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ews No.6 Johnson Prevails In Mock Election

by Cynthia Van Hazinga '65 Wellesley gave a whopping margin to 72% who voted in 1960. 65.lC/o of of victory to Lyndon Johnson in the all students and 21.l % of the Acade­ Forum-sponsorcd mock presidential mic Council and staff voted. election hckl last Monday. Of tihc 317 members of the class of 1968 1145 students who voted. 76.4% back· voted; 316 sophomores; 295 juniors; cd Johnson and 23.6% supported and 217 seniors. 99 staff members Goldwater. and 68 members of the Academic The last time WellC'sley students Council cast the non-student vote. elC'cted n Democratic candidate by Republican Tradition straw vote was in 1892, when the This year's Democratic landslide college went for Grover Cleveland. is a clear reversal of the Wellesley Frankie Walton '86 and Phyllla Grant eaat votea laat Monday in the all-school Mock F,lection sponsored Total Vote Hli:her tradition. In 1960, 55% polled were by Forum. by Marion Brenner '66 The total vote for Johnson was for Nixon. At that time the student slightly higher th~ tthe student v?te vote was 56% Republican and the 76.8";. It was raised by the voting faculty vote 79% Democratic. record of members or ttie Academic • Democratic Standard-Bearers Council. which ranged themselves In 195 . 2and 1956, W~llesley sup. 94.1 % behind President Johnson. ported Eisenhower and m ~O~ 1944, Forum divided ~he voting by class and 1948 gave large ma]Onties to and category. Results show 83.9% I?ewey. Student~ turned down Fr~­ o! t•he senior class to be for Johnson Im Roosev_elt with complete ~onsist­ Blaze Trail Through and only 16.l% for Goldwater. 81.4% e?cy, but m 1932 gave Soc1al1st can­ of the junior class voted for Johnson didate a colse sec­ and 18.61/, against him; the sopho- ond to Hoover. Crowd of 300,000 Humphrey Speaks mores votC'd 74.4% to 25.6%, and Oolleglate Trend the freshmen voted 68.Sr;,. to 31.2%. Wellesley's swing to Johnson may Acclaims Johnson To Boston Rally Texas Freshmen be part of a trend among area b, Cynthia Van HazinKa '65 Further breakdown by state and schools. Last week Harvard voted by Jane Steidemann '65 Democratic Vice-Presidential can­ clnss is reported for crucial states. 8G% for•Johnson and Radcliffe 93%. More than 300.000 Jdhnson-Hum­ didate Hubert Humit(u'ey promised The only group to give Barry Gold- Johnson received only 51% of the phrey supporters lined Boston streets ""'ise, stable, experienced, and water a "'mnmg vote was l'he fresh- total vote at MIT where there was a ta welcome the Pre ident late Tues­ careful' government to a strongly ncn from Texa . who cast 63.6'/r o! large Republican protest vote for day afternoon. According to Boston partisan crowd of about 3,000 last •hrir 11 votes for the Senator. 100% Henry Cabot Lodge, but l'('ceived policf' reports, 80,000 persons squeez­ Tuesday. Humphrey's appearance at of \\'C'Jlesl<'y's Arizona vote went to 65% of the Johnoon-Goldwater vote. ed together in downton Post Office the sparsely-attended state rally was President ,Johnson. Students at Mount Holyoke polled Square to hear (and, if lucky, to see) met with wild enthusiasm from con­ Of the 99 members of the non- 74.l'lr for Johnson and 18.5% for the Chief Executive as he eulogized fident local Democrats and poster­ 1cad<'mic staff who voted, 69.9'#: Goldwater. According to last week's backed Johnson. Mount Holyoke Nt'ws, t:tle college the late President Kennedy and waving students. has Turn-out J..ow supported a Republican since Abra- claimed that all John Kennedy's spe­ Referring to the obviously large Only !il.5 of those eligible to vote ham Lincoln captured the straw vote cific proposals have been put into concentration of college students in law. the audience, Senator Humphrey ~ast ballots on Monday, in contrast vote in 1860. ''No memory is more fresh, none began by expressing appriciation for so brigM, none so mingles pain and the "affectionate and loyal enthu­ Political Spotlight On NY Election; gratitude, as l'hat of John Fitzgerald siastic support of young people." Kennedy of Massachusetts," said the Central Issue I!arties' Futures Ride on Outcome President. Humphrey's brief address was The crowd which was clearly pro- definitive rather than argumenta· by Ellen Boneparth '66 (Continued on page Se11en) Photo by Bob Dean Boston Globe tive. "The central issue of this cam New York politics attract some de- est increases in new registrations paign," the said, "is which candidate ~ee of national attention every took place in l'he suburbs ot New is better prepared to assume the re­ ?lection year, but 1964 seems to be York City, areas where Democratic Wellesley To Host 50-College sponsibilities of the American presi­ 'ocussed on New York at every pos- strength came to the front tor the dentcy. The dhoice is a simple onr ;ible level of t!he political scene, first time in 1960. For instance, .. . between ttie irresponsibility and ~aising some vital questions. Negroes in great numbers have re- Swimming and Diving Oinic radicalism of Senator Goldwater On the national level, the specula- gistered this year in Westdlester and the sanity and responsibility of tion centers on the margin ot John· County due to the efforts ot tbe Ur­ The Wellesley pool will be kept Several swim.ming demonstrations President Lyndon Johnson." ;on's victory and whether a land- ban League. busy this week-end with a synchron­ will be given and tllen discussed by Playing to tlhe composition of the ;lide for the President will sweep Unusual l5sue8 and Bace11 ized swimming conference and a a panel critique. The panel will be crowd, Humphrey asked that all in )ther Democratic candidates into The campaigns this year have diving clinic. composed of Miss Jean Appenzeller, favor of electing Lyndon Johnson )ffice on his coattails. More than revolved around several new and Starting tomorow delegates from Swimming Instructor at Vassar Col­ president say aye. There were nc ;tate-wide interest has been aroused controversial issues. In addition to fifty member colleges will gather tor lege, Paul Barstow, Lecturer in nays audible in the affirmative roar by the Kennedy-Keating Senatorial the "carpetbagger" discussion, the the Annual Conference of die ~ Speech and director of the Theatre :i:1at followed. race. Voters are asking if resent- New York Senatorial race has high­ ciation of Synchronized Swimming at Wellesley College, Owen Jander, Perilous Times ment over the "carpet-bagger" issue lighted the questions of reapportion­ for College Women. This years con­ Assistant Professor of Music at Wel­ Senator Humphrey defined the will be great enough to defeat die ing state legislatures by population ference, entitled "Critique", cele­ lesley College, Miss Joanne Lunt, present as a perilous time when we former Attorney-General. Tmally, and of "bus-ing" in New York City brates the tenth year of the Instructor of dance at Boston-Bouve events". Americans can not be sure, the question most vital to all the Re· public schools. Kennedy is in favor A.S.S.C.W.'s existence. It wUl attract College of Northeastern University; he declared, what policies the Krem­ :>Ubliean candidates in the state has of reapportionment so ttiat New swimmers from colleges as far away Henry Scott, teohnical director of lin will issue, how Ohina will be­ been now to handle the Goldwater York's enormous Democratic vote in as North Carolina, Ohio and Toronto, tile Theatre at Wellesley College; have, or whether dangers of nu­ nomination. urban areas will prevail, while Canada. and the Moderator Miss Suzanne clear contamination will increase. Republican Dilemma Keating urges caution on the issue Workshops and Dlscwlslona Wills, of Boston-Bouve College. The (Contint1ed on page Four) New Yorkers have faced and met as he fears the loss ot traditionally Delegates will participate In work­ guests speaker at t!he closing banquet the decision of whether or not to Republican support in the less-popu· shops in lbe pool, led by Miss Gladys will be Mrs. Jessie Lie, chairman of Four WBS broadcasters will be support the Republican national lated rural areas ot ~state New Bean, Physical Education Depart­ the Physical Education Department on the spot in Washington this ticket in several ways. 1bere is some York. ment, McGill University, and Mrs. at Mount Holyoke College. Tuesday to relay up to the min­ unqualified support tor Goldwater, Neither candidate wants to take a Anne Ross Fairbanks, former na­ Diving Cllolc ute election news. As part of the but it is mainly concentrated in firm stand on "bus-Ing", the New tional diving champion. Discussion On Saturday, Miss Anne Ross University Broadcasting Sys. pockets of up.state New York. Gov- York City School Board's plan to fn. groups, led by Wellesley College del­ Fairbanks, well-known teacher, per­ tem, Nancy Adell '67, Linda ernor Rockefeller and many other tegrate schools by transporting stu­ egates, will deal wltb various as­ former and author, will conduct a Wyatt '66, Ann Medina '65 and Republicans have paid lip.service to dents to all-white or all-Negro pects of syndlronized swim.ming. diving clinic at the pool. The clinic Jean Creighton '65 will be send. party unity, but have rejected any schools as they WOQ)d both. lose much Participating in these "on-land­ is open__ to die college community. ing information over the wirea active participation in the Goldwater support by either supporting or op. workshops" will be Mrs. Berthaida Students in diving classes and A.A. to Boston area. Harvard, MIT, campaign. "Moderate Republicans" posing this plan. Consequently, tbe Fairbanks of the Physical Educa­ divers will participate in the clinic. Brandeis, Boston College and such as Senator Keating and Con- two candidates have amblquously tion Department at the University of Mrs. Fairbanks is a former Na­ Boston University commentator• gressman John Lindsay ot Manhat· announced their disapproval ot "bus­ Rochester, Miss Esther Wallace, of tional Woman's AAU Diving Oiam­ will be doing the same. Direct tan have pledged to run on their own ing long distances" and of "cmnpui· the Physical Education Department pion and member of the All-Ameri­ NBC connection and wires to records, in Lindsay's words "with· sory bus-ing." at the University ot Massachusetts, can Swimming Team. ~e is a grad­ Volpe and Belloti headquarters out reference to the national ticket." What After Ul&f and Miss Fem Yates, of the .Aiyslcal uate of Barnard and Wellesley. She ill provide additional immediate A more recent development in the 'Ibe existence of the Clonservatlve F.ducation Department of Barnard is the auNlor of the latest text in election resulta to be carried on campaign, the tremendously sue- Party in New York has made man)' College and co-author of ,,..,._., women's diving, Teacblng Sprill.g WBS. cessful voter registration drive, also races into three-sided campaigns. lied 8wlmmlag. Dlvlag. has Republicans worried. 'lbe great· (C onlinued on page Eighl) WELLESLEY OOLLmE NEWS, WELLESLEY, MASS., ocr. 29, 19M EDITORIALS Boston Theatre Group Performs Two Nightmarish Short Plays Coat Of Charms The Theater Company of Boston fc r his rendition of an earlyday Bob has done it again, but exactly what Dylan named the Crow. they've done remains a bit uncer­ "Were so Poorly Dreamed" The Wellesley tray, the Wellesley sive coat combining Rousseau's "Scotch tain. The world of "Talking to You" is image, the Wellesley crew and now the greenness" and Descarte's complex lines This promising young repertory a nig'htmare world in whiclh each culmination of all categorization - the with "expr~ssive" spots of chicken glop company, beginning its fourth sea­ man wanders alone, tortured by the and chocolate pudding to give internat­ son in the Hotel Bostonian auditor­ impossibility of knowing self, otehrs, New Yorker this week announces the ium is now producing William Saro­ or truth. The ultimate irony is that ional flavor. yan's "Talking to You" and Harold even this torture may be unreal, for, Wellesley coat. With this coat, says Such a treasure as this coat must be Pinter's "A Sligr.t Ache," two one­ a~ ttie Tiger says, "We think we're alive, but we're not. We're being John Meyer of Norwich, you can grace cherished forever along w~"1 defaced act plays of small cast, minimal all required class meetings, weather the plot, and considerable import. Tech· dreamed ... we're so poorly dream­ textbooks, blue-striped towels and sil­ nical production is flawless, acting ed . . . and we care." The utter va­ trip to the library and glorify the MTA. verware accumulated from the kitchen. is generally convincing, and the nity of life is expressed in the final It is "a coat of such gentleness" to lend To permit eternal wear, John Meyer has plays themselves are moving and scene by Blackstone's death and an air of dignity to Bleets games and disturbing, despite a certain hollow­ Paul's cry: "What's the matter with fashioned the coat with "full length ness at their core. everybody? I don't like it here. I conceal your beloved sweatshirt. seams" to epnceal student bulge for not Can the Blind See! don't like it anywhere!" Its "expressive innocence" which four but forty years. For forty years, "Talking to You" is subtitled "A But such a universal lament can­ Dream," and has t'he incoherent but not be successfully presented in ttie touches the heart will definitely enthrall you will soften the hearts of all the sometimes penetrating vision of a meager vehicle which Saroyan has the dean and may not repel blind dates. world with your "gentle, innocent" de­ nightmare. 'Phe play revolves arountl chosen. Plot is nil, and characters In this coat there is no need to puzzle meanor. Your soul may be in turmoil, the fumblings toward reality of a are cardboard symbols, despite the small group of characters, each witih actors' eUorts to make them real. over the term "expressive innocence." It but your appearance will be "the elo­ some vital and symbolic defect. Saroyan stamped wihere he should affirms that a woman's soul is her coat quent smoothness of cream pouring Mel Hopson gives a convincing for short poems, in which aloud but not really." the first image and the last shed Read New Works F.ine movies have become a vital art Such a series is financially practical. light on each other. The sound of Mr. Lowell read six poems from Admission would be only 25c-50c, a the numan voice. however, often 'his new book For The Union Dead. form which Wellesley would do well to compensates fur !Jhis by revealing He qualified some as "obscure" but recognize. Isolated and often bored, we great savings over a Boston movie. what the ey<' does not catch. Both told the audience that their ideas of badly need a foreign movies series; yet Moreover, Barn and the Entertain­ the conclusions held true for an ex· which were clear and which obscure ment Committee already charge admis­ cellE'nt r1>ading last Tuesday evening might differ from his. Unlike some last year's foreign movies club died en­ hy Robert Lowell, poet and visiting writers, Mr. Lowell gave a brief in­ tangled in scheduling problems. sion, this belying the ideal of free ad­ Pro!essor of Engli:-;h at Harvard, Lroductory explanation of eaoh poem. Eight days ago the Italian Club's pro­ mission to all Wellesley activities. Sen­ and two other members o[ the Har- "The Lesson" and "Those Behind ate seems to recognize this 4';no:oncial vard faculty, William Alfred, play. Us" were concerned wi!Jh growing up posal show the film classic, "The Bicycle wright, and Peter Taylor, short- and looking back, illle past as seen problem. Thief,'' also met with opposition. New story writer. from the present. "Hawthorne" dealt However, the bugaboo of scheduling Drama, Lyric, Narrative wit'h a more remote, more public, objections were given: all Wellesley ac­ still exists. Sponsored by !'he Harvard Advo. but equally real and livinr. past, tivities must be free in order to be cate, a literary magazine "'nose con "July in Washington" and 'Law", After gaining College Government's equally available to all students. tributors '!Jave inclu

Manaamc Edlton C. Swan Jobnaon 'flS hJOefcste Editor Jane Stcldemann 'flS Nnu l:dlltw Josephine J!erseo 'f!S ~ 11-...C Edllon Ellen 1affe 'flfl Jane McHale 'flfl ~N-U#ort Ellm Boneparth •ee J!arbara Elden '88 B"4lfrwl Editort Elaine Jons •ee , Roberta lldsfs 'M Smlor ~ Edith Postlewait. '85 Pam McConnell Walttt '85 1'1toto...,,,1tcn Marlon Brenner •ee Eadn 11.0MDtlwll '87 \VEI.I.FSLEY COLLEGE NEWS, WEJJ,ESLEY, MASS., OCT. 29, 1964

To the Editor: ''Talking To You" We had just come back from a Vance Packard Relates Plot; "filling" dinner of "chicken glop" and sat down tor a few minutes to digest it, before beginning the nigtlt­ New 'Naked Society' Evolving ly grind, and fuen tihe carillon began to play. First came a medely of by Jane McHale '66 songs from "Oliver!", then three or Combining Ian Fleming's tascina- terns, of executive assessment tests four of the nostalgic type, lights-dim, tion with ingenious conspiracies and which probed into the private family teary-eyed songs - all played with 's devotion to individual life of workers, of extensive govern­ a great deal of feeling and musical liberty, Vance Packard tackled the ment security checks and of un­ accompliShment - quite a change problem of "The Naked Society" in necessary lie-detector tests required from some of the past renditions ot a lecture at Boston College last I of garage mechanics. hymns and twice-a-week favorites! week. A rdin t Mr p kard 1 So we decided to write our first Speaking under Nie auspices of the . cco g 0 . ·. ac • 8: so~- "Letter to t>he F.ditor" and thank Business of Administration's Loyola tion to mu~h ~1ngeme?t lies in bite carilloneurs for some imagina­ Lecture Series, Mr. Packard treated stronger leg:tsla~on. He said tihat, at tion, skill, and a pleasant after-din­ ~he dangers of business, education rhe present, business managers can ner interlude, and to urge them to and government methods which in- legally_ eavesd~p .on all ~bone ~alls keep up tihe vast improvement that vade the privacy of tthe individual made 1_11 t!he building, police officers has been evident this year. and submit his freedom to surveil- ~an s~~e ~ sear?h ?n grounds of lance. He maintained that scientific susp1c1on , orgaruzations can sell Peacefully, advancement in surveillance de- names and phone nwnbers .to sal~s­ Nancy Bloom '67 vices, the growth of investigation as men, p~n~s can be tapped it .~ 1n; Jo Tvey '67 an industry and the attempts of busi- formation is used only ~ a lead' Susan Genns '67 ness and government to watch and and not revealed,. and ~e. detector Ann Medina '65 test their employees were leading to tests can be . required 0 JOb appll­ a condition in whidJt all men would cants. He believed that laws to pi:e- Mel Hopson as Blackstone Boulevard addresses Brian Norman playing To l'he Editor: be "stripped naked " vent suoh abuses as well as fue m- the deaf child in Saroyan'• "Talking To You" at the Hotel Bostonian Once upon a time there were two The Gadgets of Conspiracy c~cation of re~t for co~tituti~nal Playhouse. The play i1 reviewed on page two of this Issue. valleys, divided by an unconquerable An account of the intricate clever nghts can alleviate many intrusions mountain. One valley was very devices which can spy on society on privacy. great, not only in physical size but was tihe principal content of Mr. While Mr. Packard did describe a in accomplishments for its people. Packard's speech. Phone-tapping, problem prevalent in expanding The otiher valley was quite small. hidden cameras and microphones, bureaucracies, he seemed to exag­ The Reader Writes Unlike the great valley witil its many concealed broadcasting units and gerate "the conspiracy of sp~' roads of access, the small valley had closed TV circuits were shown to be and did not document sources wbicb To the Editor: are going to have to do in this but one - and a narrow, outmoded hidden in hotel rooms, business o!- proved that his examples were a You may mourn the passing of the movie," is to "take t>his latent anger road it was. You see, the small val­ fices, lighters and bathrooms. trend ratiler than exceptions. In his rope drill, a tradition at Wellesley and concern whidl now exists, build ley used to be a large valley also, Mr. Packard also treated the in- zealous support of the liberty of the worthy of nostalgia, but I suggest it up, and subtly turn and focus in but gradual,, unexplainable trans­ vasion of privacy in required per- individual, be lost sight of the value you take a look at the campus on the man who drives 90 miles an formations have caused it to become ;onality tests for sdlools and jobs. of much personality assessment and around you and ~ for a passing hour with a beer can in his hand, smaller and smaller, excluding He discussed tne problems of em- investigation and interpreted some tradition that, it younger, is more pulls the ears of beagles, and leave many citizens who now tave no val­ barrassing compulsory testing pro- of his material with a seemingly dis­ immediate to fue College Community them charged up to tihe point where ley at all. grams used in public school sys- torted view. that ttie Quad's fire escapades. they will want to go out and do Because of the impassable moun­ I refer, of course, to tile last year something about it." (NYT, Oct. 21, tain, there was no means of com­ of The Gymsuit, for years ttie Twi­ 1964, p. 35.) munication between the valleys. It N.E.T.C. Presents Repertory: light Zone of underclassmen. What "Choice" cost $65,000 to produce was as if tney were in diUerent else can testify to tihe devotion of and $35,000 to purchase the network countries. While tile great valley was the Wellesley student to the concept time. In ligbt of tihis as well as the eager to help and be ·helped in its of the work week as opposed to tbe extremely important nature of the common goal o! progress and free­ Directors Outline New Theatres weekend? Wilat has really driven movie's contents, we urge strongly dom tor all people, the small valley the Wellesley girl so determinedly fuat the entire film be shown to the was very suspicious ot any new "Repertory Theatre in America: McCarter Theatre of Princeton Uni­ into lher junior year? Why have crew whole country, and on the college ideas. In truth, there was but one I'he Problem and the Promise" was versity; and Nikos Psacharopoulos, Executive Director, Tbe Williams­ and Modern Dance become so popu­ campus in particular. The statement mode of acti'on in little valley - fue the theme of the tnirteenth annual town Summer Theatre, Williams­ lar in tihe Fbysical F.ducation de­ by Dem. Chairman Bailey, "Frankly right way, and all otihers were con­ O:>nvention of the New England partment? Why should sophomore I would ratner trust tne morality of sidered left ... behind. Theatre Conference, held last week­ town, Massachusetts. year be considered the year of fue my grandchildren to their parents Like the great valley though, the end at Tu!ts University. The Con­ Gard to the Avant.gard Identity Crisis and self-realization? tlhan to the so-called Mothers for small valley was also dedicated to 'erence is composed of c'hildren's, Mr. Dewell, the first speaker, de­ The Class of 1967 knows, Editor, Moral America, Who seem to be freedom, so mudl so that every citi­ ·ollege, community, and professional scribed his company as dedicated and so, unfortunately, does the spending their time promoting zen of little valley watched every heatres. to "Class A" (professional) theatre world. No one has ever eloped in money to put a salacious movie into other citizen of little valley to make Regarding fue growth of the rep­ with the aim of becoming truly a The Gymsuit, but it is neverfueless the living rooms of America when certain everyone was constantly on ~rtory theatre in America as the national theatre in a vast decen­ a Wellesley tradition deserving re­ they might accomplish more mora­ guard for freedom. Their valley '110St significant development in the tralized U.S. cognition as it is coorageously up­ lity by taking tneir children and dogs motto was a motivating force: "Ex­ N>ming-of-age of the theatre and the Founded by Eva La Gallienne, tne held by the Sophomore Class. for a romp in fue colorful autumn tremism in defense of liberty is no ·uts in America, President Samuel famous actress of Broadway and Sincerely, woods," CNYT, Oct. 22, 1964, p. 45) is vice." "lirsh invited representatives of four circuit, the National Repertory Cathy Reisman, '67 obviously a vain attempt to evade Just looking at a person from each 'mportant, newly-established reper­ Theatre is trying to become an "es­ the ever-present reality of moral valley, you or I could not tell who 'ory t•hreatres to discuss llie specific tablisthment" and a setter of stand­ To t'he Editor: decay in t>his country. The SMA, as lived Where, but fue minute a citizen backgrounds, patterns, and plans. ards. In certain respects, t!his com­ It has come to our attention that a prospective affiliate of the Mo­ from little valley opened his mouth. Elliot Norton, Drama Critic for tlhe pany does not seem to face Nie the campaign for morality in the thers for Moral America, urges your one knew where he belonged. It wa!' 3oston Record-American and Sun­ transitional problems of finance, has been temporarily support to expose tihe shockingly his teeth, you see. They weren't lay Advertiser, moderated the panel audience support, and regional per­ stalled. In fue interest, tlherefore, of lewd, lascivious and immoral be­ strong and healthy. Consequently, liscussion between Michael Dewell, manence whioh the other three fare. 'roducer of the National Repertory promoting morality on tbe campus, havior of our time, to the people. this affected his whole outlook. It still relies on the "star" system we announce the formation of a new Jessica Wolf '65 One day a group of scientists de­ lbcatre; Allen Fletcher, Artistic Di­ by which an actor is billed above the group, the Students for Moral Am­ Deborah Nicholson '65 cided to investigate the cause of fue rector, The American Shakespeare play, such as "Richard Burton in erica CSMA), under the auspices of Barbara Hatfield '66 differences between tlhe two valleys. Festival Theatre and Academy, Hamlet." the MoMlcrs for Moral America. As Joan Nixon '65 All types of studies were made and 5tratford, Connecticut; Arthur Lith­ part of t•he campaign, our immediate gow, Executive Director, The Special Problems with Shakespeare astounding results were found: Great "Stratford history is oomplicated," showing goal is the distribution and To the Editor: valley was nourished by man~ of the film "Choice", which depicts said Allen Fletcher, because its With the presidential election draw­ healthy streams, containing vital founder, Lawrence Langner, a America's moral decay and W'hich ing closer and closer, fuere has been minerals tor growth. Little valley Scholar To Speak has temporarily been withdrawn Welshman enriched by the profits of a growing tiostility between the ~as nourished by but one stream. from the television screen by the About Aristotle American Theatre, simply wanted Goldwater and Johnson camps and Analysis ot this stream revealed the to give this country a place com­ National Broadcasting Company net­ an increasing tendency towards problem. 'I1he essential minerals to work. The film is under-written by At 7:45 Wednesday evening, Nov­ parable to Stratford on Avon and name-<'~ lling and irrational quarrel­ be found in all good streams were didn't care whether anyone wanted the National Citizens for Goldwater­ ing. Goldwater supporters irrespon­ tthere but the additional presence ot ember 4, Eric Voegelin, Professor of Miller, although this group agreed to Political Science at the University it. sibly label the Liberals 'pink.' and gold in the water proved most harm­ Torn at the outset between setting the censorship of certain scenes. Johnson supporters, in turn, call the ful to tihe citizens of the little valley. of Munich, will speak in Pendleton We, however, urge the showing of Hall on "Aristotle and t>he Right by of Shakespearean standards and conservatives warmongers and seg­ By now, little valley had grown merely competing with Broadway, ~e film in its entirety. Such shots as gregationalists. This shows a sur­ smaller and smaller, with fewer and Nature." Professor Voegelin, who "a woman in a topless bathing suit, left his native Austria witil the Nazi the company was forced to launch a prising Jack of depth of thought and fewer people, but t>hose few people commercial tour to support itself. views of pornographic book covers, a complacent acceptance of over­ either could not or would not re­ occupation to come to the United strip-teasers in the final phases of States, was tor many years Distin­ When t>he tour failed, ~e company, simplified and misleading campaign member tile days when they belong­ rescued by the Ford Foundation, their performances, and a man clad slogans by those who profess to be ed to a great valley. The staunch guished Professor at The Louisiana only in a fig leaf," (New York State University. aimed at building a consistent ap­ tlhe well informed members of our tew refused any aid and decided to proach to playing Shakespeare. Times, Oct. 22, 1964, p. 45, col. 6, society. I am deeply disappointed keep the same water supply, even 'J.1he author of nwnerous books and Double Standard par. 2) are too blatant and evil to be in tibe immature and irresponsible scores of articles in English arid fuough it meant inevitable destruc­ Arthur Lithgow pointed out that omitted in the · interests of good attitude of our student body mani­ German, Voegelin is most widely tion. The people of big valley - "Oh, the McCarter Theatre of Princeton, taste. THIS COUNmY MUST ARM fested in thls type of behavior. Let dear, tthere, fuere, child, no need to known for his multi-volumed work ITSELF AGAINST IMMORALITY! us abandon the stereotyped jargon Order and History, which seeks to subsidised completely by the Uni­ cry tor the people of the little valley. versity, was converted into a reper­ S1JC'h incidents as speeding Linooln into which we have fallen and apply This is a fantasy. Remember?" relate the principles of political tory company because the existence Continentals spewing forth beer ourselves to a more intelligent pur­ Susan Levin '67 theory to the philosoPhY of history. of fue threatre building was not cans, scenes of violence, "looting suit of the problem. In other words, -;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;:;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;:;, Order and History has been praised and chaos in tne streets; twisters let us develop an informed attitude, by sCholars as "a monwnent of this justified by "one undergraduate romp," tlhe Triangle 9low. gyrating in riotous abandon • • . " by reading up on the policies of the WBS w1ll be on the alert Tues· mid-century," as "an epoch-malting Mr. Lithgow went on ro say that CNYT, Oct. 21, 1964, p. 35) mast be two candidates, by keeping up wUh day night to bring complete cam· literary occasion" and as "superior the basic problem of American thea­ exposed to the people of our nation. current events, by developing a ra­ palgn coverage. Due to special to the work of Toynbee." tre is a moral one, that of a double Russell Walton, public-relations di­ tional understanding of the problems, book-ups with NBC and party 11his lecture is the first in a pro­ jected series of talks and discussions standard. Show business morality is rector of Citizens for Goldwater­ national and international of our headquarters, returns should be on the general subject of "natural to make money, determined by the Miller, stated: "Therefore the pur­ time, and last of all by coming to on the air one hall hour before pose of this film then is to :p>rtray terms with cur own principles. Then, laws". In February a symposium will American power structure, but the other major radJo networks. university theatre morality is to lose and ~ fue people of something when we discuss politics on campus, Broadcasting will begin early In be held on the subject, details of they alseady know exists, and that Is whi<.'Qt will be announced in the near money, determined by its education­ we will talk about It intelligently, as the evening and will continue future. The Departments of Biblical al and artistic goals. "The aim of the moral crisis in America .•. We mature and responsible citizens unto ooncluslve returns are ln. History, Flbilosopby, and Political McCarter Theatre," he concluded, want to just make them mad, make which is, after all, what we are. Tune In to MG on yom AM cllal. tbeir stomachs turn . • • What we Marianne Francis '65 Science are sponsoring the series. (Continued on page Eight) Page Four WELLF.sLEY COLLEGE NEWS, WELLESLEY, MASS., OCT. 29, 1964 Miss W ehster Discusses Role Six Seniors Report on Year Abroad Describe Lives of Study and Travel Of Women In Scientific Field by Marjorie Siegel '66 Miss Eleanor R. Webster, associ­ faced by the woman in science are While fue class of '68 is adjusting thought," she explains, "and stu· ate professor of Chemistry at Wel­ further complicated by the fact that to Wellesley life, six members of the dents seem readier to take 1ile pro­ lesley College and present cllairman creative science is a continuing, pro­ class of '65 are experiencing an in­ fessors' views." of flhe department, spoke at a sympo­ gressive enterprise whose rate of teresting readjustment period. Classes at the French universities sium entitled "American Women in growtt' is unbelievably rapid and After a Junior Year Abroad which were very impersonal and offered no Science and Engineering," sponsor­ whose direction of growth is often involved "more reading but less contact with the teachers and little ed by the Association of Women Stu­ unpredictable." This need to be studying," education in a fureign with French students. dents of M.I.T., October 23-24. brought up to date necessitates ex­ tongue, frequent visits to theaters Encountered Closed Society The threefold aims of tJhe sympo­ tensive retraining. and museums, skiing in Austria, and The girls in France found that sium were to describe the opportuni­ Retraining for Employment the challenges of making friends, making acquaintances was particu­ ties and problems confronting young As Director of the Wellesley Col­ these students are now back at Wel­ larly challenging. All four referred women planning professional careers lege Institute in Chemistry, Miss lesley for their senior year. to the closed groups which they en­ in scientific fields; to stimulate their Webster is in close contact witlh the countered in Paris and remarked interest in these fields and to en­ problems of re-educating women in Study In Three Countries tlhat even French students from out· courage their acceptance by educa­ science in order that they may re­ Susan Hyman, Susan Maycock, side of Paris find it difficult to be­ tional institutions and prospective turn to productive work in the field. Caroline Hartman and Sandra Willett come assimilated to Parisian student employers; and to review and pub­ Wellesley's program of part-time spent their year in France, tile first life. licize the achievements and future graduate] evel study leading to the three on Vi1e Sweet Briar plan' and Sandra explains that "the general potential of women in science and M.A. degree in Chemistry, was ini­ Sandra on the Smith program. Jean attitude to American students is fuat engineering. tiated this fall. Including part-time Humphrey Jackson and Jane Griffith Bryan they're terribly nice, insipid people." . . . were on Smith programs in Spain Interruption of a Career study and financial assistance, the (Continued from page One) Parisian students, however, want Miss Webster, in a panel discus­ program seems to be in the van­ and Italy respectively. •'quick, intellectual curiousity" am sion entitled "The Professional Em­ guard of a trend across the country Characterising t•:ie Republican Many of the girls' had to adjust challenge American students at ployment of Women in Science and of colleges, universities. and indus­ nominee as the ''Pretender to the to the different approach to educa­ every turn, although often only in Engineering." discussed the prob­ tries to focus particularly on the Presidency," Humphrey called Gold- tion which tihey encountered abroad. fun. lems facing women who wisfh to re­ needs of women originally trained in waterism a doctrine of radicalism For example, llhe three girls on tlhe Sandra managed to meet French enter tine scientific field for which science or engineering. which would destroy l'he social and Sweet Ilriar plan iound that to study student leaders at a foreign students' they were originally trained, after Miss Webster said that teaching economic achievements of the Dem<>- Iart, political science, the~ter, and group; Caroline and Susan Hyman an interruption in their career or and editing. abstracting and review­ cratic administration. As well as French they had to study s1multane­ found tJhat the best way to meet sm. education. She believes that "the ing for teohnical literature are two alienating Democrats, Humphrey ousl~ .at four different Parisian uni­ dents was by becoming part of an mature woman . . . can retain, can of the most rewarding and genuinely chargcd that Goldwater's extremism I\'crsities. athletic group. find interesting work, and can enjoy significant types of part-time work has divided the Republic:in party, Euro~can Education Differs Italian Students Agitate both her job and her home." Ntat the women in science should and t·:mt "million of Americans who According to Susan Hyman, the In Italy Jane encountered The major problem facing the in­ consider. Experimental research is call themselves Republicans arc ~re?ch usually study only one dis­ friendlier people in the villages than dividual in science after being away most satisfying as a full-time career. going to vote for President Lyndon c1plme on the coll?ge level, for they in t•ile cities and felt tdlat students in from ihis field for some time is tilat because at its best, it is all-absorb­ Johnson." "America doesn't like ~ave taken extensive survey courses F1orence differ from Americans in of obsolescence. Miss Webster com­ ing and time-consuming, she com­ radicalism," he concluded, "Ameri- in all llhe major fields during high many ways. mented dlat ". • • the problems mented. ca needs the democracy of LyndGn school. They were primarily p0litically­ Johnson." The various universities are more minded, were actually sponsored by specified as are the courses at each political parties When running for Geophysisist Discuss Earth Not Even :For Liberty one. Instead of taking a broad course student government, and would be­ From the televis0d gathering, Sen­ on the 17th century, one must be sat­ come quite militant about such mat­ Waldo E. SmiN1, Executivl' Sf'c­ and thickt>r mantle layer. and a mol­ ator Humphrey drove to the tradi­ isfied to study only one author, and ters as curriculum change. retary of the Ami:rican Geoihysical ten metal corf'. Past rescarch and tional out-door rally at the G&G probably only one or two of his Spain More Open Union. lecturcd on the "New Era in n•easurements !have suggested such works. Geopl"-ysics" to a large number of a 1'.ypotite<:is, but the question can­ restaurant on Blue Hill Avenue at Of all the junior-year-abroaders Exams More General Jean ~d the least difficulty in meet· P.stronomv and geology students. on not be settlf"d until present geophysi­ the Dorchcster-Mattapan line. A large, pushing, jostling crowd filled In F1orence, \\r 27. 1964. Tht> ~ecturer. sp:m­ cal rcsearc~managi>s to rlelve even deeper below the earth's surfacP. tlhc delicatessen and extended out of courses were also specific in nature, courses at the Spanish lnstitute, she sored hy the Geology Department, hut lht' final examinations proved attended two classes at the Univer­ Mr. Smith p:>inted out 1·:1e unlim­ view of the Senator. \\·as introdced by Professor Louise rar more gcncral. Although lectures sity of Madrid and through a teamer Kingsley. chairman of the dPpart­ ited possibilities for c-arecrs in the "\V:1o's talking? Who's that?" would cover only one Italian auti1or, ~here learned of a seminar which ment. at the evening lecture in Sag<' ever-expanding field or geophysics, a somC' peGple asked when Humphrey riclrl '' hosP significance ias be"n began to speak, but when he quoted at the exam the studt'nt was respon- met twice a week to discuss a variety Hall. siblc for Vile entire history of Italian of subjects. Mr. Smith began his lecture hy hcight<'n<'

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Director S herry Holland a nd Chairman Katie Klttleman take t heir bow•.

Honor.bound Intellectuals Loui•e Knight, Edna Hub bard and J ean Powers have all the right a nswers.

• Revenge brews in Rac hel F a1t'1 Big Momma Leslie Williams and Mommy·s Girl Ma rlon Mlachter - Dio- meditation. loque of the Feminine Mystique.

Love with an Oxford accent Is harder than It seems demonstrate Marlon Mischter and Ali Brunell.

Until now, fastidious women had to go to great lengths to avoid a monthly problem.

Rachel Fast and Ali Brunell show how to succeed at the rite without really trying. • All photos are by H. Frar\~k and are for sale throug,h tf I can't debate diaaater now, I'll Junior Show Dorm Revs. laaue a report later, aaya Bobby Johnwater aliaa Louis Knight.

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by Barbara Elden '66 A new look is taking over the in­ tive and fanciful. A china animal art," she pointed out. When her side, as well as fue outside, of Davis, collection, started when she was tenth grade teacher did, she was at least on the fourth floor. Instead four. provided the first things she well on iber way to a career in the of the familiar prints and assorted drew. Later, when she was working field. "I want to paint but I don't bulletin boards, the ihall is now lined wit!h iher teacher on landscapes, lmow exactly how I am going to do with large, bright oil paintings. Laura noted, "I would paint my little it. I am majoring in art history be­ Laura Gros0h '67 is innovator of china animals into my green land· cause I feel yoo have to make a de­ this change. Having covered her own scapes." finite commitment because there is walls with her exciting paintings and During her junior ttigh years only a certain amount of life." still having more left over, she has Laura gave up painting because "it Laura's courses in art history are graced her hall wibh some of her wasn't the cool thing to do." Her also affecting her style. "I never largest pictures. The effect in both high school had a loosely structured thought about depth until last year," tthe room and the hall is delightful art department. "You could just go she conceded. and refreshing, giving the impres­ and paint an hour a day," she ex­ Laura likes her paintings and likes sion of something completely remov­ plained. "If you needed her or want­ to have people see them. She values ed from tlhe college atmosphere. ed to ask a question, tile teacller their giticisms as mudb as their 'Artist In Residence' would come but in general she didn't praise. "Artists are in a very diffi. Laura, who sold about ten of her interfere." Now th.er room is equip­ cult position," Laura concluded. by Barbara Elden '66 paintings last year, qualifies for the ped wit'h all her supplies and she can "We like our pictures. You have to title of Davis' "artist in residence." paint whenever she feels like it. !have confidence in yourself but you As a practicing artist she has not Needed Encouragement don't want to have to sell yourself limited her talents to her painting. "Someone had to appreciate my to get this confidence." Placement Notices Her room is a marvel of creativity. In the middle or the room hangs a GEORGE WASHINGTON fish mobile of wild pinks, blues, LAW SCHOOL Dr. Cox Stresses Interrelation Special On-Campus Peace Corps greens, red and oranges. Sweeping Monroe Freedman of George Placement Test will be held on arabesques forming complicated de­ WaShington Law School will be at signs w'hich her friends call "promi­ the Placement Office the morning of November H at 8:30 a.m. in Room 222 of Founders. The clos· tive baroque" decorate lher pink and Of Christianity and Marxism Friday, November 13. Professor orange pillows. A large easel, on Ing date for application is Mon· be a Christian in a Marxist society, Freedman has been acting assistant which rests a newly finished pie· "Do you really believe that reli­ day noon, November 2. Students one German retorted to Dr. Cox, wifu the Educational Planning Com· ture, is the most prominent piece of gion will disappear when Commun­ who wish to take Cbls exam may "And how is it possible to be a mittees of the American Bar Asso­ furniture in the room. ism is per[ect?" Dr. Harvey Cox sign op in the Placement Office Christian anywtlere? By the grace ciation. He will be available to talk Most of Laura's paintings are ex­ once asked an East German Marxist wltll Mrs. Pittman. of God!" Living wifu the idea of wit!h both seniors and undergradu­ pressionistic. "Sometimes I express friend of his. "Yes, of course," came communism is not the overriding ates who are interested in law school what I feel. Sometimes I express ttie the reply, "but it will take another about aptitude exams, education in exact opposite of wfhat I reel. I am 2,000 years." concern of young East Germans tx>­ day. (Dr. C.ox even pointed out their general and George Washington in MAT - OBERLIN COLLEGE too sad to paint a sad picture so I Dr. Cox, Assistant Professor of particular. Students who wish talk typical interest in sex.) They are to Mrs. Ira S. Steinberg of Oberlin paint a happy one," she explained. 'Dreology and Culture at Andover thinking more practically about their with Professor Freedman may see College will be in the Placement Follows Many Styles Newton Theological Sohool, spoke at relationships as Christians to Com­ Mrs. Pittman in 1lhe Pacement Office Office tomorrow morning to tallr Almost without exception, they are Wellesley College on the "Dialogue by November 6th for an appoint­ munists - to individual people, not with seniors interested in applying large and brightly colored. She uses Between Marxism and Ohristianity" ment. ideologies. for admission to fueir programs for color powerfully, eitlher unleashing as part of the chapel sponsored In· Struggle Between God and elementary teaching and secondary many vibrant colors or limiting her terfainh Forum on October 23. His Satan EARLY ADMISSION Dr. C.ox discussed a half dozen school teacbing. Please sign up wifu palette to variations of one hue. She knowledge of the problem is based HARVARD MAT prevalent views on the question. Mrs. Pittman in the Placement Of­ does not identify with one style so on personal experience he had work· The applications for early admis­ First, there are men who have a fice for an appointment. "fuere is no unity 'Of style, just ex­ ing on an assignment from the sion for the programs in elementary perimentation. I feel frustrated," World Council of Churches from theological acceptance of Commun­ education and secondary education ism as the weapon God uses to cbas· OCCUPATIONAL THERAPY >he continued. "because tihere are August 1962 until August 1963. Alter at Harvard are now available at die so many thing to try." the Berlin wall went up only non­ tize mankind for the faults of tile Mrs. Adelaide Deutsch, OTR, of Placement Office. Students may se­ Her subject matter, as her style, Germans found it posible to cross churc'h and the sins of the German College of Physicians and Surgeon~ cure them from Mrs. Pittman. Appli­ admits to no single classification. C~ckpoint Charlie from West to people. Others see Communism as or Columbia University will be at cations must be returned to the Often it has symbolic meanings. She East Berlin. Men like Dr. Cox served the work of the Devil and therefDre the Placement Office on Friday Placement Office no later than Mon­ '>ainted one picture called "Julia's rt <> liaisons between the divide'd the Christianity-Marxist conflict as morning, November 13. Mrs. Deu­ day, November 16. Dream" which was based on just halves of \lllis "world in microcosm the struggle between God and Satan. tsch, Associate in Occupational that - a dream fuat her friend - in caniacature; West Berlin more But these views are not popular Therapy will be glad to talk witih .Julia had. Human figures or faces obviously and ostentatiously capital· among the youtih. GET DISCOUNT CARD seniors and undergraduates about on Patent Medicines • Vitamins • 1re also important to her. Now she istie than the West, and East Berlin Youth criticizes those East Ger· 1her profession and the programs at Coametic1 • Toiletries • Etc. at i!. getting lher inspirations from tlhe focusing and emphasizing all the mans who flee. The young Chris­ Columbia including "Summer Ex­ CARROLL'S (Sal-Mae, Inc.) works of the Pacific Northwest In­ faults of Communism." tians do not plan to escape or even perience in Occupational Therapy." dians. From this vantage point he ob­ to change ~e system. They have 572 Washinqton Street Students who wi9h to talk with opposite Village Church Interested In Indian Art served that state of religion in Com· never known complete political free. Mrs. Deutsch may see Mrs. Pittman Call CE 5-2489 for Free Delivery She commented that she got inter­ munist East Germany - religion dom and so cannot miss it. East in fue Placement Office by Novem­ Store Hrs. Mon.-Sat. 8 a.m.·6 p.m. ested in Indian art because she had predominately Protestant because Berlin is their home and they want ber 6~h for an appointment. to make a birthday present for ber tihe Jews were murdered during to stay there. Besides, as one stu· father, who can't stand her "primi· World War II and there have been dent said, "If we all leave r. w will tive baroque" wibh its arabesques few German Catholics since Luther's the Communists ever hear the and bright colors. day. Althoug1'11 traditional parish Gospel?" She jokingly added "My parents church membership is declining, Inner Migration don't hang my paintings. That's why bobh because of a general tendency They also look upon inner migra­ I go wild here. I can hang them for seecula rization in m odern so­ tion as a betrayal. The inner migra· everyplace!" ciety, and tlhe added pressures of an tors remain physically in East Ber· Imaginative and Fanciful a nti-church government, tilere are lin but their minds emigrate. This is Having started as a very young new forms of religious life emerging not a solution to any problem, be­ child, painting to Laura is rrow an in East Germany. The growing con­ lieves Dr. Cox. 'I'he answer is seen inseparable part of life. Alt!hough cern of young Christians with Bible in critical participatiofi in the dia· she herself admitted that "wilen studies, community education and logue between Marxism and Ohris­ Y'OU are young you aim toward rep­ social improvement indicate tlhat tianity. For this, the Christians must resentation," her picture even dur­ Christianity has a future.

AFTER DINNER MUSIC EVERY COLLEGE COMMUNITY at Severance HAS SEVERAL BASIC NEEDS Sunday, Nov. 1 at Z:OO p.m. Partlta No. l in B major A CHARTER BUS J. S. Bach Praeludium to Harvard College and the Allemande Courante Boston Theat.er District Sarabande will, we hope, satisfy some of these Minuet I Minuet ll The bus will leave at 6:45 from Munger Hall on Friday Gigue Atao tollet water, bath oil, ~ and duallng powder at alt ft11e irt- and Saturday nights Nocturne In F minor, Op (8, s:vcRY PREc1ou1 otoP aon1.o. PACICAao AMO KM.aO '" 'tAllCI For information and reservations No. 2 Chopin Call Linsey Gilmore, Bates Hall Sonat& In D MaJor, K. 678 at 235-7168 before noon Friday Kou.rt SPECIAL OFFER These ·same kind people will sponsor a Fl&'\T 200 GIRL'\ AT FILENE'S (WELLESLEY) Allegro CHARTER BUS direct to Dartmouth Adagio PERFUME COUNTER WILL RECEIVE College for House Party Weekend, Allegretto A FREE SAMPLE Nov. 6-8. Reserve early, 235-7168. VALUED AT $2.50 Katharine Kolb •ee, piano .. WEJ,J.E';LEY COLLEGE NEWS, WELJ.FSLEY, MASS., OCT. 29, 1964 Journalist Discusses China, Pm BETA KAPPA Urges Change in Viet Nam SENIORS Societies Welcome Pamela Anderson Stressing that current events Giving brief sketches of the bal- Patricia Eberle Crunden should be viewed as a result of his- ance between democracy and com­ (Mrs. Robert M.) This Fall's Members toric forces and not individual re- munism in all areas of the world, Susan Fromson sponsibility, Mr. Willem L. Oltmans Mr. Oltmans concluded that "only by Virginia McConn spoke on "China's Wooing of the a study of the forces in history will Diane Pelkas AGORA Afrecause munists took over China economy was "rotten." Sherry Holland Elizabeth Reed Gloria Webb "the people were exhausted and Struggling Nations Ur. Cox • • • Robin Ladd Nancy Remage Sharon Whelan them." According to Mr. Oltmans "Turmoil is not a creation of in­ (Continued from page Six) AKX the l>ClI?le thing bas happened in Viet ternational communism," Mr. Olt­ be prepared with careful and com­ SENIORS: Nam where the Vietnamese have mans explained and blamed it in­ plete knowledge of Marxist doctrine. Ann Bergren Judy Droitcour Sarah Kelly been "costantly at war for the last stead on struggling economies and They must ask questions and be pre­ Jane Cloudsley Ann Hurst Ellen Washington 23 years. Jack of education. According to him, pared to answer questions. They JUNIORS: "Either lick them or get out," Mr the Peace Corps' services afford the have no use for the older ttheologans, Ellen Boneparth Susan Goodwin Pat Sexton Oltmans ordered tJlle audience sev- best U.S. aid to tfrlese impoverished bhose who remember the Church in Beth Chapin Ginny Greze Sally Swigert eral times, saying that the American countries. t•he days of the Kaiser, the Weimar J oAnne Chester Gail Hammond Sherry Walker soldiers he talked to in Viet Nam Comparing the political quarrels Republic and Naziism and argue Betsy Eldredge Karen Lebaeqz Carolyn White are "disgusted at risking their today with the religious struggles of that it will continue to exist under Sally Engle Carla Parrott Susan Whitehouse lives every day when they know that the Middle Ages, Mr. Oltmans said any circumstances. These "Four­ Mary Ellen Fisdher Irene Peuitt Sally Wickham the country is not behind them." that just as the Christians learned to Wheel Christians," looking upon Judy Forman Betsy Priestly While disclaiming any interest in exist peacefully with other religious church as a place to come on four­ PHI SIGMA United States party politics, Mr. Olt- groups, the United States "will have wheeled baby-carriages for baptism, SENIORS: mans said that in order to win the to accept that there are diUerent po­ in wedding cars for the marriage Sue Fox Carol Kelley Audrey Soller war we must bomb the supply lines litical systems in t'he world without ceremony, and in a hearse for fu­ Joyce Hodgson Corinne Praus Janet Stone and attack, instead of waiting for wanting to cut their throats neces- nerals, find few followers among the Ginny Jorgenson Jan Saalfield Carolyn TIJligbast the enemy to shoot first. sarily." new generation. JUNIORS: Common Interest in Franz Kafka Mary Ann Adzarito Gail Carlsen Molly Spitzer memoration of late ex-President Recently the bridge between the Cheryl Ashton Diane Drobnis Sherry Stanton Johnson ... Herbert Hoover. Communists and tihe Oiristians is Joan Barkhom Jutta Klein Addie S'ttr0pshire Amy Bright (Continued from page One) Wf'llf'slf'y Glrlii for Bellotti being made ironically enoug>h by the Jeanne Lindholm Heatiler Symmes Johnson, wWh only a few Goldwater A bus transported about 10 Welles- writings of a German speaking Georgia Brady June Milton Jane Whitehead and Volpe inter-lopers, was politely ley students to the Bellotti headquar­ Czech Jew, Franz Kafka, who died Debbie Quarles restrained in its enthusiasm. The ters early in the afternoon v.~ere 41J years ago in tlhe ghetto of Prague. S~PEARE name of Kennedy alone brought con- they were outfitted in ha ts and rib­ Kafka's works, prohibited for so SENIORS: sistent applause - whetliler it was bons and given first places on the many years as decadent and bour­ Susan Beidler Ellen Hurst Mary Jo Sanna John or Ted or Joan Kennedy. The puhlic side of the police lines. geois are now being mutually dis­ Jo Bergen Selma Landen Cathy Simon young Senator's wife Joan, who Since Boston is considered pledged cussed by Marxists and the Church Chesley Duncan Barbara Leep Pam Walker spoke before the President, express- to Johnson, the President's appear­ for they pose questions which threat­ JUNIORS: ed her husband's regret that he ance was essPntially a means of en them both. Jean Borgatti Linda Harnfeld Cynthia Salten could not be present. References by boosting local Democratic candi­ Dr. Cox believes t!hat this discus­ Margaret Carde Eileen Ray Kohl Ann Schultze the other speakers to her as the dates. especially gubernatorial con­ i ion and argumentation, no matter Louisa Cook Nancy Lynn Ober Sara Stoker "gracious" and "magnificent" Mrs tender Francis X. Bellotti. Bell:>tti'f what causes it, is the best t'hing pos­ Lee Dennison Annie Pearl Releford Alice Tepper Kennedy brougf11t cheers and w:iiistles staff instructed the "Bellotti girls" sible for Christianity in East Ger­ Nancy Felder Berit Roberg Chris Whitbeck from the audience. wearing ihats and ribbons to raise many. There are frustrations and 'IZE Rl~id St>rurity their Bellotti-LBJ signs and cJ.eer set-backs ror the Ohurcti, but the SENIORS: Security measurt>s were every- w:'nenever Bellotti's name was men­ tension whicV! keeps it actively think­ Judy Cooper Kim Kelly Joan McDonald Lin Shute where evident. Prior to the Presi- tioned. ing, and tihe continued possibility Bobby Jacobson Pam Marsters dent's arrival, intensely white spot- A brief speech by Governor Endi­ f'or dialogue can only lead to devel­ Chloee Kasselberg Lucy Wells lights slid slowly over every window cott "Chuh" Pl'nbody endorsing can­ .>pment - both for Marxism and for JUNIORS: of the buiJdings facing the square didr primary. (Continued from page Two) Beihind and above t.Gie President, But President Johnson's adulation Janice Hardy Dodie Williams policemen peered from the Jong cur- was the core of the rally. Referring PintPr's characters a re better de­ ZA tained windows of the Federal Re- to the "Austin-to-Boston" pact be-gun veloped and far more convincing SENIORS: serve Bank. Police had rigidly pre- four years ago, he said, "I used to lhan Saroyan's. Beneath tt:1eir re­ Sue Andrews Marni King Pat Swineilart vented passage beyond t·:1e barri- think Boston was known as f11e home spectable upper-class exterior lies Robin Crossley Diane Pelkus Kei Uramatsu cades that enclosed the speakers' of beans and cod," said me Presi­ ~omething strange and frightening, I Juli Hudson Sandra Willett platform and the reserved seats dent. "But I hope next week it will 1nrl it is this something which is ef­ JUNIORS: Only special passes were honored. be known as the home of the Ken- ~e-tively e":1ung at half-mast in com- the day," but the Kennedys won it. bno;ic brutality is symbolized in the Elinor Gammon Caroline Playter Sandra Williams openin~ SC'ene \\.'here ~ie scalds a Ann Halstren Paula Powers Pam Worden wasp \'l-·1'o has crept into the marma­ "For the Union Dead" is dedicat­ Anne Hanford Eve Youngstrom lade. Bronia Stefan. playing Flora. Lowell ... ed to William Alfred, who read two conveys well the conflict between scenes from his most-recent play. his feeling fuat "there is not the thP respectable exterior and the hol­ Dealing with l"11e lrisb political mach· least reason for optimism about the low interior of her character. future - there has never been a ine in Brooklyn in 1890, the play Who? time when people were liable to raises questions of political morality tlhat are topical today. It also probes Pinter's them may not seem as damage so much of life." universal and vital as Saroyan's but AltN>ug>h short, tihe poems were the relationsihip of oragnized reli­ ir is better realized, both in the mind very dense, rich with vivid and com­ gion and morality. Mr. Alfred's of l'he author and in the play itself. YOUR OPPORTUNITY plex images ti:iaty ield their mean­ ·.•ading had considerable dramatic The central question posed by til'e ing by degrees, on reading and re­ effect, willh appropriate and enter­ play is "Who is the old matchseller? reading. T·ile natural and man-made taining use of dialect. 1'he play Perhaps the answer is ''He is what for practical experience in worlds are blended inseparably. seems to combine comedy and the other characters want him to "Fall 1961," drama. In a meaningful play on words, Peter Taylor's short story, "An Promise "July in Washington" describes Overwhelming Question," was a n in­ BUSINF.SS Whatever the respective merits of "The elect, tV!e elected, they come genious reversal of the boy-meets The " Talking to You" and "A SligM ihere bright as dimes and die dish­ girl-boy-gets-girl theme. college audience laughed wryly as he de­ Acl>e." it is impossible to ignore the evelled and soft." excellent technical production and NEWS Business Staff Tryouts Robert Lowell is one of the out­ scribed the dating and tile dreams of the fine acting of the Theatre Com­ standing American poets of our gen­ American youtti, as seen through the eyes of "Ralph" and "Isabel." pany of Boston. With plays by Ca­ eration, and the reading was a wel­ mus, Cummings, Brecht, and Ibsen come reunion for his admirers and These three writers showed that Training for takeover next spring the gift of writing is, in large mea­ in the offing, it should continue to a good introduction for those not fa­ present some of the finest entertain­ in advertising, billing, et.c. miliar with tiis poetry. sure the gift of fresh vision of tile world. ment in the Boston area. NO EXPERIENCE NECESSARY SHARP GIRLS WANTED .... Come Monday, Nov. 2 Our company presently plans to pub­ -- lish a book surveyln11 the political from 1:30 - 4:30 P.M. attitudes of colle11e students on colle11e The Wellesley National Bank campuses throu11hout the U.S. We are presently In need of sev40ral attractive, News Office, Basement of Green Hall persona~le 11irls (Jr. or sr. preferred) Four Convenient Offices with an interest In politics to spend about 5 hours for 3 weeks in Nov./Oec. Any questions call : interviewln11 their friends and other Wellesley Square Wellesley Hills colle11e students on their political opin· ions from prepared question forms. Weston Road Lower Falls Cathy Erdahl 235-9380 Salary is $5.00/hr. Work is challen11in11. interestin11 and only for responsible, mature individuals. In this work you where banlrin1 ia made convenient Betsy Fowler 235-8262 will be workinll with a youn11, dedicated recent 11raduate of political science at f« the Well~:iley Colle1e Students Oxfonl University. To arran1e an Inter­ view In N.Y.C. call Mr. Greenber11 ~ Ped•nl ~t lawnnN•Co,,,oratloa 212-MU 3-8806. Of' write Monarch Press, ll.-Hr r..sonJ •-no s,..,.. Inc., 38'1 nir11 Ave. So., N. Y. 16, N. Y. - - .- -- Break-down of Student Ballots Illinois-26 electoral votes Class Johnson Goldwater by crucial states 13-1965 100.0% 00.0% New York--43 electoral votes 13-1966 76.9% 23.1 % Class Johnson Goldwater lS-1967 61.1 % 38.9% 37-1965 86.8% 13.2% 12-1968 83.3% 16.7% 53--1966 92.6% 7.4% Over-all 81.8% 18.2% 49-1967 79.6% 20.4% Midhigan-21 electoral votes 54-1968 66.7% 33.3.-;s Johnson Goldwater 11-1967 72.7% 27.3% 31-1965 83.9% 16.1 o/o 9-1968 88.9% 11.1 % 30-1966 90.0% 10.0% Over-all 85.7% 14.3% 29-1967 79.3% 20.7% Ohio--26 electoral votes 23-1968 73.9% 26.1 % Class Johnson Goldwater Over-all 82.3% 17.7% 10-1965 100.0% 00.0% 10-1966 80.0% 20.0% A panoramic point.of view reveals the bleetaball pla yera - both vietors and victims arrayed calmly on California--40 electoral votes Class Johnson Goldwater 15-1967 80.0% 20.0% the battleground after the fray. by Karen Rosenthal '67 S-1965 75.(J% 25.0% 20--1968 60.0% 40.0% 12-1966 91.7% 8.3% Over-all 76.4% 23.6% 11-1967 81.8% 18.2% New Jersey-17 electoral votes Blue Battlers Turn Redmen Green 21-1968 61.9% 38.1% Class Johnson Goldwater Over-all 75.0% 25.0% 10-1965 60.0% 40.0% Pennsylvania-29 eletcoral votes 19-1966 84.2% 15.8% Class Johnson Goldwater 26-1967 80.8% 19.2% 16-1965 87.9% 12.5'7r 19-1968 68.4% 31.6% As ('We' Extort Bleets for Mercy 17-1966 94.1 % 5.9% Over-all 75.7% 24.3% 17-1967 88.2% 11.8% Texas-25 electoral votes Wellesley won its eithth consecu· 16-1968 81.7r;,, 18.3% Class J obnson Goldwater tive victory in fille hotly-contested Over-all 87.9% 12.1 % 9-1965 100.00% 00.0% annual Dartmouth-Wellesley bleets­ 7-1966 57.1 % 42.9% ball game this Saturday in the Quad. 4-1967 100.0% 00.0% The final score, as reported to News N.E.T.C. 11-1968 36.4% 63.6% by the tophated referee, was a de­ . . . Over-all 67.7% 32.3% cisive 7-5, though the Dartmouth (Conlintted f1'om page Three) South*-117 electoral votes team was reported to take the blis­ Class Johnson Goldwater "is to provide a living library of tering defeat bravely. 21-1965 85.7% 14.3% In an exclusive interview with vet­ significant moments in fueatre over a four-year period." 32-1966 87.5% 12.5% eran player Leslie Pickering '67, 36-1967 63.9% 36.1% News learned that the game was In tihe afternoon session, Harold Clurman, Executive Director of 42-1968 57.l % 42.9% even rougiher than usual this year. Over-all 70.9% 29.1% Miss Pickering, who swings a mean Lincoln Center Repertory Theatre, said, "We can say that we have no Foreign flagle stick lhersell, was willing to 11 90.9% 9.1 % explain some of 1lbe action. "Welles­ theatre at all today. All of us at ley won," she revealed, "by getting Lincoln Center are apprentices." Johnson Goldwater This seems to eooo ttle opinion of the bleetsball into the blargon bas· the many actors, producers, and di· *Includes: - Alabama, Arkansas, ket more times than the other Florida, Georgia, Louisiana, Mis­ team." rectors who have left or bypassed Broadway to form repertory thea­ sissippi, North Carolina, South Car­ One of the most exciting moments olina, Texas, Virginia. of the game was when Debbie Lee tres all over America. '65 single !handedly scored a "cli­ max" for Qier team in the face of in fue Democratic party machinery rugged opposition. Miss Lee retired N.Y. Politics ..• as Kennedy depends so heavily on from the play soon afterwards. Ofuer (Continried from page One) ihis own personal organization and players were disqualified, or "ren­ Wihile the Liberal Party usually en· could therefore deal with the power­ dered oblivious" when a furious dorses the Democratic ticket except ful local bosses in New York from a tackle resulted in members of both for a few local offices, the Conserva­ relatively independent position. squads loosing their flagle sticks. tives have tiheir own slate of candi­ The 60's have provided New York The Dartmouth team, made up of dates for the office of Senator and on State with two Republican U.S. Sen­ members of Allita Oti Alpha (the down the political ladder. The Con­ ators and with a Republican Gov­ former Alpha Ohi Rho gone local) servatives will undoubtedly split ernor. The overriding question fur left llie Quad battered and beaten. away some of the Republican vote New Yorkers is whether the liberal· Now, if Wellesley beat Dartmouth from the regular party canqidates, conservative fissure in the Republi­ can party, now so obvious as a re­ and Dartmouth beat Harvard, by Kt1rc11 Rosemhal '67 and this has been anotJher source of shouldn't Wellesley•.•. worry to Republicans. sult of tthe Republican presidential The outcome of New York's elec­ nomination, will bring an end to the tions this year will have an import­ present Republican monopoly of ant eUect on the future of the state's leading offices in the state. However, politics. A defeat for Keating would it is even possible that Republican seriously upset ttle ranks of tthe mo­ successes this year would still mean Week/~ derate Republicans who will bofu little for the future, if reapportion­ ment and increases in voter registra· and The Fountainhead, at the Hotel On October 29, A VIEW FROM have to find new personalities for CAMPUS THE BRIDGE opens at Harvard's candidates and strengthen their or­ tion transform New York from a Thursday, October 29 - Required Commander in Cambridge at 7:30 "swing state" to a solidly Democra· p.m. The title of the speedl is "Prin· Loeb Theatre. ganization. A KennedY victory would meeting for class of '68 at 4: 15 p.m. also turn the tables to some extent tic strongoold. mPendleton. ciples of Objectivism: The Philoso­ Friday, October SO - The Syn· phy of Ayn Rand." chronized Swim Symposium, spon· Saturday, October 31 - The Bos· M. A. CUEHHILL Jrtuntll .. IM FOUILORE COllCEllT SUIES sored by Swim Club, will be held ton Museum of Fine Arts is holding at the Recreation Building pool in a lecture entitled "Survey of Collec­ the evening. tions: Ancient Greece l:ber Sl - Swim The Boston Fine Arts is continuing Symposium will continue tllrough the its special exhibition of Toulouse­ at John Hancock Hall morning and afternoon. Lautrec. In addition, the Frederick HU 2-1127 The Outing Club will sponsor a Law Olmsted and the Max Beckman Frfd.y • MoY. 6 • l:JO r.M. square dance at 8:00 p.m. in Alum eXhibits will be on display lbrough Tickets: $4.00, 3.25, 2.80, 2.20 Ballroom. Admission 75c at tile door. November 15. DOCWITSOI Sunday, November 1-Tbis week's MOVIES SATURDAY, OCTOBER 31 - 8:30 Dorm Concert will be given in Sev­ Astor - LILITH starring Jean Se­ erance at 2: 00 p.m. berg continues. Wednesday, November 4 - Profes­ Exeter - MURDER AHOY witih p:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;-. sor Eric Vogelin, formerly of the Margaret Rutheford. University of Munich, will lecture Capri - ONE POTATO, TWO PO· Communitf Plafllo111 on "Aristotle and the Rigfht By Na­ TATO, a powerful and beautiful com· Wellealey Hiiie CE 14CM7 ture" in Pendleton at 7:45. mentary on our time - not to be Evening• at 7:41 MUSIC missed, Mate. Wed. and lat. at I On Saturday, October :n, Doc Wat­ Saxon - ~ long-time Broadway lunda)' COfttlnuoua •ol•lnt at 4:41 son, Bill Monroe and his Bluegrass hit MY FAIR LADY. Boys will give a concert of tra.di· Gary - Audrey Hepburn in MARY Now Showing Enda Sat., Oct. S1 • AMERICA'S TOP COMEDY TEAM • tional country and bluegrass music POPPINS. Deborah Kerr and Hayley Miiia • • at Jordan Hall. Park Square - SEDUCED AND In "THE CHALK GARDEN" • ABANDONED. • Young French pianist Eric Heid­ Co-Hit! From Prize Winning Wellesley Hills - THE mALK FRI., NOV. 20--8:30 P.M. • sieck makes his New England debut Bookl • at the De Cordova Museum on Sat­ GARDEN with Deborah Kerr and "ISLAND • • urday, October 31. Hayley Mills, also THE ISLAND of of the BLUE DOLPHINS" • SYMPHONY HALL • DOLPHIN through 0c» Thursday, October 29 - "Civil the BLUE Featuring EUROPE'S FAVORITE FOLK DUO • Rigfhts - 1964" is the Harvard Law ber 3L Sun., Mon., Tues. Nov. 1.2.! • • Sdhool Forum topic. Whitney M. TREATER Gregory Peck • Anthony Quinn • ESTER OFARIM and ABRAHAM .. Young, Jr. Executive Director of tlhe At the Oiarles Playhouse, "TOUCH In "BEHOLD A PALE HORSE" • TICKETS $4.15 - $3.15 - $2.15 National Urban League will speak OF A POET continues. 7 day• beginning Wed., Nov. 4 • Now playing at tile J;lotel Boston­ Richard Burton, Deborah Kerr • Mail Orders-Symphony Hall Box Office; Enclose at 7:00 p.m. • • Friday, October 30 - Nathaniel ian Theater are two plays: Saroyan's Ava Gardner • Sue Lyon In Self-Addressed Stamp&"d Envelope and Check. • Branden will give a lecture on Ayn TALKING TO YOU and Pinter's A "The NIGHT of the IGUANA" • Rand, authoress of Atlas Shrugged SLIGHT ACHE. • •