i l c .ce· When · . of Notre Dame's Medieval In- riel is a Corresponding Fellow of of books of...

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I i l i j 1 ' ·; ;1 "i t . (; : '! .,.f.,· ' . . . News When .It's News Vol. 6 c .ce· of NOTRE· DAME

Transcript of i l c .ce· When · . of Notre Dame's Medieval In- riel is a Corresponding Fellow of of books of...

Page 1: i l c .ce· When · . of Notre Dame's Medieval In- riel is a Corresponding Fellow of of books of the New Testament stftute at the personal request the French Academy (Paris) and in

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c .ce· of NOTRE· DAME

Page 2: i l c .ce· When · . of Notre Dame's Medieval In- riel is a Corresponding Fellow of of books of the New Testament stftute at the personal request the French Academy (Paris) and in

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Page 2 University of Notre Dame Tuesday, .October 18, 1966

Editorial· TRY A· VOICE CLASSIFIED

,. ;·

A student whose intellectual experiences are llrnited to the· classroom is wasting his time, Out of the myriad lectures he hears, such a

. student will remember little. In order to retain the knowledge that he is exposed to and. to im­plement it, discourse between himself and. other· students, between himself and professors is a necessity,

Certainly it is possible to learn much from one's own studies, but to grasp, expand and

. effectively make ideas· one's own requires ar­

. ticulation of them by the student. He needs the challenge and inspiration of a scholar offering what wisdom he has. · '

This was the motivation behind the Student­Faculty Coffee Hour in the Library. It's pur­pose. is to provide an informal atmosphere for conversation between students and professors that is not possible in the classroom. To a

· limited extent this experiment has been suc­cessful.

The large majority o(students, however, have · little or no contact with their teachers outside

the lecture room. Undoubtedly, much of this is due. to disinterest on both sides. There are professors who limit their teaching to the class­room, students· who are "just putting in their time. •• ·But the intellectual awareness and cur­iosity of the students here. is growing, and in

. doing- so is putting greater demands on pro-

The Voice of Notre Dame

fessors. The students are beginnfug to consider these men as teachers instead of just lectur­ers and this means a role outside of the class-room. . ..

If this university ·desires continued steps in this direction, and it professes to, then more , facilities must be made available, The Coffee Hour, the Senior· Bar, and the homes of var­ious generous pr_ofessors reach but a small proportion of the student body. . ·

One possibility is to make a mid-campus cof­fee shop or lounge out of the soon-to-be-vacated Post Office. Or, considering the new orienta- . tion towards hall communities, perhaps the ef­fort should be directed towards. making within each hall a readily ·accessible lounge, with an atmosphere conducive to discussion between stu­dents and professors.

Perhaps even ih such halls as Sorin and Lyons where little space· is available, the little-used chapels might be an answer. In' any event, it is evident that further steps must be taken to- · wards- solving the oft-discussed problem of lack of student-faculty contact.

Granted their new freedoms> the students themselves nrtlst strive for this educational right. Whether in the hall or in the student senate, some action should be taken to increase the fac­ilities for student-faculty meetings. And the time to act is no"'. ·

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Page 3: i l c .ce· When · . of Notre Dame's Medieval In- riel is a Corresponding Fellow of of books of the New Testament stftute at the personal request the French Academy (Paris) and in

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Tuesday, October 18, 1966

Last Friday the French film BREATHLESS was shown on cam­pus •. The film is stlll full of in­novations for the normal a..udience;

· but at its release date ifi the late fifties the film was shocking. Director Jean.;.Luc Godard began the New ·wave with this' film.

· Godard, who is blatantly existen­tial, gives us a portrait of frag­mented life, More than any other director Godard has achieved a synthesis of style and theme. The lead Jean-Paul Belmondo plays Michel Poiccard a completely amoral young Frenchman whose life is a series of lies, deceptions, and robberies. Godard tells us that life is just a series of in­cidents at the end of which we die; Godard's editing is the most im­portant element in his style. A shot that for anyone else would be continuous is broken up into a series of shorttakes from different angles. His camera angles are de­liberately miscomposed, and much of his footage is taken. hand-held instead of from a tripod. These two techniques yield a film which is nauseous, and this is exactly what Godard was looking for in BREATHLESS. Love is imposs­ible, death is imminent, and Poi­ccard is unable to constuct or find any unifying force in his life. · Godard writes and directs all

hls ·films and has complete cOntrol and responsibility. for his work. Godard says . of his own style, "For the· artist to know himself too well is to give way, to some extent to Facility. The difficult !filng 'is to advance into unknown

· isn't hard . ·· · · when you let ·

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Pope Honors Prof. Gabriel··. A unique academic honor has ments w1ll be available to Amerl- Muratori (1672-1750), the famous

been awarded to Prof, A. L. Gab- can scholars in the Notre Dame Italian historian, who discovered riel director of the University Memorial Library. Prof. Gab- the earliest know canon. or list

. of Notre Dame's Medieval In- riel is a Corresponding Fellow of of books of the New Testament stftute at the personal request the French Academy (Paris) and in a manuscript ·now called the of Po~ Paul VI.. · a Fellow of the Medieval Aca- Muratorian fragment.

Prof. Gabriel was named the demy of America (Cambridge, 'first honorary Doctor of the fam- Mass.). Freshman Program ed Ambrosian Library in Milan, The Ambrosian Library· was ·Italy at a special convocation founded in 1609. Members of its· Continued from Page 1

territory, to be aware of danger, ther~ recently. Word of the new College of Doctors have included Thus far the program has neen to take risks, to be afraid .... The honor has just come to the recip- Achille Ratti (1857-1939), who be· labeled'a success by all those in­cinema is not a trade. It Isn't lent in an official communication came Pope Pius XI, and L. A. volved .. due both to the efforts of team-work. One is alway,s alone from Amleto Cardinal Cicognani, PROF. CLAIMS the advisors, and to the ready while shooting, as though facing a Vatican Secretary of State, Continued from Page 1 acceptance of the progratn by the blank page;'' Godard says that f h A · th he .• wants to make a "research Cardinal Cicognani told Prof. lasted for six years and was .. then res men.· s e year progresses film in spectacle form." The spec- Gabriel the degree of Doctor . abolished; no one at that time an evolution of the role of the ad-tacle in BREATHLESS is the main "honoris causa" was conferred on really cared about the Negro, and visor to strictly a counsellor and characters obession with Hum- him because "His Holiness wishes Reconstruction was a hollow farce friend hopefully will come toget-phrey Bogart, the research is in thus to recognize your achieve- . doomed to-failure, her with the gradual asswnptlon

· · ments as director of the Medi- But with the twenties came· a of the entire responsib1lity for the the documentary·, almost care":" development of the section by the less, styJ.=; and the penetrating 'evai Institute of the University great surgeofnewknowledgewhich section's own residents. Thistran­camera which .never leaves the · of Notre Dame andfruitful colla- threw out many old theories, In sidon w1llhopefullyleadtoamean­Po1ccard. The main character _ boration in the University's Am- particular, evolution became so ingful hall life for all freshmen has only one afffable character- · brosiana Microfilming and Art sophisticated tha! it was ope~ly . and an end to the unfortunate ten­istfc and that is his humor:. Project ... Your expertise in the proclaimed the !:!egro was not·in· dency ·to tum inward after the This characteristic is what Godard field of the history of universities any way inferior. The intellect- first months of college life. . was after ·in the film; Perhaps and medieval education is well uals were convinced/ and hence· humor· is the only thing that can known toT the Holy Father who en- the beginning of the Civil Righ_g>' justify nihilistic art. Godard has courages you and your associates Legislat~on in 1954. . · achieved an abstraction of life. He in your chosen work ... •• · Dr. S1lver feels that the civil has filmed in a documentary style With the support of the Samuel rights movement is not just stop­. and then edited· in "the ·manner of H. Kress Foundation and the Nat- ped,but that it is going backwards.· a cubist trim-nlng away all non- ional Science Foundation, Prof. It is Inevitable, In his opinion, essentials. Godard says, "I like ·Gabriel currently is directing the· that the negro w111 become equal· EREATHLESS enormously- for a microfilming and photographing in in everything with the whites, from certairi period I was;ashamedofit, color of several thousand classi- housing to wealth and education; but now I place it where it belongs cal medieval and Renaissance the question is, how long will · with ALICE IN 'WONDERLAND.· I ·ma~uscripts and art material in this inevitabilftv take in becoming thought it was SCARFACE.•'' the Ambrosian Library, Thedocu- a reality,

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· !•.,day, October 18, 196~ ~

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~age 4 University of Notre Dame

t m·n t"

BY JOHN CORRIGAN

It was the "same old song" last Saturday as Notre Dame's unbeaten football team bagged victim #4, North Carolina, 32-0.

But this time the song was sung in a different key. In an awesome display of versatility, strength; and depth, the Irish delighted 59,075 stadium denizens as they literally "ran past" the Tar Heels. But there was a reason for this.

The rhythm of the well-balanced, smooth-running Irish offensive machine somewhat disrupted as a result of an injury .incurred by quarterback Terry Hanratty during Friday's final practice session. Terry suffered a muscle tear deep in his right shoulder. For awhile

After Seymour's touchdown re­ception, Nick Eddy putthe "cake in the oven" with a 52 yard third period scamper. Taking a handoff from Hanratty, Nick cutover left tackle, raced past a few NC defen­ders down the sidelines, made .

· another cut back to 'the center of the field and dashed into the endzone for the . fourth Irish touchdown.

The reserves got into the game late in the· third period. "I knew they _were better than they looked against· Army,., Ara remarked, He's right. Coley O'Brien com­pleted 4 of 5 passes for 87 yards. He directed them on a 67 yard touchdown march capped by Bob Gladieux•s 5 yard run around right end.· ·

I ·From North Carolina's point of 1

view the afternoon was miserable. J

Smarting from their big win over Michigan two weeks ago, the Heels I ha_d visions of a big afternoon in ~ South Bend. But things never materialized. The Irishsrnothered their "good, fast backs" (Pete Duranko) and eliminated the anti-- · cipated Hanrat!y-Talbott duel when 1 Dixie Danny suffered an ankle in­jury that knocked him out of the j game in the first quarter, To add J

insult tQ injury their secondstring , qb took the same route later via AI Page's prodding withashoulder separation. NC went the restofthe way with a fullback at quarter. It ·

·was a futile, but nonetheless gallant J

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it appeared as if the rookie sen­sation might not play. But a superb medical corps had him somewhat patched up_and ready togobygarne time. Spurred on by cortisone, the young sophomore managed only 11 sorties,· and only one of these went to his favorite receiver, Jim Sey- There are basically two types of And in the spring ofhis sophomore

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rnour. This was the third Irish people in the world, thosewhohave year Larry Conjar became a . touchdown, a 56 yard bomb to Jim and those who have not. One will college have.

'· Irish defensive end·; Al.Page, zeroes in on NC- quarterback,- after Kevin Hardy had recovered a . usually find this breakdown in al- As a junior, Conjar did more . . Jeff Brever. Not too _long after this collision, Jeff shared a berth fumble on the ND 44. Jim beat two most any aspect of our society and than prove himself he belonged.

on the·Tar Heel casualty. list with nanny Talbott. nanny left defenders arid hauled inthepasson it is generally conceded that for He gained .535 .yards ·and in the ·the game earlier with, an injured ·ankle._ . : the TarHeel15. He raced into the the most part it is better to be a · season's big game, the nationally ,1

R. · _b. · · · end -zone -unscathed, ~ave than a.have not, televised Southern Cal executiOn l . u·g· . ·. . . y· . .. · . ·. w· ·. . Thus .Notre Dame parlayed a · As basic as it may seem, it he scored four touchdowns: Mor~ j

Y . eam· ·. 1 n·s fierce ground attack and a stone- is difficult to give ari adequate_ th . b : .. ·- , . . . . . • ·_ . ·... ..· . . . . wall-air-tight defense inchalking eadefinii tion odf eitherd· group; iti'is in~\J::~~e ~~f:~~~~~~ls~~~~f l

. . . .. - . . up its second strai·~'ht shu· tout over s er,. an more ernonstrat ve, .

B. ,, . E . . ·. - . s· IS'' to . d fin b 1 B bb the Irish. runninn name and it.' ' is" . t · . ·· . · the Tar Heels. With the air-force · e e Y exarnp e. o y "' "'

U n emy . c 0 res flying on a limited basis Ara's in.; Kennedy is· a have; Dick Nixon is his blocking as well as his running l _.. ·_ .. _ · _ . . . . . . . . . _ . fantry did most of the work. The a have not,·New YorkCityisahave ab111ty that' marks him as one of

· offense ,.oiled up 13 or the 19' ND and South Bend, well, need it be the best; · . BY T0!\1 HENEHAN - · . ·. . f said? This fall L_ arry Con]'ar will

S ·; "'uis. · · · · · · · ·· first downs, 249. o the 432 total Becau· se it is cooler and inner to. t • .LN University-wasn'tsup- The Irish could not breathe fr.. · · ·r ·r f · probablybecorne still anoth(!rtype

posed to have had a very good easily yet, though. St. Louis open- yard 0 tense, and our 0 the ive be a have; everyone would like to ·of have, an All-American have. If -

ru b t Th Billlk. . . d h . .d h If. . th . touchdowns.' ND ·rushed for an be one. Thus, gai'ning adrni'ssion to hi . ·· g Y earn. · e. ens were e · t e secon a wi another · · · . you saw. rn lasr .Saturday_ after-

asked by Notre Dame to provide a try-•. The score stood at 6-6 as the averag~· of B.9 yards per carry. the group is not an easy process. noon, you don't have . to. be. told bit of diversion last Saturday: wind prevented every conversion The de.ense registered its second One usually gets in by one of two h

1 . .th I . h B . th f th . strai~ .. t-whitewash', in "our g. ames ways·. one', beinn ·.born into. it·, or . w Y •. Paul May is also a fine full-

supp ymg e ns · team wi a attempt .o e day. Still early in. IS'' '' "' · .little competition before the main the half, big Jack Murphy, main- John Ray's first stringers have . two; working your way into h. This · back: but l:iecause.there is aLarcy .. event of the morning, the Clayton stay of the ND serum, sustilined a · yielded a mere seven points, . is a story about a man who made it Conjar around, h~ will have to waitC

-Club's contest with the first ND deep cut·on the back of his head. Notre-Darne'soffensivestrategy the latter and rnore'difficult way.· Because Conjar belongs_ where he fifteen~· · · · He left the field, had a· few feet split Jim Seymour wide where he · Larry Conjar . carne to Notre -~s: he has more than paiatheprice

. . Well, the Clayton pros never of guaze wrapped around his fore- _was the recipient ~- of double Dame like all freshman football ui bandages, tears, courage and . showed up,: but si; Louis did and ... ·head; too_ k a breath or tWo, andre:.._ coverage :·Rocky Blier ·was sent · prospects a high school have It · i · · -

t; ·certainly rriade their presence felt. turned to action. After the game, to the w~ru{:' side. This -left only· would be d~ring t!'Iat freshman y~ar. sp nt, .· · · · · · · · · . · ~~~,·~FUling•in:against-.the•Irish regu-.. c-drenched-in sweat and-blood;Mur- .. Larry Corijar·and Nick Eddy:inthe'·- that th~ select group wo~ld be· ·Except :for a few extra pounds, :::-- · · · :: lars,.. they felll2-6, but threw as phy was given four stitchestoclose dynamite backfield while setting up · divid~d . still ·again into college he hasn•t ·. reallv p chan11.ed much-;;. big· a scare into the f.orrriidable the wound. · · the NC defense for a pass, The haves and have nots. It. appeared over th~ last three years. He· still-:.-: . Notre Dame squad as the.Irish are . · Soon thereafter, Notre Dame running game~ benefited and Eddy at . the end. of that y~arthat Law- has. the same pride and deterrnina-

likely· to see this fan.· The horne· finally took a permanent lead as and Conjar took advantage of the renee Con]ar, the pnde ofHarris- tion, and enough good thinizs can't

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team needed a heroic performance D_ick Corrigan scampered into the . • · · · · burg, .would not be a have. r all h · 1 · · f J k

. M h · · situano_n. On the first Notre Darn_ e. Tha· t was _no.t a nood ye. ar ror . e . Y appen to a guy ike him.· rom ac . urp y and a couple· of . comer · of. the .end zone. Brick - "' t' It was n d r h

1 touc_hd_own march, Larry and Nick Con]·ar, A reno"'.ned ·and runge'd . ever rna e:·easy ,or irn:

scores ate 1n the second half to Belden's ~ick from a~tough angle ,v o · · pull out the victory. . . . was;blown wide, The final score ran over cent~r on 5 of the 10 . high school halfback, he .was Larry Conjar deserved everything

S .. L uis ' d h . . h . . plays_ with c_ On]ar noi_nn __ over _from plagued' with m· ·J·u·ries almost from' that the last two. autumns have

t. . o opene t e scoring · was reac ed in the closing rninu.; "' "' · ten- rnirtutes into the first half. . tes of .the game on a wild play~ the 1 at 1:54 of the 'first period. the d~y he .arrived and he passed rewarded him with. . The Idsh· had charged deep into Pat Kinnealy was the last Irish Early in thesecondperiodtheirish almost an entire fallwithoutwear­enerny territory with the wind at · back to · carry the ball after . a · WP.re on the rna_rch again :tf~er ing p_ads. The spring of that year

· ·their -backs. in. the first· minutes, series of passes covering the width . ta~ing over on the NC45. This time he had a brief flash that. made but- theBilukens .took control and oLthe field, and it was he. who Conjar: made shambles of the Tar·. one man, Ara Parseghian, rernern_. .

. :·slowly pushed .)ack upfield and crossed the'touchline and recorded Heel defense on· 7'of the 9 olavs. ~r. But Lawrence Conjar returned. IS· THE-

across'.· the goal. ·The conversion : the score. . . · ~ · ._ - . Always: running. between the tack... to Harrisburgthat June a deposed . attempt failed in the face of a'strong. : · The :basis of St. Louis' sur- les, Larry again liulled over from have. . · · . . · wind ·"' '· ·· · ,_ -·' · prisingstrengthseernedtobetheir' the one-yardline.Hanrattythrew Thingswer~ not much different

. '·Irish. back Mike· Conr~y ·sPed footwork. The Missouri city is only ·one pass on each of these two the fall of his sophomore year. across_ the. goal after. a long-run, noted as the nation's soccer capi- · drives.. · · · While some sophs were .. making but an·. offside penalty dissallowed tal,' and at,·sonie. stages of the game · · themselves famous with Huarte and

· · the tally~ After._a· serious threat by. ·the Billikens. put on a better dis- w . · t. · · · . · Snow, Larry was still nursing too SLU, 'Jim Purcell carried the ball · plav of dribbling than the Iowa . es ern numerous injuries and struggling across for. a. 3-3 'tie. ·The, wind,. St;tte soccer team which was over . . . . . . for survival with theprep,"harn--blowing cross-{ield by- this· time, i>owering'the Irish hooters on the c· a·p· . tu· r . burger;" unit. But Ara Parseghian

· :. prevented . a good ·kick. Only five :. adjacent . field, Luckily, the wind. . . _ . e S · .. had re?Jembered something and the • minutes remained in the half; but.·. was too strong for any of the rug.:. . . . .·· · .. · ·. . . . . now bigger and stronger halfback

Conroy. returned- the- ball a·cross·:,·;-gers .to score on kicks but the Jn·· ··. · • t· "f' • · ·1 had become a fullback and Larry· _the saJ!ie goal.~_this time success·(':'flasJ!lngfeet of St. Louis 'not only . . . vI a I 0 n.a Conjar, fighting against injuries. fullY-: scoring,_.-after t~ing ·a pass · h~lped _advance ·the ball by passes· . Wesiern_Mich_i<T~n captured the and sometimes himself,' was learn-from~:.. Tommy ·~P;tul Hornung'' -~·and dribbling,· but controlled thP. · "' ing his new trade well. ·Riggs, whose rugge.dpl:lY an~shifty···.:ball in:- the scru.rn, usually m, : 1966 Notre Dame :Cross Country . -In the spring of. that year,Joes : feet set up the qmckdrive down-. Irish .. strength with the_ nimble Invitational. Meet held last Friday · _Farrell_ and.· Kan_ tor -were gone,·· fi ld · B on the Burke Memorial Golf co-

._ e ~ ... ~ .. . . . . : :- rian Murphy at _hooker. urse. Kent· State's Sam Bair won though a. lot of 'other people were individual honors with a time, of supposed to be the fullback before 19:23, .. . · • _ . · him. But Conjar fougJn and: ran •• -. '• -t- ATTEND OUR·BIG ·

SESQUICENTENNIAL~UNITED ·NATION-S - . . . DAv~'cEtEBRATION.. . .

. ':. ~DOWNJOVIN MISHA. WAKA .

, ~::;··_ .SATURDAY--OCT. -22 · PA~ApE-~ 9~30 A.M;_: (See _it at Lincoln war and MainStr-~etf

.- . . . .. . . . HE:AR: . . . . -:.'CONGRESSMAN WI,LLlAM G. 3RAY 11!00 A.M •.

: . . ··.seE .. · ·- · MIAMIINDIAN>TRI BE .•.

STAGE COACH AND. ANTIQU;: CARS , K?KI BHOTE (FORM.ERLY .OF MA'oRAS, lNDIA, 4:30 ·P.M.). .

• ' • • ' • ~ ., r - -: ·: •,' • :. • • • • • ·." • • • ' '• '• • • • • ' • • .J .-

• J- DIRECT FROM ABC-TV '.'PRESS INTERNATIONAL": ~ . '. '---:.. ". . . ~ '!

FOREIGN STUDENTS AR: CORDIALLY INVITED TO'OUR '_.,·: ·_.. · '·. - · .· ·, ·· · ui-IITEb N.A·hoNs : ,' :.

"' ·,

~- · . PROGR.AM ~ ·: ~'

·SATURDAY OCT.-.'22 _ . AT 3:30 P:M: · ·· , MAlt:! st;:,. ';. · ..

·c:. :; ·- AT·LINCOLNWAY-. ··' · ·

1n. capturing its sixth tearn .. title and· hit and blocked and Ara Par­in the Eleventh . running of. the . seghian had once again seen some- . Irish Classic Western Michigan· __ thing that made Jack Snow.an end,

:dethroned the- Irish, last .year's and Nick Rassas a safety, and John champion but only .. second this -Hnarte a Hefs~an Trophy winner. drne. , ·The ·Irish have' won the

. team title five times. . . As ironic as' it rriay seem, the

Irish defeated Western in early meets . in -each of the last two years. . And in· both of those . years;· \\'MU,has gone on. to cap­.wre the NCAA Cross .'Country.· title; . It might be a fond· hope, but stretching one's · imagin:nion

. instills Alex Wilson's harriers with · ·the Iciea· of reversing· the trend. . . Notre Daine was paced by Kenny -

Howard who finished sixth. Chuck Vehorn and John Wehrheim ,__·ere '16th ·and 17th respectivelv; ·Des La'-'·ler'arid Pete Farrellwere30th· and 31m respectively. Neither Lawler nor·Howardrna'cle:the trip to Indiana the week before in which the: Irish suffered thell:· first meet

. loss in ·two· years to' Miimesota;· ¥aybe these two fellows can help make· that·· ~6nd hope. a 'reality,

·. Starts Thur~~ Oct. 20 ..

1st Run Co-FeatUre.

-"The lnd BeST -SeCReT AGeNT· in the whole wide world~~

: 'COlOR

Oct. 27 "Dear John''

.. -

WIGGY-/

~--O_R Y.OU? It's _ the: latest hang-up, .

sychadelic Go-Go scene, Soon t will be thebig noise oncarnpus. .

The .. current issue of The Satur- .' day Evening Post ·takes you o

e rounds of New York's · "tota environment•• nightclubs. Exper ience the frantic . ~aleidoscope · o flashing lights, ·movies, slides, ;o,lored smoke and deafeningroc n roll· that give ·.you an LS

trip . with no side effects. · C-e with New York's "Take-Over Gen­eration" as they Jelly Belly their cares away. Find· out, what- to

. •ear when making the new scene: . bust shields, fluorescent mini-

. skirts, siljt:r'rnotorcyc.le jackets·, aluminum wigs. · Is thts. really a ew art media· as its inventor · lieves? . Is it for your- school? · ind out in the OCtober 22 issue

of. the Saturday Evening Post. Pick up on it todav. babv , ..