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Connecticut Daily Campus H« H« Connecticut Daily Campus P Serving Storrs Since 1896 i VOL. CVXI, No. 59 STORRS, CONNECTICUT WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 10. 1962^ Freshmen Affected NSM Fund Drives By New ROTC Rules BY HOWARD ANDREWS Plans are being made to edu- Start Next Semester cate the incoming Freshmen in the Present Freshmen will be re- by Marlene I ■ •■• -ilman later quired to enroll in the National merits of the ROTC program. conducted on campus during the the sit-in movement. It This will be done either through and first and second weeks of next branched out into Freedom Rides Defense program here at the UnP John D. Perry, Jr. versitv of Connecticut in the personal talks or information sent semester. Lapel buttons with the and Ixjycotts. It is currently in- to the students. Uconn students will have an op- emblem of the Student Non-Vio- volved primarily in encourage- school year 1962-1963. portunity next semester to directly 1 e n t Coordinating Committee ment and education of potential According to a news-letter is- Possibilities - support current drives for Negro (SNCC) will be sold for the price Negro voters. sued by the Office of the Provost Other changes in the program rights according to plans formu- of one dollar. Proceeds will aid to the faculty, students who SNCC is the only all student or- are also in the planning stage. lated by the Northern Student SNCC's voter registration drive ganization in the country work- registered under the 1961-1962 One possibility mentioned is that Movement committee of the Stu- catalog must complete the re- among Southern Negros. ins exclusively for the elimination a selected group of Juniors and dent Senate. The Student Senate committee, of discrimination and segregation. quirements as stated in that Seniors will be given scholarships The committee has organized formed before vacation, has been catalog. The Southern Student Freedom by the ROTC department and plans for Uconn's participation meeting regularly to develop Fund, which will directly receive The newsletter quotes the cata- will receive all of their training in the nationwide Southern Stu- plans. They will hold their next all proceeds raised at Uconn, is a log stating "students who are re- in those two years by attending dent Freedom Fund if approval is meeting Monday, Jan. 29, the national organization supporting quired to take National Defense two summer camp sessions in ad- granted by the University Con- first day of classes for next sem- SM'C. Its board of directors in- must meet the requirements at dition to work done during the cessions Committee. ester. cludes* such notables as Rev. Mar- the earliest opportunity and must academic year. A fund raising drive will be Communication will be made tin Luther King, Jr., and Harry continue to register for National with each living unit urging it to Belafonte. The membership, how- Defense in each succeeding semes- send a representative. Literature ever remains in the hands ol stu- ter until the requirement has been Original French Ballet Company will also be distributed to dormi- dents who organized it two years completed." tories and posters circulated on ago. Grad Requirements camps. The Freedom Fund has an ad- The news-letter also brings to Visits Uconn Auditorium Tonight The committee, composed of visory committee with representa- attention the University policy of Senators and interested non-Sena- tives from the National Students requiring students to meet the re- Janine Charrat, the French Bal- pearance is not only handsome tors, is concerned with the pro- Association, the National Student quirements of the catalog under lerina and choreographer who but full of character, her line is blems of voter registration ed- Christian Federation, the Students which they register. In addition will appear here with her Ballet quite distinctive, and her move- ucation programs for Negroes in for Democratic Society, and sev- the Provost points out that the Janine Charrat De France tonight ment and her invention are al- the South and discriminatory eral other national student organ- new ruling will not effect the at 8:15 p.m., in the Jorgensen ways informed by inner feeling, practices in the North. The latter even when she is working in the aspect emphasizes discrimination izations. minimum number of credits Auditorium, during the course of The committee is composed of necessary for graduation. her return American tour, was an strictly classic idiom. Perhaps in employment, residential prac- because she is so good a dancer, tices and public accomodations. the following senators: John D. Colonel Wis". Professor of Air established "etoile" of the Europ- Perry, Jr., (ISO); Marlene Fieed- Science, said that he was very ean Dance Theatre both as a with such a genuine dramatic in- A Spokesman for the Student stinct and so much musicallity, Senate committee pointed out that man. (ISO); Fran Tiller. (ISOi; pleased with the new ruling. He dancer and choreographer before Ann Lovelace, (ISO); Kathy anticipa'es an enrollment of thirty she made her Ameircan debut she is better able than many in two separate articles in this choreographers to create a phase past Sunday's New York Times, Bland. (USA); Sandy Smith, *» fifty per cent of the number a few years ago. Most of the pro- (ISO and Vic Schachter (ISO). •f Students enrolled in the past. gram to be presented here is made that can really be danced, and analyses of the racial situation This reasoning is based on fig- up of ballots created by Mile. with meaning and flavor." concluded that voter registration Non-senators on the commjuee ures obtained from other univer- Charrat for interpretation by her- Ill addition to Mile. Charrat, is the most significant aspect of the are: Sheila Feinstein, Doris Karpe, sities where similar actions have self and troupe. several of Europe's brilliant young Negro fight for first-class citizen- G'ana Oertel, Howard Wachtel, Occurred. dar.ee artists are included in the ship. Theda Wexler, Rolene Auclair and The impact of Mile. Charrat roster of the Ballet Janine Char- Mary Allen. He stated that although the upon the American Dance scene Raising funds is only one phase Corps would be smaller, a better was summed up by John Mar- rat de France. Among them are of the Committee's future plans. This ad hoc committee was set unit is expected because of the tin. New York Times critic,: Milenko Banovitch, Yvonne Me- The Student Senate committee, up as a result of a motion which, Increase in interest on the part yer, Ivan Dragadze, and Serge according* to chairman, Senator was introducted bv Senator John "Miss Charrat is ' an authentic Pourney and Jean-Pierre Duchene. of the cadets. talent of high order . Her ap- John D. Perry, Jr., will also serve Perry (ISO). It read: Like Mile Charrat, they have all as a coordinating committee. Ex- "I move that the Student Sen- api>cared with many of Europe's isting campus organizations are ate authorize and direct iis Presi- most distinguished ballet com- expected to develop and execute dent to appoint an ad hoc com- Kuzmak Heads IFC Slate; panies. projects aimed at improving the mittee to co-ordinate and direct, Seme of Mile. Charrat's ballets racial situaiion in the North. on this campus, activities in sup- will be included in the programs The Americans for Democratic port of the Northern Student Greek Week Plans Made which she is presenting in Ameri- Action and the University Christ- Movement. 'Die Committee shall Plans were disclosed at the ca this season. Amonn them are ian Fellowship have already in- p be composed of Senators and non- meeting concerning next Spring's "Concerto," a work of pure clas- dicated their participation in this ' senators. The committee shall co- sical movement set to the Con- phase. I operate, whenever possible, with ! Greek Week. The annual events certo of Greig; "The Amazon." a The Student Non-violent Co-: existing campus organizations in are scheduled to take place on (Continued on Page 3, Col. 2) ordinating Committee began with I carrying out its activities." April 2-8. The highlight of the ! week will be a Sunday afternoon concert featuring the Four Preps, Proceeds from the concert, which will be held in the Jor- gensen Auditorium, will IK> used to set up a student scholarship fund. Special guest at the meeting was Robert Bonitati, an alumnus of Uconn. Now a field director for Sigma Alpha Epsilon. Bonita- ti spoke of the accomplishments and highly successful results of a survey on the fraternity system at the University of Washington. Bonitati proposed a similar sur- , DIC K KUZMAK vey here at Uconn, as a method II"C President of evaluating the present system. Dick Kuzmak Sigma Alpha Ep- silon, was elected president of the Interfraternity Council at the an- nual elections Monday night. In Inside Pages bis call for "unified cooperation," Dally Campus niu-.ii review- Will be a "year of crisis for the er, Anthony Skey, comments fraternity system" at the Univer- on the Isaac Stern presentation sity of Connecticut. Kuzmak Monday night . MV p.me 3. asked for the full support of the Sir Anthony Wedgewood fraternities on campus to strength- r.enn. controversial Knglish- en the present system. man, u> speak on "A Kriton Other officers elected Monday Looks at Russia" . see page •re: Administrative Vice - presi- S. dent. Bert Goldfarb, (Alpha Zeta The National Students As- Omega); Executive Vice - presi- sociation BOts on segrega- dent, Moe Fradette (Tau Kappa tion . see page I. Epsilon); Secretary, Tom Stron- Who won the Uconn—Khotty awski iPhi Kappa Tau); Treas- basketball game? . see page urer, Carl Fisher (Phi Epsilon 6.
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