Yol. 50 No. 3
A LOYOLA- MARYMOUNT PUBLICATION
Oct. 16. 1972
Two Killed,
one injured
in car crash
by Dave Devereaux
Stephen Paul Gregoire and Rob¬
ert Charles Zigler, both Loyola
students, died early last Tuesday
in a two-car collision near Marina
Del Rey.
Mr. Gregoire was dead on ar¬
rival and Mr. Zigler died a few
hours later at Marina Mercy Hos¬
pital following. the 1:10 accident.
The driver of their car, Daniel
James Puma, another Loyola
student, is reported in good condi¬
tion after suffering a skull frac¬
ture, internal injuries and broken
legs;
According to the Evening Out¬
look, the three men were trav¬
eling west on Culver Boulevard
when their car collided with an
auto going east on the Marina ac¬
cess road.
Venice police said the east-
bound vehicle, driven by Charles
Andrews* 2$f apparently went
through a red light and struck the
Loyola students’ car.
An employee of the Department
of Water and Power, Andrews
was also treated at Marina Mercy
for a possible concussion an<f ex¬
tensive cuts. He was later booked
for felony manslaughter at the
jail ward of Los Angeles County-
USC Medical Center.
Messrs. Gregoire and Zigler
were both graduates of Notre
Dame High School in Sherman
Oaks and both were sophomores
at Loyola.
Mr. Gregoire, 19, was enrolled
in a pre-legal curriculum in the
College of Business Adminis¬
tration. Funeral services were*
held last Thursday at St. Francis
de Sales Church in Sherman
Oaks.
Mr. Zigler, also 19* of Van
Nuys, was a pre-medical student
in the College of Science and En¬
gineering. The funeral was held
last Friday at St Elisabeth
Church in Van Nuys.
Daniel Puma, a transfer student
in his first term at Loyola, is a
political science major in a pre-
legal curriculum. He previously
attended Pierce and Moorpark
Colleges,
Inside
Sports . . ....... p. 9
Religion .... . . p. 7
Features ............... p. 4
Dogs, bombs
and mosey ....§. . . p. 3
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Total enrollment climbs
due to recruitment
Registration figures for the Fall Indian) mainly results from a
1972 term showed an unexpected more intensive program of re-
increkse in the total enrollment of cruitment.
Alfonso Nava, assistant director of Chicano studies, spoke on Mexican
identity during last Thursday’s El Dia de la Raza festivities*
expansion
by lack of
пищеу
by Jeff Steed
Work on the long awaited li¬
brary, expansion is supposed to be¬
gin in 1973, according to Richard
Mason, vice president for univer¬
sity relations. Mason explained
the delays in a Loyolan interview.
Mason said that recently Wil¬
fred , von der Ahe, son of Charles
von der Ahe who provided funds
for the library, had supplied the
funds for a consultant to develop
a general expansion plan.
According 'to Mason, the plan¬
ning stopped at that level because
the money for expansion had not
yet been released by the courts.
When , the court releases the
money, it will take six months for
an architect to compose the blue-
p r i n t s . A general contractor
would then bq hired to begin the
final steps toward construction.
Mason explained the delay
caused by the court action. He
said that the T. Marie Chilton es¬
tate (roughly $3.5 million) was the
major fund for the library ex¬
pansion.
This 1967 will is in probate for a
second time. The original probate
was contested by Bruce Stevens,
Mrs. Chilton’s ex-husband, who
claimed to have a 1968 hand¬
written will naming himself and
an architect co-trustees.
In October 1971, the court re¬
jected Steves’s claim and ad¬
mitted the 19y67 will to its sec¬
ond probate.
Mason said that the university
did not want to bring in an archi¬
tect before this money is' in the
University’s bank. According to
Mason, the money will be out of
probate very soon and construc¬
tion underway no later' than next
year.
Loyola/Marymount.
Instead of the 75-160 person
drop predicted' last December by
the Office of Admissions, the en¬
rollment climbed from 2,748 for
the Fall 1971 term to 2,811 for the*
first quarter of this year, a net
increase of 63 students.
According to Michel L’Heureux,
Director of Admissions, the De¬
cember estimates were based on
the number of applications re¬
ceived, which was then substan¬
tially below normal. “But as soon
as the commitment deposits be-'
gan to come in, we knew that we
had to revise our figures,” said
L’Heureux. “Apparently this
year’s freshman didn’t apply to as
many colleges, but was more
serious about the ones he applied
to.”
The registration summary also
showed a better than one - third
rise in minority enrollment, from
346 in 1971 to 480 this fall. This
year’s freshman class has 167
studests of minority origin, more
than doubling the total of 63 in
last year’s class.
The increase in minority stu¬
dents (which the federal govern¬
ment defines as black, Spanish
surname, oriental, and American
Representatives of L
о у о
1 a
/
Marymount visited most of the
Los Angeles city schools in an at¬
tempt to inform qualified students
about Loyola. Their efforts are
borne out by the enrollment sta¬
tistics.
A total of 894 new students en¬
tered Loyola this fall, 686 fresh¬
men and 218 transfer students.
Marymount showed a slight de¬
crease in the size of its freshman
class, while Loyola had seventeen
more freshmen than* last year.
Both schools showed small in¬
creases in total enrollment.
According to Miss Catherine
Emenaker , University Registrar,
the Loyola/Marymount figures
are typical for the private col¬
leges of the area. “Last year most
private colleges were anticipating
a drop in enrollment,” said Miss
Emenaker. “Money was tight and
college expenses are usually the
first place to cut back.
“Instead, it was the state col-
eges that experienced the drop.
All of the private colleges I’ve
talked to have had slight enroll¬
ment increases. The students are
just willing to make sacrifices to
get the type of education they
want.”
Rand Cor p. speaker
Hammond
says
public is misled
by Frank Fine
Political, military and corpo¬
rate moguls are playing a game
oif “deliberate innocence” with
their own bureaucracies and with
the American public, Dr. Paul
Hammond of the Rand Corpo¬
ration told a largely Air Force
ROTC audience of 160 in the Louts
B. Mayer Theater Wednesday.
Hammond, who has taught at
the U.S. Naval Academy, the
Navy War College and Harvard
University, also predicted that
the proposed all-volunteer armed
forces would impair the present
Establishment’s ability to main¬
tain control of the society.
Hammond cited the recent con¬
troversy over unauthorized bomb¬
ing of North Vietnam as an ex¬
ample of officials’ using “deliber¬
ate innocence” to mislead the
public.
The Senate Armed Forces Com¬
mittee, which demoted retired
Maj. Gen. John D. Lavelle for al¬
legedly ordering the raids in de¬
fiance of President Nixon’s bomb¬
ing limitation, also ruled that
none of Lavelle’s superiors shared
h is guilt .
The committee, Hammond
charged, sacrificed Lavelle hur¬
riedly to avoid embarrassing
those who had given Lavelle un¬
clear directives or had possibly
approved his actions.
Using lower officials as scape¬
goats, Hammond said, is a game
higher officials are playing more
and more frequently. The tenden¬
cy, he observed, is to be expected
in any bureaurcracy “over six
months old.”
The new, all-volunteer armed
forces, Hammond predicted, will
be more strictly regulated by ci¬
vilian authority. The military it¬
self, partly to secure recruits, will
seek a greater cohesion with civil¬
ian life, he said.
Vocational training for soldiers,
more permissive appearance
standards and a general de-mi-
litarization of the military will
compose key elements in the
Army’s image for the Seventies,
he said.
To allow this de-militarization,
he said, U S. foreign policy will be
restricted to maintaining present
commitments at most. A qualified
isolationism will replace inter¬
vention abroad.
At home, he continued, the new
military will follow a “social mod¬
el,” addressing itself to, among
other thing, emergency response
to natural or social disasters.
The new educated, well-kept
and factionless military organiza¬
tion, he foresaw, will align itself
with the goals of the lower-and
lower-middle classes, which in
turn will put “a substantial
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