissue ('picture 1) in ,the lower mouth and upper pharnyx, Careful examination rev ·ealed ,that this mass of tissue was actually well differentiated .and to the stomcould be C01TI1Piared ach (rpk.ture 2) and esQPhagus The ·tissue seemed to ,f,unotion
Are you longing for those blissful days of sun and flowers? Then weep no more, my friend. I have the answer to your tale of woe. Will you believe that you can be off to Pu~rto Rico for only
April 9, contact McGettegan's Travel Bureau. If you are a girl who likes to have her feet on the ground, why not hop on a Greyhound and follow the boys to the sunshine state of Florida? The cost?
$196.80? Just think, for six glorious days you can be a guest of the El Miremar Charterhouse Hotel in San Jual14 Each morning you will be served a luscious breakfast and then on to a day of swimming, boating, water skiing, and (if you are a girl of adventure) skin diving. Eastern's flight No. 941 leaves for San Juan on Monday, April 11 at 10: 00 a.m : Wouldn't you like to be on it? Or would you rather be en route to the Elbow Beach Sul'f Club in Bermuda? If you would like to board the Bermuda jet on Saturday,
Only $45.00 to $50.00. Accommodations? Fort Lauderdale has a fantastic variety of hotels, motels, and apartments. For a listing of these and for the details on Puerto Rico, grab your suitcase and talk to Terry Girard . I hear New York and Washington also have the perfect tonic for despairing college girls . Where else but New York could you find a Metropolitan Museum serving a poolside brunch; and where else could you spend an
1
gather my wits briskly for this encounter because this senior was none other than Natalie edi'tor of Drest, outstanding Loquitur. (She was out, standing in the foyer at the time because her office was encumbered by a gaggle of sophomore staff members.) "Mr. Bores," she said. "I have an importunate request to importune of you." Her mispronunciation of my name took me off my guard for a moment . What did it mean? Was the facetious cunning of the senior mind at work in its normal devious way? W,as this a subtle criticism of my teaching method? Or was it merely an unfortunate consequence Of her, perhaps, congenital speech defect? With the warm-hearted, openhanded, bright-eyed, ,all-encompassing generosity of Engli sh department members everywhere in the groves of Academe, I assumed the latter. "Yes, Miss Drest," said. "Proceed perforce. What is this importunate request you would importune of me?" "Oh, Sir, kind sir," - she said . "Will you be so kind as to write for us some stimuJ.ating article about the absolute paucity of women dramatists?" "My dear 'Miss Drest," chortled. "Your other editor, Sioux Sequin, has already asked me this same question, in different words of course, ,and with a minor clause agreement allowmg me to write the comple t"" e-article in passive voice so that the sophomores and juniors might better understand it." "Oh, heartily granted by me also, forthwith," was the reply made to me by the magnanimous Natalie Drest. "And what was your reply?" she asked. "No!" I said .
First Day Behind Desk Promises Surprise; Reaffirms Faith InSelf, Humanity Teaching By BONNIB LUCAS In a college career ithere are usually two days which are .memtJhe arable as new beginnings: first day of freshman year and ,gr,aduation day. There is a day for education majors, however, which promises a new beginning even before ,graduation has arPICTURE 2 rived . This is the fi1rst day of tudenLTea.ching ....=.-""-'-----tissue ( icture 1) in a nol'llTl'al specimen. To those who have always The tissue seems to function wanted to become teachers this to some degree since food maday is one of dreams come true. terial in v;arious states of decomLooking back ,and forgetting the position was found in both the anxieity of that first morning, it false stomach and false esophais good to remember this fact, ~us. and not let it.he day be lost among When .asked how she felt about the events wlhich in a few years her recent discovery, Ba ·rbara will be so much trivia. returned with her usual glib sarIt is a day when the knowlcasm, "I turned out to be a real edge of three and a half years sharpie, didn't I?" of work will begin to fall into place and serve a useful purpose. It is a day when personal potenAdvertising and tial and ingenuity are joined to Public Relations become facile ,by exereise. It is a day when individuality is recSeminar ognized and acknowledged as a Monday, March 7 precious commodity. Student teaching is an apprenP.M. ticeship of a wonderful kind. It
PICTURE
this: What 'are the metaphysical v,alue structures inherent in the ethical ramifications of the common tarradiddle? The biology department insisted that the problem would soon bother no one if we all learned to eat unpolished rice boiled in carrot juice. With such a diet, Mrs. Brown suggested, perhaps even the recent high incidence of inverted stomachs might subside. As I came to the last step, I neatly avoided the inbound rush of Dr. Burton, who was tapping out a Gregorian chant on the Of his briefcase and handle winking his left eye with metronome-like regularity to signal his impending turn onto the new vacant stair. I was again drawn from my reverie by another interruption. I was hailed by a prima facie senior. "Hail," she said. "Sleet," I replied. I tried to
6:30
Come On Down
entire day gallery-hopping for free; or find restaurants like Charles a la Tomme Souffie; or hear jazz played as it is at the Village Gate? Have you ever been in .Washington? I hear there is a discotheque called the Tomfoolery where the action is filmed on week nights and played back on Saturday. M Street in Georgetown offers a swinging night of jazz and dancing at the Cellar Door and at the Crazy Horse. For the girl who loves to eat, you will adore the Tudor atmosphere of Blackbeard, and those marvelous Indi,an curries and breads at the Taj Mahal. So, my friends, just shake your piggy bank, forget those winter blues, and, above all, have a ball!
allows for intense observa:tion and practice in the ·field without the worries of money or family. It is probably the closesit thing to ·the ideal learning situartion encountered in college . The promise which Student Teadhing holds i-s that of mernbership in a profession which continues giving with successive years. Teacn:tng gives no on y o the pupil but to the teacher as well. It has mysterious powers of re-juvenation which re-affirms belief and wonder in humanity and in one's .personal abilities . In short, the meaning and joy of teaching will remain long after the sheepskin ihas been framed and hung on ,th= study wall. ~ '"
Junior Week Memo,ries; Barn, Snow, Rings, Party
Phones rang . Banned at the Country Club. No place to go . . . Rings in the rain, motorcade to chapel . . . Lovely breakfast. Still the phones ... Off to the Gatsby, diet after ..• Guitar strumming sisters, blue icing cake . . . Maids for a day ... Phones again. Lost the Barn, drat the map . . . What's our room number?", "Who has the key?" . . . Tux to the Treadway without chains, all uphm Phones again.
;h~
.. Emblems on jiggers Talk ... Tired girls ...
..• Snow Memories.
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"'
LOQUITIJR
Page 4
St. Joseph, Villanova, LaSalle
Sports Review Boasts Coach Lynam Interview By MARIA COURTNEY and SUSAN DURLING In the past rew months the fans of St. Joseph's, Villanova, and LaSalle have been ,through a 9timula>ting and tUJI'bulent basketball season. They have witnessed games that have reached the wild extremes of triu~h and ,tragedy. On Wednesday and Saturday nights 9,211 of them assembled in a state of screaming hysteria in the grea.t madhouse known as the Palestra. The season is almost over now, and ;the basketball courts will soon be vacant; but if you go back into the empty Palestra you will still be able to hear the undying echo of their cheering. A Saint Joe's rootsr associates with <this echo the cheering from a steady stream of vic.tories. Behind their coach, Dr. Jack Ramsey, the Hawks have given their fans reasons for ciheering by retaining national rank in the top ten each ,week. The cheering was thunderous during the three vie-
tories which captured for them the Quaker City Tournament Championship. On the final night of the tourney, Matty Gouk.as ireceived itJhe Most Valuable P'layer Award. Out on the court one can see how the game seems to revolve around Ma.tty. In speaking with Mr. James Lynam, Athletic Director and Freshman Basketball Coach at Saint Joe's, about Matty's role in the game, he said, "The team does look up ,to Matty a little . . . no, they look up to him a lot." In the Boston C'ollege game Billy Oakes made a career record of 1,000 ;poinits. About this record Mr. Lynam said, "It is not a hard record to break if you are a starter in your sophomore year and average atbout 13-14 i!)Oints a ,game. Billy didn't sta-rt then, so this was an acfor hirrn." co~lishment For Villanova the echo of the Palestra has been of a season hampered by the loss of most of las,t year's top lettermen except
Squad Cheers Hoopsters Amid Empty Home Sta,nds
Seven
vivaclous cheerleaders whait Les Keiter would call a "Pandemonium Palace" in Cabrini's gymnasium each week. Captain Betty Lucas leads Marcia Howe, Alice Mitchell, Gayle Nazarete, Judy Sherknis, Palma and Rosanne Vertucci in ·try to recreate
performing stunts and new renditions of cheers. But, like many of the activities on this campus, student supll)Ol'tis lacking and the girls must face an almost non-existent audience and try to encite enthusiasm for a team deserving some recognition.
for Bill Mekhioni and Bernie Schaffer. Coached by Jack K.raf.t, ,the Wildcats suffered their keenest disappointment in the VillanovaSt. .Joe's ·game. Villanova's unexpected surge to near-victory brought out untold emotions in the :fans who jammed every corner of thhe Palestra. These emotions were !heightened when Saint Joe's substitute, Steve Donches, scored the winning two points bringing victory for the Hawks in the finaJ seconds of the game. One of ithe best moments for the Villanova fans this year came the night that Billy Melchioni broke this year's high scoring record at the Palestra. He scored 44 points against Saint Bonaventure. LaSalle's major contribution to ;the echo of the Palestra lhas been ,that of thei-r very persevering cheering, Joe Heyer's Explorers have suffered their defeats mainly in overtime or by slim margins of one or two !I)Oints. The eXJplorers never gave UJP:though, and neither did their fans. When they defeated previously unbeaten Brigham Young in the Quaker City Tournament 71-69, the crowd was ecstatic. February ihas become a winning month for :them in their triumph over Geittysburg. Here Hubie Marshall reached a season total of 500 points, becoming the second junior to have done so at LaSalle. It is hard ,to describe what a basketball fan feels and why he will .go completely ,orazy art; a giame. The February issue of the Philadelphia magazine suanmed up rt;his metamoi-phis in their article, "Basketball Fever." They said, "Most Philadelphia college kids are normal in every way. It is only in the winter, and it is only about the game of basketball that they go out of their minds and become a menace to the metropolis."
Tr:lsha Bonn attempts shot against a towering .Jean ReUly in foreground covers the boards.
Blue'nWhite GameTally: Three Wins, Two Losses By PEG WHITEHEAD Tihey heard it in Grace Hall! Heard what? The shouts and screams of avW Ca-brini rooters as our team stovmed forward to clineh the opening ·game of ,the season. With the fast action of magnificent team work, Cabrini College defea,ted Holy Redeemer witlh ai score of 41-18. Scoring laurels go to Trish Bpgan who racked up 14 points. With an undauted spirit our players met their second foe, Immaculata, only to be defea.ted in a well played, hard fought game resulting in a 17-61 upset. With an increased surge of spirit produced by their first win, Iananaculata's J.unior Varsi,ty capped OUJI'J.V. by a 24-7 score. However, our varsity retaliated in their ne~t ,game against Holy Family by sparking a wild attack resulting in a 31-22 Cabirini viotory. Ro Bimbo was high scorer with 12 points. Next, Cabrini thundered the walls of Rosemont hoping for vic1tory. Howev ·er, Rosemont proved to be too well for ,tified and manaiged to .give our team ,the slijp,, the final tally reading 34-10. Here our J.V. also met their doom by going down in a well ,played game of 18-11. Our varsity next challenged Manor and success abounded in the form of a 40-33 Cabrini win . Ro Bimbo led the team to victory with 23 points. Don't :forget, there are still games to be played) and we expect you there!
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Volleyball still heads the news! Cabrini players. Bar,b Schneider, Cassie Bradl~y, Ro Bimbo, Mary Jane 1Smith, Mary Ann Haflin, Rody McCarthy, Mkhele Marshall and Joyce Polyniak, competed against Eastern Baptist, West Chester, Lmmaculata and Plhiladelphia College of the Bible at Eastern's _campus on February 26 in their second annual Volleyball Tournament.
GAMES THIS WEEK '1:30 Gwynedd
Mercy-Mar.
1, Cheney S.C.--.Mar.
Conservative Ans .wers (cont.) (Continued from Page 1) Great Purges of the 1930's, and enslaved the llllinds and f,utures of millions more. The liberal philosophy is well presented in .the ,phrase, "the
CLUB BIDS SODALITY . . . meetings every anyone Wednesday at 4:30 ... interested in doing Apostolic work contact St. Edmund's Home for Crippled Children, Rosemont. FRENCH CLUB ... will be dodicna,ting French illustraited tionary, l"letite Larousse, to the library. GERMAN CLUB ... Lynn Hoppe gave J..ecture on Berlin at the Wednesday, February 16, meeting. CHEMISTRY CLUB ... annual Minstrel Show on March 17 . . . Rehearsals now taking place. LITERARY CLUB ... Temple of Gold by William Goldman will be reviewed March 1, 3 P.M. SOCIAL COMMITTEE ... Raffles to be 'held sponsored by undergraduate chapters . . . Dina Tamany elected Freshman representative ,to the commi.titee.
greatest good for the greatest number;" in other words, the rights of the individ ·ual are se.condary. In same mysterious way, liberalism naively assumes :that the individual can continue ,to function as such in a society ruled by this iPiremise. If the government ,takes iniitiativ ·e away :from the individual by :forcing him to consider the interest of the majority before his own self-interest, tt is reducing him to a member of a "group of like-minded individuals." I,t is replacing individuality with conformity necessary ,to a centralized society. The ,payment for obedience is security. A paternalistic government will, like any good parent, provide for its offspring. It gives them welfare when ,they are out of work, medicare when .they are ill, and social security when they are old. million The twenty - seven Americans who voted against the Great Society in the last election would prefer not to belong. The price of security is too great. They chose ,to retain ,the power of volition. They would rather be human beings,
I C defense.
A FACULTY READY TO SERVE 1966 Champs, Faculty-Student Volleyball Tourney
5 . . Away