The Hilltopper (Austin, Tex.), Vol. 48, No. 14, Ed. 1 Friday, March 13, 1964 Page: 3 of 4
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HILLTOPPER
Page 3
March 13, 1964
How Far Is Too Far?
Discussed by 'Sunday
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Member F.D.I.C.
Sincerely yours,
Fr. Maurice P. Johnston, OP
Director of Student Affairs
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with you as man to man, we will. But we are /waiting for evi-
dence—evidence of the fact that we are dealing with responsi-
ble, mature adults.
We shall never have a perfect world as long as it is filled with
imperfect men—and imperfect we are till the day we die. But
this is no reason for despair. We can improve our situation, we
can overcome some obstacles and learn to adjust to others
together. But it must be together, for no one of us can do it
alone. Let me end this letter then, with a challenge and an
invitation: much can be done if we work together. We are
ready to discuss any issue; we are ready to do all that we can
to reach a solution to any problem—but if we are to deal in
this matter man to man, the efforts of the administration alone
will not be sufficient to achieve a lasting solution. You must
be willing and able to assume responsibilities, to commit your-
selves not simply as individual students here and there, but
as the student community, to a mature acceptance of standards
and a general cooperation in the life and activities of campus
life. Our common problems can be solved. We are ready. We are
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leadership of Coach Volpe and
with the help of Bob Santos, Fer-
nando Garcia and Humberto Gar-
za, the teams have been most suc-
cessful.
With this spirit and the pur-
chase of new uniforms, the pro-
gram has been greatly stimulated,
and it is now reaching even more
children than ever. It is hoped
that this spirit of participation
will be forwarded to the coming
baseball and softball season.
This is just one of the CCD ac-
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the Christian life to people.
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The Ghost Writer
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(Continued from Page 2)
work cannot possibly be successful without your cooperation
and without your efforts to make a mature response.
The religious questionnaire, the results of which have been
discussed in the paper for the past several weeks, is only one
issue in point. The results were published. The situation was
generally recognized to be in need of improvement. What was
the student reaction? A desire to get with the program, to lend
a hand, to offer themselves? No, not a bit of it. The reaction
was “well, what will the administration do to change the situ-
ation?”
Volpe Works Sports
Into CCD Program
For the past two months, Ar-
turo Volpe, senior from Laredo,
Texas, has been donating his
time to help organize and main-
tain a sports program at Our Lady
of Guadalupe Parish in Austin.
Working under the formality of
the campus CCD, Volpe spends
three days a week working with
the boys and girls of this parish.
In doing this, he is giving these
children an outlet for their ener-
gies within a wholesome and
Christian atmosphere.
To date the program has con-
sisted of basketball for the boys
and volleyball for the girls. There
are two basketball squads made
up of junior and senior high
school boys, and one volleyball
teams composed of junior and
senior high school girls.
The teams have had an oppor-
tunity to compete with other
schools in the city. The senior
basketball team has played some
of the intramural teams at St.
Edward’s high school. The jun-
ior high school team has played
teams at St. Luis parish and Pan
American recreation center. The
girls’ volleyball team has played
St. Mary’s academy. Under the
American girl who got some ‘ter-
rific experience’ she speeds away
in a sports car and the film con-
tinues to its perfect sugar-coated
climax.
The film is worth looking at
simply because it deals with a
seemingly widespread problem.
American films of late seem to
be moving in the right direction;
they deal with current man and
his problems. But they insist on
making the solution take place
in the world of studio budget de-
mands and in the fantastic imag-
inations of writers. They do not
draw upon life for solutions but
upon the chance of a contrived,
isolated instance which has no
true significance for people but
which will insure them a nice di-
version at the movies.
Jane Fonda is quickly becom-
ing a star; some of her lines are
delivered with a professional fi-
nesse for comedy and she deftly
manages to dominate the screen
whenever she appears. The cam-
era is used without imagination
or effect. The broadway play was
performed on one set and the in-
fluence of this precondition is
noticeable time and again in the
stock positions and phony set-ups
the camera takes.
Come to think of it, the film as
a whole, because it ends up by
answering the questions it poses
with such shallow and trite for-
mulae, dissolves into a contrived,
cotton candy, metrocolored dream.
--
/ 1
"Where
Pharmacy
is a
Profession"
By Michael Tracy
Just how far should a girl go
prior to saying “I do”? The pro-
ducers of Sunday in New York,
now playing at the new Cinema
theatre deal with this most inter-
esting problem of contemporary
morality. Moralists would not dis-
pute the fact that a girl shouldn’t
go too far, and it is clear from a
look at this picture that perhaps
novelist Norman Krasna, who
wrote the original Sunday in New
York, should review his principles.
And if he should feel that he has
mastered them then perhaps his
characters should brush up, just
a little bit. The film is “dedicated
to the proposition that every girls
gets—sooner or later’’ and man-
ages to prove that society cer-
tainly doesn’t embroider scarlet
letters on young ladies any more.
Attractive Jane Fonda comes to
New York one Sunday to get
some advice from big brother
(Cliff Robertson) about the stand-
ard dating procedures. She re-
fuses to get “modern” and comes
to the conclusion that her moral-
ity is obsolete. Oh no, insists her
brother who advises that she do
as he says and not as he does;
maintain your virginity at all
costs and go only as far as you
feel would be right.
She soon finds herself in a situ-
ation with Rod Taylor that makes
her wonder if she shouldn’t
change her tactics. She discovers
her brother to be quite the hypo-
crite and plunges into her new
relationship with kittenish aban-
don. Of course, playing with fire
in Hollywood never leads to get-
ting the pinkies burned and in the
end with the starry gaze of an
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LETTERS...
(Continued from Page 2)
digest and assimilate for our-
selves. Then it’s ours—it’s part
of us—and there won’t be a
dichotomy between the real me
and what I believe as a Catholic.
Then, when we leave here, we will
be Christian gentlemen—more or
less liberally educated. Then there
will be a “healthy Catholic atmos-
phere” and we will have a founda-
tion.
Brother Herbert Monie, CSC
Student Brother-
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In The Basement
Of The Ivory Tower
Well, gentlemen, spring vaca-
tion is just around the corner.
I don’t plan to tell you about the
religious regulations because you
will hear about them from some-
one more appropriate than I. I
plan to give the rules for having
a successful and happy vacation.
There are just three rules:
1) Upon arriving at your des-
tination, be sure and say hello to
your parents and let them know
that you have arrived, because
for the most part of your vaca-
tion they will only see you at
dinner and then you will be in a
rush and will not say much. Oh,
by the way, be sure you say good-
bye or they might not know that
you have left and won’t send you
any money.
2) This section is about the per-
son or in some cases persons you
will spend most of your time with.
Be sure that you are extremely
careful. After all, it has been al-
most three months since your last
meeting. One wrong word about
some girl in Austin and you’ve
had the program. Prepare a
speech to the effect that you have
never been more faithful in your
life (but make sure that you have
talked to one of her informing
friends). Then she will tell you
approximately the same and the
vacation has already started off
on the right foot. Make sure that
there is no curfew with her par-
ents; that can really put the wet
rag on things.
3) Between dodging your par-
ents and keeping your girl friend,
it will be a little difficult to find
time for drinking (I have been
warned not to speak too heavily
on this subject but I think that
I can tell you what I want over
spring vacation. I shouldn’t get
in too much trouble). First, don’t
start until you are well off the
campus. That rule is most impor-
tant. Second, when drinking in
your home town, be sure you have
the right identification or that
could mean trouble with the par-
ents. Third, when drinking and
driving remember that alcohol
and gas don’t mix, but then I have
never drunk gas and beer—might
be good. Have fun.
1 I
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many must work toward a solution. The administration makes
no claim to be always in the right on every issue. We can be
wrong, we can make changes. But if the situation is to be
remedied, more than the administration will have to have a
hand in it. And the big question that we in the administration
have is “can we count on you, the students?” You must do more
than make demands of us. You must learn to argue with reason, q
you must be able to compromise, you must be able to uphold f
your end of a bargain once it has been made. If we can deal
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maintenance and insurance
See PAUL BOROWSKI
Campus Representative
Room 221, Holy Cross Hall
GR 8-7826 110 E 7th St
Across from Driskill
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The Hilltopper (Austin, Tex.), Vol. 48, No. 14, Ed. 1 Friday, March 13, 1964, newspaper, March 13, 1964; Austin, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1491823/m1/3/: accessed June 30, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting St. Edward’s University.