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Book Tampering Seen As Cause of No Gov't. Audit

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McGinley Out As Search Chairman Mr. Wlesley was graduated from the University of Utah in 1939 \,';Ih a B.S. in EnlitineerinJi:. Hl" subsequentJ)· attended the Harvard Business SChool and was named Vice President In charJ!:e of Sales of the American Can Company's fonner Canco Division In 1966 he was named Vice President and assistant to the President and in 1966 assumed thf' responsibilities of Senior Vice Prt'sidenl. Voice From lbe Editors and Staff Members ollbe Merry Christmas and A Uapp.y New )'ear . BYrD This year's aeademie calendar leavf'lO little time for studt'nt1' to pl'f'pare for Chri:;tmas. But once this )"f'ar studl'nts will havl' the uniqu(' opportunit.,·IO do lOomE' Christmas on ('ampos and hE'lp thl' peopll' of .o\ppalachia at tht" sam(' timp. Appalachian Volunt('('fS In(' .. an Of)i:anizalion whi('h markt'lil thp hand made proouct:- of Appalachian Craftsml'n in an effort to stimulatl' ('conomiC' Ji:rowth in that area. will run a three day I)('c 11·13 on the Falr1lplll Umvt'l"SlIy eampus Campus C'hainnan 01 th(' AppalaC'hian VoIUnle('fs. Tl'rt'rK'e Horan. said. "\\'e had much 11"51' to offer la:-t ,·par. and werl' still ('nthusiasticall,' re<'f'ived by Ihe Jl:raduatf' and undef)i:raduate :-tudents. This \·ear. with all kinds of new ilems on sale at half the prices found COmmef('lal!v. I think ean offt>r students unique Rllt Ideail and help .\ppalaehia While doinJi: It." The Appalaehlan crafl1' dlspla\' Will be in Xavier Hall Monday. Tuesday and Wednesday evenings from 6:30 pm until 9:30 for the con\'cnicncp of the I'!raduate schools. A booth will also be in the Campus Center Oak Room Tuesday from noon until 2:00 p.m. for undetRraduates and staff members to ,hop A wide variety of products .... ill be on hand with handmade patchwork quilts. cherry wood chess and checker boards. stuffl'd animals of all sizes and hand crafted wood products among the many items to be available. "With all the different and distinctive products .....e have." Horan said ... , am surt' that ..... 1" have somethinJi: for just about everybody_ .. Appalachian Volunteers Inc. also have a store. in Westport located at Bulkley Road North and Post Rd.. where an even larRW selt'Clion of Appalachian craftsmanship can be found The store is open every day except on Sunday. Staffed completely by volunteers. tht> Appalachian House store will also be open Thursday and Friday eveninRS until 9 p.m. Appalachian Crafts On Sale Here Enrollment Rise Bucks State Trend Fairfield University is one of only six private collelites In the state tbat has increased Its full lime undergraduate enrollm('nt this y'Car. FilNres recentl ... rt'leaSNl b\' the Connecticut Confert'net' o( Independent Collelles :-:how Ihat only six of thf' I went)' independent four)'eareollf'Ji:t's In the statt' had f'nrollment increases this year O\'er last year. Those addiflJi: to their undel'Ji!raduate student body were Connecticut Trinit\'. Weslevan. Yale. St. Joseph's 'and Fairfield University. Total enrollment in the private sector stayed about the same at 26.871. In the public sector the four year colleJl:es and universities showed an enrollment increase of less than with the total student body rising slightly to 54.S3S. Next to Yale University with an increase of 262 students. Fairfield. University showed the larJ!:est increase - 260 students. State scholarship aid to Connecticut students is based on the number of Connecticut residents in the school. Last vear the aid was based on the growth of Connecticut student enrollment. D. Bruce Wiesley. a of the Search Committee and a University Trustf'e. has succeeded Rev. James J McGinley. S.J .. as Chainnan of the Committee. Mr Wiesley. who is a senior Vice President of the Amencan Can Company. lIti\l manaJi:e the affairs of the Search Committee as well as schedule and conduet all meetinlits. Fr. McGinle.... 1It1l0 had served as the Committee's Chainnan since it was otfi!aniU'd in Septf'rTlber. resigned the post when his duties as Rector of the Jesuit Community intervened. He claimed that he could not fulfill both roles adequately and therefore decided to announce his resignation at Ihe Committee's December I meeting. As Chainnan Fr. McGinley sparked criticism from the faculty and student body for his proposal to create a seven· member committee advisory to the Trustees. Both the teachers and studf'nts h"vf' voted to withhold participation on the special committee until have been grantE'd a laf)i:('r rote in the selection of a n('w University President. A native of Bradliate. Iowa. ,Dec. 7,1972 CAPTAIN GEORGE GROOM - driviDI against Southern's Charlie Miller, surpasses the 1,000 point plateau and aeeds 9JfM1'As 9 tb become Fairfield's all·tlme LeadiDg scorer. Hickson stated that he had re«ived the books from Mr Kunces onl\' last week The Vice PresKient Stated that two yf'ars ago. when the administration agreed to colleC't the optional Student Government Activities Fee. he had offered to perform an audit of the Government's books (ree of charge. Howe\'er. the offer was declined. when Govf'rnment officials in(onned Mr. Hickson that they would seek the assistance of a private accountinlit finn. Last week Mr. Hickson received a phone call from Mr. Junces. who asked if the offer still stood. When the Vice President replied that it did. Mr. Junces alitreed to submit the books for inspection. Mr. Hickson stated that he and Controller William J. Lucas would perfonn the audit and have it completed sometime this week or next. (Continued on Page 31 UNIVERSITV I E expalnation that insufficient data for a complete audit had been supplied by Mr. Mednick. Moreover. despite earlier assurances that the financial opinion would be prepared without charge. the accounting firm has billed the Student Government for fifty dollars. K.DCes Explaias Det.Us Appearing before the Government Operations Committee of the Student LeJ;:islature last Tuesday. November 28. Mr. Kunces asserted that he had mailed all of the Government's financial records to Mr. Mednick during the summer. and that it was only the latter's failure to examine the books carefully which led him to believe that some of the figures were missing. When Mr. Mednick attempted to insert his own numbers for the "missing" figures. his lack of accounting expertise prevented him from (orwarding sufficient information (or an audit to the aceounting finn. When asked to comment upon his own role in the incident. f\lr. Mednick replied that he had received all of the financial records from Mr. Kunces. but onlv over an extended period of time. His own lack of experience. he explained. prevented him from that the Treasurers records .....ere not incomplete. Mr. Mednick further admilted that it had been a mistake on his part to attempt to compile a financial report from the cancelled checks and receipts when he knew so little about practices. "1 took responsibility for what the Treasurer should have done." he said. HIdSOll to PeTfond "-lit Claiming to have no knowledge of the background of the Government's attempts to sec:.un: a. •• .• Mr. FAIRfiELD UNIVERSITY, fAIRfiELD, CONNEc;YICUT , By Roben Bym ...... "'G-we.w-,... AN AMERICAN bREAM - Karen Hanraban as Grandma rehearses for the Edward Albee classic. "The American Dream". which opens at the Playhouse tonight and runs through Saturday night. Last week's performances of "The American Dream" and "Happy Ending" were cancelled. Vol. 3, No. 14 Book Tampering Seen As Cause of No Gov't. Audit John M. Hickson. Vice- PresKlent in charge of the University's Business and Finance Division. has revealed that Student Government President Steven Mednick and Treasurer Robert Kunces have submitted the Government's financial books to him for audit of the 197I-n Finn Holds Up A.dil According to Student Government representatives the action results from a series of mix-ups and delays caused when President Mednick attempted to secure a financial opinion from a private New Haven auditing firm. Mr. Mednick first attempted to obtain an audit of the Government's books the summer when he asked Mr. Kunces to supply him with all financial records and receipts pertaining to the previous fiscal year. Although there seems to be some confusion as to what happened next. Mr. Kunces apparently complied. Nevertheless. either as a consequence of his own oversight or because of an unfamiliarity with reading financial transcripts. Mr. Mednick came to believe that he had not been given all of the necessary figures. Mednick Inserts Figures It was at this point that the Government President. using the cancelled checks and reeeipts which he had in his possession. attempted to fill in what he thought were the missing figures. These he sent at the end of the summer to the New Haven accounting finn of Einebinder and Young. lIt1lich had promised to perform the audit free of charge. Now nearly four months later Einebinder and Young has returned the unaudited Government books witb W -
Transcript

McGinley Out AsSearch Chairman

Mr. Wlesley was graduated fromthe University of Utah in 1939\,';Ih a B.S. in ~'I(>('hanical

EnlitineerinJi:. Hl" subsequentJ)·attended the Harvard BusinessSChool and was named VicePresident In charJ!:e of Sales ofthe American Can Company'sfonner Canco Division In 1966he was named Vice Presidentand assistant to the Presidentand in 1966 assumed thf'responsibilities of Senior VicePrt'sidenl.

Voice

From lbe Editorsand Staff Members

ollbe

Merry Christmasand

A Uapp.y New )'ear

. BYrD

This year's aeademie calendarleavf'lO little time for studt'nt1' topl'f'pare for Chri:;tmas. But oncea~ain this )"f'ar studl'nts willhavl' the uniqu(' opportunit.,·IO dolOomE' Christmas shoppin~ on('ampos and hE'lp thl' peopll' of.o\ppalachia at tht" sam(' timp.

Appalachian Volunt('('fS In(' ..an Of)i:anizalion whi('h markt'lilthp hand made proouct:- ofAppalachian Craftsml'n in aneffort to stimulatl' ('conomiC'Ji:rowth in that area. will run athree day displa~' I)('c 11·13 onthe Falr1lplll Umvt'l"SlIy eampus

Campus C'hainnan 01 th('AppalaC'hian VoIUnle('fs.Tl'rt'rK'e Horan. said. "\\'e hadmuch 11"51' to offer la:-t ,·par. andwerl' still ('nthusiasticall,'re<'f'ived by Ihe Jl:raduatf' andundef)i:raduate :-tudents. This\·ear. with all kinds of new ilemson sale at half the prices foundCOmmef('lal!v. I think ~ eanofft>r students ~e unique RlltIdeail and help .\ppalaehia WhiledoinJi: It."

The Appalaehlan crafl1'dlspla\' Will be in Xavier HallMonday. Tuesday andWednesday evenings from 6:30pm until 9:30 for thecon\'cnicncp of the I'!raduateschools.

A booth will also be in theCampus Center Oak RoomTuesday from noon until 2:00p.m. for undetRraduates anduniversil~' staff members to,hop

A wide variety of products ....illbe on hand with handmadepatchwork quilts. cherry woodchess and checker boards.stuffl'd animals of all sizes andhand crafted wood productsamong the many items to beavailable.

"With all the different anddistinctive products .....e have."Horan said... , am surt' that .....1"

have somethinJi: for just abouteverybody_ ..

Appalachian Volunteers Inc.also have a store. in Westportlocated at Bulkley Road Northand Post Rd.. where an evenlarRW selt'Clion of Appalachiancraftsmanship can be found Thestore is open every day except onSunday.

Staffed completely byvolunteers. tht> AppalachianHouse store will also be openThursday and Friday eveninRSuntil 9 p.m.

AppalachianCrafts OnSale Here

EnrollmentRise BucksState Trend

Fairfield University is one ofonly six private collelites In thestate tbat has increased Its fulllime undergraduate enrollm('ntthis y'Car.

FilNres recentl ... rt'leaSNl b\'the Connecticut Confert'net' o(Independent Collelles :-:how Ihatonly six of thf' I went)'independent four)'eareollf'Ji:t's Inthe statt' had f'nrollmentincreases this year O\'er lastyear. Those addiflJi: to theirundel'Ji!raduate student bodywere Connecticut Colh~lite.Trinit\'. Weslevan. Yale. St.Joseph's 'and FairfieldUniversity.

Total enrollment in the privatesector stayed about the same at26.871. In the public sector thefour year colleJl:es anduniversities showed anenrollment increase of less thanl~. with the total student bodyrising slightly to 54.S3S.

Next to Yale University withan increase of 262 students.Fairfield. University showed thelarJ!:est increase - 260 students.

State scholarship aid toConnecticut students is based onthe number of Connecticutresidents in the school. Last vearthe aid was based on the growthof Connecticut studentenrollment.

D. Bruce Wiesley. a mem~rof the Search Committee and aUniversity Trustf'e. hassucceeded Rev. James JMcGinley. S.J .. as Chainnan ofthe Committee.

Mr Wiesley. who is a seniorVice President of the AmencanCan Company. lIti\l manaJi:e theaffairs of the Search Committeeas well as schedule and conduetall meetinlits.

Fr. McGinle.... 1It1l0 had servedas the Committee's Chainnansince it was otfi!aniU'd inSeptf'rTlber. resigned the postwhen his duties as Rector of theJesuit Community intervened.He claimed that he could notfulfill both roles adequately andtherefore decided to announcehis resignation at IheCommittee's December Imeeting.

As Chainnan Fr. McGinleysparked criticism from thefaculty and student body for hisproposal to create a seven·member committee advisory tothe Trustees. Both the teachersand studf'nts h"vf' voted towithhold participation on thespecial committee until tht'~·

have been grantE'd a laf)i:('r rotein the selection of a n('wUniversity President.

A native of Bradliate. Iowa.

,Dec. 7,1972

-.,~-,.

CAPTAIN GEORGE GROOM - driviDI against Southern'sCharlie Miller, surpasses the 1,000 point plateau and aeeds •

9JfM1'As9tb become Fairfield's all·tlme LeadiDg scorer.

Hickson stated that he hadre«ived the books from MrKunces onl\' last week The VicePresKient Stated that two yf'arsago. when the administrationagreed to colleC't the optionalStudent Government ActivitiesFee. he had offered to performan audit of the Government'sbooks (ree of charge. Howe\'er.the offer was declined. whenGovf'rnment officials in(onnedMr. Hickson that they wouldseek the assistance of a privateaccountinlit finn.

Last week Mr. Hicksonreceived a phone call from Mr.Junces. who asked if the offerstill stood. When the VicePresident replied that it did. Mr.Junces alitreed to submit thebooks for inspection.

Mr. Hickson stated that he andController William J. Lucaswould perfonn the audit andhave it completed sometime thisweek or next.

(Continued on Page 31

•UNIVERSITV•I E

expalnation that insufficientdata for a complete audit hadbeen supplied by Mr. Mednick.Moreover. despite earlierassurances that the financialopinion would be preparedwithout charge. the accountingfirm has billed the StudentGovernment for fifty dollars.

K.DCes Explaias Det.UsAppearing before the

Government OperationsCommittee of the StudentLeJ;:islature last Tuesday.November 28. Mr. Kuncesasserted that he had mailed allof the Government's financialrecords to Mr. Mednick duringthe summer. and that it was onlythe latter's failure to examinethe books carefully which ledhim to believe that some of thefigures were missing. When Mr.Mednick attempted to insert hisown numbers for the "missing"figures. his lack of accountingexpertise prevented him from(orwarding sufficientinformation (or an audit to theaceounting finn.

When asked to comment uponhis own role in the incident. f\lr.Mednick replied that he hadreceived all of the financialrecords from Mr. Kunces. butonlv over an extended period oftime. His own lack of accountin~experience. he explained.prevented him from realizin~

that the Treasurers records.....ere not incomplete.

Mr. Mednick further admiltedthat it had been a mistake on hispart to attempt to compile afinancial report from thecancelled checks and receiptswhen he knew so little aboutaceountin~ practices. "1 tookresponsibility for what theTreasurer should have done." hesaid.

HIdSOll to PeTfond "-litClaiming to have no knowledge

of the background of theGovernment's attempts tosec:.un: a. .I?rjy~t~ ••aud~it.• Mr.

FAIRfiELD UNIVERSITY, fAIRfiELD, CONNEc;YICUT,

By Roben Bym

...... "'G-we.w-,...AN AMERICAN bREAM - Karen Hanraban as Grandma rehearses for the Edward Albee classic."The American Dream". which opens at the Playhouse tonight and runs through Saturday night. Lastweek's performances of "The American Dream" and "Happy Ending" were cancelled.

Vol. 3, No. 14

Book Tampering Seen AsCause of No Gov't. Audit

John M. Hickson. Vice­PresKlent in charge of theUniversity's Business andFinance Division. has revealedthat Student GovernmentPresident Steven Mednick andTreasurer Robert Kunces havesubmitted the Government'sfinancial books to him for auditof the 197I-n bud~et.

Finn Holds Up A.dilAccording to Student

Government representatives theaction results from a series ofmix-ups and delays caused whenPresident Mednick attempted tosecure a financial opinion from aprivate New Haven auditingfirm.

Mr. Mednick first attemptedto obtain an audit of theGovernment's books durin~ thesummer when he asked Mr.Kunces to supply him with allfinancial records and receiptspertaining to the previous fiscalyear. Although there seems to besome confusion as to whathappened next. Mr. Kuncesapparently complied.Nevertheless. either as aconsequence of his own oversightor because of an unfamiliaritywith reading financialtranscripts. Mr. Mednick cameto believe that he had not beengiven all of the necessaryfigures.

Mednick Inserts FiguresIt was at this point that the

Government President. usingthe cancelled checks andreeeipts which he had in hispossession. attempted to fill inwhat he thought were themissing figures. These he sent atthe end of the summer to theNew Haven accounting finn ofEinebinder and Young. lIt1lichhad promised to perform theaudit free of charge.

Now nearly four months laterEinebinder and Young hasreturned the unauditedGovernment books witb W

-

Page % THE UNIVERSITY VOICE Thursday, Dec. 7,1972

should not be taken as a sign thatits members have not helddivergent viewpoints. On thecontrary. committee membershave often expresseddisaRreement as to thosequalifications which theyconsider essential.

When questioned about his ownviews concerning the list. Dr.Combs replied that to himscholarly commitment was themost important qualification.

"I would not like to see abusinessman in chaq!e of theUniversity because I think theperson chosen should definitely ­have some kind of educationalphilosophy. At the same time heshould be flexible enough andcapable of acting as arbitratorbetween opposillR factions."

He went on to explain that hewould not like to see the newPrestdent chosen from amongthe Fairfield faculty itself.because such a person would belacking in objectivity and wouldbe bound by his fonner ties withother members of the faculty. Asa result he might tend t e

own committee, consisting of achainnan and foor consultingmembers instead of two. Thisproblem was solved at theTrustee search Committe'smeeting of November 17. whenthe Trustees accepted the rive·man Faculty search Committeeas represenUrtfl: the entirefaculty.

However. faculty disfavor of aposition merely advisory and itslack of a vote in the finalchoosing of a new President haveposed a new problem.

Although some among thefaculty find this statusacceptable. others have voicedconsKlerable criticism. In fact.at its November 17 meeting thegeneral faculty voted to boycottmembership on the seven­member committee unless theTrustees accede to facultydemands for some binding votein the search process.

In addition the committee'sapparent agreement on the listof core requirements desirablein the next University President

\

In a recent interview. Dr.Theodore Combs, Chainnan ofthe Faculty search Committee.declared the committee's veryexistence to be in a state of"limbo" and expounded his ownpersonal views on the necesaryqualifications for the incomingUniversity President.

Rev. James J. McGinley. S.J.,former Chairman of thePresidential search Committee.had originally planned toorganize a committee. or sevenwith the faculty and the six othersegments of the Universitycommunity electing orappointi'llR one representative tosit on the new committee.

Moreover. he hadrecommended that each of theseven groups listed appoint nomore than two consultants toassist its chosen representative.The initial problem, which arosein regard to the faculty'srepresentative. was that thefaculty had already elected its

~t'I':' t

Faculty's Search ChairmanAirs Views on Racefor Pres.

renZle o ",no

ueaUon DON'T DO YOUR CHRISTMAS SHOPPING special interests rather than theUniversity as a whole.

is to be unfil you (heck with Dr. Combs would 'like to see ast time

ijfi2N[YV,JJ;F.~SJesuit .. lhe school's Chief

,as we Executive. but only if one can be

as and found with the properFor I.... Finftl Merchondise qualifications, particularly witli

ugh an lcn"tS~ a good liberal arts background.leetual f ... Gift Wroppi"9 Another important

. which Mosler(ho.ge,..80nkomeric:ord, qualification mentioned by Dr.

lege in Offic:iol .epresentative fo.:loy·A.....oys Combs was that of national

prominence. As an example, heentire RoJ.x, Omego, Accutr"on, TIHo"y, cited Notre Dame's President.

de that Towle, lenox, Minto" Rev. Theodore Hesburgh, who

d.Gr-eot gifts,lorge 000 small recently served as a member of

Y_ (on GET STONEO IN GOOD TASTE, ..... ith on one of President Nixon'samong Ar1<orved or Oronge BtoS$OII'l rirog committees.future 1'Olt'..-os~OM." Regarding the new President'sellorts ......__.... 1_1MSODUJft ........- ..- (Continued on Page31to take -titutes .....

B\1oiCidering.,... .....................

tum, if

ram,ornu,klll~ )'Our Second-class postage paid atometo Fairfield, Connecticut.

over as Tile UDivenlty Voice is the01 the br(·ad • campus newspaper published

by the rIS(~ every Thursday during themake academic year by Fairfield

e.rasft·r

University. Opinions expressed

looksherein in no way reflect the of-ficial position of the University.

temay .Is our ....n~!

Subscriptions are available at at the yearly rate of $6.00 and may be

volves obtained by writing to the

'de andeditorial office located in LoyolaHall, Fairfield University, Fair-

that field Conn., 06430.,- Edltor-ID-OlldIt Byro

,,-,Robert Bym

le~ple"sNews Editor

of this David Pettinicchion the E4Jtorial Pace Editorords in Kevin Curtinairfi~ld

&AV'''G& BaNK. Spons Edi&orarticles • -BRIDGEPORT Tony Mixcus

as not to - - •• -......yEdl....

IIUIiIIt HOllUl OI'OSlT UISUItU.U COIt'Oll,,1I0"George Ahlmeyer...................

~ , . . . '. . , Terence Horan..•'\.,",-"",*\~¥' ',I,' ,rtUc:."_', '. • ". IIJ':"'~" .'" - - .... • • ~Q

.. Kevin CuninI

Why AllThe Rush?

An editorial in last week's Ualvenlty Voicecriticiled the shortness of the first semester anda~ed in favor of an academic calendar which wouldpenn it the semester break to be~in earlier than it nowdoes. Even more important and more tbought­provoki~ than this specific proposal lor change.however. was the editorial's underlying implicationthat education at Fairfield has become a servant ofspeed and compactness.

Apparently in accordance with the overly I . dpace of modem American life. university edseems to have degenerated to the point where itendured at best and completed within the shortepossible. Not only do we rush through semesterskeep sight only on the transitory goals of Christmsummer vacations. but we may also hurry throentire college career if we like. For the intelelite there is the accelerated Capsule programallows a student to complete four years of colthree. Vet even a sizeable proportion of thestudent body seems to have adopted the allitucollege life is not to be enjoyed. but only tolerate

Nowhere is this attitude more prevalent thanmany of the pre-meds. Looking only toward thegoa) of medical school, concentrating theiralmost exclusively on studies. and neglectingpart in the many other areas of what consuniversity life, they may find tbemsleves wonwhen their rejected med school applications rethey haven't lived the previous four years in vain

II is not so muc h the Iault 01 the Pre-med prot!any department here, that many students have cview a Fairfield education as something to passquickly as possible. Rather. it is the altitudestudents, who far from being detenninedenvironment in which they find themselves. cantheir college lives whatever they want them to b

The student who as an incoming freshmanlorward only to the day on which he will graduasay after four years, "I gained my diploma." Buperson who accepts Fairfield for itself and inhimsell in what is and could be here. both insloutside the academic realm. will say. "Duringtime I grew as a human being...

Arts NeedA Theatre

. Robe

This past Sunday dramatized on~aJ!ain the need fora theatre on the Fairfield campus. The Ambassadors ofSo~ (The Glee Clubl presented a combined concertwith the St. Joseph's (Hartlord) Glee Club. When thetime came for the com bined number at the end of theconcert. the two o~anizations crowded onto the sta~e

so tiJthtly it was a wonder that they were able to sinJt.There is no permanent place on campus which has a

st3Jte and seatiol'! capacity to handle such occasions.Gonzal!3 Auditorium is hardly the place for a musical.and the university Playho'Jse has a somewhat limitedsealin~ capacity. The Oak Room is not suitable for alldramatic or cultural events.

Concerts would nol be the sole beneficiaries of a newtheatre. The weekend movies would benefit J!reatlyfrom a permanent. la~e theatre buildinJ!. A moviescreen which could be lowered into place would notonly be better for viewi~ the shows. but also would runless risk of bein~-vandal ized than the current screen.

Most universities in the country have a buildin~

desi~ned to encou ra~e the perlonnin~ arts. In the pastfew years. Fairfield has built a new science buildin~

and has expanded seatin~ in the ~ymnasium. It wouldseem that buildin~ plans for a theatre ou~ht not to bedismissed Iiji!:htly, if Fairlield is to offer its students awide scope of ways in which they may expressthemselves.

----.---EDITORIAL POLICY - Interested and informed readers

newspaper may submit guest editorials for publicationeditorial page. Editorials must be no longer than 500 wlength and should pertain to topics dealing solely with FUniversity. The editors reserve the rigbt to edit allsubmitted. but editin« will be performed in such a way soalter the opinion ollhe autbor.

FOI'" further information contact the Editorial Page EditOl'".. , .....~..;J'kw_. ..... i.·6~ - ~

~~ ~....,.n ....1fT

Thursday, Dec. 7,1972"'''\lr.J JT'?Sl~" II "1 .~

THE UNIVERSITY VOICE(> ....

Page 3

..

Combs

"My Uncle" was written anddirected by Jacques Tati - whoalso plays the lead role. Thisparody of automated factoriesand futuristic booses is so perfectthat even after 13 vean the filmis not dated. Tati's films areaffectionate toward humanbeings, but, at the same time,scornful of bourgeois rigidity,materialism and convention. Heis an irresistable and universalclown with a superb sense oftiming. "My Uncle" wasawarded the Academy Award forbest foreign film in 19S8.

"Reefer Madness" was madein 1936. It is a dramatic featureabout the evils of smolting mari­juana. Made as a serious film inthe era when a national move­ment, under the direction of theTreasury Dept., outlawed thesmoking of Cannabis,"Reefer Madness" today is awildly humorous statement aboutthe mores of America. KevmSaDders of ABC·TV said aboutthis film: "An incredible seriesof gross and ludicrous distortionstbat 36 years later becomeshilarious when seen from theother side of \be generation gap,a gap this film did so. much tocreate."

Ipture serlinisplay WINE .. SPIRIT

MERCHANTS

ihrary wee a~d S1l'ft1 1475 P05l Road8r'<!&fpol'l. Conn. fairfifld. Conn=un ...."

tion of 2\ works8el. John. Clinnon FairlifldQllr.

12&2S1alfSlreflby noted Bridgeport 81i<!&fport. Connertrude Amidar was "..",

display last week in ';oIorado

us Library. FREE DELIVERYe-man exhibition ofwill remain on public 259-0673hrough January 31. FREE PARKINGr Christmas and New

".rks of Miss Amidar CALIFORNIAaquette for Owl. of

pink marble on a blackCHAMPAGNEFish. of Belf(ian •rble on white marble

e base: Hiding. in pink • PINK00 , walnut base:e wood on a mahogany CHAMPAGNEI. of Cretan alabaster:of Mexican marble oncite base. • SPARKUNGorks include Bird. of BURGUNDYwith sil,,:er foel o.s. rose marble:

. of olive wood on a • COLD"d slate base: DUCKof caJcedony onail, brass on blackther and Child, Cretanon lucite: Untitled.

$24~,n black wood: and Therosewood o. black

RT SALE CALWA

Originals

ES'I5 ·'35 ONLY AT SERLIN STORES

atercolors, Etc.ertly Framed serlinFiElD MDTOR INN

hItC_t.... ISTHEMOSTKNOWLEDGEABLE.., .... - hirfWll WINE STORE

, Dt<. 10, 1972 IN BRIDGEPORT1 AM·6PM and FAIRFIELD

F," Admiu;onAND ANY OTHER PLACE

Movie ComediesTo Lighten Exams

SeuD

InLA colle<:

executedartisan Gplaced onthe Nyseli

The onsculpturedisplay texcepl foYear's da.

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actions once he has beenselected. Dr. Combs would liketo see him maintain theUniversity's good relations withthe surrounding community. butwould like to see the newPresident work primarily on theproblems within the Universityitself. One of these internalproblems, he said, is the.. -, • .1._ In' ~. ,. alienation at Fairfield of

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In order to belp you get throughfinal exams, the Film Society hasplanned a series of unusual films.They are guaranteed to malr.e youlaugh ". well, they will at leasttake your mind off French, orchemistry, or bistory, orwhatever.

On Tues., Dec. 12, a Frencbcome-uppance that she deserves. comedy named "My Uncle" willI think. Christ's birth was worth be shown; on Wed. and 1bun.the effort. aDd if we are the Dec. 13 and 14, the movie isChristian community that we "Reefer Madness"; on Mon.,profess to be. there oulilht to be a Dec. 18, "Horsefeathen" is thelot of people around here who attraction. Eacb film will beshould agree. Maybe if we make presented at 7 p.m. in Gonzagait to January lst. we can aim for Auditorium.

JanUary;2~odl'l$a~!~~~!~~~~g::4~

This year marked FairfieldUniversity's second annualUnited Fund campaign and withthe results already tabulated.Stephen Jakab. the UniversityDirector of Personnel. and thecampaign chairman at Fairfield.has nothinf( but praise for thisyear's participants.

According to Mr. Jakab theresults this year were up 125percent over last year's initialdrive. (n the first United FundCampaign. the amount of moneyreached was $2:205.00: this yearthe amount of money donatedwas $4,867.00. In 1971 the numberparticipAting mUle drive was &S••whilp this year 180 people tookpart. f ~

Fairfield University waschosen along with otherbusinesses and institutions to beone of the twenty pacesetters inthe charity drive. .8U! Malley

Fund DriveNets Reeord

ContrihutiOli

reveal the soundness of theGovernment's financial policies.

When queried aboot why theGovernment had not acceptedthe Hickson offer duririjl; thesummer. President Mednickresponded. "No one from theUniversity had ever told meabout it.··

with snow. but already I havebeen hearing "I don't know: itdoesn't really feel likeChristmas" around sch~1. Butis Christmas something for avaRUe "it" to feel. or for us?

1f it doesn't feel likeChristmas. what are we doing toimprove the situation? There areways. And they are not easy.

The best solution to thisdilemma was given to me by ateacher in high school who, aboutthis time of year, told all hisclasses ready for Christmasvacation that the best Christmasthey could have would mean tofoflow Christ's exampleperfectly: For the week betweenChristmas Day and New Year'sDay, we were to think ofnothing for ourselves. "1 want"was to be stricken from theactive vocabulary. He dared usto do it. I tried, and I failed. But Iam willing to try again.

So maybe Edna can be provenwrong. She is a good judge of "lacondition. humaine," but if westop worrying about parking lotsand Union Theologicalseminaries and the best way toreplace someone who hasn't leftyet. maybe she will get the

Muir and Teilhard de Chardin.The program will also includecarol singing with audienceparticipation being invited.

Guest performers from theWestport Brass Ensemble willinclude Rick Burke and Jeffri!yBerns. trumpet: Scott Conant,French horn: SUsan Pike,trombone: and Robert Borden.tuba. They will perform sonatasbv Johann Pezel and one from':Die Baekelsaenf(erlieder."

The concert is under thedirection of Andrew Heath,director of the university'sMusic division of the Fine Artsdepartment.Williams: and "Alleluia." byWilliam Boyce.

The university's Festival ofChristmar l....usic will includethe Nativity story with readingsfrom J'. B. Phillips'contemporary translation of theBible.

Government Audit

By Bill Verrilli

The Voice Box

To Jesus on His Birthday

(Continued From Page 1)Although the administration

has collected $28,000 - 130,000from the Activities Fee, only$15,000 has been released for theGovernment's use. Theremaininl $13,000 - $15,000 hasbeen retained pendinlcompletion of the audit. which.accordiDl to Mr. Hickson, will

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COED SINGERS - practice with director Andrew Heath in anticipation of Sunday's concert. Theholiday songfest will be held in the Oak Room.

The Fairfield UniversityWomen's Chorus in conjunctionwith the Westport BrassEnsemble. will present itsannual Christmas concert onSunday, December 10at 4 p.m. inthe Campus Center Oak Room.

The concert is open withoulcharge to the public.

The 4O-voice Women's Choruswill presenl "Fanfare forChristmas Day," by MartinShaw: "Lo. How a Rose e'erBlooming." by Praetorius;"Noel Nouvelet." a sixteenthcentury French piece: WilliamBlake's "Cradle Sof\i:," set tomusic by Vaughan Williams: and"Personent Hoelie," as arrangedby Holst.

Other selections include" Songof the Nuns of Chester," from afifteenth-century manuscript:';Carol of the Bells," byLeontovich: "How Far is it toBethlehem." by Vaughan

For this your mother sweatedin the cold.

For this you bled upon thebiller tree:

A yard of tinsel ribbon boughtand sold:

A paper wreath: a day at homeforme.

The merry bells ring out. thepeople kneel;

Up goes the man of God beforethe crowd:

With voice of honey and witheyes of steel

He drones your humble gospelto the proud.

Nobody listens. Less than thewind that blows

Are all your words to us youdied to save.

o Prince of Peace! 0 Sharon'sdewy Rose!

How mute you lie within yourvaulted grave.

The stone the angel rolledaway with tears

IS'back upon your mouth thesethousand years.

Edna St. Vircent Millay

Is she right? 1 wonder. Thecampus has been at best dusted

Coeds to PresentChristInas Concert

Page 4 THE UNIVERSITY VOICE Thursday, I>ec. 7,1972

Mcinnes Offers Insights on Years at Fairfield

What It Means To Be A College President

Best drinks at prices oriented to college students.

-PRESENTS-

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William C. Mclnn", S.J .•Througb tbe Years

As PresidentCollage By George Ablmeyer

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He particularly criticized thestudents for their long-standing"confusion" of the concept ofbinding authority witb that ofgovemance. "When governancebecomes a political notion. itbecomes confused. Whengovemance is seen as ultimateauthority to bind someone. itobscures all possibilities ofparticipating and workingtogether. In an academiccommunity the greatest rightshould be to be heard. Herestudents want to be able to put uptheir hands and bind people."Cite Need for Strolll Leaclerslaip

Fr. Mcinnes emphasized thatstudent activity requires. morethan anythinjil: else. strongstudent leadership. Forexample. three years ago thecommuter club and the filmsociety \\"ere very active; thentheir leaders graduated. and thec1ubscoJlapsed.

He would like to see "a strong.representative StudentGovernment so that issues couldbe heard. and not sidetracked bypseudo· issues. .. He alsorecommends that the Presidentof the Student Government be ajunior. since sophomores lacksufficient experience in theoperation o( the school. and thatthe concept of class officers bereinstated to restore a sense ofclass identity. For students whowish to participate in theUniversity's J{ovemance. theyshould get involved at the facultylevel: that's where the decisionsare made.

CbaJleaa:es of tbe SeveDliesFinally. what are the

challenges Fairfield races in theseventies? Father Mcinnesbelieves that academicallyFairfield has a great future.Evidence of this is that it wasone of the six private collejil:es inConnecticut that encountered anincrease in enrollment this year.in the company of schools likeVale. Wesleyan. and Trinity. Butas a University Fairfield l'eedsto "tighten up a sense ofdirection. People are askingwhere do we go from here? Notconstruct more buiildings. butteaching. In the coming years.we need to develop really goodteaching. .. And the newpresident in 13 who will lead thistask is faced with the sameproblem as the new president in'64: "Lead the schooL J{ctstudents interested - that's thepresident's job. He has to be aleader:' Says William C.Mcinnes. "The challenge of theseventies is to find alternateways to grow in learning andcooperation. and not to find waysto polarize one another."r·:·~,;:Y.&':::;:';~~';:-;'~

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Fairfield Collell:e PreparatorySChool. was co-author of a paper."Conditioning of the RabbitNictitation Membrane Responsewith Brief InteresssionInternals." which was presentedduring the November 2 ~4 annu~lmeeting of the PsychonomlcSociety in St. Louis. Mo.

Other co·authors wereFairfield student Linda J.Martino. of Middlebury. Conn..and Or. W. Ronald salafia.associate professor ofPsychol~ at the university.who presented the paper beforethe largest scientific society forexperimental psychologists inthe nation.

The experiment is one of aseries on the consolidationprocess of memory. Followingeach trial. it takes a period oftime in a learning situation forthe electrophysiolOfi\:ical andbiochemical process involved inthe pennanent fixation ofmemory to become complete.

"Studying the number of trialsper session and variations inintersession is one of the manypaths being taken in an attemptto understand the memoryprocess." explained Or. salafia.

Since the inception of the NewEngland PsychologicalAssociation's fellowshipprogram in 1966. one or moreFairfield students have beenselected annually for the honor.This marts the third consecutiveyear in which two Fairfieldstudents have been elected forthe honor. and its studentrecipients number more thanthose from any college oruniversity in the New Englandarea.

thought. Student action.particularly the buildingtakeovers in 1970. turned off theboard of trustees. Had politicaleveats beea dlffer-nt. a m.c'Itl'NKer form oflripanile _.ldexisl bere today, evea possiblysladents on llae board oflrastees...

Trlpartltism AliveThen is tripartite ~overnance

dead at Fairfield? "Tripartite isvery alive. but confrontationpolitics doesn't work. Andstudents here have practiced toomuch confrontation politics." Hepointed out that at san Franciscostudents have gotten on the rankand tenure committee. byrecogniziDR the importance of"non-binding" positions wherenevertheless their voice can be

.heard. "Students here now havea similar chance to have a voicein the selection of the nextpresident. and they are refusingit over the idea of a vote. "

Weathered Turbulent .'sFr. Mcinnes. by virtue of his

tenure. belongs to that class ofcollelile presideDts who wereunfortunate enough to have beenin o(fief! in the latter half of thesixties. The years of studentdissent at Fairfield werecharacterized by thetransfonnation of a strict, male.Catholic college into an open.diverse University. They werealso characterized by buildingtakeovers. mass rallies. and astudent strike. Lookinlil back onthese years and the changes thatoccurred. Fr. Mcinnes said "Thepressure of society around usbrought about chanjil:es in theuniversity·· in life styles. inacademic quality. and in ourposition viz. a viz. thecommunity." But he thought thepressure exerted by the studentswas counter-productive. "Thestudent pressure involved toomany rallies and too little

Students CapturePsych. FellowshipsTwo Fairfield University

seniors majoring in Psychologyhave been elected Fellows of theNew England PsycholOjil:icalAssociation.

Those elected are Thomas S.Kaluzynski. son of Mrs.Kazimera Kaluzynski and thelate Marian Kaluzvnski ofHolyoke. Mass.. and· AnthonyDaston. son of Mr. and Mrs.Nicholas Daston of Bridgeport.

They were selected forfellowships on the basis oforijil:inai and imaginativeresearch work and pre­professional abilities. said Dr.Boitano.

Mr. Kaluzynski worted under­Dr. Boitano in studiesinvestigating the role ofhippocampal lesions in rats alK!cats on inhibition of responses inoperant conditions for delayedreinforcement at low rates ofresponse.

A member of the unlversity'svolunteer Youth InterracialCouncil IYIC). tutoringpfOfl:ram. he is also a member ofits Psychology Club and proctorin a PhysiolOJl"ical Psychologycourse.

A fonner reporter and editorwith the school newspaper.Ualverslty Voice, Mr.Kaluzynski was selected in 1970for Dean's List honors.

While at Holyoke CatholicHigh School. he was a member ofthe National Honor Society.editor of the school newspaperand yearbook. and also lettered intrack.

He plans to attend graduateschool and specialh.e inrehabilitation_

Mr. Daston. a jil:raduate of

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power as President during thoseeijitht years. was oftenexag~rated. "The President ofa university has far less power incertain areas than the rhetoric ofsome people would sugRest."But he also added. "He has farmore power in other areas thanpeople think:' Speci£ically. thePresident commands ~reat

authority as chief spokesman forthe university and as chiefexecutive officer for thetrustees. His most valuableaccomplishment as president. hesaid. was his ability to createself· responsibility in otherpeople. An Academic Council. ateacher's rights clause in thefaculty contracts. and even aboard of trustees fin 1964 itconsisted of four jesuits I \\"ereall innovations he brou~ht in.Cil" Academic AclaievemealsIn his eiRht years as President.

Father Mcinnes feels the mostimportant accomplishment hasbeen Fairfield's ~rowth Inacademic reputation andeducational quality. Moreprojitrams are offered. thefaculty is lafJ:er and morediverse. the ~raduate divisionhas expanded. and each yearbrililhter students are beingattracted here. Asked what his.i:reatest disappointment was. hesaid "to see my tenn come to ant>nd at Fairfield." He added"The greatest consolation of thejob has IJeen the people I'veknown: the disappointment isthere are many fine people hereI've never met."

PENFIELD RD.FAIRFIELD

POunC.'L CAUWS •• Con~ressman Stewart.. McKinney fA the·lIh Dlstrkt add",S5eS membt>rs fA the Connecticut Intercollejil:iateSlud<'nt Ll'J!islature at their stat(' mecti~ last &inday. Listenil1$!:IS Con~ressman-f>lectRonald Sarasin of the 5th Dist rict.

BEACHSIDE

Rev. William C. Mcinnes. s.J..was installed as the sixth

-President of Fairfield Universityon saturday. Oct. 24.1964. At theceremony the highest-rankingblack judJi:e in the country urgedcollell:es to develop leaders whowould fil/:ht (or a better. moreequitable world. a New Yorktheater designer said artistsmust learn to view their fellowman with compassion. and thecommanding Ji:eneral of the U.S.Army Center for SpecialWarfare discussed thecommunist menace. Perhaps Ifsomeone from 1m could havebeen in that audience in the lIl:ym.he would have seen in Ihismixture of liberal humanism.sixties idealism. and cold-warconservatism. a prediction ofwhal lay in the elJi:ht yearsahead.

Growth and C'laaDgesDurinjit Fr. Mcinnes' te"" at

Fairfield. e.i.i:ht buildirlRs wereconstructed. tM> size of thefaculty doubled. the. dress codeand compulsory Massatt<>ndance went. I(irls andparietals came. the studentswent on strike and buildin~s

.....ere seized. the tri·partiteconstitution was defeated. andthe quality of educationlncr<'ased. To litet the reaction ofthf> man who. more than anvone('1:-;('. was most often blamed andcr('dited for all this. I went andlalk('d with FathE'r Mcinnes.

H(' readilv admitted that his

Announcing'new policy. college I.D.·s witb picture now will beconsidered in determining proof of age over 18.

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By Chris Walsh

Thursday, Dec. 7,1972 THE UNIVERSITY VOICE Pa. _. -_. -----_.- ..- -----------=-=

-

......, THE UNIVERSITY VOICE Thursday, Dec. 7, 1m

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many cases separate politicalcontrols are dysfunctionaL" Mr.Greenberg comments.

With the funds supplied byHECUS the program was able toassume expenses incurred suchas for travel. supplies.secretarial help and the cosl of abill"llUallnterviewer.

Professors Fishman andGreenberg organized the surveyIn such a way that the"instrument" may be used ajilainin the future by other instructorsand their students.

This first return represents theinitial step in the development ofa "data bank," based on therelationship of this infonnationto the larger body of inputalready gathered on these sameareas in the 19'70 census.

Over and above the scientificvalue of tbe newly·initiatedprogram. the professorsrecognize lhe worth of thesurvey as a "pedagogicalendeavor" for the studentsinvolved.

"It provides him with agrowing experience becausethere are real responsibilitiesgiven to each student." says Mr.Greenberg. "U's not like a tennpaper which he works on in thelibrary and then puts away."

Mr. Fishman comments that"there's a tendency in mostacademic instilutions tolearn about life solely throughbooks. and we wanted ourstudents to get away from this. "

Mr. Greenberg observesfurther that "it is quiteimportant for the student to getout of the classroom and into thereal wortd to test the limits andpotentialities of the theories hehas read about in textbooks...

Following an initialorientation class at which thestudents were briefedconcerni.. the method ofinterviewinc in the varioustracts. they were each sent out~~ interview aU voting-agecitiJl!(.s 01 at least 12 bousebolds.StUdents ~re also required tofamillarile tbemselves with asma.ny characteristics of theirparticular survey area aspoulble.

Both professors acreed that abetter overall understanding ofthe area would result from thestudent·survey takers lalklngwith as many local citizens,merchants and political lea.dersas possible.

TOTAL

LOYOLA. CIlAPEL

...klarln of 511 ,. CeIIed__J•• 1.1I7!-N 1I'TZ

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The "undecided" vote willundergo additional analysis todetermine whether the"undecided" voters were boundby some common characteristic.such as political party or socialclass.

Also, they will attempt tocorrelate the citiZf'ns overallvoting preferences with theirethnic background and socialclass in an attempt to detenninewhether a relationship existsbetween these factors.

In addition to the questions onthe election. the four-pagequestionnaire Included a varietyof queries concerning other'political and social issues.

Sociology students areinterested in a section of thequestionnaire which examines acitizen's notion of hisneighborhood boundaries.Professor Fishman sulgests thatprior to the survey studentshypotheslZled that members oflower class nelghborboods wouldtend to eJ:pand their boundaries,while those of more upper classsections would be likely torestrict their dimensions.

The political scientists willfocus on the results. whenanalyzed. of questions such asasking voters their politicalparty preferences on the locallevel. They hope to comparelocal preferences to the nationalparty identification of suchvoters in order to detennlnewhether the party systemstill holds in a local level.

Another interested party Whenthe results are finally labulatedwill be the Higher EducationCenter for Urban StudiesIHEaJSI, which has providedsome funding for the program Inreturn for a final report which isexpected next spring.

HEeUS. according to Mr.Greenberg. is particularlyinterested in the results from asection of the questionnairewhich asks citi1l!fl opinion aboutcooperative ventures betweentowns and cities in a particularregion.

He explains tbat for manysmall towns the problems posedtoday by water and air pollution,education. transportation andthe like, are simplyoverwhelming.

"The whole notion ofreglonalizatlon Is alive todaybecause we have found that in

Aiming to foster a fratemalfeelilw among its members theCardinal Key Society is a serviceorganization designed to assistvarious clubs and campusorganizations, and to serve thecommunity in Reneral throughits volunteer programs.Members of the Society providetours for freshman. publish­yearty the student directory,provide students with a deskblotter, usher at basketballgames and athletic events uponrequest. act as hosts andhostesses for special events suchas art exhibits. In addition theytutor in cooperation with theY.I.C.. wort with the Knilhts ofColumbus In planning aChristmas party for chUdrenwith cerebral palsy, andcoordinate the activities forSenior Week at the end of eachyear.

The Society is also involvedwith the year~d st. Joseph'sManor program. through whichits members render theirservices to the aced who resideat the Manor: and also c0­sponsors with Phi Kappa 1betathe annual Blood Bank whichwas held last~.

Consisting at present of someU members from thesophomore. junior, and seniorclasses, the Cardinal Key is coedand has as its officers JolinRomeo. presldent: Don Pagoda.vice-president: MartinO'Connor. treasurer: and MaryJo Colles, secretary. The clubmoderator is Paul Davis of theHistory Department.

Admission Into the club is byselection which occurs in theSflriJw. During this "Spectus"period, those people interested injoining are Intervie~ forseveral weeks and are admittedafter a fonnal vote by the club'smemben.

"What the Key looks' for,"says John Romeo, "are peoplethat are able to serve lhe schooland are since~ly williDc tocontribute their talentsCOftStrvctively. "

Founded in 1", the Societyusaall,. coaduct. buslaessmeetqs twice every fIQIth.

.J........'.

CardirialKey ServesUniversity

By Timotllly Grace

Preliminary resullS from avoter survey taken in FairfieldCounty communitaes this fallsuggest that most local votersdecided on a candidate beforeNovember 7 and then stuck totheir guns when going to thepollson election day.

The survey was conducted by alearn of more than 100 FairfieldUniversity students this fall aspart ot the requirements for acombined Urban Sociology­Urban Politics course.

Under the direction ofProfessors Harry Fishman andDonald Greenberg. the studentssurveyed citizens in 88 censustracts in the urban and suburbanareas or Bridgeport, Fairfield,Stratford. and Trumbull. inaddiHOIl to Norwalk. Westport,Stamford and Danbury, on avariety of political and socialquestions.

Results released this week b}'the professors show that mostpeople wOO said they intended tovote for President RichardNixon in advance of election dayactually did so on November 7.

Thus far. Professors Fishmanand Greenberg say the onlyinconsistency between their pre­election data and the actualvoting statistics stems from thefact that they underestimatedthe number of votes registeredfor Senator George McGovern.who lost by an overwhelmingmarRin.

Survey Shows Nov. ContestDecided Well Before Election

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Page 7

- MixCU5

Marvin Barnes

Sorry WeMissed it,George.

Happy Birthday

receivinR 3 .....amlnR from a tn·partIte disclpJinal)' committ~.first year a$Slstant ("each NIckMacarchuk CQ-(:aptauK"d the '63StaR five and $COred 1.217 pointsduring his career

Se\'eD Gam~5OuriDJI: Vacatioa11tl'1"(' ha~ been a Rreat dpal of

talk and publicity concemlORFairfield and an N I.T. bid.Making thIS dream a realilycould beRin with an upset of theP.C. Friars, The contesl could bethe pivotal one of the younRseason. A win would give theStaji!s the much-neededmomentum lo carry lhemthrough the ChrIStmas vacationcompetition of the Queen CityTournament. Sooth Carolina.South Alabama. Brown. Coljitateand St. Joseph's

This writer. along with the restof the staff. Wlsh the Slags luckt the consensus is that it willcome in mighty handy I duringthe "off-session ..

The Purple Knights outshot theStags by a narrow margin of 31­29. with Eddie Palma cominR upwith many fine saves for theFairfield team.

Joe Flynn's four goals boostedhim from second to first place inscoring in the MetropolitanIntercollell:iate Hockey LeaRUe,n.e eight StaR goals madeFairfield the leading. Roal Retterin the Leajitue_

The Stag Icemen a", on recessnow until second semeSIf'r. Their(irst game is a non·Leaguematch 3Rainst Trinity Collejite ofHartford at the GlastonburyRink in Glastonbury.Connecticut on Jan. 20.

Providence

the field and 3-5 from the line totake honors with 17 points. SteveDiaz. who pll'ased the crowdwith his drivi~ lay-ups. hustledfor his 13 points One key notmentioned before could be in thebalanced scori~ attack. Afterthe top three mentioned above.you've got 10, nine- eight and sixpoint performances.

The Owls, on the other hand.went back to their nest hoping tosolve their shooting problems.Overall they shot 27.5 percentfrom the noor 129-781.

It was just a matter of themcounting their chickens (or inthis case Owletsl before theyhatched.

(Continued From Page 8)

and ·prides itself on having senlfour players to the NBA: JohnEgan tretiredl. Lenny WilkinsIClevelandl. Jim Walker(Houston\. and Mike RiordanI Baltimore I.

An example of Providence'sbasketabl! tradition is itsupcormnR return match a,alnstUCLA on Jan. 20.

Roundinlit out Coach DaveGarltt's startinR squad ....;11 be6'8" forward Fran COSlello. a 9.7ppg. scorer: 6'4" guard KevinStacom. a tran~fer from HolyCross; and eith('r 6T' NehruKinlit or 6'5" Charlie Crawford....;11 man the other forward spol.

In last year's contest. theStalits lost 87-75 to Provuienct' onthe stre~th of BarTlE'S' insidework 428 pts. %2 reboundsl.George Groom was sharp in alosil1J! ('ffon. hitlin,: for 31points.

Notes of Interest include; theacademic loss of sophomo",Steve StrotlM!r. a 2fi.1 scorer and13.8 rebounder. The fijithtinjtincident between Barnes and6'10" Larry Kelvinis has bE'enamended with Barnes only

hard blows by a UB player whichsent him literally flying acrossthe ice. promptinR nonnallycalm asslsunt-.eaptain Ed Jennyinto a raRing assault on theguilty UB player.

Thl' Purple Knights gave thl'StaRS some tense moments asthey managed to come up withtwo more goals. briRjl:ing themwithin one point of tyinjit thegame

Ludl.. MIHL ScorerTallies Seatrity Goal

Joe Flynn then scored hisfourth of the night and StaRCaptain Gerry Michaudaccounted for the final Fairfieldioals.

By Peler P. Berardino

By Debbie MOIlIUlo

JV's Ruffle Owls

At the season opener lastSaturday, the JV o....;s from So.Conn fle ..... into tIM! Fairfieldgym and fluttered OUl .....ith an 80­Sidefeat.

The Owts came out stronjit: inthe first half behind the shootingof Bob Flaherty. who had eililhtpoints (on Four field Roalsl. TheFairfield Yearlings looked alittle rusty, usually /(etting onlyone shot at the hoop.

The first half statistics tell uswhy Fairfield went into thedressing room with only a 25-20lead. Fairfield shot a dismal 31peTCfllt (10 for 29), So. Conn.fared even worse. They were 9for 36. The first half was slowand a little boring with a slowdeliberate offense worked byboth sides.

The second half saw the clubcome out running and the Jr.Stags left the Owls picking uptheir feathers. One reason cooldbe that the Owls shot 12-4{) fromthe field. It wasn't a matter ofthem not being able to put theball In the hoop. It was more of acase of forcing their shots,taking poor percentage shots.

Fairfield's percentage jumpedup to 47.6 percent and II for 13from the line. It looked as thoughthe team was trying to sit ontheir lead. With 10 minutes to gothey had a 13 point lead. and theyhad that same lead five minuteslater At this point in the gamethe Jr. Stags opened their lead tothe one they had at the game'send. being 21 points 80-59.

Rbabarn, Seon Pace AttackYou're probably wondering

who the stars are for this game.One is Gregg Scott. Scott puttogether 5 field goals in six shotsand 5 free throws in 6 attemr,tsfor 15 points. He also pul ed SENIOR MIKE REINER - carrying a well-traveled basketball.down 11 caroms. Mike loots relieved as he enters the gym before the Southern game

Herb ~!QJajtgo.7~14 (OW...... Afw • 3S-~e dril!b4P.I. trjR JI"QI'D ~_Q"!~( .ca!J1pu5.

A near capacity crowd filledthe Wonderland of lee lastFriday niRht to watch the StagHockey Club romp over thedivision leadlnR Purple Knill:htsof the University of BridReportby a score of 8·5.

The fast-paced game was jam­packed with action from theopening seconds of the Rame.When only ten seconds elapsedafter the opening face-on, thePurple Knights threatened theFairfield net. SeniordefensemanGerry Michaud took a sacrificepenalty by physically blocking aUB skater from nearill$! the SLaggoal after Michaud's stick wassplintered.

Fairfield put the first goal onthe board at an even six minutesinto the game. as Chris Stantontallied, assisted by Mike Reddenand Ed Stefan.

UB evened up the score twoand one half minutes later,leaving the score tied at I-I atthe close of the first period

Quick secoDd Period SCoreThe Purple Knights charged

out in the second period to scoreafter only seven seconds of playwith a shot taken from twentyfeet out which slipped Into theleft side of the net past Stagnetminder Eddie Palma.

Joe Flynn managed to rally theStaRS with only three and onehalf minutes left to the secondperiod. The power play goal wasthe first of four breakaways bythe Rame's star Flynn.

UB retaliated at 13:43. bulFairfield left the period with a 3­3 tie on the scoreboard followingthe second of Flynn'sgoals in theclosing seconds of that segment.

At the three minute mark Intothe third period. JOf' Flynn.Rollil' Fillion and Ed Stefanscored successive goals within aminutes"time to vault the Stagsinto a 6-3 lead over the PurpleKnights.

Chris Stanton was dealt two

Icemen Lance Purple Knights;Move Past VB In Standings

THE UNIVERSITY VOICE

flipped a 15 yard pass to BrianO'Regan and then booted thePAT fora I5-0F.A.C. win.

In the Powder Puff Bowl.Southeast defeated Loyola. 6-0 ona 13 yard pass from Joyce Lasineto Claire Shaughnessey.

The arm of Steve Lennox and astf'Qr@: defensive line led theP.A.C. to the Superbowl crownand the Championship of theintramural football. F.A.C.defeated a hardfighting teamfrom Northwest 4, 13-0. on a veryslippery field.

The F.A.C. scored early in thegame on a short pass from SteveLennox to Brian O'Regan as hisdefender slipped The score hadbeen setup on the previous playwhen a pass interference callagainst NW 4 put the ball on theone yard line. Lennox booted thePAT for a 7-0 lead.

Late in the half Jack Bopphauled in a 50 yard bomb fromLennox between three defendersto push the F.A.C. lead to 13-0:the conversion failed.

The big difference in the twoteams was the defensive frontfour of the F.A.C. who puttremendous pressure on FrankJohnson, the Northwest 4quarterback. Clinching theSuperbowl was the big highlightof the F.A.C. se~~

By Chip DavisIn the American Conference,

Northwest 4 earned its spot inlbe Superhowl by defeatingcampion 3, lJ.O in a hard foughtgame and tben overturning OldGonzaga 2 in the final. 16-0. OldGonzaga reached the final bybeating Northwest 3, 2t).{I andCampion 4. 16-0.

In the conference final.Northwest 4 scored on a one yardplunge by quarterback FrankJohnson who also passed toMarty Sailor for the 2 pointconversion. In the second halfJohnson hit Dave Della Volpewith a 25 yard scoring strike andthen the 2 point conversion passto make the final 16-(1 forNorthwest 4.

Over in the NationalConference. the F.A.C. wasmoving easily into theirSuperbov.1 berth They defeatedReRis 1..1l-ointheope:ningroundand met the Studs in the final.The Studs had previously won byforfeit over Loyola 3.

In the conference final. JackBoggs returned the openingkickoff 65 yards to a touchdown,Steve Lennox hit Mike Yates forthe PAT and an 8-0 lead. Aninterception and ~ yard returnby Chris "Doc" KiMY set up thesecond F.A.C. score. Lennox

__un..' _=,.a~_D.lIoLO.__

"

"Superhowl" Path

LEADING THE RUSH - Captain Gerry Michaud slickllandlesinto the offensive zone during the 8-S victory over UB.

By Tom MuaJImagine the headlines. "Pbyll.is Rogers nels 39 points as the Stags

upset Providence." The possibility of this really happening basbecome slightly less remote with a recent rewording of the EasternCollegiate Athletic Conference constitution. . .

According to Athletic Director C. Donald Cook. the constitutionhad previously stated that the conCerence was fonned in order tohelp "competition between men" and that this phrase has beenchanged to "competition between students." Thus any implieddiscrimination against women competing has been eliminated.

He stated that "if a girl has the ability to play any varsity sportthen this should be recognized, however many of the girls favor arevision in the basic rules of the game," aDd he did not agree withlhat concept.

When pressed on the practicality of girls playing varsity sports atFairfield, Mr. Coot was rather dubious. "It would be very difficultconsidering our present facilities, equipment, and coaching staffs.Philosophically we are willing to let girls compete but realisticaDyit woold be very impractical."

Locker Room gUCSPerhaps a few specific examples would show bow impractical and

embarrassing it would be for females to compete with males on thesame team. The simple act of changing in the locker room before agame could prove to be an awkward situation, and a well-en<1owedgirl might feel a little uncomfortable wearing a basketball jersey. Ifshe makes a nice shot, should one of the guys give ber a pat on thebehind?

In baseball there is always the chance that a girl might rip a bighole in her pants while sliding or if she gets hit by a pitched ballshould the trainer go out and rub the spot where she was hit? Manytimes a player'S jersey gets torn of[ wbile playing football and itwould be rather uncomfortable for a girl on the bottom of a pileupwith boys on top of ber.

Even rnaki.ng a simple chest-trap in aoccer could prove difficultfor some women. It appears that the only sports at Fairfield wherewomen would be able to compete on a realistic level would be tennis,golf, and possibly tract.

However, so as not to discourage any future jockettes, justremember that Vivian Fleming of Emerson, Iowa scored 200 pointsIn a high school state tournament, and Marie Boyd of Lonaconing,Maryland scored 156 points in one game!

Varsity Stagettes?

Thursday, I>ec. 7,1972

Providence Away

Stags to Host St. Francis (Pa.)

1126 19Totals

fAIRFIELDFg Ft T.

Groom 10 1 'J!IBradley 8 a 16Rogers 3 • 10Duff~' I 0 2Kellv 2 II 15Rehn 2 a 4Moorer I 6 8--------

seeond half. Coach Barakat'schal1!es took a deliberate-t~'pe ofoffense. Ryan. who finished with10 assists, found Bradle,\' han~ingin the lane. The "Rave" went towork on sophomore ChrisRzonca aft~r the earlier fouled­out departure of senior JimLaCorte. endin~ with a total of 16points on 8-12 shoot in~,

Groom-All AroundPerformance

With Tom Oufh' and Rogersrebounding and Kell~' havin~ aknack for drawing fouls 111-12from the Ime!. the Stags wereable to mainlain a "safe" leadthroughout the seeond halfGroom's all-around perfonnanceof 27 points, six rebounds andfour assists was typical of hismid-season fonn,

seton Hall shot a whopping52~ from the field with JimLaColte and frank Zelesnikpacing the attack with 14.Freshman quarterback PaulLape did a comp<'tent jobdirectinJ'( the attack, hand in$!: outseven assists. The Pirates. byvirtue of a 76-72 loss to Siennalast sat.. dropped to an 0-2 mark,

Coach' Barakat attributed thewin to a stronJil defense andadmitted 10 the offensE' has of"having .\·CI to put it together""The versalile tx>nch strengTh isan important asset in The sensethat it also shall'ens competitionon the team ",

The vet~l'an mentor sinJ'(ledout Kelly's Iii point perlonnanceas a fill-in aud his adaptabilily tofilling- the roles of forward.shooting J'(uard and set-up J'(uard.

Sub-Varsity Winfairfield's sub-varsit~' squad

upped its record to 2-0 in thepreliminary game b,\' defeatingSeton Hall. 76-66. Herb Rhaburn,Jim 1\lcCarlhy, ';teve Diaz andGn.>gg Scott with 22, 15. 10 and 10points respt'Clivelv paced theteam to its strong second-halfshowinJ'( and eVt'ntual win,

Totals 21 2S 82S~:TON HALL

Fg Ft T.Clark 2 3 1J,LaCOl'le 6 2 14Lppe 2 2 6McFarland I a 2Ramsa.v 6 a 12Rzonca 3 6 12Tern' a 2 2Zelesnik 6 • I'P,LaCorte I 0 2

Thursday. Dec. 7. 1972

Groom - Led StagsShipwreck Pirates

By Tony MixcusA threateninJ'( seton Hall team

closed to within five points witheiJ!"ht minutes remaining, bUI analways to be counted on GeorgeGroom hit six straight points and10 of Fairfield's last 21 to ensurean 82-71 victory Monday niJ'(hL

Scorin,; the final six points ofthe first half. vaulted the Sta~s

to a safe II point half-timeadvanta~e. Seton Hall hadswitched out of an earl~' man toman defense in an atlempt tostop the numerous la~'ups andclose-in shots Fairfield wasKelling,

Pirates RallyThe straleg~' paid off as the

Pirates rallied from a sevenpoint deficit to a 16-13 lead.Forced outside b.\· the sagginJ'( 3-2zone defense, the StaJ'(s revertedto an outside attack. PhilROJ'(ers, hampered by abothersome heel injury, couldn'tbu,\' a basket. and seton Hall'sRay Clark and John Ramsa,\'limited Fairfield to just one shot,

Groom soon caught fire fromthe outside, thus opening up themiddle for CraiJZ Moorer. DaveBradley and a drivinJ'( Ray Kell~'.

With the insertion of Ralph Hehninto the lineup. the StaJ!"s Ix'ganto rebound and pilch out toquarterbat'k John R~'an, whokeyed a fast break offense thatresulted in quick ba~kets beforetht> Pirates had time to set up itszone,

TOllith Stag DefenseA tight man to man covera~e

emplo~'ed b,\' the Fairfield Fiveproved to be a major factor inthe .e:ame·s favorable outCOme.The ~'oung and inexperiencedPirates committed 14 turnovers.while taking a mere 23 shots inthe opening stanza.

Groom led the scorinJ'( paradt>in the first pt'riod with II.Rogers. having an off ni,e:h1.shifted his attention to theboards and grabbed ninerebounds to head thatdepartment.

Substituting freelv in the

"'"'" II)' GewIe~DRIVING IN FOR A LAYUP - is John Ryan after stealing theball from Southern', Kevin Connoi's.'(,No.'24Y, '

\ '.'

The 6'8" Barnes garnered 424rebounds last year along with a21.6 ppg. scoring average,DiGregorio at 6'0" needs onepoint to reach the 1.000 pointplateau in the Friars openeragainst St. Francis tN,Y.1 onSaturday.

The above-mentioned co­captains along with graduateDon Lewis paced Providence toa 21-6 record last year, losing 76­60 to Penn. in the post-seasonNCAA tournament. The school issteeped in basketball tradition

(Continued on Page 71

nected for 14 markers andLavery followed with 10 pointsand a game-high 10 rebounds,

Fairfield - 75FG FT TP

4 8 162 a 44 4 122593 I 12 2 6I 2 45 0 101 a 21 a 2

26 23 75Southern - 46

FG FT TP2 • 82 a 43 8 14I a 22 a 43 4 1012.

14 18 46

GroomBagadBradleyRogersRyanDuffyLademanKellyRehnRhaburnTotals

THE UNIVERSITY VOICE

The Stags played onetremendous game last yearhitting 66'1 of their shots todefeat St. Francis.

A'll point. six rebound and fiveassist performance by GeorgeGroom against Kevin Porter andJoe Hazinsky, two top-notchguards who finished theircareers as the second and fifthall-time S1. Francis scorers,highlighted the contest.

The Red Flash lost sevenseniors from last season, butCoach Dick Conover has 6""forward Clarence Hopson and6'8" center Gary Copeland for anucleus. Hopson averaged 16,2points a game last year alongwith a 12th in the nation fieldgoal percentage (.5901.Copeland, a two-year starter.contributed with 5,2 points and6,2 rebounds last season.

The remaining startingpositions will be filled byfreshmen forward Bob Nicholsand guards Bob Williams andPat McGeary. The 6'7" Nicholsstarred at St. Thomas More PrepBveraginl': 16,7 ppg. and 11.2rebounds.

St. Francis suffered a close 61­60 away loss to GeorgetownUniversity in last week's opener.

Fairfield-Providenceon Tap lor MOD,

The December 11 game needsno announcement as the loyalStal': fans are making plans totravel to the brand-new 12.000seat Providence Civic Center,Fairfield's visit will markProvidence College's first homeopener in the new arena.

All Tournament teamselections in the NIT (there'sthat word again! 1 HolidayFestival. junior Malv Barnesand senior Ernie DiGregorio,head the best in the E~s~aQd 01)£of the,best in the ~tlonl~ leam,

ConlanConnorsIveyKapralSwitchenkoLaveryMillerTotals

Gary Copeland

."

anxious, and consequently, com­mitted costly fouls that put Fair­field over the limit (seven fouls)and Southern into the one and onesituation with over elevenminutes to go in the openingstanza,

Groom at 1,004 POIDlsA vociferous, standing room

only crowd witnessed captainGeorge Groom reach the 1,000point mark on a running one­hander with some four minutesleft in the game, Groom finishedthe night with -a game-high 1$points. The 6'2" sharpshooterdrew contact-paper coveragefrom Southern's Charles Miller,and paid for most of his pointshitting 8-11 from the free throwline,

Contributing to the Slag vic­tory were Bradley's 12 points andseven rebounds, along withRyan's alert defense and finepassing 110 assists). Ivey con-

The Red FI, ,of S1. Francis(Pa.) will z.jp •. ltO the Fairfieldgym this Saturday night hoping10 avenRe last year's 8()'74 loss.,

Stop at the Liquor Barrel fora complete line of Gifts toRaise Your Holiday Spirit

Merry Christmas&

Happy New Year

Before Going Home ForChristmas Be Sure To

The Liquor Barrel

By Tony Mixcus

I--­UP ABOVE THE CROWD - is Craig Moorer as he deftly throws in a hook during the Stags' 75-46victory over the Owls.

Fairfield Five Wise-Up to Owlsin the Second Half, .Win 75-46

It was a good thing that Fair­field played a team of Southern'snot too prominent caliber in thetraditional opener, and that thesecond half of Saturday's 75-46win was more indicative of thetype of ball the Stag team iscapable of; or otherwise. the 72­73 campaign would have startedoff on a losing note.

Obviously fired up at the outsetof the second stanza, Fairfield,paced by Ray Kelly's threestraight jumpers and JohnRyan"s quick hands and evenquicker feet. raced to a 46-26advantage during the first eightminutes. During this stretch. theStags' opportunistic defensecapitalized on the Owls offensivebreakdown.

Southern could no longer main­tain its slow-down tactics afterFairfield's Iightning.quick burst.The Owls attempted to put pointson the scoreboard quickly relyingon Ron Conlan and John Iveyfrom the outside, Both Conlanand Ivey along with the rest ofthe squad couldn't seem to con­nect as their 16% second halffield goal percentage will attest.

Fairfield, on the other hand,received strong rebounding per­formances from Tom Duffy, PhilRogers, and Dave Bradley per­mitting Southern only one shot atthe basket. 6'7" freshman JohnLavery had battled Fairfield'sbig men single-handedly in theopening period, but his lack ofboard support took its toll in thesecond half,

First Half LeldownSouthern had made Fairfield

play its type of game in the firsthalf as the patient Owl attackcashed in on many Stag defensivelapses to score most of its pointson layups, or on foul shotsresulting from attempted layups,Led by Ivey's 10 points, the Owlswere down by a 27-24 score athalftime, and surprisingly held a14-13 rebounding edge on thestrength of Lavery's 6,

Coach Barakat admitted to theStags being impatient and over-


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