(Efltmwttritt Satlg (ftampita Serving Storrs Since 1896

STORRS, CONNECTICUT WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 12, 1969 VOL. LXXV NO. 65 Confrontation O"

' Theatrical Bazaar9 To Premier Next Week

conflict between it and "the The UConn Department, of rebels." explains the direc- Theater will attempt to hold tor. Asst. Prof. Michael T. a mirror up to life this month Gregmic. when it stages an experimen- Members of the cast include: tal production titled "Con- Robert Schwanfedler, Loria frontation '69." V'aldeck. Sally Iline, Barry The play, which is billed Kingsbury, and Anthony No- as a "theatrical bazaat," will gas. be presented Feb. 19- March Also, Judith Brugger, Theo- 1 at the Arena Theater in the dore Ford, Janis Gillespie, Fine Arts . Curtain Rachael Ballow Mosbo, Jerry time is 8:15 pm. Doff, Peter Tocci, and Mar- The nove I theatrical vehicle, cia Savella. which will be interpreted by a James B. Gillikin, instruc- cast of 13 students, will at- tor in theater, is in charge of tempt to portray various die choreography, while aspects of life which fre- Jerry Rojo, assistant profes- quently are ignored or hidden. sor of theater is the designer. "Confrontation" is not de- There will be matinees Feb. The seasons worst snowstorm couldn't slow down those to- signed to attack the "estab- 22 and March 1. but no perfor- bogganing UConn coeds in their race for the Winter Weekend lishment," but to expose the mance Feb. 23- Winter crown. One will be chosen as Queen of Winter Weekend fes- tivities, starting Feb. 21. She will share the throne with a Win- ter Weekend "King." The coeds are, fran left, Deborah M. Royalty Durham, GROTON; Ann M. Kirchner, DEERFIELD, ILL.; (Catherine Sebastian, NEW LONDON; Patricia L. Paige, TRUM- BULL, and Rita H. Pepe, BRIDGEPORT. ComputersUsed by UConn Experimental College to Begin

Student^ Lof Center Director By CHERYL ROMANO placement for the current struc- Lance Pruyn, Room 317, "Phil- Assistant News Editor ture, but an augmentation of osophy of Science", M.A. Simon, the present curriculum." Room 419, "Utopia and Politics", ter, Lof said that prior to 1961, The first classes of the Ex- Paul Leary, Room 214 and a "Ra- by STEPHEN FAGIN perimental College will be held Courses are taught by anyone Campus Staff Writer students or faculty who wanted who feels qualified. dical Theater Workshop", Robert to use a computer had to tra- Thursday night at 8:30 in the Luyster. Room 322. rooms- of the Business Admin- N.i credit is given for tho vel to Yale or the Massachusetts courses and there is no enroll- Also scheduled are "Who Go- Institute of Technology. Then, istration Building indicated be- verns Connecticut?" John Leg- low. ment fee. Have you ever spoken inFor- the IBM 1620 was installed, fol- According to Mallett, the fol- gett, Room 424, "United States lowed by the 1740 three years Grant Mallett, a New York Imperialism" Peter Jodaitis, tram? How about Snobel? PL-1 Union Theological Seminary stu- lowing courses with their APL, or Cobal? These foreign later. The new 360, he said, Is instructors indicated will beheld Room 118 and "Contemporary about 500 times faster than the dent who is one of the college Poetry", J?.ck DeWitt and Peter tongues won't be found in the founders said, "It is not a re- tomorrow night: Language Department. However, 1620, and is capable of solving "Political Irrelevancy '69". Rittner, Room 116. at the Computer Center, they're several problems at once. "Spoken" as fluently as English. Lof said computers have been Dr. J.L.C. Lof, director of used for designing electric cir- Mansfield Companions To Hold Tour the center, at the Community cuits, calculating orbits of space vehicles, researching supply and House Thursday night that over By LOUIS TODISCO tho Student Union at 2:30 p.m., 2,000 students from 20 depart- demand of market goods, anal- week on an afternoon of his yzing languages and more re- and DAN GLOBE choice with a child. No previous today and Thursday and return ments used the IBM computer at 4:30 p.m. By taking this tour, last year. The number is incre- cently, creating artificial music. Features Editor's note: Dan training in working with retar- •Nearly all routine computa- a student is not obligated to asing about 50 per cent every Glode has been a member of ded children is necessary. tional work will be done by com- Bus transportation will leave join the Companion Program. year, he said. the Companion program at Lof said there were five type- puters," he said. "Computers writer terminals at the UConn themselves very rarely make er- Mansfield Training School for branches in Hartford. Stamford, rors," he claimed. Lof blamed the past two years. Torrlngton, Groton, and Water- most mistakes on faulty pro- bury from which students could gramming, which would result in relay dat a to solve pro- "Gigo" (Garbage in garbage out). Today and tomorrow, the UC- blems. There are also eight ter- Lof suggested that students onn- Mansfield Companion Pro- minals on campus located in such interested in learning to pro- gram is sponsoring a tour of the departments as agriculture, bus- gram computers enroll in Sta- Mansfield Center TrainlngSchool iness, and math, he said. tistics 260. He said anyone was to acquaint UConn students with Tracing the history of thecen- welcome to visit the center. the institution and the Companion Program. The tour will consist of visits Russo Doubtful About Own to the school, hospital and some residences. It will also provide Testimony Agai net Shaw an opportunity to meet staff By Associated Press BOLOGNA, ITALY - Nearly members and some children. NEW ORLEANS -- A star all the 5,000 delegates and ob- Unlike the Tutorial Program, prosecution witness at the Clay servers to the Italian Commu- the Companion Program does not Shaw conspiracy trial in New nist Party Congress in Bologna specifically try to aid the re- Orleans admits hedging on tes- chanted "Dubcek, Dubcek" at tarded child scholastically by timony which has been the core yesterdays session. direct teaching methods. It sim- of District Attorney Jim Garri- The chant and thunderous ply provides companionship for son's case. applaus e followed a 30-mtnute the child. Under cross-examination, speec h by the head of the The majority of the children Perry Raymond Russo testified Czechoslovak delegation. have spent most of their lives In he told a police officer in 1967 The speech ended with a re- one institution or another. Con- he could not say truthfully whe- ference to Alexander Dubcek, sequently they have never had the the r Shaw was one of a trio he liberal-minded Czechoslovak opportunity to establish a per- said he heard plotting to assas- leader whose country now is sonal relationship with an adult. under Soviet occupation. sinate President Kennedy. • • • • • This type of relationship is as • • • • • vital to the development of a MONTREAL — Students went AMMAN, JORDAN — A retarded child as it is to a nor- on a ten-hour rampage of des- Jordanian army official charged mal child. truction at the Computer Cen- Through the efforts of volun- ter of Sir George Williams Un- Israeli war planes dropped flam- teers a personal relationship be- iversity here yesterday. ing napalm on Jordanian troops comes a reality. Sadly, the po- A center spokesman says da- yesterday killing four and tential of the Companion Program Don Glode, a 6th semester mage to the machines may wounding six others. The attack is not being fulfilled for the sociology major, sits with reach one million dollars. Part was reported at Ghor Elsaffl, in simple reason that only 75 of Francis Bachond, 12, a resident the desert near the southern end Keeping of this was from fire. Riot po- about 600 children have com- at the Mansfield- Training of the Dead Sea. panions. lice finally broke down barri- Center, in the school gym Dan cades and arrested about 80 The Jordanian spokesman The keynote of the Companion students. said eight Israeli jet fighters Program is its simplicity. The Company and Francis have been com- The center has been occupied and two helicopters carried out volunteer spends two hours a panions for two years. by students since Jan. 29. the attack. Diclc Gregory (Hmmttiaxt Satlg Campita Programming Race Attitudes Cybernation and computer The inferior stock myth in- Serving Storrs Since 1896 programming may represent the dicates another dominant racial lowed me to see was Beulah. technological society of the fu- attitude. There is nothing that up- And even at that early stage of ture, but they also indicate a sets the average white man more sexual orientation Beulah was ob- phenomenon which has long dom- than seeing a black man with viously not the preferred choice. Wednesdoy, February 12,1969 inated racial attitudes in this a white woman. Yey a computer It seems strange indeed that country. Both whites and blacks check will reveal that white pro- white America's programming Is have been systematically pro- gramming has forced the black the absolute reversal of what grammed to develop certain at- man to secretly desire a white fi necessary to produce its de- titudes which determine current woman. The white woman has sired result. To decrease rela- behavior patterns. Unfortunately been projected as the object of tionships between black meH iha such social programming has not sexual attraction on every level white women, white America been fed into the computer to of the mass media. She is the should enact a determined pro- check the reliability of the data, sexual symbol for America and gram in the mass media to el- thus producing a less than re- black folks are Americans too. evate black women to the sta- alistic set of attitudes. This col- Every time I see an adver- tus of sexual symbols. If beau- umn is an attempt to computer- tisements for a new car, and black tiful black women were selling ize some surrent racial attitudes. folks do like to drive new cars, the cars and the soft drinks, For years white America has there is a white lady dangling black youth would at least have programmed itself to believed the keys enticingly by the open a choice of sex objects. Or is that black people were of Infer- door, Inviting me to make the there something about the pro- ior stock. It began with a pro- purchase. Such an ad leads me grammed white mentality which gram called slavery and has lin- to believe that I should take the would cause a sharp decline in gered ever since. Such program- white lady along with the car the white consumer market for ming has affected white attitudes to make sure my gears shift any industry which would dare toward interracial marriage, right. When I see a beautiful Implement such advertising'' black potential for education, white woman holding a bottle of Perhaps the most distinct feature in the black capability in employment and so on. Yet a quick com- Pepsi urging me to "come alive present controversy over on-campus recruit- and have a Pepsi," it Is natur- White America has been pro- puter check will reveal that white al to assume that I will want ing is that while everyone seems to have a America itself does not believe grammed to deplore the rate of the inferior stock myth. the Pepsi and the lady too. Can illegitimate births in the black catalogue of arguments supporting their own If I marry a woman of any white America actually bellieve ghettos. Such statistics are used positions, no one has been able to offer a ethnic background -- Italian, Chi- . that sex objects used in adver- to illustrate an inferior moral compromise solution which would benefit the nese, Puerto Rican, Irish or tising will tempt only the white standard in the black community. University as a whole. whatever -- a child produced segment of the Intended market? It is true that illtgitlmate births through that union will be consi- when I was a little boy in the In the black community far out- With the recent release of the findings of dered black. The child will be ghetto of St. Louis, I used to number those In the white com- tne Joint Policy Committee (see page four) said to have "Negro blood" and go to the movies almost every munity. But if the black man could perhaps that solution has now been found will be considered "a Negro" day, because the theater was ever get his hands on the white and frequently called "a nigger." cooler In the summer than- it man's abortion credit card, he For two months, this Committee has lit- The same pattern holds true for was at home and warmer in the would show white America how to tened to testimony from both sides of the con- any black woman who marries winter. I was too young, of course, reverse statistics. Or if black a man of any other ethnic back- to know anything about sex. But youth were able to get the high flict. Its recommendations, based on this tes- ground. Black genes are consi- the movie industry began my pro- salaried jobs white youth have timony are, we feel, a sincere attempt to in- dered so socially (If not biol- gramming even at that early age. been getting, so that black boys corporate the best ideas and ideals from both ogically) predominant that a child On the screen I was Ava Gard- can afford prostitutes like white sides into a workable policy. is designated black regardless of ner making love to Humphry Bo- boys can, black illegitimate the mixture. Realistically speak- gart. My earliest indoctrination births would decline sharply. Il- An example of this can be seen in the com- ing, does that sound like infer- in glamorous love-making was legitimate births are more In- ior stock to you? watching white folks do it. The dicative of economic choice than mittee's first recommendation. This would re- only black woman Hollywood al- quire any employer who desires to conduct they are of moral standards. interviews here to provide a speaker or a de- bater prior to or concurrently with the inter- vlews, if so requested by a petition of 350 Today we at Storrs need a bill' The News i The Courts of rights, and if need be, we'll students and faculty. follow our ancestors' precedent If a employer failed to do so, according to To the editor: to obtain it. (2) The purpose in following .!uJeC°mmendation> his invitation would be In the February 7 edition of To the Editor: withdrawn. THK DAILY CAMPUS, it was The nine members of the Phil- established procedures Is to reported that the Student Senate osophy Department blew their assure insofar as possible that We believe this recommendation is fair for had passed a resolution which chances for some genuine justice and fair play will be pro- two reasons. First, itpermits those who desire appears to condemn WTIC-TV confrontation when they pointedly vided for, in the face of poss- interviews to schedule them. Second, it gives because a reporter from the avoided Professor Hook's chal- ible contrary pressures tha t station was called to testify in lenge to a public debate. Their may arise in particular sit- those who are opposed to recruiting an arena a recent court action involving refutations of the alleged impli- uations. Here Babbidge holds that in which to voice their dissent. Professor Jack Roach. cations of Hook's statements, precedent provides for a limit- Although it is always regret- their analysis of his dichotom- ed form of justice, one that can The other recommendations of the Com- table when a reporter has to ous style as Indicator of poli- withstand external pressures. I mittee are likewise fair and,for much the become a participant In an event tical position are lukewarm re- presume that external pressures same reasons that this one is. both sides he was assigned to cover, it sponses, better suited to an ad- would include the State's mana- considered Of course they will not please should be pointed out that there- ministrator's mlmeo machine gerial elite, the bery one's who porter, like Professor Roach, ap- than to an action oriented group. have judged us. But this Interest- those who feel that on-campus recruiting is peared in court because he was To put it rather vulgarly "Put ing paradox Is not my major mmoral but. in the last analysis, we feel even ordered to do so by subpoena. up or shut up," and putting up . What I want to know is they will recognize the advantages of this me- Cordially in this case means engaging Pro- what does Babbidge mean by Paul G. Kuntz fessor Hook in the public arena. a limited form of justice, or as thod over the methods used last semester. News Director Arthur Daigen he put it, justice insofar as School of Education possible. (3) The protection of in- dividual rights (and here I pre- sume Babbidge is referring to Kill Confrontation Politics a limited conception of justice) is guaranteed by such provisions Editor, CDC: as the availability of counsel, Dear Editor: the maintenance of a stenogra- Censorship of the Floating O- phic record, and the opportunity pera by the management of the President Babbidge has iss- ued a statement (January 24) to challenge any serious irreg- University Bookstore Is justone ularity by subsequent appeal to aspect of the suppressive atmos- on the need for closed hearings to deal with the faculty four. competant professional associa- phere which has pervaded this He has argued: tions or to the courts. You will campus for far too long. It must observe that Babbidge's concep- stop or all will suffer. (1) Closed hearings on per- sonnel matters have been a con- tion of protection of individual Because a few students have rights is a very limited one. complained about the contents of sistent practice and strict ad- herence to proven procedures is In fact, it is more In accord the Floating Opera, the store's with Russian than American law. management has seen fit to ba- always preferable to Improvisa- tion. Here Babbidge is arguing Only in Russia, the professional nish it from sales. This censor- association is not the AAUP but ship - by - whim is rather con- what is precedent is good and what Is good is precedent. Hence the Communist Party. And here tagious, and one may well wonder I am quite serious in suggest- when the book burning will begin. the administration should not im- provise, no matter what the sit- ing what Babbidge fails to In- Censorship hurts everyone. clude in haft conception of jus- When the beauty of the body uation. I would like to point out that situation s do change, and tice. In addition to the barren raises ire in a person, that per- individual rights specified by son does not have to look. And they require new procedures. Today, as opposed to 25 years Babbidge, the American legal as far words go, the most 'ob- system provides for minimal scene' word In our language is ago, faculty offenders no longer consist almost exclusively of fights such as trials open to the kill. Yet few seem to recognize public, trial by a Jury fairly this, dwelling on the 'obscenity' sexual deviants, people obviously of life. With the help of the book- in need of closed hearings. To- chosem, continuances for defense store and the administration of day, most errant faculty are attorneys, the cross-examination Published daily while the University is in session, except Saturdays this profiteering academy, KILL political dissidents whoknowthey of witnesses, and so forth -- and Sundays. Second class postage paid at Storrs. Connecticut. is being used every day to KILL can not obtain justice from the all the things missing from Bab- Member of I ho Associated Collegiate Press. Accepted for national people, KILL freedom of the very ones they oppose: the cor- bidge's managerial conception. advertising by The National Advertising Service. Editorial and Press, KILL freedom of assem- porate elite who man the Boards I believe that the campus Husiness Offices located in the Student Union Building, University of Trustees. One more point. should hold open hearings. We bly, and KILL democracy. should do so even if we fail of Connecticut at Storrs. SUBSCRIBER: Associated Press News With obscenities like these, Several centuries ago, had New England Ametlcans followed Bab- to receive the Good Housekeep- Service. Subscription Rates: $3.50 per semester; $5.50 per year. no Floating -Opera is going to ing Seal. Keturn Notification of unclaimed deliveries to Connecticut Uaily goad me. bidge's advice on sticking topre- am us ^- P - University of Connecticut, Storrs. Connecticut 06268. Frederick Wozenskl cedent, this country would never John C Leggett have created a bill of rights. Professor of Sociology THE THIRTIES TIMES .1 put** ad b. moniniy •« fob •"" »••*■» thoraatttf. in eon|uiKI>on *Uh In tardapa.tmanlal 2*7-MM co«» count on "Th« Thtrtia* Expo»i ,nc. " l» putpOM » «■ '••» *• Univaruly community portad on coming ayanll ml W lupply lup THE TIMES plamaniary malar.* •boul tht doc 3C% ad* of the 1930*1

wl DO ou« rt.ni STORRS, CONNECTICUT WKDNES., FEB. 12, 1969 VOLUME 1 NO 1 trends 1930. BONUS ARMY SMASHED -ILLITERACY in America reached a new low of 4.3% of the population, a decline of 1.7% from 1920 and a decline of WASHINGTON. JULY 29, 1932-lt was 15.7% from 1870. like air suddenly being let out of a giant -ONE OF EVERY 4.9 AMERICANS balloon, when, yesterday afternoon, the owned an automobile. "Bonus Expeditionary Force" exploded in a rage pent-up since the Great War and 1932: --UNEMPLOYED in the U. S. reached 13 nurtured in the Great Depression. . Since May 29, the Bonus Army and million. National wages were 60% less their wives and children had occupied than in 1929; dividends were 56.6% less their ramshackle camp beyond the city, than in 1929. on marshy Anacostia flats, refusing to -WHEAT prices dropped to a new low of leave until their desperate demands for 32 cents per bushel. This compared with compensation for service in the World peak prices of S2.33 a bu. in 1920. War were met. The Government owed them a bonus, they said, for the meager 1933: eoWjJ. rwv thaw had receiver! fourteen -AVPRAGE LIFE EXPECTANCY, 59 years before, while their civilian friends years. This represented a gain of 10 years had made good salaries at home. from 1900. "We will never need money more than the arts we do now," one of them said. At one point, the "Army" numbered 1930: Camp of the Bonus Army at Anacostia, June 1932, before the July 29th 17,000. Yesterday, only 6,000 remained, -Copy of James Joyce's ULYSSES, invasion by Gen. Douglas MacArthur, Army Chief of Staff. due to city officials' strict orders to get shipped frorrfParis to a prospective Amer- out. Tempers had grown shorter and ican publisher (Random House), seized in soldiers, clutching hankerchiefs to their search lights, fastidiously attired in white New York by the Customs Bureau, on garbage in their squatter camp had piled faces. sports shoes and white pants, and a higher-"a public health hazard of grave grounds of obscenity. The crowd fled through the gas, the floppy white hat, smoking a cigarette and consequence," according to one Washing- cavalry trotting after them. Once out of looking debonaire. MacArthur had made 1931: ton official. the gas, many of the veterans stood their short work of the Bonus Army. For two months, some sort of clash March 3-Pres. Hoover signs bill making ground, only to be whacked by the flats A few hours later, Pres. Hoover receiv- was inevitable. It is extremely doubtful, THE STAR SPANGLED BANNER the of sabers or ridden over by charging ed a telegram from Rep. Fiorello LaGuar however, that any of the veterans antici- national anthem. cavalrymen. dia of New York. It read: "Soup is pated the magnitude of that confronta- "You dirty stinking - - -," the veterans cheaper than tear bombs and bread better tion. than bullets in maintaining law and order 1932: cursed. Yesterday, they found out. -One of the most popular songs of that Ambulances screamed down the Ave- in these times of depression, unemploy Yesterday, the Bonus Army met the year was BROTHER, CAN YOU SPARE nue. When infantrymen unloaded more ment, and hunger." troops of Gen. Douglas MacArthur, which A DIME. grenades, wild shouts of warning went up had been rushed to the camp within sight NOTE: The demand of disgruntled World from the Bonus men: "Look out! Look sports of the White House, at the order of Pres. War I veterans for the immediate pay- out! They're at it again!" ment of $2 billion as a bonus for service Hoover. What resulted was: One veteran ran after the steaming 1930: Two Bonus veterans and two police- in The War, provided the impetus behind SEPT. 27 Robert Tyre "Bobby" Jones grenades and caught them in a bushel men killed, more than sixty injured, the the "Bonus Expeditionary Force," de- became the first golfer to win the "Grand basket, then threw them back at whatever squatter's tented shacks of old packing scribed in this issue of the THIRTIES Slam" of golf, by taking the U. S. khaki uniform he could see through the boxes and tattered cloth set ablaze, their TIMES. In spring of 1932 about 17,000 Amateur Tournament at Philadelphia. air, thick with gas. Cobblestones, bricks, ex-servicemen and their families packed meager commissary destroyed, their wives alarm clocks, flying pans and spittle were up their belongings and set up camp on and babies misplaced, and their pride 1931: fired by veterans. the edge of Washington, D. C. MAY 16-ln the Kentucky Derby, trampled into the dust by the 3rd Caval- Infantrymen ran around, putting ry, the 12th Infantry, and the Washington "We shall remain here," they said, "if TWENTY GRAND set a new record of torches to the rickety shacks. When the we have to, all summer. We shall build a 2:01-4/5 for the 1- 1/4 mile. Metropolitan Police. rear guard of the Bonus Army saw clus- Troops were called after a veteran was city." ters of them moving among the rubble, shot to death by a Washington policeman, On July 28-29, 1932, the "Bonus they fired their final blistering round-of "Damn! I'm never going to during a struggle to drive members of the Army" was forcibly evicted, in a wild forget this year! 1930! I can spit Bronx cheers. it" —Unidentified man In army from a vacant house on Pennsyl- melee, after Pres. Hoover called in Fed- on The retreat went on through the after soup line at Holy Name Mission, vania Avenue, only two blocks from the eral troops, under Gen. Douglas Mac- noon and evening. Having lost all they New York, Der. 1930. Arthur. nation's Capitol. had owned, the remnants of the Bonus After the episode, a squadron of crack While few Americans sympathized NOTE: One of the world's best- Army trudged away from the campsite, cavalry clattered down the Avenue with with the squatter's protest tactics, a loud known contemporary poets, into Maryland and Virginia. Stephen Spender, has joined thf drawn sabers, followed by a batallion of protest went up over Hoover's "militaris- Around midnight, Gen. MacArthur and University of Connecticut Eng- helmeted infantry with fixed bayonets. tic" measures. Cries of "Dictatorship!" Secretary of War Hurley surveyed the lish Dept. Staff for this semes- Then came the rattle of five steel-treaded and "police state" over the use of force ter as a writer in residence. battlefield. Hurley stood in the white tanks, grinding their way over the asphalt, to stifle the protest. glow thrown out by the fire engines' and the light-footed shuffle of city police behind them. FEB. 10: Prof. Paul Klemens, physics head, "Heroic Age of Physics," film: One thousand strong, they marched "Our Daily Bread." towards the garbage-cluttered, make-shift home of the Bonus Army-tight-lipped FEB. 11: Prof. Everett Ladd, political science, "Politics." and taut. Crowds along the Avenue grew as the word spread: "Don't get in their FEB. 12: Prof. Edwin Tucker, business law, "The Supreme Court." way, they mean business." The "Army" met them in a tangled FEB. 13: Prof. Robert Kanter, labor, "Labor Unions." mob, but its front line drew back when it read their faces. Its rear guard, however, FEB. 17: Prof. Hugh Clark, associate dean for graduate research, taunted and shoved. "Yell-oo-oo-ow!" "Developments in Biology," film: "The President Vanishes." they shrieked. Suddenly, the mob lurched forward FEB. 18: Prof. Charles Fritz, philosophy, "Developments in Philosophy." and the cavalrymen spurred their horses, NOVELIST-Erskine Caldwell, whose FEB. 19: Prof. Calvin Rollins, philosophy, "Logical Positivism." swinging swords and heaving tear gas best-seller, TOBACCO ROAD became grenades. Cavalry and infantry hurriedly one of the decade's most popular works, FEB. 20: Prof. Joel Kupperman, philosophy. "Ethical Philosophy." put on gas masks, while the Bonus Army will deliver a public lecture Feb. 27th, at choked and staggered. Police rushed for, 4 p.m. in the UN room of the SUB. ward, behind a wall of horsemen and foot 4 W,dne»doy, Fob 12, 1969 CONNECTICUT DAILY CAMPUS Parti Joint Policy Committee Report Made News Editor's Note: The follow- ,..,„„ ,-_2L -...___, . -I general welfare of the University Following is a summary of ing is the text of the Joint Policy so that the primary functions of of a university. Importance. Committee report on recruit- the opinions and arguments pre- 3. Job placement has no edu- teaching, research, and public sented by individuals in and out- In this context, the Commit, ment and the role of the Uni- cational function and tends to tee acknowledges that placement versity. service may be pursued." side of the University communi- make the University a vocation- Open hearings were held on ty to the Committee for its con- and career planning activities The Committee, composed of al market place. The purpose ot are part of the service functions five faculty members, five grad- Jan. 7 and 9, 1969, in the Student sideration of the present place- a university Is to educate, not to Union Building. Verbal state- of the University. However, many uate students and fifteen under- ment policy. lend practical application for students and alumni find employ, graduates picked by the Student ments were taken from interested Arguments for: what is learned. members of the University com- ment without the aid of the Place, Senate, the Graduate Council and 1. The relationship of place- 4. Placement Is not a service ment Office. In addition, the con. the Faculty Senate, issued the munity at these hearings. A large ment to th e war effort In Viet- equally rendered to all students number of written statements venience to all students, but is of report in answer to a statement nam is Irrelevant. because it favors the technical greater benefit to certain ac- made by President Homer D. were also received by the Com- 2. A land grant University has mittee. fields as opposed to the liberal ademic disciplines. Babbidge on Dec. 9. a special obligation to society arts. There are two distinct types Babbidge said at that time," Supporting Present Policy and cannot completely disasso- 5. On-campus placement of service offered by the Place- . . .1 am requesting that the de- ciate Itself from the corporate tends to favor larger corpor- ment Office: career planning and liberative bodies of the Univer- Persistent efforts were made and government structure. ations and also to discriminate job placement. Career planning sity, having now addressed var- to allow all persons who so de- 3. Placement is a service against organizations whose include s such activities as In- iously the question of a mora- sired to make known their views rendered to students which al- views are opposed to those of dividual and group counseling and torium, turn speedily to a review on placement and on the role of lows them to investigate poten- the political establishment. the collecting of Information of the material issues. .." the University. tial careers. 6. University resources used concerning prospective employ, Committee members wished 4. On-campus placement ful- in placement could be better used ers. Procedures, Issues Listed fills a necessary function with to hear as wide a range of views In other areas. Within the scope of Job place, He added that he hoped a as possible so that their deli- the minimum of inconvenience 7. On-campus Interviews are ment lie actual Interviews and joint group from the three bod- berations might consider all to the student. Such activity con- not necessary because such In- ducted off campus would entail the referral of Interested stu- ies work through the holidays opinions and suggestions. terviews could feasibly be held dents to possible employers. and have their report ready by In the Interests of rational greater Inconvenience and cost off campus. both for the student and for the Two major arguments are the beginning of this semester. discussion and in order to pre- The Committee upholds the advanced against on campus In- The first section published vent the spread of rumors, all potential employer. view that the University has the terviewing. below lists the procedures of the deliberative meetings of the 5. Placement interviews allow obligation to ensure the free First, the University should a student to acquaint himself with Committee. Joint Policy Committee were expression of all opinion. not make its facilities and good The second takes up the re- held in executive session. specific companies and fulfill an A minority may raise valid educational function. name available to employers port's third section titled 'Is- arguments against the status quo, whose practices are considered sues, Comments and Alterna- (Section II, omitted here, in a 6. Interviews represent a per- and these arguments should be chronological list of events at sonal Interest on the part of stu- Immoral. tives. It is printed in full from considered on their merits ra- ■Second, the University •■ no! UConn last semester that relate dents and are voluntgrv. thp»" than rtn»v»c-«j „,_%_. u«rt0ne « ....■■■ .rrvDcu alinpiy ucvu—P an employment agency, but an to the report.) 7. The University derives the y are raised by a minority. The names of the committee most of its financial support from educational institution , and is members will be printed at the The Committee addressed It- under no obligation to make Its The Committee, having tax revenues, much of which self to the question of what conclusion of the report. comes from Industry. facilities available to what Is not I Procedures broadly defined the central func- functions do placement activities educational, namely on-campus The Committee held meetings tions of the University to be on campus serve in the role of interviews. between Dec 11, 1968, and Feb. teaching, research, and public Opposed to Present Policy the University. In general, it has 5, 1969, to discuss the Issue of service, considered the major Is- found these activities are inten- The first argument raises Placement and the larger ques- sue to be: are placement activi- Arguments against: ded to help educate students a- questions as to what might be tion of the role of the University. ties on campus compatible with 1 . Interviews associate the bout career choices and oppor- considered "immoral practic- The purpose of the committee the central functions of the Uni- University with an Immoral war tunities. es." The University presently was "to preserve the stability and versity. (e.g. Dow Chemical's production It disagrees with the Board upholds the policy of permitting of napalm for the war in Vietnam of Trustees' statement of No- all bonafide employers on-cam- calls into question the morality vembe r 15, 1967, which reaf- pus. of that company's presence on firmed "the desirability and Bonaflde employers are campus.) central importance of operating interpreted to mean any legal 2. Interviews connect the Uni- a placement service for gradu- operation recognized by the law versity with the Military-Indus- ating students and alumni." Al- of the land, even though their trial Complex which has values though such a service may be practices may offend a large contrary to the humanistic values desirable, it is not of central numbe r of people. It is not the actual interview that is thought immoral, but the practices of the organization. The interview Did you RUSH by us? becomes symbolic and its mere removal from campus will not In itself comdemn or condone employer practices. SHERMAN HOUSE wants to See Page 11 Avis Rents All Makes of Cars, features Plymouth* meet you COLLEGE "■II PAIRING ill 1,01.1 NOW THRU SATURDAY "Give us a chance to show Thursday, February 13th Dailv 2:00. o:30. 9:00 how hard We try..." 7-10p.m. SAT. 2:00,4:15,6:30, 9:00 — Avis Rent - A -Car — Hals ESSO How can I convience 1071 Mam Street Willimantic, Conn, AVIS you to tryout for BOG? tel. 423-2584 „oO°° m COLOR by Oeuue 0° «8gl united Urtiiti JASON ROBARDS BRITT EKLAN0 NORMAN WISDOM BERT LAHR (renters must be over 25)

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A prescription for relieving sooner that the college graduate ter the business world. would deny it," he continues. velopment director at the Tra- the inflamed image of business recognizes that, the more quick- "The further detached the ac- velers Corporation, suggests this ly, he will be able to get on with "Such an adjustment on the in the eyes of youth was offer- part of the college graduate must ademic world is from business, conflict stems from the different ed by a UConn professor in the the business of doing a good the greater the error in atti- goals of the two communities. job." occur, if he is to grow in bus- current issue of the Journal of iness. It is unrealistic to think tudes and value systems of those He notes that business and acad- College Placement. Souerwine feels that the youth who teach students about to en- emic worlds both thrive on ideas. of every generation has had com- that all college graduates will According to Dr. Andrew Sou- abandon business -- the economy ter the business world," he main- But he is wont to point out that erwine, associate professor of mon frustrations once entering tains. there is a major difference — the world of work. The graduate could not tolerate it and the wide industrial administration and di- spectrum of personal goals Souerwine, who recently business needs both ideas and rector of the master's degree had to find himself. One of the served as career planning and de- profits. in business program at Hartford, things he learns -- somewhat business and youth, too, will have rudely --is that he didn't know to bend a little if there is to quite as much as he thought he be an accommodation. did when he picked up his dip- Defending the basic goals of loma. Moreover he finds that business, Souerwine insists that he is not gettin ahead as quick- the entrepreneur must have a ly as he thought he would. profit motive -- not to the ex- clusion of all others, of course, Paradoxically, Souerwine but profit must be a prime mo- writes , the youth of a genera- tivator. It is the essence of what tion ago was motivated by these continues to make business grow, same frustrations, seeing the e- and this is what young America conomic rewards of hard work often forgets, he writes. as meaningful and necessary to The business specialist, who him. once headed the Psychology Dept. "This is riot so with the af- at Trinity College, concedes that fluent college youth of today. social connections and personali- In many respects their attitudes ty are occasionally more impor- are in direct conflict with the tant to business success than abi- needs and function of business," lity. But he points out, "Where he adds. there ar people there will be Young people, he remarks, this subjectivity, to a greater or are asking business to conform lesser deeree." to their attitudes and value sys- He contends that the same kind tems. But, he points out, the com- of infighting and jealousy, which plexities of big business and the permits some to get ahead and rapidity of" change in this society, others to falter, exists in many make it difficult for business to different institutions. change without some comparable "Business is not unique. The effort to adjust by those who en-

Snow Monsters Or What? Not snow, but plaster of Paris sculptures done by art students in front of the Fine Arts build- INTER ing. RUSH THETA SIGMA CHI VIEWS Mo M*hm*\ Sales and Sales Management i—r Training Program This Program is designed to develop young college graduates for careers in life insurance sales and sales management. It provides an initial training period of 3 months (including 2 weeks at a Home Office School) before moving into full sales work. ZD Those trainees who are interested in and who are found qualified for management responsibility are assured of ample opportunity to move on to such work in either our field offices or in the Home Office after an initial period in sales. Aggressive expansion plans provide unusual opportunities for those accepted. Arrange with the placement office for an interview with: WEST CAMPUS Thomas G. Meehon Jerry J. Coursey TONIGHT 7:50-70 P.M. March 17, 1969 For Rdes Call 429-2900 Connecticut Mutual Life INSURANCE COMPANY • HARTFORD • The Blue Chip Company • Since 1846

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GAMMA COME + SEE. CONNECTICUT DAILY CAMPUS Wednesday, Feb 12, 1969" 7 CDFR Program Aims Literary Magazine Controversy For Field Experience Floating Opera Praised In Review

UConn has launched a pilot program that combines academic iyMIKE WHALEN limits. Here is a dangerous voy- sex out of their systems, the work with field exposure to bridge the gap between the classroom view Campus News Editor age to the East, and I might sug- "Opera" team captured beau- of family life and actual home experience. gest that if you find th e trip tifully the horror of a photo- Coeds enrolled in the Department of Child Development and Fam- comfortable, you are l)ondrugs; graphic record of our time. ily Relations program spend much of their time at such institutions as " 'The Floating Opera'? No 2) dull; 3) a philosophy major, Take a view of earth from the State Receiving Home at Warehouse Point and Connecticut Valley thanks." Features Editor Gary or 4) you have run into an ambush space, add a few assassinations Hospital, Middletown. Students also gain field work experience in the Woods was trying to stuff a copy of the mind. (including that of the only rad- Willlmantic and Manchester Headstart programs and the Middletown under my arm. Mantegna is out there; along ical America might have ever Community Action Program. I had always thought of avant- with Michaelangelo, method put in the White 11 ouse} add a Dr. Eleanore B. Luckey, head of the CDFR and distinguished garde tyVe maga7tnes, especially acting, Bottecelli, peace, unity psychotic about the murder his expert on family life, explained that the program 'deals with problems homemade ones, a s filling a . . .and confusion. I do not know wife, a touch of beauty tor con- and issues as they exist in reality, but at the same time, keeps much needed gap in my life.' if the editors planned things this trast, sprinkle witli a running them in academic focus for the student." "You keep it," I said. way, but they have Adam reach- flow ol words ranging from Conducting the program are Dr. David C. Payne, a new assistant "But take It; just look at it." ing not across the Cistine Chapel mumho-juinho Burrough's style professor In CDFR and Dr. Borbala S. Clark, a native of Budapest, He had my back tip against the to touch God, but rattier down- to touches of fine writing, mix Hungary, who has been appointed Field Services Director for CDFR. wall. Finally, if only to avoid ward into an explosion. well with a flair for design and Dr. Payne explained that coeds spend from six to eight hours a his whiskey breath, I took the However, being oriented to an you have. . .well, you have a week in the field, then return to campus for classroom discussion thing home. environment with iKjundaries I magazine worth reading because sessions. The students often provide companionship to youngsters at I flipped through it quickly. flipped to the "opening section it lias captured something of the Connecticut Valley or at Warehouse Point and also do case work stud- It was going right into the trash where I was more comfortable. world in which we live. ies for various community agencies. with the "Reader's Digest" that Here was a good, old fashioned For folks who like writing, Dr. Luckey said that the department plans to expand the pilot my mother-in-law subscribes to attack on the Great Society. And the editors have tacked on a program to take in additional work at day care centers to provide for me each Christinas, and my here, in the weakest section of section called, "A Day in the services for more people from low socio-economic levels. latest issue ofGinsburg's "Avant the magazine, the "Opera" Life of the Apocalypse." No Dr. Clark, who came to UConn from the Adler-Zone Center in Garde." transcended the plans of its graphic work intrudes here, so Champaign, 111., where she was a clinical psychologist, will direct Then they banned it at the designers. our tired eyes get a rest, and the the expanded program. bookstore! Perhaps it was worth For instance, there is an at- piece stands well on its own A former educational counselor for juvenile delinquents in Buda- reading after all. tack on those Mustang advertise- feet. The best praise I can think pest, Dr. Clark received her bachelor's and doctor's degrees in Sales ought to double after ments we all know and love. of is that, reading it, for a mom- psychology from the Eotovos Lorane University there. She had also they banned it. I wondered if you "In the "Opera" version a naked ent, I remembered what it was been a clinical psychologist at Long Grove Hospital outside London could buy a Bible at the book- female throbs on the stick shift like to be in the service. before coming to this country in 1966. store. A Bible has more good dirt of a surging new "Mustang" par- And pain is the hardest thing Dr. Clark noted that in day-care centers students will help care than all the "Evergreen Re- ked on a country road. in the world to remember. for children and work with parents in child-rearing procedures. views" ever published. Now we all know that this "The Floating Opera" may She said she would divide her time between her campus head- Officials at the bookstore said only carries out the Mustang not live forever in the hearts of quarters here and the Women's League Day Care Center in Hartford, that the "Opera" was banned be- ads to their natural conclusion. men, but it is a delight, worth as well as at other agencies where students will be assigned. cause of student complaints. How UConn's middle class students buying and reading and keeping. Students who have been participating in the pilot program are: Uze refreshing after so much politics may be half dead, but they are It is a magazine, its anger not Kupris, Michelle Forcier, Margaret Brltton, Elaine Lavalle, Felicia last semester: UConn had Its not dull when it comes to sex, withstanding, that this university Agdens, Claudette Johnson, Mildred Griffith, Eileen Banouer, Phyllis own dirty book. Did the president and I wager that the "Opera" could well be proud of. Merritt. and Karen Hartmann. Also, Roberta Monstello, Nancy Pura, have to hide his copy under of- has helped sell at least a dozen The pitiful shame of it all is Marilyn Morganti, Laureen Forto, Mary J. Barbleri, Judy Samuels, ficial papers on his desk? Mustangs in the Storrs area. that our bookstore has decided Karen Fifield,. Karen Sprinczeles Sclare, Pamela Vicino, Cynthia Well, of course I had to read What was to be a put down be- to ban it. May God have mercy Rudnick, Cynthia Sivol, Judie Schneider, and Carollee Howes. it. "The Floating Opera" turned came instead a celebration. on this school, this enlightened out to be lively and exciting. I As for the rest of the first union of scholars, students and wouldn't trade my copy for a section, I would only say that It frightened men. year's worth of the back Issues was done with a flair for wit 0, hri ,Punle of "Evergreen". "Avant Garde" and remains as fair a comment Weother CROSSWORD PUZZLE *"-" ** "' and "Playboy" put together. on the Great Society as I can There Is more than a touch remember. It will do until some- Clearing this morning with a ACROSS 3 Debase rjorca nrann tanra of the nasty; but it comes out one who can write well comes 4-Twirl an HDO ransmnn alive and Joyful nasty, not at all along. chance of a lingering snow flur- 1-Seed container 5-Chtcken ana HQH aaa like the dead, depressing nasty of ry. Partly cloudy and seasona- 4 Footwear The graphics here are the 6 Faroe Islands BOOH yrcir? nnara Ginsburg's rag. bly cold today with afternoon 8 Possesses whirlwind weakest in the magazine, done In asm rai3R aan I won't talk about the cover. high temps. 30-35 degrees. Fair 11 Exist 7-Puflup rag ranoEHBB an If you don't understand It, try a pop-art, paste up style that 12 Skin of fruit 8 Strike QDO and cool tonight. ran s?na shedding a little light. Work hard does not match the material to 13 Small island 9 -Conjunction u^ae rasa arjafi come. (It Is good however, to Precipitation Probability 15 Stay lOlnclme UBO and peace will come. msa aera know that someone around here stands at 30% jhis.. tnQrning, 17-Lituly 14-Heraldry: □aruaBE il3U QE Perhaps the best of the maga- 19 Indefinite crafted □rja aarjg aaaa zine is the fold-out insert about remembers Bobby Breen.) lowering to 10% by tonight. article 16 Skill EOHH The graphics In Part Two, 18 Parent (colloq.) aam arary the little boy who found ultimate For further information, call 20 Sea eagle "An Oratorio in Mixed Media 21 -Resume 29 peace. Prose, poetry and the Southern New England 21-Music: as 22-Ventilate graphics take the readers mind for Alexander Dubcek" were, written 23 Secret agent 34-Pigpen 44 Rodents to my eye, near perfect. With Weather Service at 4290030. 22-Emmet 24 Falsehood 35-Damp 46-ln favor of on a rubber journey to its outer 23 Narrow, flat 250bstruct 37-Conflict 47-Tiny amount board 26 Ethiopian title 38- Barracuda 48 Dine 28 Chapeau 39 Rent 49 Inlet 25 Owing 51 Symbol tor 26 Ceremony 29 Wooden vessel 40-Artist's INTERESTED 31 Concealed stand silver Coffee House 27-Tran»fix 41-Small rug 53-Parent 28 Cut of meat 32-Worm 43 Pronoun (colloq.) 29 Swiss river 33-Paddle IN: 30 Old pronoun 31-Carpenter's 10 FORECASTING? tools 3R0ADCA5TING? 33-Bone 12 13 14 35 Intellect MAP MAKING? Feb. 13, 36 Inquire 15 16 17 18 37Tlying mammal 38 Winter vehicle 20 71 22 JOIN THE 14, 15 40-Bitter vetch 41-Girl's name 26 42 Fondle 23 24 25 WEATHER 43 Grass mowed featuring and cured 27 28 29 for fodder BUREAU 44 Small rug 30 32 33 34 45 Babylonian Application Available at deity 35 36 37 46-Footlike part Mc Kendree Spring 47-Acrid 38 39 40 41 the control desk or in 50 Former Russian ruler 42 43 44 our office 301-A SUB S? Heroic event S.U.B. 8 and 9:30 FREE 54 Burma native 429-0030 55 The sell 46 47 48 49 56-Tardy 57-Greek letter 51 52 ~ 54 DOWN 56 57 THE ST. THOMAS AQUINAS CENTER 1 Equality presents 2 Native metal Diitr. by United Feature Syndicate, Inc. 29 THREE BY FELLINI TONIGHT- 8 1 / FEB. 12 £(/$# &igma pji €pstloit MM o commentary and discussion led by

ARNOLD T. ORZA \U Quite A hint PROF. OF ENGLISH, UCONN Wednesday, Feb. 19 La Dolce Vita

Wednesday, Feb. 26 J"'''e» of the Spirits

St. Thomas Aquinas Center All shows begin at 7:30 p.m. North Eagleville Road 8 W.dnesdoy, Feb 12,1969 CONNECTICUT DAILY CAMPUS Babbidge Placement Interviews Monday, Feb. 17 Peace Corps Placement Test Available Northeast Utilities Service Co. State Mutual Life Assurance Company of America To Be Given Here Feb. 20 For Talks American Optical Company Those who wish to briny Connecticut Mutual Life Insurance Company The Peace Corps Placement a foreign language. Peace Corps Sun OH Company - Sales Office test will be given at 3:30 p.m. problems or suggestions to Los Angeles City Schools experience has demonstrated that President Momer n Babbidge, on Thursday, Feb. 20 In Koons even those who do poorly on the Hall Room 101. Because the num- MLAT, usually are able to learn Jr. may do so every Friday Tuesday, Feb. 18 ber taking the test at this time a new language, given good in- afternoon from 2-4 p.m. Avon, Conn. Public Schools is limited to 10, those students struction, strong motivation and Hither President Babbidge Hughes Aircraft Company interested in taking the test time. or Provost Edward V. Gant Radio Corporation of America should sign up in Koons Hall Burndy Corporation rm. 111. will be in the Presidential Jackson and Moreland Division Students planning to take the Lounge. Room 217 of the Stu- Aetna Life & Casualty test should have already submit- CORRECTION dent Union, at the above time Aetna Life & Casualty - women Windham Public Schools ted a Peace Corps Application Yesterday's Beta Sig ad was pr- to speak with any student who or b e prepared to turn one in at inted wrong. wishes to have discussions UConn School of Dental Medicine - Careers Program the time of the test. The test used is the Modern with them. Wednesday, Feb. 19 Language Apptitude test(MLAT). Wethersfleld School Dept. The ML AT is not a pass-fail EACH GAY OUR TEACHER SELECTS Clairol, Inc. |raWltyfts,MA-AM... Metcalf & Eddu, Inc. type of test, but rather a non- THANK V0l>... I'LL ONE BOV IN OUR CLASS TO GO competitive guide used to pre- BE VERY HAPPV OOWPE ANP fWNP AUTHE ERASED Port of New York Authority dict the success of the applicant TO VO IT... IT'S CONSIPEREP A 6REAT HONOR Sealtest Foods in learning a foreign language in TO BE CHOSEN FOR THIS TASK... a comparatively short time. The Thursday, Feb. 20 Peace Corps has no specific lan- Chester, Conn. Elementary Schools guage requirements, and it uses Bristol, Conn. Public Schools the ML AT simply to help place a The International Silver Company volunteer. U.S. Geological Survey The degree to which the score Continental Insurance Companies on the MLAT may be attributed E.F. Hutton & Co., Inc. to acquired learning or native Kimberly - Clark Corporation capacity, or both, Is not known. I COULD PIE FROM Standard Brands, Inc. Occasionally, an applicant makes ALL THIS HONOR! Chevron Chemical Co. - Ortho Division a satisfactory score and yet does Babson Institute very poorly in the language por- tion of Peace Corps training. In Friday, Feb. 21 such cases, it is Peace Corps The International Silver Company policy to transfer the person to Commercial Union Insurance Co. of New York a program with less rigid for- G. Fox & Co. - women eign language requirements. No G. Fox & Co. - Men person has been turned away Mercantile Stores Co., Inc. soley because he couldn't learn Wantagh, L.I., N.Y. Schools Cheshire, Conn. Schools During February and March many insurance companies, depart- JOE NAMATH ment stores, banks, schools, and industrial employers interested in stu- dents with non-technical backgrounds will be coming to the Campus to discuss their career opportunities. Seniors and grad students are DENNY McCLAIN encouraged to visit the Placement and take advantage of these oppor- JOHN LINDSAY tunities to talk with a variety of employers. ERWIN ROMMEL ALFRED E. NEWMAN Attention: ?? GOLDIE ?? Nutmeg 99c Sale: HENRY GIBSON Order your 1969 Nutmeg + get SIDNEY KUETCH the 1968 edition for only 99< more. THEY DID NOT LIVE IN SOUSA, 3UT THEY This offer good for the first 100 WISH THEY sales. HAD! RUSH JOHN PHILIP SOUSA HOUSE 'HUB OF THE TOWERS'

Tuesday thru Friday 10:00 a.m. 4:00 p.m. Why don't you come over and meet Student Union Lobby

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You Just May Never Leave

RUSH DELTA CHI

Feb. 10 & 12 7:0 C-10:00 Grammy Awards CONNECTICUT DAILY CAMPUS W«dn«sdoy, Fob 12, 1969 9 Barnes Satisfied With Hearing Youth Take Over On Issue Of Lower Voting Age Connecticut State Minority Leader Barnes said in a talk to NEW YORK (AP) - Youth funkel and "Wichita Lineman," Beatles or "A Tramp Shining," has taken over the nominations Glen Campbell. Richard Harris. Young Republicans here Thursday that he was pleased with Song of the Year will be ei- for Grammy Awards, which were Best Contemporary pop Male the hearing held in Hartford last week to lower the voting announced Monday. Vocal Performances nominees ther "Harper Valley PTA," "Ho- Grammies are given by the are Bobby Goldsboro for ney", "Hey Jude," "Little Green age to 18. National Academy of Recording "Honey," Jose Feliciano for Apples" or "Mrs. Robinson. He said the 12 Republicans in the Senate are unanimously Female vocalists nominated Arts and' Sciences to records "Light My Fire"; O.C. Smith for in favor of putting the issue to voters in a referendum in voted the best of the previous •Little Green Apples," Richard for Grammies are Merrllee Rush year - In the same way that Harris, for "MacArthur Park" for "Angel of the Morning," Dl- 1970. His one reservation about the issue, however, was that the movie industry awards Os- and Glen Campbell for "Witchita onne Warwick for "Do You Know the establishment of students as a voting bloc might have a the Way to San Jose?", Bar- cars. Lineman." "backlash effect" on professors. Nominees for best single re- Album of the year 1968 will bara Streisand for "Funny Girl," cord of the year are "Harper be either "Bookends" by Simon Aretha Franklin for "I Say a Barnes said he also favored the abolition of capital punish- Valley PTA/ sung by Jeannie and Garfunkel, or "By the Time Little Paryer" and Mary Hopkin ment and voiced optimism for the bill's chance of being pass- I get to Phoenix," Glen Camp- for "Those Were the Days," Miss C. Riley, "Hey Jude," The Bea- ed this year, according to Whitney Dean of the Young Republ- tles, "Honey," Bobby Goldsboro, bell; "Feliciano", Jose Feliciano Streisand has won three times •Mrs. Robinson,* Simon andGar- "Magical Mystery Tour,* The previously. icans. Bames doubted that the hills supporting the liberalization Suicide Motives Studied By UConn Psychologist of abortion laws and government aid to private schools would A social psychologist here In such ways that their sense of some effort to build a feeling of be passed. has worked out a general theory competence Is not impaired," he competence in the child must on why people kill themselves explained. be made," he said. which includes an indictment of Dr. Farber indicates the ten- Dr. Farber also observed that those who undermine the feeling dency of some parents to devalue children of fathers who present of competence In their fellow their own youngsters can have a a good model of competence man. serious longterm Impact on the seemed to fare better than those Dr. Maurice Farber unfolded children's ability to cope with of weaker sires. "The strong his insights into the causes of their environment. father figures tend to rear child- self-destruction In a concise vol- "It's not necessary to say that ren who are themselves better ume entitled "Theory of Sui- your ordinary offspring is the able to withstand stress," he Now that cide," just published by Funk greatest kid who ever lived, but added. and Wagnalls. Buttressed by a wealth of evince gathered If. ScandlnaYii and around the world, Dr. Far- you re one of ber Isolated what he considers the essential factors that cause FDE WALK A MILE suicides in all cultures. He also identified the sources of suicide, both within the Individual and his TO RUSH social setting. The Phonables, His general theory is presen- ted in language more common to mathematicians than social psy- chologists. Using equations he shows the Interactions among ALPHA SIGMA PHI here's the sue h subtle human factors as "demands for the exercising of competence , demands for Inter- personal giving, availability of love and tolerance of suicide." cheapest way Dr. Farber suggested that people can be prevented from committing suicide If the demands placed on them by so- YOU OTHER GUYS- ciety can be kept within their to get hold psychological ability to cope. 'This may sound like a tru- ism but we can help prevent START WALKING suicides if we can maintain hope, In the deepest sense in a person. The trick is how. I of your feel that one way might be to get people — particularly par- ents ' to rear their children far-out friends.

Call 'em after midnight. Midnight is the happy time when long distance rates really drop out of sight. (You can even reach that far-out, far-away friend in California for just 75 cents!)0 Of course, if you don't want to stay up that late, call anytime after 7 p.m. - you're still in bargainsville. (The most you pay for a call to any place in the country is a buck.)* And you get that same break every Saturday and Sunday, all day long. The chart gives you the lowdown on low rates. Wouldn't some far-out Phonable like to hear from you tonight?

1 [ MON TUES 1 WED 1 THUDS nu, SAT SUN

7 a.m. 5pm $1 75 or LESS

5 p m 7 p m SI IS or LESS

7pm 7 a m SI 00 or IESS

Midnight S .75 or IESS (ON CAllS VOU DIAl YOUHSElFi 7 o m 1 1 | | i 1 1 • Three minute station call within the continental U. S., plus federal tax. Excludes Alaska and Hawaii.

B.O.G. Poetry Reading £jq¥*4c* by CORRECTIONN , Poet Mark Strand's readk.g MARK STRAND of his work was Incorrectly print- ed in Tuesday's ConnectlcutDally Campus as being held last night'. Wed. Feb. 12 8:00 p.m The reading will be given tonight at 8 p.m. at the UConn Art Museum. •MUM Strand, a Fulbrlght scholar, DOWNtOWH WIL: IMANTIC 423-3027 > mil PARKING has had three books of poetry Museum of Art published. His work has also ap- T/m.s 4:30 - 7.-00 - 9:15 peared In 'The New Yorker," the "Saturday Review" and 'At- lantic Monthly."

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.''.'..-.■ .\\-:.\\\\\\\\-:■:■: ■■:..•■:■ ■■■■:■■ ■•■...'. ..■.-•>••%•• .1 . -,. v.'.., ,.'...7.7.'.'.'.'.', CONNECTICUT DAILY CAMPUS Wednesdoy, Feb12, 1959 1 SPORT Poll Shows Russell Top NBA Star coaches believe he can shoot, The ' pass, run, score, play-make and Elgin Baylor is the top forward control the ball better than any- in the NBA, the Cincinnati one else. "It he wants to shoot, Royals' Oscar Robertson the top he can score 40 points a game, guard, and the Boston Celtics' and he can get any shot he wants BUI Russell the top center, ac- at any time," says one coach cording to a poll of NBA coach- in salute. es appearing in the current is- Trailing Robertson and West sue Of SPORT MAGAZINE. at guard are the Detroit Pistons' Baylor and Robertson were Dave Bing, the Baltimore Bul- runaway picks at their positions, lets' and the Phil- with Elgin outpointing the Royals' adelphia 76er's Hal Greer, fil- Jerry Lucas and Oscar outpolllng ling out the top five. the Lakers' Jerry West by nearly Russell nipped Chamberlain two-to-one margins. Russell for the top spot because of his barely edged the Lakers' Wilt defense, his intangibles as a Chamberlain and the San Fran- team player and his ability to get cisco Warriors' up for the big game. Chamberlain Perhaps it Isn't exactly art, but these two wrestlers uncon- for the center slot, according to lost out because, as one coach sciously posed for the camera during a recent match. The Hus- the SPORT Magazine poll. put it, "He just doesn't want it Modern Art? kies are 5-1 in the year and host Holy Cross here Saturday af- Baylor, considered to have anymore. He already has all the ternoon. the greatest individual moves In records." Thurmond ranks third the NBA, earned the top spot be- because he isn't as good as either Freshman Record Breakers cause "he can score on a big Chamberlain or Russell in their guy or a little guy, and he's the phase of the game, though he is Among Track Attractions event which made headlines in best offensive rebounder in the probably better than Russell of- the sports section in the New league," agree the coaches. fensively and Chamberlain de- by Sherwood Anderson York Times. Rated behind Baylor and fensively. Records were made to be bro- five freshmen standards. Carters The team is young -- only Lucas at forward were Willis Joining the triumvirate of 4:12.5 mile time and Paliwoda's Reed of the New York Knicker- Russell, Chamberlain and Thur- ken as we all know. It has al- 51'7" shot put are now univer- four seniors -- and has proven most come to a point where It devastating to say the very least. bockers, now shifted to center, mond as the top centers in the doesn't matter who wins as long sity records. Last weekend Car- Saturday at 2:00 p.m. these young Johq Havlicek of Boston and Dave league are the San Diego Rock- as a record is broken. And as ter placed fourth in a mile race Huskies go against Columbia in DeBusschere of the Knlcks, tied ets' Elvln Hayes and the Seat- at Madison Square Garden. with the Atlanta Hawks' Bill tle SuperSonics' Bob Rule, com- long as you're a member of the The Varsity two-mile relay the Field House. There's plenty UConn track team you're probab- of seats, no admission and you'll Bridges for the fifth spot. pleting SPORT Magazine's coac- ly accomplishing both. team consisting of Steve Flana- probably see a record broken Robertson wins the top guard hes ratings of the top stars in Since the Huskies first and on- gan, Bill Young, John Vitale and or a Husky win. Most likely spot simply because most the NBA. ly dual meet to date, the record Craig McColl established a new you'll see both. books have taken a beating es- standard at 7:49 and this week- pecially by a couple of freshmen. end at Madison Square Garden During semester break Scott walked away with first place ho- Carter and Al Paliwoda combined nors. In that same meet Craig for two university standards and McColl placed second in the mile

Committee Report... fromPage four i Wherever intelligent and In- particular political or moral po- formed people work together, sition. and particularly at a university, The present placement crisis divergent value judgements are has revealed that a segment of bound to arise; indeed, the In- the University community feels teraction of such opinion is an that ther e do not exist suffi- essential part of an intellectual cient methods of expressing their cojr.Tiunity. political and moral dissent. To T"e Committee concludes that meet this need the Committee the I'niverslty best serves the proposes a device whereby the values of civilized life by pro- views of a minority holding such viding a forum for the expres- an opinion can be openly debated. sion of all shades of opinion. The conclusion of this report It follows from this principle will be published in the Connect- that the University should not icut Daily Campus later this seek to advocate or enforce any week. Wanted:

Motel Night Clerk 7 Apply Immediately For Reading Getting You Down Interview and Details.

Keep up with the studies this year by learning to read taster and better. Compensofion Includes: Furnished Room Wi'fh TV The way you're reading right now — Reading Dynamics. And her course Complete Daily dreakfast, word by word — is the way people read works. If after taking it you haven't Nominal Salary and a hundred years ago. But who needs to at least tripled your reading speed Commission. read as they did in horse-and-buggy (with equal or better comprehension days when a revolutionary new based on the beginning and ending technique makes it possible to get tests), your entire tuition will be Excellent Arrangement through a book at a dramatically faster refunded. If reading is one of your For Student Seeking rate and with top comprehension. This hang-ups. how can you afford not to Ideal Study Environment is the technique discovered by Evelyn look into the Evelyn Wood course? It Wood, based on her extensive could make the big difference for Call 684-2221 Mr. Sinclair Ashford Motel research into reading p.-tterns of you this year. natural speed readers. She's called it

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