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Thou~htfulspeaker Leslie Fiedler's speech Saturday morning ended the Alienation Conference on an unorthodox note. Fiedler outraged much of his staid audience by suggesting that they .. cross the border and close the gap" between pop and classical cultures. Story on pa~e 9. CARDINAL Vol. Xl.IV No. 24 Rm. 117 Otter Hall March 15, 1973 Be President ! Student Senate to hold ele-ction April 6 by ALEDA SIDRLEY Apr. 6, two Fridays after we return from that glorious interlude known nominally as Spring Break, a very important e..,ent will occur here at UL. That event? Our student government elections. On that sunny (?) Friday - for one day and one day only - UL students will have the chance to choose their student senate president , and their student senate vice-presidents - both academic and services. File by Apr. 2 Any full-time UL student with a 2.0 or better grade average is eligible for any of the Student Senate offices. Applications may be picked up in the Dean of Students' office now, and the filing deadline is the Monday before the Friday elections - Apr. 2. The Student Senate president receives a full scholarship with his office as well as a voting seat on the Board of Trustees and the University Senate. Both Senate vicepresidents get half-scholarships. The academic v.p. is concerned with initiating curriculum reform through the Student Senate, and the services v.p. deals with university services, for instance food and the bookstore. Abolished CLEP tests This past year the Student Senate has been active in a variety of ways, and has succeeded in abolishing A & S's requirement of the CLEP tests, as well as initiating the boycott of the SUB. Presently there are various academic reforms in the works, and this is why, current Senate president Brad Dillon says, these elections are important. With all of these important reforms in the works, it is necessary for the new officer to be prepared to deal with them. Elections for student senators will be held two weeks after the officer elections. Applications for these too are available in the Dean of Students' Office. .. U~ Cards off to the Gardens! by RICK CUSHING Last summer while visiting friends in New York, Bill Butler took a stroll down 32nd St. He stood across the way from a building which has become synonymous with the spectacle of sports throughout the world . It was, of course, the Gardens. They call it the Madison Square Garden but it really isn't square. From across the street, it appears to be all different shapes. A solid brick structure, it stretches from 7th to 8th Ave., sharing space with Penn Station, which lies underneath. There are escalators visible along the outside of the building, and ramps mirrored in windowglass. Memories circle, up there among the rafters. Only the great ones survive. You can take the train in to the Gardens. In Jersey you get on abovegrvll1ld, proceed underneath the Hudson and then under the city itself to Penn Station. From .there its merely a short trip up the escalators to the place, and the roars, and the ghosts. Sharing a dream Only Bill Butler can say if he thought about the roars or the ghosts, standing there across the street. He might have, though , because he did think about playing inside someday. It's a dream shared by many an aspiring athlete. This S~turday , Mar. 17, at 4 p.m. in the afternoon, Bill Butler and his University of Louisville teammates will get a chance to This aay there weren't any people in the create a ghost or two of their own. That's escalators or on the ramps, but Bill Butler when the tipoff is set for the second game looked at it anyway. If it had been night of this year's National Invitational Tourna-time or even a weekend afternoon, there ment, pitting Louisville against American would more than likely have been a bustle University. about the street, an excitement in the air. Winner of their last seven games and And inside there would have been a roar, boasting the nation's leading rebounder in just like countless thousands of roars before Kermit Washington, American U .. will enter it, wafting to the ceiling, there to take its the contest with a 21-4 record. Numbered rightful place among the memories of the among their conquests are St. Johri's, Du-past. quesne, LaSalle, Drexel, Farleigh-Dickinson, The • Gardens has a memorable his- and Towson State. (That last school might tory. And there are ghosts of roars past still just be a prison, it has that ring about it.) echoing somewhere in that great edifice. But back to their rebounding. Stat.ding Each one in turn competes with its predeces- 6-8 and 230 pounds, Washington averaged sors for a niche of its own, but, because '20.7 rebounds and 20.5 points a game on the there have been so many memorable feats season, making him only the seventh player and accompanying roars, it is a very seleet in history to exceed the 20 mark_in both categories. As a team American ranks second in the country in rebounding with an average margin of 17.8 rebounds per game. This is the kind of team that can be tripped over if taken lightly. And Louisville has had its problems matching up with teams that are strong along the front line. (Witness North Texas State.) But then Denny Crum is aware of the dangers and will try to make his team aware of them too before they step out into the Gardens with its blue, green, yellow, orange, and red seats, 19,500 in all. If you lose Saturday, you're back home Sunday when you could be having tons of fun in the Fun City . St. Patrick's game Assuming the Cardinals want to stick around and sightsee, their next game will be Tuesday, Mar. 20 at 7 p.m. Their opponent will come from the winner of the nationally televised tourney kickoff game between Notre Dame and Southern California, and if anybody thinks the Irish are going to lose on St. Patrick's Day on national TV, they'd better stay clear of 5th A venue that morning, else their life won't be worth a nickel or a beer (green, that is). Hopefully , by Tuesday the Irish will n·o longer be saintly inspired. If Louisville can get by Tuesday's game it will move into the semi-final round and will appear on national television Sat~day (Continued p. 11 with NIT bracket) photogr8ph by Mich.., Brahm 1Vatural high It was a long, long look down for five UL students last Monday from atop Dorm Four. The dorm won't be as busy next week however as Spring Break begins at UL March 17th.
Object Description
Title | The Louisville Cardinal, March 15, 1973. |
Volume | XLIV |
Issue | 24 |
Description | The University of Louisville’s undergraduate newspaper. The title of this publication has varied over the years, but with the exception of the period 1928-1930, when it was known as the U. of L. News, the title has always been a variation of The Cardinal. |
Subject |
Newspapers College student newspapers and periodicals University of Louisville--Students--Periodicals |
Date Original | 1973-03-15 |
Object Type | Newspapers |
Source | Scanned from microfilm in the Louisville Cardinal newspapers collection. Item Number ULUA Cardinal 19730315 |
Citation Information | See https://digital.library.louisville.edu/cdm/description/collection/cardinal#conditions for guidance on citing this item. To cite the digital version, add its Reference URL (found by following the link in the header above the digital file) |
Collection | Louisville Cardinal Newspapers Collection |
Collection Website | https://digital.library.louisville.edu/cdm/landingpage/collection/cardinal |
Digital Publisher | University of Louisville Archives and Special Collections |
Date Digital | 2019-01-29 |
Format | application/pdf |
Ordering Information | To inquire about reproductions, permissions, or for information about prices see: http://library.louisville.edu/archives/order. Please cite the Image Number when ordering. |
Image Number | ULUA Cardinal 19730315 |
Rating |
Description
Title | 19730315 1 |
Full Text | Thou~htfulspeaker Leslie Fiedler's speech Saturday morning ended the Alienation Conference on an unorthodox note. Fiedler outraged much of his staid audience by suggesting that they .. cross the border and close the gap" between pop and classical cultures. Story on pa~e 9. CARDINAL Vol. Xl.IV No. 24 Rm. 117 Otter Hall March 15, 1973 Be President ! Student Senate to hold ele-ction April 6 by ALEDA SIDRLEY Apr. 6, two Fridays after we return from that glorious interlude known nominally as Spring Break, a very important e..,ent will occur here at UL. That event? Our student government elections. On that sunny (?) Friday - for one day and one day only - UL students will have the chance to choose their student senate president , and their student senate vice-presidents - both academic and services. File by Apr. 2 Any full-time UL student with a 2.0 or better grade average is eligible for any of the Student Senate offices. Applications may be picked up in the Dean of Students' office now, and the filing deadline is the Monday before the Friday elections - Apr. 2. The Student Senate president receives a full scholarship with his office as well as a voting seat on the Board of Trustees and the University Senate. Both Senate vicepresidents get half-scholarships. The academic v.p. is concerned with initiating curriculum reform through the Student Senate, and the services v.p. deals with university services, for instance food and the bookstore. Abolished CLEP tests This past year the Student Senate has been active in a variety of ways, and has succeeded in abolishing A & S's requirement of the CLEP tests, as well as initiating the boycott of the SUB. Presently there are various academic reforms in the works, and this is why, current Senate president Brad Dillon says, these elections are important. With all of these important reforms in the works, it is necessary for the new officer to be prepared to deal with them. Elections for student senators will be held two weeks after the officer elections. Applications for these too are available in the Dean of Students' Office. .. U~ Cards off to the Gardens! by RICK CUSHING Last summer while visiting friends in New York, Bill Butler took a stroll down 32nd St. He stood across the way from a building which has become synonymous with the spectacle of sports throughout the world . It was, of course, the Gardens. They call it the Madison Square Garden but it really isn't square. From across the street, it appears to be all different shapes. A solid brick structure, it stretches from 7th to 8th Ave., sharing space with Penn Station, which lies underneath. There are escalators visible along the outside of the building, and ramps mirrored in windowglass. Memories circle, up there among the rafters. Only the great ones survive. You can take the train in to the Gardens. In Jersey you get on abovegrvll1ld, proceed underneath the Hudson and then under the city itself to Penn Station. From .there its merely a short trip up the escalators to the place, and the roars, and the ghosts. Sharing a dream Only Bill Butler can say if he thought about the roars or the ghosts, standing there across the street. He might have, though , because he did think about playing inside someday. It's a dream shared by many an aspiring athlete. This S~turday , Mar. 17, at 4 p.m. in the afternoon, Bill Butler and his University of Louisville teammates will get a chance to This aay there weren't any people in the create a ghost or two of their own. That's escalators or on the ramps, but Bill Butler when the tipoff is set for the second game looked at it anyway. If it had been night of this year's National Invitational Tourna-time or even a weekend afternoon, there ment, pitting Louisville against American would more than likely have been a bustle University. about the street, an excitement in the air. Winner of their last seven games and And inside there would have been a roar, boasting the nation's leading rebounder in just like countless thousands of roars before Kermit Washington, American U .. will enter it, wafting to the ceiling, there to take its the contest with a 21-4 record. Numbered rightful place among the memories of the among their conquests are St. Johri's, Du-past. quesne, LaSalle, Drexel, Farleigh-Dickinson, The • Gardens has a memorable his- and Towson State. (That last school might tory. And there are ghosts of roars past still just be a prison, it has that ring about it.) echoing somewhere in that great edifice. But back to their rebounding. Stat.ding Each one in turn competes with its predeces- 6-8 and 230 pounds, Washington averaged sors for a niche of its own, but, because '20.7 rebounds and 20.5 points a game on the there have been so many memorable feats season, making him only the seventh player and accompanying roars, it is a very seleet in history to exceed the 20 mark_in both categories. As a team American ranks second in the country in rebounding with an average margin of 17.8 rebounds per game. This is the kind of team that can be tripped over if taken lightly. And Louisville has had its problems matching up with teams that are strong along the front line. (Witness North Texas State.) But then Denny Crum is aware of the dangers and will try to make his team aware of them too before they step out into the Gardens with its blue, green, yellow, orange, and red seats, 19,500 in all. If you lose Saturday, you're back home Sunday when you could be having tons of fun in the Fun City . St. Patrick's game Assuming the Cardinals want to stick around and sightsee, their next game will be Tuesday, Mar. 20 at 7 p.m. Their opponent will come from the winner of the nationally televised tourney kickoff game between Notre Dame and Southern California, and if anybody thinks the Irish are going to lose on St. Patrick's Day on national TV, they'd better stay clear of 5th A venue that morning, else their life won't be worth a nickel or a beer (green, that is). Hopefully , by Tuesday the Irish will n·o longer be saintly inspired. If Louisville can get by Tuesday's game it will move into the semi-final round and will appear on national television Sat~day (Continued p. 11 with NIT bracket) photogr8ph by Mich.., Brahm 1Vatural high It was a long, long look down for five UL students last Monday from atop Dorm Four. The dorm won't be as busy next week however as Spring Break begins at UL March 17th. |
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