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Vol 20, No, 10 Emmanuel College, Boston, Mass. October 2, 1968
Self-Determinism Requires New Attitude to Succeed By Mary Kathryn Harrity
. Emmanuel's Inter-Dormitory Council recently assembled to d iscuss the relevance of the student-determinism theory to the regulation of resident life at EC with special focus on the alte ration or retention of the present curfew system.
In capsule, student-determinism results from the newly as~rted theory that college stud.ents, living away from direct parental supervision, should have the responsibility of ordering their own lives.
According to this theory, students would learn to make mature decisions through the necessity of forming considered judgments and the process of trial and error that this entails.
Sister Eleanor Dunfey, Dean of Students, Sister Ann Rachel, Dean of Residence, resident staff members and IDC officers highlighted the curfew question because it represents a concrete example of the application of student-determinism . It would imply that resident students would decide what curfews, if any, they desired.
RAMIFICATIONS PROVOKE DEBATE
from technical problems, was placed on the education of .the students themselves to the seriousness and extent of the student-determinism pol icy. Again and again, the IDC members stressed the importance of making the students aware that the rights and privileges that spring from the ado'ption of this policy would be linked with corresponding duties and responsibilities .
Sister E I e a nor Dunfey pointed out the ease of talking about mature decisions," but also the difficulty of learning to " choose the right thing in aU living conditions." She suggested individual Boor meetings in the dorms as part of the educative process. Consequently, the dorm officers' responsibilities would broaden .
Resulting from this deliberation over the educative process was concern with the time element. There was some divergence on this point among the IDC officers, who favor an early surveying and voting on the curfew issue, and the resident staff, who preferred a longer waiting period while students extensively examine the policy of student-determinism in general.
This open meeting followed a series of closed meetings at which groundwork for the
The debate, which appeared adoption of the policy was ,laid. Jeanne Manson, senior
to assume that student-de- Student Government representerminism had already been
Sister Ann Bartholomew has announced that she hopes to break ground for Emmanuel's auditorium and aoademic facilities building during the Golden Jubilee year. The launching of this project depends upon the assistance of government funds available under the bigher education facilities bill, Title I, the construction of academic facilities. Appropriations for this bill are presently under consideration by Congress.
This view of the ten-story building, designed by the firm of McGinnis & Walsh & Ken.nedy. faces in.to the Emmanuel campus. Extra care is being taken so that neither the proposed facilities building on this campus nor the science building Simmons p'ans to construct opposite Alumnae Hall will affect the attractiveness of Avenue Louis Pasteur.
The art department will sponsor a graphics sale on Monday, O~tober 21 in the art department. The Ferdinand Roten Galleries from Baltimore will supply the prints for exhibit and sale.
SpeCial Literature Course Offers Wider Perspective
recognized and accepted in tative, worked closely with the IDC in formulation the ap- .-------------....
theory, concerned itself ',with EC Rel Clu b Beginning October 3 , a non- gro Poe try (December 5);
credit course in Black Ameri- Richard Wright, The Outsider , can Literature will be offered (December 12) .
propriate application of stu-the legal and financial ramifi- dent-determinism on the Emcations of curfew change.
each Thursday from 3 :30 to A tentative schedule for the two hour sessions was se t up. A prepared lecture on the week's reading by a student, ' faculty member, or gues t speaker will be followed by discussion in small groups . Tho s e interested in giving o ne of t hese , presen ta tions are asked to contac t Adele Clements.
manuel campus. Ow. Obtaining parental consent ers
to the student determined cur- Jeanne represented Emman-fe ws is necessary because t he uel at the national NSA con- TT7.,'th m ajority of the EC residents gress this past summer. In rY ~
Variety Activities
5:30 in Room 28. Organized under the supervision of Mr. William Irvin and Miss Jill Rubinson of the English Department,
with Adele ,Clements, '70 as are legally minors, Le . under conferences with other col-21. Siste r Eleanor Dunfey leges of approximately t he sh'essed the education of par - same size and category as E m e nts as essential beca use the manuel, She discovered t hat paren ts ~eed assurance of the EC has a high standing as an well-being of the ir daughters. academically liberal college.
Tomon'ow at 8 :00 p .m .,. Dr. chairman, the series aims to Mary Daly will speak in the
her ful fill the persoaal o bjectives of
TOPIC FOR PARENTS' WEEKEND
Considering means of edu~ating parents to this policy resulted in plans to have Edward Schwartz, outgoing president of the National Student Association, speak on the issue of students' rights and freedoms at Parents' Weekend in October. Small , discussions for the parents concerning this topic will follaw the talk. Students will also be urged to discuss individually the question of student-determinism with their parents .
The financial aspect of the curfew question pertains to the hiring or re-scheduling of house fathers and/ or Pinkerton guards to insure protection of late-returning students. Sister Ann Rachel commented that furt her consideration was needed before any definite arrangements c 0 u 1 d be announced.
The major emphasis, aside
Howeve r , in compar ison with other colleges Emmanuel is socially conservative. In a survey of the schools present, 21 out of 60 answered " yes" to h a v in g student-determinism operative on their campuses.
Fashions Exhibited
For Golden Jubilee The Pre'sident of EmmanueL
College and the Golden jubilee Committee will sponsor a Golden Jubilee Fashion Show on Thursday evening; October 17 at 8 :00 p.m. in Marian HalL
Fashions from Worth of Boston, worn by professional and Emmanuel models will be shown to the music of Ruby Newman, with Mr. Stanley Worth as commentator.
Alumnae and friends are invited to attend. Tickets are six dollars. Co-chairmen of reservations are Mrs. Ronald S. Perry (323-056 ) , and Mrs. William J. Fahey (327-7774).
library lecture hall about controversial book, The Church and the Second Sex.
Dr. Daly, a noted theologian, philosopher, author and teache r presently conducts a course on the thought of Paul Tillich at Baston College.
Dr. Daly's lecture is sponsored by Kappa Gamma Pi, the National Honor Society for gradua,tes of women's CathoOlic colleges in the United States. Tickets are available in the dean of students' office for $1.00.
INTERRACIAL COUNCIL HOLDS PEACE MASS
Friday evening, October 4 , Emmanuel will host the Catholic Interracial Council's annual Leo P. Haley Memorial Mass for Peace. Mass will be celebrated at 8:00 p .m . i1l- the administration auditorium, followed by a coffee hour in the Blue & Gold Lounge.
Anyone interested in assisting the Council in its programs has the opportunity to speak with and question members of the Council during t he coffee hour.
(Continued on Page Z)
everyone who w ishes to participate.
September 19 a p reliminary meet ing, open to a ll faculty anel students, was held to decide the format of fu ture gatherings. A list of forty-seven books by black aut h 0 r s available in paperback editions was distributed. Those present discussed the selections and voted for ten, one for each Thursday of the sem~ter.
The following received the highest number of votes (the date of 'the book's di9Cussion): Malcolm X, Autobiography of Malcolm X (October 3) ; Ralph Ellison, Invisible Man (October 10); Langston Hughes, The Panther and the Lash (October 17) ; LeRoi Jones, Dutchman and The Slave, (pctober 24); James Baldwin, Fire N ext Time (October 31) ; W.E.B . DuBois, Souls of the Black Folk (November 7) ; Martin Luther King, Jr. , Stride Toward FreeDouglass, Life of Frederick Douglass, Life of Frederick Douglass (November 21) ; Arna Bontemps, , ed., American Ne-
"Total View" Programmed J?or Weekend By Diane Zalewski
Emmanuel7s Parents' Weekend will be a " total environment" experience, involving bhree days of tradition, entertainment, and student-parent interraction.
The schedule is as follows: Friday, October 18:
Junior Ring Ceremony evening ,
Saturday, October 19:
In the afternoon students and parents will jointly participate in seminars concerning the controversial topic ()f student power. The AdministratQl"s Handbook: " Understanding t he Joint Statement on R ights and Freedoms of Students" will be issued as the topic for discussion. Those interested in the
(Continued on Page 3 j
I
w4r fmmuuurl1J1ntus 400 The Fenway, Boston, Massachusetts 02115
Pnblished by tbe students of Emmanuel CoJJe&,e
EDITORIAL BOARD Editor-in-Cbief: Theresa A. Mursick Associate Editor: Bernadette Soetens
News Editors: Marilyn Miller and Helen Drew Feature Editor: Joan Chiara
Lay-eut: Mary Kathryn Harrity
Plletocraphy: Diane Karolkiewicz, Editor, and Kathy Olberg
Business Mana«er: Denise Rondeau Art Work: Diane Zalewski
Circulation Man~er: Bonnie Quesnel
CONTRIBUTING STAFF 3udy Brewn, Paula Duggan, Mary Hammond, Mary Kathryn Harrity. Paula McFarland. .Jacqueline Nolan, Sheila O'Leary, Mary Damon Peltier, Diane Porr, Chris Price, Kathleen Rogers, Maureen Rogers, Ann Waldron, Diane Zalewski.
Opinions expressed in leatut e articles are not necessarily those of the editors; editorial
eemmcnts do not represent official coJJe&,e policy or administrative opinion.
Too Much .to Ask? This was going to be a scathing indictment concerning the poor turn-out for the
Red Cross bloodmobile. But then I thought to myself, what's the use? The next time you have the opportunity to give blood you will stay away for the same stupid reasons--you "can't stand the sight of blood" or you're "afraid of needles." You're afraid of a lot more than needles.
Granted, there is a cer4Lin per cent of the student body which could not, for health reasons, donate a pint of blood. The Red Cross is quick to tell you if yO'U don't qualify. But what about the great majority who fall into the "qualified" category? In fact, you'll probably never be healthier than you are now.
Was it too much trouble for those under twenty-one to write horne and secure parental permission? Was the half-hour too much to spare from your busy schedule, or the walk across campus to Marian Hall too arduous?
Are you so insensitive that you can remain indifferent when the need for blood in the Boston area is so great?
Nothing I can say here is going to change your attitude, so I will close now, with the oniy honest comment I can make: For the first time since I stepped on this campus my freshman year, I am ashamed for the Emmanuel student body.
- The Editor
Challenge to Freshmen Freshman! If you are interested in being ahead of the news, playing an active
part in campus activities and being a member of the most rapidly advancing student organization on campus, join Focus, the Emmanuel weekly newspaper, published by and for the students.
Come on Friday, October 4, to the Focus office in the Communications Corridor on the lower level of the administration building, to talk with the editors about Focus, its history, polit ics, the mechanics of the paper, anything you want to know, from 9 :00 a.m. to 1 :30 p.m. Join your classmates who have demonstrated that they are able and willing to perlonn the work required to work on the Focus staff.
To the Editor:
Letters to the Editor. • •
- dents. When the seniors were presented with t his idea in April , three volunteered. Two are planning to go next year.
Annette p romises to keep us posted during the year about her experiences.
Sister Marie Augusta, SND
To the Editor:
that people have their personal reasons for not donating. The committee did its utmost to publicize this event and even though the turn-out was di sappointing-the Red Cross has 86 m or e p ints of blood than it had before.
Mary K inney
SOUNDING BOARD Soundi~g Board is available to an'}! student or facu·lty m embe1" who w lshes to address the enttre Emmanuel community. Simply noti fy the edi tor; please remember that she retains her editorial prerogative concerning all copy .
By Jeanne Manson ate the necessity of self-imposed The Student Government and restrictions.
the Interdormitory Council are The next question, then, is presently w'Orking rogether to how shoule we proceed? Should ()ibtain a policy of student- this right be recognized, residetermined social rules where- dent students would vote on by dorm . students would be their own curfew hours by solely responsible for deciding class, with the out-going freshwhat kind of curfew hours they man determining the firstwould have. semester curfews for incoming
The policy, as presently freshmen. Each individual stustated, ·is "that students have dent would -then obtain parthe right to determine their ental permission for the curown social regulations." The few decided uPon. issue here is not that the present curfew hours are too early or too late, but rather that the responsibility for deciding what kind of curfew exists should be in the hands of those who are directly affected by curfews - the dorm students.
SELF-DETERMINED RESTRICTIONS
In proposing this policy, neither the Student Government nor the I .D.C. is suggesting that the present curfew hours be replaced by a set of later curfews, or that curfews be abolished, but rather that students themSelves decide what kind of curfews they want, be they earlier or later than the ones we presently have.
One of the ideas behind this proposal is that since Emmanuel is advancing academically in areas of independent study and active participation of students in the educative process, the right of students to control respons ibly their own social
Jives should advance correspondingly .
It has been observed by Roland Liebert that "A liberal education is fundamentally education for the intelligent use of freedom in a free society." It is obvious that this use of freedom should be exercised in all aspects of our lives, not just in matters pertaining to the classroom.
OPPORTUNITY FOR MATURITY
This of course would not means that students would stay out until curfew limits each n ight, but ra ther that students would learn to replace the presently imposed curfews with rules dictated by t heir own sense of judgment. It will, in a sense, give .each student the opportunity to deve lop social maturity and learn to appreci-
HOW DO WE VIEW OURSELVES?
Now the question concerns not how the administration regards us as socially mature individuals, but how we ourselves and, more critically, our parents, view us as socially mature individuals.
How would your parents react (or would they?) if the curfews were extended or eliminated?
Each individual and her paren15, would have to resolve t h is matter of curfews, rather than it being resolved. between the students and the administration.
For the implementation of this program, parents will have to be educated to the issue and its possi.ble ramifications.
Saturday of Parents' Weekend, a series of speakers and a panel will discuss the issue after whiCh parents will be free to
raise questions in small groups.
EDUCATE PARENTS TO THE ISSUE
Sh'Ortly after Parents' Weekend, a questionnaire will be sent out to the p arents of dorm s tudents to obtain their react ions. This a spect of Paren ts' Weekend is designed merely to acquaint parents with the issue ; the actual resolving of any conflicts will have to take place on an individual basis.
On September 16, Annette Rossi, a graduate of the class of 1968, left t o go to t he Notre Dame m ission in Embakwe, Rhodesia to teach for one year. There is a grea~ shortage of -teachers and a great need to h elp the natives and coloured t o experience the w orld in its w ider contest.
Regarding the Bloodmobile on September 23, 1968 which w as held in Marian Hall Gym from 11 a .m. - 4:45 p .m. and sp onsored by the Senior Class:
Religious Committee
Bear in mind that this is the projected plan and that these programs are tentative. S tudent Government and I .D.C. will distribute a surve y to a ll resident students to pQll their opin ions concerning student self-d eterm ination of social r ules. Actual implementati'On of these p lans will depend upon the assessment of student attitudes obtained through thi s survey which will be distributed in the near future, p ossibly within a week. R esults will be tabulated and published in Focus.
We had hoped to have two girls going; however , Annette is quite h appy to try this adventure alone. She will live with two of the coloured teachers on the mission. ~ We are hoping to collect sufficient money for her passage through voluntary contributions from friends of Notre Dame. This will be a cost of about $1200. She will receive a . small stipend of government money for her year of work. Next year we hope to have two more girls going. .
At the chapter in Rome we d iscussed the a d v an tage of grad uates from our colleges coming to serve awhile on the m issions living in close contact w ith our sisters and the stu-
Poster s publicizing this were posted on September 10th throughout the campus as well as at Wheelock and Simmons. Permission slips for those between 18-21 years of age were made available to all who needed them.
The Bloodmobile was explained and further announced at the Dean's assembly on September 19th. It is felt that the en tire community of Emmanuel was a ware of this event.
The turnout was disappointing - to say the least. Our quota was 150 pints -a mere tenth of the school. Ninetyeight donors cam e and eightysix were accepted. I realize
(Continued f rom Front Page) The Council does m uch work
in trying to bridge the gap of understanding separating the inner city and suburbia. The members need much' help and are eager to explain the Council to interested persons.
DISCUSSION PLANNED OF HUMANAE VITAE
Tuesday, October 8, at 7:00 p .m . in the Logan Lounge, the Religious Activities Committee will sponsor a discussion on Pope Paul's encyclical Humanae Vitae. Participating in the discussion will be two married couples and two priests.
To derive the greatest benefit from this discussion, t he Rel igious Activities Committee
urges anyone interested to read the encyclical and shar~ her v iews. The Committee w ill distribute cop ies of the encyclical for the convenience of the students.
CAMPUS COLLECTION FOR BIAFRANS
Today, tomorrow and Friday the Religious ACtivities Comm ittee will make a collection in the Campus Shop and Commuters' Lounge f'Or the Biafr an Rescue Organization To Hasten Emergency Relief. Several thousand dollars are still needed t'O help the starving p eople of Biafra .
Please help in any and every way you can.
The Emmanuel .Focus
In writing this article, it has been my intention to familia rize students, faculty, and adm inistration with the issue and I have thererore concentrated mainly on the theoretical aspects. There are many other aspects to be considered , i.e ., a system of checks and balances which would have to be developed w ithin the residential commun ity.
This program is directed toward the development of an a t titudinal maturit y r ather than being directed against any specific rule of the college. Time and effort must be p ut into the £-orm ation of such an attitude.
October 2, 1968 Page 2
•
Jobs Require SDS In Cafeteria For
Increased New System
Repudiated As Agency Society's Reconstruction'
B,- Joan Chiara The new situation in the Em
manuel cafeteria is the result of requests by students for employment.
Lists were posted in all the dormitories last spring asking girls to signify their interest in the program. During the summer letters were sent to the 200 interested girls asking them to specify their preferred working hours. From this response, some 100 girls are now working in the ctlfeteria.
The students are paid' minimum wage on a monthly basis by the Treasurer of Emmanuel College. Tax is not deducted from the salary in order to facilitate bookkeeping. Preference was given to· those girls who can work one meal six 0:
seven days a week. The girls check I.D.'s, serve
the food, wash tables, and collect trays. Positions are supposedly rotated from day to
Cinema Club loins A. F. A.
day. The new I.D. system, by the way will help the kitchen in preparing the proper amounts of food, and has not held up traffic as expected.
Naturally, some of the former cafeteria workers were released in order to create these new jobs. Let the concerned be assured, however, that many of the older cafeteria staff were only part-time employees and have other sources of income, e .g. Social Security. In other words, they were not put at the mercy of the Welfare Department.
Press Re]ease by Reader's Digest
While the organization known as Students for a Democratic Society represents only a minuscule minority of students, it has managed to playa leading role in the violence, bloodshed and arson that have exploded across college campuses from Columbia to Stan-ford. .
Details of how this small but militant group has managed to disrupt college life are revealed in the October Reader's Digest by Eugene Methvin of the magazine's Washington bureau. Quoting SDS officials and members, he reports that the organization's ultimate goal ·'is nothing less than the destruction of society
Mrs. Helen Williams, the new Director of Social Services is the woman" -ho sits behind the flower garden in the new section of the cafeteria. She was called in last spring to survey the cafeteria. Mrs. Williams has initiated such improvements as more fresh fru it and itself." the salad wagons. She meets Methvin quotes one speaker weekly with the FOod Council at SDS' national convention at and is open to any comments, East Lansing, Mich., last June : complaints or suggestions from "The ability to manipulate peothe students. pIe through violence and mass
Everyone see m s qui t e media has never been greater,
issues as the university 's relation to Chase Manhattan Bank."
The article quo t e s these among specific SDS proposals for disruption of society; picking public fights with welfare workers; starting ' trash-can fires and pulling fire alarms in high schools as "forms of protest"; making appointments by the score with university deans and registrars - to "overuse the bureaucracy"; checking out an inordinate number of books to disrupt libraries and study programs; disIVpting d r aft boards by registering under a false name so "federal agents wiil spend much time attempting to track down people who do not exist."
While it purports to follow a line of "independent radicalism," Methvin reports SDS betrays growing signs of links, to
Drama Emphasized In Literary Society
pleased with the new program. the potential for us as radi- Officers of the Literary SociStudents frequently using the cals never more exciting, than ety announce that membership cafeteria agree that the lines now." FBI director J. Edgar has reached 175 and is expect.
Because of its recent affilia- move faster this year and that Hoover has said : "They are a ed to reach 200 this year. t ions with the American Film the working girls are cheerful, new type of subversive, and The program for this year Academy, the Emmanuel Col- pleasant, neat, efficient, and their danger is great." has been released by Grace lege Cinema Club can now of- reliable. SDS's tactics include use of Farrell, president, with finanfer a wider selection of filJJl6 One s u g g est ion : perhaps off-campus issues to 'disrupt cial aspects given by Helen for the students: in addition to something could be done about campus life, the article points Lambert, treasurer. the other advantages. the cross-traffic situation in the out. An SDS member from Wis- First are two lectures fol-
The initial admission charge new section? Girls leaving ' consin put it this way : "We or- lowed by discussions and re-I . $12 In their trays are in the path of ganized dormitory students freshments. Dr. George Harris to an A.F .A . fi m IS . 5 . - b
cluded in this admission charge girls exiting from the food around rules, and then it was W10
ilthl. e the speaker on October A F A line. easy to move them on such
is a membership to the . . ., Four faculty members will admitting a student to any compose the panel at the A .F .A. film on any A.F.A. M Ie · E I· d February meeting. In addition, campus for .75. enta enter xp alne "a Creative Writing Workshop
hard-core professional communists. Known communists have. sat ,in on SDS meetings and coached organizers since t ile organization was founded in 1962; SDS leaders frequently travel to Red capitals; twa of three national officers chosen at last June's national conven-tion were self-proclaimed cemmunists.
While many SDSers are actively anti-Kremlin, they share with the communists a common' desire to destroy, to annihilate and to tear down, the article asserts.
Citing SDS's role in the recent upheaval at Columbia University, Mettlvin declares ; hat firmer action by school authorities in support of the antir~dical "Majority Coalition" would have averted escalating violence that culminated in cancellation of classes a t Co-lumbia. .
W 11 i I e acknowledging that legitimate grievances by students must receive ' ~far more attention" from officials than heretofore, Methvin says that prompt action by students and administrators is a must to prevent campus-wide clashes in the future .
Sidney Hook, noted New Yo r k University philoso,phy professor, has said that SDS members " threaten to become the true grave diggers of academic freedom in the United States." Only prompt action. by school authorities and the overwhelming majority of students can prevent the grave from being dug.
Parents' Weekend Severa! local colleges are and tea will be sponsored joint-
affiliated with A.F .A. The ad- B D St k tID C ly with the St~ering Commit- (Continued from Front Page) vantage in th is, obviously , is a y r. urroc 0 tee of the Enghsh Department . genera tion gap may possibly grea ter selection of films of- on May 6th at the Gardner witness a n ew breach f er ed almost every night of the By Judy Brown t'heft and 0 the r situations Museum. H f)] b . .
The second part of the pro- o. p e u .y Y eveDlng the week a t a minimal charge to Dr . Stur rock. a member of which arise in close com- t I . gr am consists of the purchase enslOn WI 1 have eased and
A .F .A. members. the College Center , which pro- munity living. of memberships to the MFA paren!s and stud~nts will enjoy Among the films to be pre- vides counseling for thirty-one He ended the discussion by which will be used by the ~roml lses, PromJses, the mu-
sented this semester are: r eiterating the availability of m embers of the Socl'ety free of SIca adapta tion of the film 29 D St schools in the Boston area , met Tb
September - r. range- .help for all students, no mat- charge. e A.partment. Reservations 1 w it'h m embers of the Emman- f th "" ove ter how trivial they may think To promote interest in the or IS ou.-campus play are
October 6 - Seance on a Wet uel Inter -Dormitory Council their problems are. All inter- theater and to make theater' three dollars, four dollars, and Afternoon with Kim S tanley on Thursday evening, Septem- views ar e strictly confidential, going practical for a student five dollars. and Richard Harris. ber 17. and neither the school, Le. ad- size budget, the Society will Sunday, October 20 :
October 13 - The Burmese ministration, faculty, or other purchase subscriptions to the H I] t J Dr . Sturrock a t this time
arp, an exce en apanese students, or parents need know ' Charles Playhouse and the The-film. stressed the posi t ive aspects of anything about any contact a ater Company of Boston. These
October 20 - Dock Soup, m ental health with which he studen t has with the Center. subscriptions will be bought w ith the Mar x brothers and and h is colleagues are w illing Also, a student's problems do through the Priority Ticket My Lit tle Chickadee, w ith t d 1 and he said that the not have to be based on her S~rvice of the Boston After W . C. F ields and Mae West - 0 ea academic life . Tll e Cen ter will Dark a t a lower cost than the
, a double b ill for Parents' Center is always willing thO help with any social or family regular student subscription p rovide a representative, suc
W1:!ekend. . problems. r a te. October 27 - Mirac]e Work- as himself, to speak to dorml- Society m embers will be able
er with Anne Bancroft and tory councils, groups of par- This is the fi rst year that to buy tick ets at an even lower ents, and studen t governments. E mmanuel has taken advan -
Patty Duke. cost t han the subscrip tion, November 24 _ Cartou~he The 1. D. C. discussed stu- tage of the services offer ed by $1.00 for the Char1es and $1.25
dent power with Dr . Stu r rock , the College Center. The Stu- for the T .C.B.
. Seniors will be in the spotlight. A brunCh will be served in the cafeteria from 10-11:30 A .M. for the seniors and their parents. At noon the Cap and Gown Mass will be celebra ted by Fr. Logan, F r . K ett and Fr. Connick.
All students and thei r paren ts are encouraged to participate in what p romises to be an enjoyable and stimulating weekend . with J ean Paul Be1mondo, is
the onl y official November date as of now. (Sophomore Weekend)
Other plans for the year include p resentation of experimental and underground fi lms; sem inars w ith cinema students of other schools ; and t he possib le ini t iation of a cinema course into the curriculum. The Club is hoping to promote more interest into the Campus in this v ital, exper imental art by holding d iscussions with creative Boston fi lmmakers.
ask ing him questions about den t Government Handbook With the money collected by other sc'hools and how they contains the essen t ial informa- the sale of these subscription effected student power on their tion, but the addr ess is 4360 tickets, the Society will pur - Frosh to Hold Tea campuses. He offered some P r udential Cen ter and the chase d iscount t ickets to plays h elpful suggestions for dis- telephone number is 262-33.15. other than those at the two Parents' Weekend
Student support and in terest are necessary in order to push this program along at Emmanuel. The cinema is definitely established in the plast ic arts and w e certainly should include it in a liberal education .
covering the attitudes on this There is tw en ty -four hour con- theaters, arid, in turn, offer campus and he also suggested sultation service available. them to Society members.
that par ents be considered as I~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ a major factor in any proce-dure for change, especially that of curfews.
P r oblems of dormitory life w er e another concern and Dr. Sturrock talked to the officer s about spotting serious emotional trouble am ong fellow students and h e stressed the importance of contacting the Center at the first signs of a deep "hang-up." He also gave some h ints about h omesick n ess, inconsideration, petty
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Th.e Emmanud. Focus
After a week of orientation and two weeks of classes the class of 1972 has proved itself more than a mere sublet y on the Emmanuel Campus. Cathy Wimmet, President Pro-Tem of the freshman class has· announced plans for the a nnual ' Freshman-Pa rent tea . The tea, a t which Sister Ann Bar tholemew will address the paren ts of freshmen, w ill be held in October in conjunction with Parents Weekend . Also, par ents will have the oppottunity to meet and converse with the facul ty.
October 2, 1968 Page 3
SB Itt R . CO. and EC Graduate: Experiment in Motivation The SB&R Sunshine Com
pany has put smiles on the faces of its four young business partners (ages 12 to 14) and on the · shoes of hundreds of Philadelphians.
The recently-formed s hoe sH ne company derives its name from its three founders, Stephen Murph, 12, Barry Moses, p , and Russell Travers, 14, who added to their business 13-year-old Andre Ferguson.
In the next few days the four Spring Garden area boys will open their first savings accounts a t a neighborhood bank - a proud accomplishment for boys who have rare ly had more t han a quarter at a time to call their own.
" I'm saving my money to b uy school clothes," said Barry Moses, hardly pausing in his concentra ted effort to turn a customer's shoes into a looking-glass . H is three enterprising colleagues a g r e e d that they'll also buy clothes and school supplies with their earnings. It At the present t ime SB&S Sunshine. has a limited clientele of 3000 - all employees of Smith Kline & Krench Laboratories, Philadelphia manufacturer of prescription medicines and other health-related products. The boys have set up shop in the 1530 Spring Garden Street lobby of SK&F, where they do a brisk lunch time business and occupy their noncustomer hours by polishing extra pairs of shoes that have
Cecile Betit, Emanuel '65, letters a poster for the SB & R Sunshine Company while the four boys who form the company . look on. They are from left: Stephen Murph, Andre Ferguson, Russell Travers and Barry Moses. The shoe shine business has been organized by the neighborhood youths under the Potentials program of the Information Services Center, 1720 Mount VernoR Street, Philadelphia, an activity of ~mith Kline & French Laboratories, PhUadelphia manufacturer of prescription medicines and other health-related products. '
been left with them.
'\ PREPARATION ; FOR THE FUTURE
Miss Betit is a 1965 graduate of Emmanuel College. Before coming to Philadelphia she worked for a year as assistant to Sister Marie Augusta Neal, S .N.D., Chairman of the Sociology Department .
Miss Betit has had cooperation from SK&S executives and others in developing the Potentials program. Some of the top men in their fields have taken time to advise the youngsters on public relations as well as advertising and promotion.
'Measures New Season
Opens Caravan
Taken~
at The shoe shine company was
organized through a program called Potentials, which seeks to motivate young people and to give them some sound business experience as preparation for starting businesses of their own some day.
Born in Vermont and still a country girl at heart, Miss Betit has continued her work at the Information Services €enter since receiving her degree from Temple University in June. She explains her involvement by saying :
The board of directors of Potentials includes among others Car v erA. Portlock, SK&F Community Affairs Coordinator; Irwin Horowitz, Philadelphia developer, and the Rev. Donald R. Gabert, pastor of St. Matthew's Lutheran Church, Broad and Mount V ern 0 n
Bertolt Brecht's, The Meas- " lesson play," Measures Taken ures Take.n, will open the first probes the · problem of whell
" "Studies show that few Negroes own their own businesses and not many young people aspire to it," says Cecile Betit, 25-year-old me m b e r of the board of directors of Potentials. Miss Betit helped -to organize Potentials last year while she
,was a member of the Teacher ; Corps doing community work I at SK&F's Information Services ,Center, 1720 Mount Vernon t Street, for credit toward he r
" I think teachers have to learn more about the cgmmu7 nity and the changes occurring there. This is where we have to make a beginning - in the home, jn the community . I'm convinced that the a nswer to the whole mess our cities a re in will have to come from priva te industry." ~Jnaster's degree.
'.Stu. G. Meets to Consider i !Aid to Bia/ra and PrOjects
Streets. The fledgling shoe shine
company is being opera ted on a very businesslike basis. Customers are charged 25 cents per shine, or they may buy a $5 card which entitles them to 21 shoe shines. Receipts a·re given and accounts are metic ulously kept.
Five cents of each quarter goes back into the Potentials progra m to sponsor educational outings for the young workers such as their recent trip to New York City. They pocket ' 10
"f At the firs t meeting of the that any club or standing com- cents, put a nickel from each Student Government, Tuesday, mittee can place petitions for shine into their savings acSeptember 24, it was decided the allotted activities funds to counts and use .the remainder
the Treasurer of t he Student ·of the money for supplies. ilhat meetings will be held Government. It will be up to "Although the money is im·
resident season of the Caravan Theatre on Wednesday, October 9 at 8:00 p.m .
\
Considered one of Brecht's best works , and his greatest
Conference to Aid
Adver~ising Career The Twelfth Annual Career
Conference, sponsored by the Ad vert ising Women of New York Foundation, Inc., will aga in be hel~ing college studen ts w ith a realis tic, professional panorama of the vast career opportunit ies a vailable to bright young men a nd women in adver t ising.
Hundreds of students representing key colleges will attend this annual career conference, Saturday, November 2, 1968 from 9:00 a .m. to 4:30 p.m. at the Hotel Commodore, New York City. every T u e s day night at six the discretion of the Treasurer portant to the program, I feel
O'clock, These meetings are to distribute these funds. giving these youngsters busi- Registration must be made in ~pen to all members of the stu- Student Government also de- ness experience and motivation advance, and there is a regis-(lent body. cided to support a Biafra Re- is paramount," says Miss Betit. t ration fee.of $5.50 for each
, ~ Clarification concerning some lief Program which is to be es- " Motivation is probably one 01 student. '.spects of Focus was presented tablished on campus. the greatest forces we have The Career Conference is a
. at the meeting: the editorial Programs established and working for us effecting social pro j e c t of the Advertising , J;>oard, usually consisting of six discussed by the .student Gov- change." Women of New York Founda: 10 eight editol'S, detel'mine their .ernment are: the Community What is the future of Poten- tion, Inc. and is co-sponsored . successors; editorials will rep- Council to be composed. of rep- tials? Miss ' BeUt hopes to or- by The American Advertising
in a time of radical change, do the ends justify the means ..
Mime, song, dance and music are used in d ram a t i z i n g Brecht's uncannily ptfnetrating' . intuitive grasp of the realities of the problem of revolution .
In staging the production, director Stan Edelson has created a unique and imaginative use of set. Benches, arranged in star shape, form both the st age and the sets-they become an old workers' union ; a canal ; a rooftop ; and fi nally ' the sides of a lime pit.
Two original, contemporary sa t ires-Lemon Meringue P ie and How to Make a Womanand a modern version of Euripedes' classic tragedy, Iphigenia, compr ise the remaining part of Caravan's season_
The underlying theme for all of Caravan Theatre's work is "change the world, it needs it." Perhaps, by consistently presenting current, social th~atre--theatre that looks a t what is really happening-a better world might be realized.
Season subscriptions, group discounts, individual ' tickets, and touring engagements information cim be obtained now by calling the .box office 491-9579 or writing Caravan Theatre, 1555 Massachusetts Avenue, Cambridge, 02138. I
resent the concensus of the resent atives from the Adminis- ganize a car washing service Federation' The American AsJ>oard unless otherwise indi- t ration, Faculty Senate and ~ext, and has even more ambi-' sociation ~.f A d v e'l' tis in g
t d b . ad d't . I th St d t G t tlOllS dreams for the future. Agencies ', Association of Na-I ~a e y a SIgn e 1 orIa; e u en overnmen ; a com- • _____________ ..
I present editorial board has mittee to increase the ratio 01 tionai" Advertisers, Inc.; The Good Food Take Out Service decided to open up board meet- underprivileged st u den t s on Relax at Magazine Publishers' Associa- . ilngs to all staff members; fu- campus; par e n t educational The Campus Shop tion; and' the National Associa-
! iture policy concerning t his program to be held on Parents M Th tion of Broadcasters. I on.- urs.8 a.m.-9 :45 p.m . I matter to be decided by the in- Weekend headed by sophomore Fr.- 8 6 • a .m.- p.m. ~ eumbent board. Janet Hufnagel; a-nd the ex- Sat. . 9 a.m.-2 p.rn l t It w as s~ated at the meeting perimental college. Sun 7 p.m.-9 :45 p.m .
For further information contact R. M. Mullin, Director of Placement.
The Emmanuel Focus
B & R DELI, INC. 356 LONGWOOD AVE.
Ncar Brookline Ave.
FamoUs for our Roast Beef Sandwiches Tel. 566-9442 - George Porte r, Mgr.
"The Store with the Yellow Front"
October 2, 1968 ·Page 4